WASHINGTON, DC -- On the plaza of the U.S. Capitol this week, the entire Bible is being read aloud non-stop from a podium facing west across the nation. The 27th annual U.S. Capitol Bible Reading ...
Children play in the foam at a past Fall Festival at The Fountain. This year’s event takes place Sept. 14 at the church, 797 W. Brookville Road, Fountaintown. FOUNTAINTOWN — The Fountain plans a free ...
Trey Oetjen, associate pastor at Heather Hills Baptist Church in Cumberland, reads a verse from Ecclesiastes during a corporate Bible reading time Monday at the church. Marsha Schultheis would read ...
CAMDEN, S.C. — In the heart of downtown Camden, you can hear the echoes of people with a deep calling to share their faith by publicly reading the Holy Bible. “We’re reading from Genesis 1 to the end ...
Superior's Central Assembly of God is ringing in the New Year with a marathon Bible-reading session. Over three days, members will read the entire Bible aloud from the pulpit into a live microphone.
College of the Ozarks will be part of a national cover-to-cover Bible-reading event just before the 250th birthday of the United States.
(RNS) — While yearlong plans taking readers from Genesis to Revelation have been around for years, podcasts have more recently become a popular way for listeners to keep up with or better understand a ...
COLUMBIA, SC (WIS) - South Carolina Gamecocks backup quarterback Dylan Thompson may be well known for helping the team beat the Clemson Tigers and the Michigan Wolverines this year, but he's hoping to ...
Two Hemet men charged with unlawful protest for reading the Bible aloud outside a state government building were acquitted by a judge Tuesday. Riverside County Superior Court Judge Timothy Freer ruled ...
A scholar who translated the New Testament into English is being commemorated in Gloucestershire with a 24-hour marathon reading of his bible. William Tyndale, who was born in the county in 1494, ...
This post is in partnership with the Harry Ransom Center at The University of Texas at Austin. A version of the article below was originally published on the Ransom Center’s Cultural Compass blog.