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Jefferson Bethke. Why I Hate Religion, But Love Jesus is a viral video created by Christian speaker Jefferson Bethke, who uploaded his work that rose him to fame onto YouTube and GodTube, under the screenname bball1989. [1] [2] The video has thus far received more than 34 million views. [3]
By 2011 the archdiocese listed for sale the church, rectory, and parish hall. [6] New Orleans [6] Ave Maria Chapel Dedicated October 21, 1912. Destroyed on September 29, 1915 by weather event . [4] Lakeview, New Orleans [4] 1915 [4] Blessed Sacrament Final church service was August 17, 2008. St. Joan of Arc Church in Carrollton took ...
Recently information on a Jefferson Bethke was added to the article. I removed it because it is more to do with Bethke than the Church. It also seems somewhat of an advertisement for some video. If this is going to be added, there should be some discussion here justifying how it helps the article overall.
What one nurse learned about humanity amidst the Ebola epidemic
Jefferson never joined a Unitarian church, but he did attend Unitarian services while in Philadelphia. His friend Joseph Priestley was the minister. Jefferson corresponded on religious matters with numerous Unitarians, among them Jared Sparks (Unitarian minister, historian and president of Harvard), Thomas Cooper, Benjamin Waterhouse and John ...
Having grown up Catholic in small-town Louisiana, Monique Maddox is devoutly and deliberately faithful, visibly involved in her church. When her time comes, she said, she doesn’t want the priest ...
Bethke criticizes this arrangement on basis that it starts with sin, whereas the Bible starts with God's good creation. [7] Other writers object to using black at all, arguing that the color scheme reinforces racist associations of the color "black" with "sin".
Court rules Metropolitan AME Church owns Proud Boys' trademark after the group fails to pay $2.8 million judgment.