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120 illustrations — Vivid stories and real-world analogies for sermon use
The James Webb Space Telescope peers thirteen billion years into the past, capturing light from the earliest galaxies. When it launched from French Guiana in...
In the year 203 AD, a young noblewoman named Vibia Perpetua sat in a Carthaginian prison, nursing her infant son and writing in her journal....
Maria Vargas works the overnight shift in the laundry facility at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. She folds fitted sheets with mechanical precision, sorts surgical...
During the Nazi occupation of Holland, Corrie ten Boom and her family hid Jewish refugees in a secret room behind a false wall in their...
In 1935, Japanese physicist Hideki Yukawa proposed something astonishing: buried inside the nucleus of every atom is a force so powerful it defies everything we...
On a clear night in the high desert of New Mexico, you can see roughly five thousand stars. But there is one star you never...
In 1932, physicist James Chadwick discovered the neutron, and with it came a baffling question that kept nuclear scientists awake at night. Protons packed tightly...
In 1845, Michael Faraday stood in his basement laboratory at the Royal Institution in London, passing a beam of light through a block of heavy...
Beneath the streets of Rome, early Christians carved miles of tunnels — the catacombs — where they buried their dead and gathered in secret during...
Last spring, Maria Gutierrez finally tackled the hall closet in her Chicago bungalow. For years she had shoved old coats, stained shirts, and shoes that...
In 2019, Maria Gonzalez planted a small community garden behind her church in Tucson, Arizona. She had no budget, just a patch of sun-scorched dirt...
In 1882, Antoni Gaudí took over construction of the Sagrada Família in Barcelona. What makes the basilica astonishing is not just its beauty but its...
On a Thursday evening in 1951, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra sat tuning in Orchestra Hall. Oboes bleated against cellos. Timpani rumbled beneath shrieking violins. A...
In 1845, Michael Faraday stood before the Royal Institution in London and demonstrated something no one had ever seen — because it could not be...
In 1845, Michael Faraday stood in his basement laboratory at the Royal Institution in London, demonstrating something no one had ever seen. By rotating a...
Every year, the U.S. Marshals Service relocates hundreds of people through witness protection. Their old identities are erased — bank accounts closed, records sealed, obituaries...
In 2015, structural engineers discovered that the Millennium Tower in San Francisco was sinking — tilting inches per year into the soft soil beneath it....
When the National Socialist movement swept through Germany in the 1930s, it captivated an entire nation with its promise of renewal and power. Universities, civic...
In the 1970s, astronomer Vera Rubin pointed her telescope at the Andromeda galaxy and discovered something that should have been impossible. The stars at the...
As the autumn sun dips low in the sky, a farmer stands in the midst of a golden field, the air rich with the scent of ripened grain. Each stalk, heavy with its bounty, tells a story of hard work...
Stand in Rome and look up at the Colosseum's ancient arches — still standing after two thousand years of earthquakes, invasions, and relentless tourism. Engineers...
On any winter morning in Vermont's Green Mountains, billions of snowflakes drift silently to earth, each one an intricate crystal of breathtaking symmetry. But here...
Michael Faraday, the son of a London blacksmith, became one of the greatest scientists of the nineteenth century. In the 1830s and 1840s, working in...
Imagine a small fishing village along the rugged coast, where generations have depended on the sea for sustenance. One stormy night, the waves crashed violently against the cliffs, and the fishermen gathered in the local church, their faces etched with...
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