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Book Review: Spiritual Warfare: A Biblical and Balanced Perspective


Reformed Baptist Fellowship's avatarReformed Baptist Fellowship

Biblical Warfare

In the subtitle of their book on spiritual warfare, authors Brian Borgman and Rob Ventura promise to provide a perspective that is both biblical and balanced. The prospect of a balanced approach is immediately appealing, given widespread excesses in various branches of modern Christianity on the subject; and I thought it a successful endeavor in that regard. But what I found more striking, when I dived in, was the “biblical” part of the equation. I say this by way of confession: spiritual warfare is not among my list of favorite theological topics to think about. In fact, whether it’s because of the very common imbalanced perspectives a modern reader is apt to encounter, or whether it’s simply because I have no military experience, and so the analogy of warfare is a little foreign to my own history, I have to admit a little distaste for the subject. However, by the…

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Kobo’s porn purge hits many innocent bystanders


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In furor over rape and incest porn, ebook retailers aren’t the only ones to blame


Laura Hazard Owen's avatarGigaom

The U.K. media is in an uproar over rape and incest porn ebooks that popped up in searches on sites like Amazon (s AMZN) and Kobo. In response, WHSmith took down its entire site over the weekend, and on Tuesday Kobo — which powers ebook sales through WHSmith’s site — announced that it is pulling all self-published books from its own U.K. website while it addresses the problem.

The ebooks in question have titles like Daddy Daughter Sex Stories and Daddy’s Birthday Gang Bang.

The saga started last week, when U.K. tech site The Kernel published a post entitled “How Amazon Cashes In on Kindle Filth.” Various U.K. newspapers, including the Daily Mail and Guardian, picked up the story. In the following days, The Kernel has continued to pump out posts on the issue, with titles like “An epidemic of filth” and the link bait-y “The…

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Article: Flipboard and the Like – Scams?


The link below is to an article that questions whether Flipboard and similar sites are actually scams on publishers.

For more visit:
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/–100456