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10 Pious People Who Defy Common Religious Stereotypes

10 Pious People Who Defy Common Religious Stereotypes Stereotypes have a nifty way of condensing oceanic amounts of information about people into neat, bite-sized parcels. They’re also quintessential conduits for discrimination and cultural misrepresentation. Few domains exemplify this danger better than religion. Sweeping generalizations about what people of differing faiths are like can create the impression that a Christian, Muslim, or Jew, for example, can be reductively summed up by traits ranging from shrewd huckster to misogynistic terrorist. And while everyone can point to a real-life exemplar that bears some semblance to a crude generalization, to every overly broad rule there are glaring exceptions. For example . . . 

Seats at the Table

Mark Mabry There aren t many who can make a career in classical music, much less while also suffering from a congenital heart disorder. But thus it has been for Salt Lake City native and now Nashville resident Paul Cardall, who while living 30 years with half a heart released 22 studio albums of original compositions and hymn renditions before receiving a heart transplant in 2009. I released a record while I waited for my heart, because what am I supposed to do, sit around and weep? he says of that time. Now, the well-established Cardall is coming out with a new album unlike any before. My heart has been healed, so I want to use music to heal other hearts, he says of his old music, and his new. With changes in his own faith perspective by way of leaving the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, on top of still getting asked constantly about how one can live with congenital hear

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