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Ray Oliver Dreher Jr. [a] (born February 14, 1967), known as Rod Dreher, [1] is an American conservative writer and editor living in Hungary. [2] He was a columnist with The American Conservative for 12 years, ending in March 2023, and remains an editor-at-large there. [ 3 ]
The Benedict Option: A Strategy for Christians in a Post-Christian Nation is a 2017 book by writer and conservative commentator Rod Dreher on Christianity and Western culture. Drawing very loosely on the writings of early Christian monk Benedict of Nursia and the philosophy of Alasdair MacIntyre , [ 1 ] Dreher argues for the formation of ...
Rod Dreher - Dallas Morning News columnist, "Crunchy Con" blog; Mike Emanuel - Fox News White House Correspondent; Terry Mattingly - syndicated columnist; Natalie Jacobson - born Natalie Salatich, television news anchor, WCVB - Boston - Serbian Orthodox; Serge Schmemann - International Herald Tribune writer/editor
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Rod Dreher: writer and blogger; raised Methodist before converting to Catholicism; converted to Eastern Orthodoxy in 2006 [450] Henry Ford II: converted by Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen; twice divorced; later ceased practicing the faith, although he received the last rites of the Catholic Church on his deathbed; his funeral was Episcopalian
Writer Damon Linker suggested in a 2009 blog post that moralistic therapeutic deism, while theologically "insipid", is "perfectly suited to serve as the civil religion of the highly differentiated twenty-first century United States", [20] a contention that was disputed by Collin Hansen, [3] Ross Douthat, [21] and Rod Dreher. [22]
Tom Hanks.. Rod Dreher, writer who converted to Catholicism and then to Eastern Orthodoxy; H. Tristram Engelhardt Jr., philosopher and bioethicist Tom Hanks, actor, was involved with Catholicism, Mormonism and the Nazarens as a child, and was a "Bible-toting evangelical teenager", and converted to the Greek Orthodox Church after marrying his second wife.
Developed as an effort among evangelical, charismatic and Pentecostal, and liturgical Christians and denominations blending their forms of worship, [3] the movement has been defined for its predominant use of the Anglican tradition's Book of Common Prayer; use from additional liturgical sources common to Lutheranism, Eastern Orthodoxy, and ...