Category Archives: Christian Carnival

Carnival Highlights

This week’s Christian Carnival is up at Pseudo-Polymath. These are the posts that really stuck out to me:

  • Are you treating the Bible like Cinderella?

    As I watched it, it occurred to me that, as evangelicals, the Bible may be our Cinderella. We have opened our homes to her, but we have relegated her to washing our dishes and scrubbing our floors. We have used her to make our lives theologically comfortable; and she, never one to complain, has remained faithful. But we have been blind to here true loveliness and oblivious to the possibility that others might see real beauty in her. As the series clearly showed, our Cinderella has been to the ball, and the glass slipper has been found. The king’s men are now knocking at our door, searching for the beauty they have seen in “our” Scriptures.

  • Sign of the Cross – there’s some really good discussion in the comments section.

Christian Carnival CLXXII

This week’s carnival is up at Crossroads. Highlights:

I don’t usually post when I disagree with an article in the Carnival, but I have to say something about Defense of Public Schools???  Elizabeth takes a look at five “common” Christian defenses of Public Schools and essentially tears them apart. Her stance in the end is that Christians shouldn’t send their kids to public school because “it’s hard for me to understand sending children to spend at least six hours a day in the midst of temptation.”

My early childhood is somewhat fuzzy. I’m not positive of how the timeline went, but I do know that I went to a Christian school for half of my kindergarten year and was homeschooled for the rest of it because my parents couldn’t afford the private school. I also remember that while my class was learning how to read “See spot run,” I was reading Little House on the Prairie. My mom homeschooled me half of kindergarten and all of first and second grades. Curriculum wise, I was six years old and had completed the second grade. My parents opted to send me to public school after that, and because of my age they placed me in the first grade. Obviously I was bored to tears because I was ahead of what they were doing. So they moved me into a combination first and second grade class. Technically, I was in the first grade, but they had me doing second grade work (still bored). The next year, they put me in 3rd grade. My transcripts show that I skipped the second grade. During that school year, I ended up back in Christian school. I don’t remember anything I was taught that year except that I was paddled for lying to the teacher, when in reality it was a miscommunication. I also remember that the pastor/principal of that church/school told my dad that he should do a better job of controlling my mom and that when they got divorced that year he told my dad he was going to hell for not keeping his family together.

That was the last time I went to Christian school.

I graduated from public school, more educated than friends I had who did go to a Christian school. My faith was strong and intact. And I have every intention of sending my own children to public school. If parents aren’t teaching their kids in the home how to keep their faith strong in the midst of adversity, then the problems they have run deeper than whether or not to send their kids to public school.

Highlights from Christian Carnival 171

This week’s Christian Carnival is up at Light Along the Journey. This week’s highlights:

Highlights from the Carnival

Lillie writes of the similarities between abortion and slavery.

Abortion is justified by saying the aborted fetus is not a human being, just a blob of tissue. Slavery was justified was saying that the slave was not a human being, but something less than human.

Dana writes about cleaving to that which is evil.

Katy writes about her dad and a decision.

Christian Carnival CLXX (170)

This week’s Christian Carnival is up at Brain Cramps for God. Because of the recent transitions we’ve gone through, John themed this week’s carnival around informing everyone of the new changes. I’ll recap those here.

Google Group for Notification of Members

We have set up a new Google Group – Christian Carnival II – as a notification list to tell folks who the next host is, where to send the submissions, and when the Carnival is posted. Even if you on not own a blog (or never intend to submit to the Carnival), but you would like to be notified of where and when the Carnival will be posted, please go and join this group. Incidentally, there is no reason to join if you pick the “no email” option: you do not have to be a member to read the notices at the site; and the only purpose of the Google Group is email notification about the Carnival.

All messages to the group are moderated except for those of the moderators; and the current host. Incidentally, there are five “owners” of this group with equal access – we will not lose access to it if one person is no longer available. Once you join, you will be able to see how to send messages to the group (which, again, will be moderated)

Submission Gmail

There is also one email to send all submissions for the Carnival to. The moderators will make sure the forwarding is flipped when it should be flipped. Again, there are five moderators to make sure these tasks are done.

So, again, send all submissions to the Christian Carnival to the gmail email.

Christian Carnival Forum

One of the blessings of the current situation is that Nick Queen, the original founder of the Christian Carnival, is actively involved again – and came up (with help from others) with the Christian Carnival Forum. It is a bulletin board type site, and it allows the scope of the Carnival to expand greatly – the ideas for its use are just beginning to be explored. Go visit, look around at some of the discussions, and give your ideas.

Practically, it is serving three real functions right now:

  1. A place to discuss how, why, and when we are going to use these new tools
  2. A place to volunteer to host a future Carnival
  3. A place to link posts that will, or could, not, for one reason or other, be submitted to the Carnival – but would be of interest to Carnival readers

I am sure more uses are coming – how would you use it? To paraphrase an old TV show: “We have re-built it; and it is stronger than ever”.

One last new item is that we are back up and running on the Blog Carnival site. You can use the handy submission form and see a schedule of past (beginning with last week’s carnival) and future carnivals.

Trackposted to Pirate’s Cove, third world countyDumb Ox Daily News, Woman Honor Thyself, Conservative Cat, and Pursuing Holiness, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Christian Carnival 169

Welcome to the 169th Christian Carnival! There are some great posts this week. 

There were fewer submissions this week than last week, so I’ll keep this week’s Carnival open through Friday. That means that any post written prior to today may be submitted through Friday, April 27.

UPDATE: It turns out there were more submissions than I thought! Someone, somewhere, posted my email address as a gmail address, rather than yahoo. Luckily, I own the gmail address too, though I’ve never used it nor given it out, so the missing entries aren’t lost! My apologies for getting them added on so late.

On to the carnival!


    Trackposted to  Perri Nelson’s Website, Blog @ MoreWhat.com, third world county, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, basil’s blogLeaning Straight Up, The Bullwinkle BlogCORSARI D’ITALIA, Conservative Cat, Pursuing Holiness, and The Yankee Sailor, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

This Week’s Christian Carnival

Just a reminder that I’ll be hosting this week’s Christian Carnival. It’ll be up tomorrow! Send your submissions to me at praisingfool@yahoo.com

Spread the word, too! Submissions are way down, so everyone may not be aware that it’s been started back up.

Trackposted to Perri Nelson’s Website, third world county, The Random Yak, Adam’s Blog, basil’s blog, Blue Star Chronicles, Pirate’s CoveThe Amboy Times, Leaning Straight Up, Dumb Ox Daily News, Right Voices, Pursuing Holiness, Conservative Thoughts, Conservative Cat, and The Yankee Sailor, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Christian Carnival 168

Thanks to the efforts of Jeremy and Matt, Christian Carnival is up and running again. Dory has been out of contact for awhile, so no one knows what’s going on. Continue to pray for her.

This week’s Carnival is up at Matt’s Random Acts of Verbiage. There weren’t many submissions this week, but what was submitted is definitely worth reading. Matt’s also taking submissions from the last three weeks through Friday. It’s not too late to get in this week! Email him at Matt510@gmail.com

I’ll be hosting the Carnival next week (Wednesday, April 25), and you can send submissions to praisingfool@gmail.com anytime after Friday (anything before then should go to Matt so he can get them in this week).

Trackposted to Planck’s Constant, The Random Yak, Dumb Ox Daily News, Conservative Cat, Right Voices, and Conservative Thoughts, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Christian Carnival

This week’s Christian Carnival is up at Wittenberg Gate.

Highlights:

Christian Carnival CLXV

I haven’t participated in the Christian Carnival in several months for the same reasons that my posting was down over the last few months. Thankfully, diligent prayer and seeking has brought my heart back into a right attitude with God. So here’s this week’s Carnival (hosted at Pseudo-Polymath) and highlights:

  • Michael looks at Once Saved, Always Saved - “Sometimes I can go for 6 or 8 hours in a row without sinning, but then I wake up and have to get out of bed.”
  • Jeremy looks at whether the word “Bible” should be capitalized in Bible or bible?
  • Tom looks at The Beauty of Virtue - “…virtue is not unique to Christianity, it has a unique fit within the Christian faith.”
  • Matthew talks about Sanitizing Darwin - “Darwinism is not a religion, though it shares many of the same elements as religions.  It is an intellectual movement, and subject to…evolution.” 

Happy reading!