copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
Could Charlie Kirk’s death be a “turning point” for America? House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La) urged leaders to “turn down the rhetoric” amid a divisive political climate, saying lawmakers should stop treating policy disputes as an “existential threat to democracy or the Republic ” I would like to respond by simply encouraging our nation to follow Charlie Kirk’s example But our divisive culture has gotten where we are for a reason, and it’s
Who is Jim Denison? Who is Jim Denison? About Jim Denison Jim Denison, PhD, is a cultural theologian and the founder and CEO of Denison Ministries, which is transforming 6 8 million lives through meaningful digital content
The Daily Article Archives • Denison Forum The Daily Article by Jim Denison with Denison Forum offers timely Christian news from a nonpartisan, biblical perspective—news discerned differently
Why Taylor Swift and Mel Robbins are so popular Today, we reflect on the prolific output of Taylor Swift, who released her twelfth original studio album last week, and Mel Robbins, the bestselling author and podcaster whose latest book, The Let Them Theory, was the #1 selling book of 2025 and is on pace to have the best non-fiction book launch of all time Robbins teaches that flourishing comes from letting others live freely while focusing
US tariffs, al Qaeda’s rise, and Hamas’s “bloody crackdown” Al Qaeda is on the rise in nuclear-armed Pakistan, part of a growing terrorism hub that it is organizing in South and Central Asia Meanwhile, Hamas is pursuing what the New York Times calls a “bloody crackdown” on its rivals in Gaza as it seeks to assert its dominance in the territory Ideas have consequences, and bad ideas have victims But when “bad” by definition is what the other
May Day protests and Israel’s Independence Day For example, as Dr Ryan Denison noted in his Daily Article yesterday, the National Day of Prayer observed by many across the country has its antecedents in a congressional appeal in 1775 for the colonies to join in “a Day of public Humiliation, Fasting and Prayer” for God’s blessing on their revolution for independence