Best of the Broken” conference, featuring Bishop Jonathan Coffman and Amanda Crabb, for a weekend of hope, healing and renewal.
Looking for an inspiring climate read? A bookworm shares five favourites. View on euronews ...
A church is going viral on TikTok for its unconventional Super Bowl-themed service. Social media user Micah Waldman gave an inside look at the service through a video posted to social media this week, ...
“Things are happening [in Minnesota] that my friends and family elsewhere are really having trouble understanding,” Laura Kelly Fanucci says, “because the media is saying one thing, and all these ...
Muriel's childhood crippled her emotionally. She began visits to the hospital's psychiatric ward when she was in her teens. By her late forties, she'd seen dozens of counselors, therapists, and ...
Ask the publishers to restore access to 500,000+ books. An icon used to represent a menu that can be toggled by interacting with this icon. A line drawing of the Internet Archive headquarters building ...
Veteran running back Trey Sermon was the odd-man out when the Pittsburgh Steelers had to create an opening for rookie quarterback Will Howard to come off injured reserve. But two days later, Sermon is ...
Preaching is the centerpiece of many Christian worship services, and Bethel College will bring to campus a national leader in the study of preaching, called homiletics. The occasion is the biennial ...
The Rev. Dr. Kelly U. Farrow is founder of Kelly U. Farrow Institute for Black Preaching and Education, aiming to build a movement to sustain and evolve the legacy of Black preaching. (Courtesy photo) ...
A new wearable device, a-Heal, combines AI, imaging, and bioelectronics to speed up wound recovery. It continuously monitors wounds, diagnoses healing stages, and applies personalized treatments like ...
A model of the a-Heal wearable device. As a wound heals, it goes through several stages: clotting to stop bleeding, immune system response, scabbing, and scarring. A wearable device called “a-Heal,” ...
WASHINGTON — Someone who wandered into The Catholic University of America’s Hartke Theater on July 15 might have mistaken the 29 men standing in a circle on the stage for an improv acting troupe — not ...