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Psalm 118:1-2
1Give thanks to Yahweh, for he is good, For his lovingkindness endures forever.
2Let Israel now say That his lovingkindness endures forever.
340 results found
In a small kitchen in Louisville, Kentucky, a woman named Grace Kimura keeps a handwritten letter pinned to her refrigerator with a magnet shaped like...
On August 5, 2010, the San José copper mine in Chile's Atacama Desert collapsed, sealing thirty-three miners seven hundred meters underground. Engineers studied the fractured...
In 1956, the judges evaluating entries for a new opera house in Sydney, Australia, had already sorted through most of the 233 submissions. Jørn Utzon's...
In the Saxon town of Eilenburg, Germany, the Thirty Years' War brought suffering that defied description. By 1637, plague and famine had claimed so many...
On the evening of November 9, 1989, Harald Jäger stood at the Bornholmer Strasse checkpoint in East Berlin, facing a crowd of thousands. For twenty-eight...
In 2014, a contractor demolishing an old church in Portland, Oregon, pulled a massive granite block from the foundation rubble. It was irregular, cracked along...
In October 1536, outside the walls of Vilvoorde Castle in Belgium, William Tyndale was led to a stake. His crime was translating the Bible into...
On a bitter December day in 1944, Corrie ten Boom walked out of Ravensbrück concentration camp clutching a discharge paper stamped with a clerical error....
In the 2014 World Cup, Tim Howard stood in goal for the United States against Belgium. No major European club had wanted him as a...
In the spring of 1741, George Frideric Handel was a ruined man. London's musical establishment had turned against him. Creditors circled. His operas played to...
In April 1737, George Frideric Handel collapsed in his London home, struck by what doctors believed was a stroke. His right arm was paralyzed. His...
In 2014, a young architect named Rafael Aranda stood in a forgotten quarry outside Olot, Spain, staring at volcanic basalt that local builders had dismissed...
William Tyndale spent his final days in a cold Belgian prison cell in 1536, convicted of heresy for the crime of translating Scripture into English....
For eleven months, Marcus Thompson's front door stayed locked from the outside. His wife Denise kept it that way — not out of superstition, but...
In 2015, a construction crew demolishing an old church in downtown Savannah, Georgia, pulled a massive granite block from the foundation and tossed it into...
In 1956, a relatively unknown Danish architect named Jørn Utzon submitted his design for a new opera house in Sydney, Australia. The panel of judges...
In 2009, engineers in rural Rwanda faced an impossible problem. The Nyabarongo River had swallowed every bridge the government tried to build during rainy season....
In 1847, a young Hungarian physician named Ignaz Semmelweis made a devastating observation at Vienna General Hospital. Women in the doctors' ward were dying of...
In October 1536, William Tyndale was led to a stake outside Brussels, strangled, and burned as a heretic. His crime was translating the Bible into...
In 2009, a construction crew in Pittsburgh demolished the old Civic Arena, and thousands of tons of structural steel sat in a salvage yard, tagged...
In 2019, city planners in Hamden, Connecticut, nearly demolished a crumbling granite wall along Eli Whitney Park. The stones were uneven, cracked, deemed unusable for...
In 1525, William Tyndale smuggled the first printed English New Testament out of Cologne in bales of cloth. The Bishop of London, Cuthbert Tunstall, bought...
On the evening of November 9, 1989, East German spokesman Günter Schabowski fumbled through a press conference and accidentally announced that border crossings were open...
In 1824, Adoniram Judson lay in chains on the floor of Ava Prison in Burma, his ankles lashed to a bamboo pole hoisted so high...