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Full-Text Articles in Christianity

Standing In Solidarity Dec 2018

Standing In Solidarity

St. Norbert Times

  • News
    • Standing in Solidarity
    • Heid E. Erdrich Visits St. Norbert College
    • Shelby Rodeffer “Paints Out” Towards the Reality of Social Media
    • “God’s Got This”: The Story of the Decleenes
    • Building Hope for Homelessness Week
    • Hour of Power Honors Later Swimmer
  • Opinion
    • The Holiday Spirit
    • A College Christmas List
    • Politics Today
    • Not Sorry
    • Thankful for the Athem
  • Features
    • Political Diversity in WI Schools
    • The Season of Giving and Emptying Wallets
  • Entertainment
    • Junk Drawer: Holiday Traditions
    • Sudoku
    • Trivia
    • 2018 in Music… so far
    • Review: “Devils Unto Dust” by Emma Berquist
    • Mother Knows Best
    • The Wild Kingdom of Black Friday Shopping
    • Review Corner …


Danny Postel Analyzing Conflict Oct 2018

Danny Postel Analyzing Conflict

St. Norbert Times

  • News
    • Danny Postel Analyzing Conflict
    • St. Norbert Presents “Almost, Maine”
    • Follow Me Printing: A New System
    • 50 Years of Art in Ink-Rick Harnowski
    • Campus Safety Introduces Changes
    • Carol Bruess Talks Technology
  • Opinion
    • The Importance of Justices
    • Defined
    • It’s Not Too Late to Find Your Faith
    • Alcohol in Green Bay
    • I Believe You
    • Role Reversal
  • Features
    • United We Stand
    • Study Abroad at SNC
  • Entertainment
    • Student Spotlight
    • Sudoku
    • Trivia
    • The End of the Avengers: Theories for “Avengers 4”
    • Book Review: “Siddhartha” by Hermann Hesse
    • “The Purge”
    • Nirvana Reunion at Cal Jam 2018
    • Junk Drawer: Favorite Movie or TV Costumes
  • Sports
    • Soccer Takes …


Keeping Safe On Campus Oct 2018

Keeping Safe On Campus

St. Norbert Times

  • News
    • Keeping Safe on Campus
    • SNC Political Life: Promoting voting
    • SNC’s Heroes Without Capes
    • Seeing Signs on Campus Plants?
  • Opinion
    • Hello, My Name Is…
    • Today, I am Angry
    • The Kavanaugh Accusations
    • Go Vote!
    • Sudoku
    • Trivia
    • “Maximum Ride”
  • Features
    • Playing for a Cure
    • Let’s talk about Title IX
  • Entertainment
    • Event Spotlight
    • Book Review: “Heretics Anonymous” by Katie Henry
    • “Game of Thrones” Spinoff Prequel
    • Classics Review: “The White Album”- The Beatles
    • Junk Drawer: Fall Films We Want to See
  • Sports
    • SNC Football Sets Record
    • Athlete Spotlight: Graceanna Tarsa
    • SNC Radio Features New Sports Talk Shows
    • Athlete Spotlight: Ben Prange
    • Bored?
    • Green Knights …


Snc Day: A September Tradition Sep 2018

Snc Day: A September Tradition

St. Norbert Times

  • News
    • SNC Day: A September Tradition
    • Economic Study’s Promising Results for Allouez
    • The CVC Goes Green
    • Religion Meets Art: The St. John’s Bible
    • SNC Moves Up in National Ranks
  • Opinion
    • The Importance of Arguments
    • What the Future Might Hold
    • Living Simply: A Reflection
    • Just Do It
  • Features
    • Ruth’s Marketplace Remodeled
    • SNC Annual Involvement Fair
  • Entertainment
    • Student Spotlight
    • Sudoku
    • Trivia
    • Where is Hip-Hop Going?
    • Winners and Loser of Summer 2018
    • Music Opinion
    • Junk Drawer: Reboots We Want to See
  • Sports
    • Men’s Soccer Defeats Lakeland, 14-0
    • “QB: 1 Beyond the Lights” Review
    • Diving Into New Tradition
    • Friday Wrap Up: Volleyball, XC


Snc Opens Doors To Class Of ’22 Sep 2018

Snc Opens Doors To Class Of ’22

St. Norbert Times

  • News
    • SNC Opens Doors to Class of ’22
    • Get Involved with Student Orgs
    • The Art of Creation
    • New Freshmen Go Into the Streets
  • Opinion
    • Remembering John McCain
    • The Value of Liberal Arts
    • Burnout: A Forgotten Affliction
    • The Morality of Hard Work
  • Features
    • Campus Spotlight: What is PAW?
    • Burke: The Singles Life,
  • Entertainment
    • Student Spotlight
    • Sudoku
    • Trivia
    • The Big Question: How to Make a Living in Music?
    • Oscars Adds ‘Popular Film’ Category
    • Book Review: Six Moon Summer
    • Junk Drawer: Summer Catch-Up
  • Sports
    • SNC Football Preview
    • Cross Country Dominates at Tom Barry
    • New Look Knights Serve for Thirteen Straight
    • Usain Bolt: Trading …


Pollen On Your Nose, Calvin Seerveld Sep 2018

Pollen On Your Nose, Calvin Seerveld

Pro Rege

No abstract provided.


Saving People From The Fiery Pits Of Hell? A Review Of “The Very Worst Missionary”, Melanie Springer Mock Jun 2018

Saving People From The Fiery Pits Of Hell? A Review Of “The Very Worst Missionary”, Melanie Springer Mock

Faculty Publications - Department of English

Excerpt: "As a Christian college student several decades ago, I knew without a doubt that the holiest, most sanctified majors on campus where those preparing their graduates for overseas missions. This probably explains the small twinges of guilt I felt when others gushed about their longing to serve God on the mission field. Nothing about that vocation seemed appealing to me, nor did the yearly short-term missions trips the college hosted, when vanloads of students travelled to Mexico or flew to other far-away locales to offer children a week of Vacation Bible School, or to build an outdoor baño."


Reckoning With “Other Lies”: A Review Of “Everything Happens For A Reason”, Melanie Springer Mock Jun 2018

Reckoning With “Other Lies”: A Review Of “Everything Happens For A Reason”, Melanie Springer Mock

Faculty Publications - Department of English

Excerpt: "Everything Happens For a Reason and Other Lies I’ve Loved narrates the aftermath of Bowler’s diagnosis, reflecting on what it means to live well despite the specter of death. The memoir, by turns funny, thoughtful, meditative, and sobering, asks important questions about how we understand God in the midst of suffering and pain, especially when those facile mythologies we often turn to—everything happens for a reason, it’s all part of God’s plan, God is teaching me something—provide insufficient comfort for those who are hurting."


The Presentation Of Postmodern Sexuality In Short Fiction, Allie J. Kapus May 2018

The Presentation Of Postmodern Sexuality In Short Fiction, Allie J. Kapus

Senior Honors Theses

Shifting norms in twentieth century western society, coupled with emerging postmodern thought in the 1960s, radically changed the ways in which people viewed sexuality, gender roles, and the institutions of marriage and the family. The literature of the postmodern era, namely short fiction, also reflects such ideological shifts. Literature is a powerful communicator of the human condition as well as a crucial means for reflecting the customs, beliefs, and norms of a society at the time of its writing. Such evolving differences as were occurring in the realm of sexuality came to be represented in postmodern literature. This thesis aims …


The Limitations Of Welcome: An Interview With Amy Jacober, Melanie Springer Mock Apr 2018

The Limitations Of Welcome: An Interview With Amy Jacober, Melanie Springer Mock

Faculty Publications - Department of English

Excerpt: "Amy Jacober remembers well the anger she felt when, in her early 20s, she saw a first-grade girl get kicked out of her church’s youth choir. The girl, a daughter of close friends, had Down syndrome, and the choir’s director decided since there was no one to help the child navigate her time in choir, she would be banned from participating."


The Fluid Pastoral: African American Spiritual Waterways In The Urban Landscapes Of Harlem Renaissance Poetry, Maren E. Loveland Apr 2018

The Fluid Pastoral: African American Spiritual Waterways In The Urban Landscapes Of Harlem Renaissance Poetry, Maren E. Loveland

Criterion: A Journal of Literary Criticism

In 1921 Langston Hughes penned, “My soul has grown deep like the rivers” in his poem “The Negro Speaks of Rivers” (Hughes 1254). Weaving the profound pain of the African American experience with the symbolism of the primordial river, Hughes recognized the inherent power of water as a means of spiritual communication and religious significance. Departing from the traditional interpretation of the American pastoral as typified by white poets such as Robert Frost and Walt Whitman, the African American poets emerging from the Harlem Renaissance established a more nuanced pastoral landscape embedded within urban cultures, utilizing water in particular as …


Finding The Intersections: A Review Of “This Child Of Faith”, Melanie Springer Mock Feb 2018

Finding The Intersections: A Review Of “This Child Of Faith”, Melanie Springer Mock

Faculty Publications - Department of English

Excerpt: "Sophfronia Scott and her son, Tain Gregory, have a compelling story to tell. In December 2012, Tain was a thirdgrader at Sandy Hook Elementary, the school that became synonymous with the tragedy of school shootings when 20 first-grade children and six adult staff members were killed at Sandy Hook in a massacre that took only moments. Tain’s friend, Ben, was among those killed, as was the school’s principal, a woman who had only months earlier warmly welcomed Tain to his new school. Sophfronia and Tain tell their story in the book This Child of Faith: Raising a Spiritual Child …


The Thin Blue Line Of Theodicy: Flannery O’Connor, Teilhard De Chardin, And Competitions Between Good/Good And Evil/Evil, Sue Whatley Jan 2018

The Thin Blue Line Of Theodicy: Flannery O’Connor, Teilhard De Chardin, And Competitions Between Good/Good And Evil/Evil, Sue Whatley

Faculty Publications

This essay explores the concept of theodicy in Flannery O’Connor’s works of fiction. O’Connor’s fiction complicates the subjects of good and evil, moving the reader through what seem to be competitions not only between good and evil, but also between actions of good and actions of evil. Characters align themselves with one force, then another, in a constantly fluctuating system, and there is no traditional pattern of Christian warfare that we would expect orthodox Catholic writing to produce. Sometimes, evil brings about the resolution of the narratives, and sometimes actions of good fail to redeem. It is only through the …


Book Review: I’M Still Here: Black Dignity In A World Made For Whiteness, Melanie Springer Mock Jan 2018

Book Review: I’M Still Here: Black Dignity In A World Made For Whiteness, Melanie Springer Mock

Faculty Publications - Department of English

Excerpt: "As a Christian feminist and progressive, I spend a lot of time patting myself on the back, believing other people might be racist or sexist or otherwise close-minded, but certainly not me. It’s easy for me to assert my bona fides. I seek to be inclusive in my language and in my actions; I champion diversity in the classes I teach; I have two teenage boys who are not white and with whom I’m carefully navigating an educational experience that has not been wholly positive, given their place in a majority white school."


Book Review: Fat And Faithful: Learning To Love Our Bodies, Our Neighbors, And Ourselves, Melanie Springer Mock Jan 2018

Book Review: Fat And Faithful: Learning To Love Our Bodies, Our Neighbors, And Ourselves, Melanie Springer Mock

Faculty Publications - Department of English

Excerpt: "Patterson is the former president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, fired in May because of his misogynistic comments and mishandling of sexual abuse claims. He chose in his return to preaching last week to question the legitimacy of the #MeToo movement, and apparently thought the pulpit was the best place to body-shame women, in particular those who are fat. In a sermon during a Christian revival, Patterson described a woman who “filled the door,” made a joke about the baptistery and her weight, and said that she could play linebacker for an NFL team.

The audience, there ostensibly …


What Do You Give To A God Who Has Everything? "In The Bleak Mid-Winter", Leslie A. Engelson Dec 2017

What Do You Give To A God Who Has Everything? "In The Bleak Mid-Winter", Leslie A. Engelson

Leslie Engelson

A discussion of Christina Rosetti and her poem "A Christmas Carol". A famous musical setting of this poem is by Gustav Holst and is where the title "In the Bleak Mid-Winter originated. Another setting, by Harold Darke is sung and broadcast every Christmas by the Kings College Choir at Cambridge. This essay also includes a personal account of the author's experience with the poem and it's meaning to her. The full text of the poem as well as the Holst version of the carol is also included.