Welcome!
This blog grows out of my conviction that every aspect of our lives is sacred and is to be nurtured and celebrated as a good gift of God. Most of the posts will be the sorts of things you would expect from a historian and worldview teacher, but some are likely to be a bit surprising. Since God created all things good, including all aspects of human life, everything is interesting and important from the perspective of a biblical worldview. Everything under the Sun and under Heaven is thus fair game here. I hope you find it interesting and enjoyable.
Monday, March 11, 2013
Pandita Ramabai
My next article in the series "Christians who Changed their World" is up. This set focuses on non-Western Christians and women. Today's article features both: Pandita Ramabai was a remarkable woman who was an acknowledged Hindu scholar, but who was dissatisfied by the attitudes toward women she found within Hinduism. This led her to Christianity. She then became a major promoter of women's rights and women's education in India.
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Coming Soon: Newsletter
I will begin publishing a monthly newsletter in the very near future. It will include new content, article links, upcoming events, etc., related to my work in churches and in parachurch organizations. If you would like to receive the newsletter, you can subscribe using the link on the right side of this page. Thanks!
Monday, February 25, 2013
Chiune Sugihara
This past Saturday, USA Network put on “Schindler’s List” without commercial interruption. My newest article features Chiune Sugihara, a Japanese consular official who has been described as the Japanese Schindler—only Sugihara saved many thousands more than Schindler and was not motivated by exploiting their labor as Schindler had been in the beginning. For me personally, this is one of the most moving stories I have recounted. I hope you enjoy it.
Monday, February 18, 2013
Tsuda Umeka
The next article in the series Christians who Changed their World is up. We're focusing on non-Western Christians and women for now, and this time we have one who fits both categories, Tsuda Umeka.
Monday, January 28, 2013
New article at the Colson Center
My new article in the series
“Christians who Changed their World” is up at the Colson Center . We’re continuing with non-Western
Christians with Nitobe
Inazo. Also, if you haven’t done so already, please see my updated website
at www.esquareinch.com.
Monday, January 21, 2013
New article on Niijima Jo, in Christians who Changed their World
I'm a bit late in posting this, but I have rebooted the series on Christians who Changed their World at the Colson Center. This set will focus on non-Western Christians and women. The first, published last week, was on Niijima Jo, also known in America as Joseph Hardy Neesima.
After the article came out, I received an e-mail from a friend about Niijima. With his permission, I am copying it here:
Thank you so much for the latest article. My wife is fromJapan , so after
I read it we talked for a while. Niijima Jo is fairly well known in
Japan . Even more well-known is one
of his teachers from Amherst, William Smith Clark, who was asked to start an
agricultural school in Hokkaido. He spent 8 months there setting up the
school. As a result of his work, not only was a nationally known school created
(which exists today as Hokkaido University ), but several dozen students
came to Christ, some of whom were influential as well.
My wife read up on Niijima Jo and his wife tonight on the Japanese section of Wikipedia, and apparently she was quite a woman as well. She was teaching at a girl's school when they first met, and she was well known for demanding that the governor support the school financially, to the point of going to his house, apparently uninvited, to talk to him about it, which was considered extremely inappropriate for a woman at the time. Jo had told one of his mentors that he wanted a woman who would not blindly follow her husbands lead, and the man immediately told him about her.
Also of note is the fact that Jo started a school for girls a year after he started his first boy's school. Educating women was not seen as a worthwhile endeavour inJapan at the time, and this choice
says a lot about his character.
Thank you again for the article. It brightened our day!
He also pointed me to a book on Neesima's life and letters available free through Google books.
Thank you, Jason!
After the article came out, I received an e-mail from a friend about Niijima. With his permission, I am copying it here:
Thank you so much for the latest article. My wife is from
My wife read up on Niijima Jo and his wife tonight on the Japanese section of Wikipedia, and apparently she was quite a woman as well. She was teaching at a girl's school when they first met, and she was well known for demanding that the governor support the school financially, to the point of going to his house, apparently uninvited, to talk to him about it, which was considered extremely inappropriate for a woman at the time. Jo had told one of his mentors that he wanted a woman who would not blindly follow her husbands lead, and the man immediately told him about her.
Also of note is the fact that Jo started a school for girls a year after he started his first boy's school. Educating women was not seen as a worthwhile endeavour in
Thank you again for the article. It brightened our day!
He also pointed me to a book on Neesima's life and letters available free through Google books.
Thank you, Jason!
Friday, January 11, 2013
Every Square Inch Webpage
I've got a webpage up for my teaching and worldview ministry. It's at esquareinch.com, short for "Every Square Inch." The name comes from a quotation from Abraham Kuyper: Oh, no single piece of our mental world is to be hermetically sealed off from the rest, and there is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: “Mine!" I'll be starting a 501(c)3 soon for Every Square Inch Ministries, but in the meantime, check out the site. It's got a bio, links to my books, supporting materials for Portals, links to audio and video resources and articles, and an event calendar, with more material being put up regularly. Check it out!
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