Discovering the Church, the Culture, and the Truth
August 29th, 2009

Derek Webb’s “Stockholm Syndrome” controversy

Stockholm Syndrome refers to a hostage sympathizing, identifying, and aligning their loyalty to their captor. With Derek Webb’s habit of criticizing Christian culture, you may see where he’s going with this album.

Webb has done few things that can’t be interpreted as offensive by the Conservative Christian media in his solo career. His very fist release in 2003, after breaking from the Contemporary Christian band Caedemon’s Call, She Must and Shall Go Free, ruffled a few feathers when he used the rather biblical language “whore” and “bastard” that family-friendly radio stations weren’t comfortable with. In 2007, his breakthrough electric album The Ringing Bell criticized politic-pushing-pulpits on the track “A Savior on Capital Hill.” A year later, during the election year, he re-released his Mockingbird album for free on Noisetrade with a bonus track in which Webb communicates to his listeners their right and moral obligation not to vote if they cannot, with a clear conscience, choose a candidate.

In summary, controversy is nothing new to Derek Webb.

Why then are so many fans who have stuck with him through four albums now turning their backs and calling Stockholm Syndrome the final straw? It would seem he has chosen a line to cross that many people are finally unwilling to go over with him.

Basically, in a nod to a speech made by Tony Campolo, Webb uses obscenities on the track “What Matters More” which deals with the Christian community’s mistreatment of the gay community. That’s what is really getting people fired up. To say that is the only song on Stockholm Syndrome that will ruffle feathers would be to overlook other blatant and offensive language on the album, but the obscenities are what’s really going to have Webb dodging all the stones that will be cast at him come September 1st… and some have already started to fly (I found quite an interesting blog entry that really gets behind the song, you should check it out).

While everyone’s turning their attention to “What Matters More” (irony), there are many other abrasive songs that will be overlooked… that also need to be heard.

The Song “Black Eye” calls out Christian passivism, ignorance, and adaptation to culture, stating “Time looks the same at the ones who hate and the ones that do nothing” while “The Spirit vs. the Kickdrum” addresses Christian’s convenience-skewed view of the Godhead. Webb continues his political trend with “The State” and even makes an interesting address to Westboro Baptist Church’s Fred Phelps in what I would consider one of the most notable tracks on the album, “Freddie, Please.” And that’s only the first half.

I recently scheduled lunch with a friend from high school who, since graduation three years ago, has come out as a homosexual. When I made the passing comment about meeting him, I was teased about our “date” by some of my friends and family. There where people very close to me, and the person I was going to meet, who did not really love him at all, and it hurt. Honestly, what Webb has to say on “What Matters More” needs to be said.

However, I believe the greatest risk run by the lyrical content of Stockholm Syndrome is not actually one or two words, but the actual language Webb uses throughout the album. The obscenities are not the greatest concern here. If we’re going to draw the line and mandate language, google the lyrics for the song and look at how many christian bloggers chose to type out “damn” but censor “s—.” Where do we draw the line? My only conern of how this album will be received is that in calling out real, critical points in the American Church in the way that he does, Webb has run the risk of sounding as sharp and in-compassionate as the very people he criticizes.

My final suggestion, for what it’s worth… buy the album. Decide for yourself. Not just if Derek Webb’s approach is right or wrong… but what’s the heart behind the songs, and what will you take away.

Note: Anyone who claims this is all a marketing strategy to sell records is just mudslinging. For $10 you get both the clean and “explicit” versions of the album and the album booklet reads:

“I wholly support the free distribution and consumption of music. Please share this record.”

In other words, Webb is giving away the unedited copy for free. He really just wants this song to be heard.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, Music, The Culture | No Comments » | Tags: , ,
June 17th, 2009

A quick update from India

I may not have many readers left due to my complete inactivity on this blog for the past month, but I have a good reason. For those of you who do not know I am in India. For certain reasons I have had to create another blog for journaling my adventures in India.

But while I’m here I thought I’d give you all a quick thought.

God is moving in India, just as He is in America. One thing I’ve learned from being here is that God’s work of reconciling people to Himself is both a complete and perfect process that He has initiated, and a tedious and difficult task that he has charged to us.

As I am here doing mission work in India, I am more consistently praying for the mission work that God’s people are doing in the States.  Seeing actual, physical idols such as Kali praised and glorified on TV right before a commercial interruption telling Indian teens they can be sexy and Western-like by additionally adorning and worshiping the God of Levi Jeans has made me realize the incredible giants of oppression we face in America. I pray that the Saints in the States will be sensitive to the culture and, rather than seeking to conform to it or plan strategies to use it in ministry, that they would actively seek to crash the culture by visibly loving others and being set apart as a Holy Priesthood worthy of the calling God has placed on all who belong to Him.

We are in the world, but not of the world, for freedom Christ has set us free, live and minister in that freedom. Do not turn back and worship other Gods. Set your sights on eternity. Live in the Kingdom. Have faith and work it out through caring for others. Suffer gracefully. Never compromise. Proclaim boldly. Love well.

Grace and Peace in the One who has set us apart as His adopted children,

Micah

May 19th, 2009

Tell your story, shape your story

I’m  a mass media major that loves a good story and loves to talk about what God’s doing, so Nick Charalambous’s article about story-making was a must read that I just wanted to pass on. I hope to see more about this, a little more in depth in the future.

And to see one way I think this looks, check out the stories coming from the Radius community in Greenville.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Media, The Culture | No Comments » | Tags: , ,
April 23rd, 2009

The Church [R]evolution Documentary: Clip 1

This is a clip from the new documentary project I’m working on with Matt Brammer and Taylor Cash.

The title is The Church [R]evolution, it explores the changing role of the church and its clergy in modern culture.

I’ll be posting more later, in the meantime you can check out the site in full.

March 31st, 2009

Luke 10 Project: Day 3

We wake up at 9am and get ready to leave. Chris offers us mouth wash. I’ve never seen any men get as excited about hygiene as we were when we realized we got to use mouthwash. He also offers us the frisbee. On the way out Kurt (he’s out of college and kinda the head of operations at the Decomm House) offers us the house as a “base of operations.” We rejoice in the fact that we have a secure place to stay each night and we leave to make the 45 minute walk to the shelters.

We go by Sunday Breakfast for lunch. Here’s how it works; they offer three meals a day and before lunch and dinner there’s a sermon. We have to sit through 3 of these sermons in all. We are all in shock at the terrible theology, out of context scripture, and just downright piss-poor [unacceptable] presentation of the gospel given by… every “preacher” we hear at these meetings. It’s frustrating. One of the preachers was even homeless himself once, and all he had to present to the fifty men sitting in the room was a terribly communicated presentation of the prosperity gospel.

Despite their terrible teaching and the harm that may be done through that, it is apparent that the people at Sunday Breakfast are trying to serve the homeless community. We ask if we can volunteer to help them in some way and they tell us they will have work for us tomorrow. We go by The Chosen 300 and volunteer our services there too and they also tell us they will have work for us tomorrow.

We walk back into the downtown area Wes decides he wants doughnuts again, so we go back by DD, but they haven’t thrown anything out. So Wes picks up some of the doughnuts from the day before… the ones on the ground… behind the dumpster… that got rained on the night before. No one else touches them… except Vic who is persuaded into taking a bite. Steve and I remark on how impractical this is.

Vic, Steve, and Wes spot a sign saying “DONATE BLOOD, $20″ They get over excited and run with reckless abandon into the building in a manner that makes me think they would sell their kidneys for fifty bucks. They are turned away because only Philadelphia residents can donate.

Photo from http://www.freewebs.com/themeades/

Photo from http://www.freewebs.com/themeades/

It’s a nice day, so we decide to head into the city, hang out, and see what opportunities God brings up. We decide to lounge around the Plaza around the Municipal Services Building where there is a concrete flat with tons of game pieces like chess pawns, dominoes, and Sorry and Monopoly figures. We take a seat on a giant checker and lay in the sun. The guys throw the frisbee around while I sit down and talk to a womanizing man who talks about how Obama has made it easy for him lie and get hundreds of dollars in disability and food stamps.

After a while I join the guys trowing the disc. A man walks up and asks if he can throw with us. His name is Tom, he has his wife and two twin baby boys in a stroller with him. He joins in, cigarette in one hand, throwing with the other. After a while he asks Steve “do you guys smoke pot?” When Steve replies with a no he immediately states, “oh, then you guys are Christians.” Steve uses the opportunity to open up a few doors and tell him why we’re in the city. After hanging out with him for about an hour he insists that he wants to buy us some food with his food stamps. We argue that he doesn’t need to for about ten minutes but eventually he and his family leave and he tells us to wait where we are because he will be back.

As we sit down, pray, and wait for Tom to return we meet our first apparent bout with spiritual warfare. It comes in a crazy, sixty-something year old black lady named Barbara. She approaches us and begins talking about who knows what. She takes a quick liking to Wesley and makes awkward physical advances on him that are both troubling and hysterical.

After about an hour, Tom returns with some food. Then things heat up. Crazy Barbara becomes loud and insane and Tom tries to be calm but is also being very protective of his boys and increasingly verbally aggressive towards Crazy Barbara. Finally we all agree to pray. Tom asks us to share something from the Word. So Wes begins to read from 2 Corinthians 5:

Since we believe that Christ died for all, we also believe that we have all died to our old life. He died for everyone so that those who receive his new life will no longer live for themselves. Instead, they will live for Christ, who died and was raised for them.

So we have stopped evaluating others from a human point of view. At one time we thought of Christ merely from a human point of view. How differently we know him now! This means that anyone who belongs to Christ has become a new person. The old life is gone; a new life has begun!And all of this is a gift from God, who brought us back to himself through Christ.”

Silence falls over everyone. Tom stares at Wes. There’s something in his eyes. Then the best two lines we heard on our whole trip are spoken.

“Can you read that again?”

Wes does.

“Can you explain that to me?”

We all sit down and Wes begins to walk through God’s plan with Tom and his family.

And the Crazy Barbara becomes insane.

Looking back, this may quite possibly have been demon possession, it was definitely the act of Satan trying to interfere with the Gospel. She is yelling indistinguishably and becoming paranoid about all her surroundings. Vic and I quickly diagnose the situation. Barbara = bad. We have to get her away from Tom and his kids. So Vic and I seclude Insane Barbara and walk her away from where Steve and Wes are walking Tom through the idea of sin and redemption. I would like to be over there with them. But I learn a very important lesson dealing with Insane Barbara: as a minister of the Gospel, dealing with the wolves is just as important as tending to the sheep.

After Wes and Steve are done we pray and we walk away from Insane Barbara with Tom and his family at a brisk pace. We trade phone numbers and agree to call him tomorrow. We go to Sunday Breakfast, listened to some more terrible “preaching” and fellowshiped with our brothers. Some of the guys asked us where we had been staying, when we told them we had been staying on a college campus, Bill thought it was hilarious. He was happy for us but acknowledged that it was nice to be young because he could never pull it off. Walt became angry and told us we had lost our credibility. The topic of whether Walt was right or not became a topic of debate between the four of us for the rest of the week. Afterward we walked back to Temple University, hung out in the abandoned student center, talked theology, and pretty much ministered to each other for a couple of ours.

We decided to walk the town a little more. We were walking back towards the house when we spotted a MacDonalds. We thought it would be a good idea to check the drive through for change… cause you know, when you drop change in the drive through, you’re too lazy to pick it up. As we were about to go fish for pennies a car full of girls drives up and goes into the McDees. We try to convince Wes that if he’ll work some charm, he could get us all double cheeseburgers for free. He refuses, we argue for 10 minutes and finally decide to walk away. As we are leaving I decide you only live (homeless) once (hopefully) so I’m just gonna go beg for food. Steve accompanies me and we go in and strike up and conversation with the group of girls. They are all 23 year old Drexel students, they’re quite friendly and interested in what we’re doing. After a while Vic and Wes (the cowards) come in and sit down. We tell them our story and talk to them for about 15 minutes. As we get up to leave, one of them, Alycia, tells us to take $20 dollars.

I refuse. she insists. Wes says “offer twice.” She does. We get $20.

We walk back to the Decomm House wondering what to do with the money. We decide we’ll spend it tomorrow on Bill somehow. We get back and I watch the end of Lost with Adam. We stay up talking for a while. We go to bed. It was a good day.

March 30th, 2009

Mac on Luke 10 Project: DC, Day 1

  • It is very early right now (around 5:30 am). Russ, [Derrick, Kalon,] and I are waiting in the train station now for the train to take us to Washington, D.C. I got a little freaked out this morning because one of the lenses in my glasses popped out. I was afraid I was going to either have to bring my contacts with me or not wear any vision correction at all (not good at all). Fortunately, Russ told me to try to pop the lens back in and it worked. I haven’t been really nervous about the trip until just lately. That’s the way I get. I am fine until the day of or right before some big event. My nerves are calm until I am actually doing whatever it is that I have been planning on doing. After it comes though, I tend to be a nervous wreck.
  • It’s about 4 pm right now. We arrived in D.C. and met up with the church at which our emergency contact works (located in Union Station). They were awesome. We got to help the band set up for worship before the services and then tear down afterwards. In between the services, we walked around for a little while just to get used to the city. We met our first homeless friend. His name is Pete AKA “B.I.S.” which stands for something that I can’t remember right now. He is a really crazy and cool homeless guy. He said lots of things that I really didn’t understand, but I’m not really sure if he did either. We hope to speak to him a lot more throughout the week because he stays in the same area all the time.After going back to the church to help tear down, we walked around some more. The church (National Community Church) has an awesome homeless ministry. They invite all of the homeless around the area to come to the services and then have free doughnuts and coffee in between services. They gave us the extra doughnuts and four or five extra bag lunches that they didn’t hand out to the homeless. We decided to walk around the city and hand the doughnuts out as we went. We gave some to a few homeless people outside of Union Station and then the rest to lots of homeless people standing outside of one of the main shelters in D.C. They were waiting outside because the shelter didn’t open until 7 pm that night (it was only around 3 pm at that point). They had to wait outside in the cold and rain. We got to speak with quite a few of them for a pretty long while. We also got to pray with a few of them.

    Afterwards, we headed to George Washington University to try to build some relationships with some people our age and to possibly find a place to stay for the night/ week. We stopped on the way to chow down on our bag lunches. When we arrived at the school, we soon discovered that they were on spring break, the campus is very spread out, and there were few places for the public to hang out on school grounds (we couldn’t locate a student center or places like that). We hung out in the nearby Starbucks for a little while to regain some energy. Afterwards, we headed to NCC’s coffee house called Ebenezer’s to get some free coffee and cookies for their third birthday celebration. We got here too late for the cookies, but we did all get some coffee. We are all sort of concerned about where we will sleep for the night, but we know God will provide according to His will.

  • Later on, we headed over to Union Station again. We walked through the food court to get a few free samples for what we expected to be dinner. We sat down in the food court just to chill out a little and pray. We came up with the idea to ask if we could help one of the food places close for the night for their leftovers. Dave proceeded to do so at a pizza place. I told him that if the first place turned us down, I would ask the second place. As he was walking back towards us, he had no expression on his face. We expected this to be a sign of “try again.” When he got back to the table, he informed us that they were going to give us the leftover pizza, and all we had to do was go back at 7 pm to pick it up! We all signed a thank you note that I wrote to the manager and gave it to him while picking up the pizza. They ended up giving us around two and a half pizzas (stuffed in one box) and a full grocery bag of breadsticks. One of the homeless guys we met at the church this morning named Vondel was also in the food court when we were. We invited him to eat with us (we obviously had some pizza to spare).After all five of us ate our fill, we still had lots of pizza and breadsticks leftover. I asked if we should keep some of the pizza for tomorrow, but I was quickly reminded by the guys of one of the reasons we were there: to trust in God to provide. I felt pretty selfish for a second, but I was happy to go along with the plan of giving the rest away. We walked right outside of Union Station and gave the rest of the pizza away to the homeless.
  • We are now in Union Station and are thinking that this is going to be where we will have to stay for the night. We tried to persuade a few hotels to let us work for them for a little while for a room, but none of them allowed us in. I am having a hard time coping with being away from the comfort of people. Of course, I am around guys that I know, but I miss my family, friends (from home), and girlfriend much more than I expected to. I am really having to find comfort in God right now through prayer and reading the Word.
March 27th, 2009

Luke 10 Project: Day 2

We are “wakened” from our not-sleeping in the waiting room of Ridge at 6am, told to stand up, walk into the hall, wait for 2 minutes, and then let back in. If that sounds pointless, think about how confused I was at 6am. I’m not a morning person. I’m not a functional tired person either. We all agree we can’t spend another night like the previous one.

We walk over to a place called Sunday Breakfast for… well, breakfast. Waiting in line we see people selling cigarettes for 75 cents and a few weed exchanges. There’s quite a market system for the homeless. We meet Richard and talk to him and a few others until 7:00 when they open the doors for us to eat. Chopped potatoes and a cold hot dog wiener. At the time I thought this was the best breakfast I’ve ever had and I reside to wake up for breakfast more often at school, a week later, at home, I will decide sleeping is usually more important than eating. Richard tells us that there’s a place called The Chosen 300 that serves the best meal in town every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday (he ends up being right). So we agree to meet him at 6pm for dinner.

We make the 45 minute walk into downtown. We head over to Temple University and fall asleep on the couches in the media room part of their student center. Vic took his shoes off and it smelled like that bush on campus near my dorm that cats perpetually crawl into and die. We get in a really good 2 hours of sleep before students start showing up. We blend in so it’s no big deal. We walk out into the main part of the student center and I have the epiphany that apparently every student center is the same; smelly people asleep on the couch and kids playing Yu-Gi-Oh! and Magic the Gathering at the tables. Only at temple, we were the smelly couch sleepers and the kids playing Yu-Gi-Oh! are real Asians.

We noticed pretty quickly that there was a Dunkin Donuts on every corner. So we decide to dumpster dive. For those of you who don’t know, at the end of the night, DD takes all their old doughnuts, puts them in their own separate trash bag, and throws them in the dumpster. So if you’re a broke college kid with a sweet tooth… or a homeless person (we are at this point, both) you can get about 30 pounds of relatively untouched doughnuts for free if you can get past the thought of them being in a dumpster for a few hours. We don’t mind.

We are successful in our scavenging and as literally Wes squeals with excitement and lifts the enormous bag of cold free pastries from the dumpster. It rips a little and rains doughnuts. It’s like manna falling from heaven… like a movie. We eat. It’s awesome. We leave the open and exposed doughnuts behind the dumpster. We read 1 Kings 17, laughed, and feasted.

We went back and slept in the student center a little more. This time there were students in the media room with us. Some of them were sleeping too. Steve had the brilliant idea of going by the event information desk to see if there were any christian related events going on around campus. Then God’s shower of blessings became apparent; Campus Crusade at 7pm, Monday night. Score.

We didn’t want to stand Richard up, so Steve elected Wes and I to stay on campus, go to Cru, and maybe find us a place to stay for the night. In the meantime, he and Vic would go eat… with Richard.

Wes and I hang around the campus for about an hour and a half before we go up to the 2nd floor of the student center. We wait in the room that Cru (called Crossway here) will be held and we listen to the praise band practice. The guy playing the guitar looks up at one point and greets us with a smile. He asks us if it’s our first time here. We then tell him our story and our purpose. Before we can even finish he offers us a place to stay and then he and the whole band immediately responds by offering us all the food they have on them. The worship leader’s name is Chris Kulp, and he will prove to be the most hospitable person I have ever met… and that includes my grandma. Vic and Steve join us. Richard had never shown up, but they did get to eat with Bill and they had a great time. We meet some more guys who we would be staying in the house with; Adam, Kurt, Ross, Brenden… 8 guys in all.

After Crossway they take us back to the house. It’s a 3 story modular home they call the Decomm House. The guys offer us showers and let us wash our clothes. I peel off my hoodie, flannel short, thermal shirt, and v-neck and get in the shower. I haven’t showered or changed clothes in 3 days and I’ve been walking for 9 hours a day two days in a row. There is some type of dead-skin-gray-fungus thing caked on my underarms, torso, stomach, and other areas…

The shower cleans it right up. We go play ultimate with the guys on a 24-hour lit turf at about 11:00pm. We go back to the house and Chris cooks us a bunch of food including soup, burgers, chips and salsa… all of these things are officially my favorite at this point. We think back about how we were jumping between homeless shelters and stumbling into the middle of crack deals the night before and realize we are eating Chris’s mom’s soup, have clean hair, and we each have a couch to sleep on for the night. God’s provision becomes very apparent.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, Luke 10 Project, Missions, The Culture | 1 Comment » |
March 26th, 2009

Luke 10 Project: Day 1

I am in fear of my life. Nathan Cline has been driving us around the streets of Philadelphia for about an hour now and we’ve had about 5 near-death, or at least near-car-totaling, accidents. He makes a comment about how shady the streets look, how he’s glad he wasn’t assigned this city, and how he doesn’t even want to drop us off here.

Five minutes later we find ourselves in the middle of the St. Patty’s day parade and he tells us he’s tired of driving around and doesn’t want to drive through the parade. So out we go, onto the streets of Philadelphia. There’s four of us, Wes, Vic, Steve, and myself. We have no wallets, no money, no change of clothes, and no plans for shelter or food. The idea is to spread the gospel around the city while learning complete dependence on God.

love-parkThe first place we find ourselves is Love Park. The fountain is drained. Wes and I quickly realize we’ve played this level on Tony Hawk Pro Skater 2. I make a note to take my Dreamcast back to school so I can play the game and we decide to move through the city.

We walk around for hours and nothing happens. Steve and Vic find four half-bagels in a bag… in a trash can. Dinner. We also find two halves of a apple cinnamon pop-tart on a park bench. Desert.

It gets late and we have found no place to stay. A man named Scott, who “just got out of the system” (translation: was very previously, but is no longer, homeless), directs us to a shelter. We round a shady corner between Broad Street and China Town to find a shelter on the corner called St. John’s, which is ironically run by Muslims. They tell us we can begin lining up at 8, so we have about an hour and a half to kill. We find a place on the corner to sit down and get off our feet.

A slightly Hispanic man passes carrying a large black trash bag over his shoulder. He realizes Vic and I are reading The Word so he stops to comment on it. His name is Richard, he is a believer, he’s homeless, and he’s one of the nicest guys I’ve ever met. He tells us he’s going to get some coffee and will be back to St. John’s around 8.

At 8:00 we start to line up for the chance at getting a bed. While waiting in line we meet a number of people who will be reoccurring throughout our week. The first was a guy named Walt. Think Snoop Dogg with a lazy left eye. He talks in circles about the bible and the homeless system and we can hardly get a word in. One thing he said that immediately stuck out to me was

“A homeless man never has to go hungry. Homeless people know how to eat, they need to know how to fill out a job application.”

Another key player, probably the the biggest, was Bill. Black, 6′2”, mid-fifties, bald with a gray goatee, glasses, and hands the size of my head, strong as trash compactor, soft as pillows. There was love and care in his eyes like those of a grandfather. He had recently got out of prison for small charges… nothing criminal.

The way the system at St. John’s, and many other shelters, works is if you stayed the night before and you show up the next night, you have first chance at getting a bed again. There were 27 beds, 26 people from the night before showed up. Richard got in. Walt tells us we best try our luck at Ridge

Bill walks us over to Ridge. Ridge is the main intake shelter for homeless in the Philadelphia area. The supervisor at the intake was the only one who genuinely seemed to give a crap about helping people. The rest are seemingly there because it’s there job. The security guards search us for weapons by tapping our knees and then un-zipping and zipping up our book-bags. The employees here are kinda nice and try to help us, but this is clearly not something they do because they have a heart for the homeless. That’s evident from their interaction. Bill and Walt get in. We cannot be put up because we are not Philly residents. When Walt finds this out, he offers to take us somewhere else. We have to convince him we’ll be okay and that he should take the bed before he decides to check in. The people at the shelter send us over to Our Brothers Place, but they have no beds left. So we decide to walk the streets.

We turn the corner of Our Brothers Place and Wes and I accidentally witness a crack deal. Seriously… the biggest bag of crack I’ve ever seen. We turn to walk the other way, Vic and Steve are already a considerable distance ahead of us, when we hear the dealer yell at us asking where we’re going.

The options become extremely clear to me at this point; run away and get shot in the back, or turn around and get shot in the face. I like to talk. Sometimes I’m good at it. So I decide to try my luck. I turn around and greet Mr. Crack Dealer. Wes pulls his sleeve over his watch (the only thing of value any of us have, and the object we constantly consider pawning) and walks up beside me. After he realizes we’re homeless he names off a number of shelters that would put us up. We nod and thank him. He was the nicest crack dealer I’ve ever met.

We decide it would be better to get off the streets. So we go back to Ridge and anti-sleep in their waiting room. At one point they move us into the dining room area where we are allowed to lay down on the floor. We get 1.5 hours of sleep and pray that tomorrow will not be like this.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, Luke 10 Project, Missions, The Culture | 1 Comment » |
February 17th, 2009

Philip Rizk on Christianity Today

Last week, Christianity Today did a really nice piece on Philip Rizk’s detainment in Egypt

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, The Church, The Culture, Theology | No Comments » |
February 17th, 2009

“Give me only enough…”

Found this video over on Francis Chan’s Blog and thought I’d share it.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, The Culture | No Comments » |













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