Top Posts & Pages
- 70 AD -- One Of History's Most Important Dates
- The Pope & The General
- Occupy Till I Come -- What The Church Can Learn From Occupy Wall Street
- How To Regularly Experience The Inner Flow Of The Holy Spirit
- Top 10 Ways To Quench The Holy Spirit
- Where Did Sojourner Truth Get Her Name?
- 9 Reasons I'm Convinced That Jesus Christ Is Alive And Present In Our World
- A Nashville Dream Fulfilled After 121 Years
- Sermon-Free Church Rocked The Early Methodists
- I Don't Like Shakespeare (Neither Did Tolstoy)
- About
- 17 Benefits Of Prayer Walking
The Salvation Army Berry Street Worship Center
Follow me on Twitter
- My safe room is being in the presence of the living God. 11 hours ago
- Priesthood of the Believer Church (Church Meetings Without One, Dominate Leader) nblo.gs/Lp0V3 1 day ago
-
Recent Posts
Tags
37207 amazing Berry Street Berry Street Worship Center Bible book book of Acts Christ Christianity Christians church experience faith freedom God heart history Holy Spirit Jesus Jesus Christ life living love mind Nashville New Testament organic church people power prayer quotations quote read reading religion revival society spiritual Sunday Sundays Tennessee The Salvation Army think words worldArchives
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
Category Archives: Civil Rights
Should People Have The Right To Make Other People Say Wrong Is Right?
Nobody should have the right to make other people say that wrong is right? Everybody should have the right to believe in right and wrong and to freely express their belief. However, the right to believe in right and wrong has been … Continue reading
Posted in alternative lifestyle, ancient history, boundaries, C.S. Lewis, Civil Rights, freedom, history, human rights, lifestyles, meaning, morality, morals, popular culture, Quotations, Quotes, self-esteem, self-image, Uncategorized, values
Tagged accepted, ancient, appluaded, approved, approving, Babylonians, behaviors, belief, believe, C.S. Lewis, Chinese, common moral standards, compare, conform, conscience, contemporary, cultures, each other, Egyptians, everybody, express, fair, follow, freely express, from, Greeks, Hindus, history, however, human, humanity, in the world, insist, intolerant, is this fair, judgmental, labeled, like, maintain, media, merely, moral standards, morally worng, most, no right, nobody, not satisfied, nowadays, other, own, people, pressure, push, quotation, right and wrong, Romans, say, shared, should, silence, sincerely, society, some years, stand up, standards, storng belief, take the trouble, teaching, tells you, the right, the right to believe, to make, today, under attack, violate, wrong is right, you
3 Comments
Ralph Abernathy Said What!
Famous Civil Rights leader, Ralph Abernathy, was a campus speaker when I was in college at The University of Tennessee Martin. In a packed ball room he told about his experiences in the Civil Rights Movement and about working with … Continue reading
Posted in apologists, biography, black history, Civil Rights, freedom, God, history, human rights, Jesus Christ, lifestyles, popular culture, prejudice, Quotations, Quotes, race, religion, social justice, speech making, Uncategorized, What is church?
Tagged altar, angry, answer, ball room, Baptist church, better, black-church, boldly, boy, campus, changed, Christianity, civil rights, college, curious, decalred, did, dismissed, Dr., excited, experiences, famous, father's, firmly, five, guy, hand up, human, inspired, Jesus Christ, Jr., know, leader, lecture, life, love, Martin, Martin Luther King, met, minuters, morning, movement, never been the same, paused, people, picked, preaching, pulpit, questions, Ralph Abernathy, Rev., rushed up, said, Savior, speaker, special, startled, stated, style, Sunday, testimony, topic, true, University of Tennessee, Why, young
2 Comments
Freedom Riders And Church Diversity
I watched a two-hour documentary on PBS about the Freedom Riders, a group of young people (mostly college students) both black and white (committed to non-violence), who rode public busses together into the Deep South (in 1961) to challenge state segregation laws that … Continue reading
Posted in abolitionists, Bible, biography, black history, Civil Rights, Creator, freedom, God, history, house church, human rights, lifestyles, Nashville, organic church, prejudice, Quotations, Quotes, racism, religion, self-help, social justice, Supreme Court, Uncategorized, What is church?
Tagged 1961, Alabama, America, angry, Anniston, assistant, Attorne General, beat, Bible, Biblical, Birming jail, Birmingham, black and white, bus terminal, bus terminals, busses, challenge, choking, church, church diversity, churches, Civil Rights Movement, class, coach, college students, commitment, committed, country, courage, cross racial lines, cultural, DC, Deep South, Diane Nashv, diversity, documentary, end segregation, ethnicity, every kindred and every tribe, explode, federal government, fire bomb, Fisk University, freedom, freedom riders, God, group, hate-filled, heaven, heroism, idea, interstate commerce, into, Jackson, John Seigenthaler, kick, last will and testament, leadership, left, local police, Lord, Mississippi, mixed, movie, moving, multi-culturial, multi-racial, multiethnic, Nashville, New Orleans, non-violence, notorious, PBS, protect, public busses, race, racial reconciliation, required, Return of the Titans, Robert Kennedy, rode, ruled unconstitutional, school, segregation laws, state, states, Supreme Court, surrounded, team, tears, town, Trevecca Nazarene University, two-hour, US, victory, violence, Washington, white mob, worst prison
1 Comment
How A White Guy Experienced Jim Crow As A Black Guy
Black Like Me is the story of how John Howard Griffin, a white man, colored his skin black and traveled around the segregated, Jim Crow South in the late 1950s. The cover reads: “What was it like, really like to be … Continue reading
Posted in American Literature, biography, black history, Black Like Me, Civil Rights, freedom, human rights, John Howard Griffin, lifestyles, popular culture, race, racism, self-help, social justice, The Declaration of Independence, Uncategorized
Tagged 10 million, 1950s, all men are created equal, amazed, America, American, American history, black, Black Like Me, book, called names, changed, charged, citizens, Civil Rights Movement, colored, commitment, continually, copies, country, courageous, cover, darkened, Declaration of Independence, Deep South, despised, experienced, forgotten, great, guy, hateful looks, hero, hidden, His, human rights, injustice, inspired, Jim Crow, John Howard Griffin, justice, killed, late, laws, leader, learn, life, like, love, mistreated, night, novelist, persecution, personal, personally, played down, prominent, protesting, racial, racism, report, risk, segregated, segregation, set out to discover, side, skin, South, startling, story, traveled, up, white
Leave a comment