It's amazing how many good Christian resources you can find on the web these days. One site that I've been looking into for quite a while is bibleserver.com, a cooperation of different bible societies, which allows you to browse a number of different modern translations online. Now, most of these translations, I already have in my BibleWorks, where they can be used a lot more comfortably. The most important ones, I even have on my palm, which I always carry in my pocket. But then again, some I don't have and I didn't even know they existed in a digital form anywhere.
There's something to be said about the internet's little hints on how to save valuable time in your daily household tasks. Now, I don't know how much time you spend folding your t-shirts to put them away, but, anyhow, here's how you do it in two seconds.
As a coffee fan, this just had to be interesting to me: Achieve-IT has an interesting story on Achieve-IT!: How to Take A Caffeine Nap.
Test for compliance to standard X or proposal Y are common-place in IT and I've gotten quite used to them. I just didn't know you could test yourself for standards compliance.
Svensvensven has created a questionnaire on QuizFarm.com where you can verify your compatibility with the creed of Chalcedon, one of the fundamental documents of Christianity, writted in 451 CE.
I was glad to see I'm not a heretic! :-)
HT to Kyle of neumatikos.org
Attempting to place Pentecostalism in the Christian (or even just the Evangelical) mainstream can -- let's admit this -- be a curious task. But even more so, if the one's doing so are some rather clueless editors on Wikipedia. Rich Tatum has a great article on Wikipedia, cult status, and the Assemblies of God.
Recent Comments