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Devout Christians: Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good People? : ThyBlackMan com

Personally, natural disasters aren’t necessarily created by God or the Devil either. I believe that God is capable, but I don’t believe He is responsible for every natural disaster in history. Hurricanes strike Christian’s houses as much as they do atheist’s houses. Christians died in the World trade center as much as atheists did. Christians are injured in car accidents as much as atheists are.

The Best of the Book Nook: Remembering Rabbi Harold Kushner The Lord Is My Shepherd: Healing Wisdom of the Twenty-third Psalm by Rabbi Harold Kushner

The Best of the Book Nook: Remembering Rabbi Harold Kushner The Lord Is My Shepherd: Healing Wisdom of the Twenty-third Psalm by Rabbi Harold Kushner
wyso.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wyso.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Wise Temple announces summer sessions for Tuesdays with Torah

  Tuesdays with Torah is one of Isaac M. Wise Temple’s mainstays of the Adult Learning Program. It’s always on Tuesday, always at noon, always at Wise Center and always about Torah. It gives attendees an opportunity to take a middle-of-the-day break to feed their minds. Fascinating content led by expert Wise Temple rabbis and rabbinic interns provides a deeper understanding of the Torah and its meaning to Jewish lives. Wise Temple is pleased to announce that beginning in June (and weather permitting), in-person classes will be held outdoors and the classes will also be viewable simultaneously online for those who cannot attend in person. If weather prohibits an outdoor, in-person class, attendees can still attend online.

COVID-19 inspires new courses that push students to think themselves out of the pandemic

COVID-19 inspires new courses that push students to think themselves out of the pandemic COVID-19 inspires new courses that push students to think themselves out of the pandemic Millie Felder / Senior Staff Photographer Students used to wander the halls of Hamilton Hall to find the offices for their classes within the Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race, but now, they click on a Zoom link for their Columbia COVID-19 courses. By Bella Druckman | January 19, 2021, 11:09 AM With a quick click of the “Leave Meeting” button, students return to the monotonous rhythm of life in a pandemic. Largely empty libraries are void of the whispers that used to echo off the walls. The silence is deafening.

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