Welcome to The Weekly Town Crier. Welcome one, welcome all. Welcome tall welcome small. Browse to your heart’s content, click to your finger’s discontent.
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Read about what happens when you let Dwight from the Office name your band’s album.
Read Frank Viola on the Postchurch Perspective.
Read about Michael Jackson’s death being declared a homicide.
Browse this collection of “20 Non-Preaching Websites for Better Preaching.”
Read “Why I Love the Church: In Praise of God’s Eternal Purpose,” by Frank Viola.
Read as Jeremy Wilson recounts: “My Experience with the Acts 29 Crew.”
Watch Mark Driscoll preach at the Crystal Cathedral, in a suit. Yes, you read that correctly.
Read as Trey Herweck talks suburban church planting.
R.I.P. Ted Kennedy.
Read Christianity Today’s review of the latest from Leeland.
See cool photographs of now extinct animals.
Polaroid at Urban Outfitters? How hip.
Meet Ignatius the Ultimate Youth Pastor.
Browse Steve McCoy’s Tim Keller resources.
Browse this list of 41 questions a pastoral candidate should ask a potential church.
Browse lots of C.J. Mahaney videos.
Read as Daniel Wallace asks “Who Should Run The Church” and offers “A Case For A Plurality of Elders.”
Read as Lee Irons tries to determine where N.T. Wright stands on penal substitution.
Read as Lee Irons warns against “The Problems of Theological Perfectionism.”
Shoes for the indie kid? Get your Sub Pop Nikes now!
Read as the Irish Independent interviews composer Nico Muhly.
Read as The Nation profiles Wallace Stevens and his poetry.
Read as Pitchfork recaps the 2000s in pop music.
Browse as FACT Magazine lists the 20 best post-rock albums.
Read about the upcoming black and white graphic novel treatment of Johnny Cash.
Read as the Telegraph interviews singer-songwriter Imogen Heap about her new album, Ellipse.
Read as the Louisville Courier-Journal profiles the Great Lake Swimmers.
Browse as Ars Technica lists ways to discover new and interesting music online.
Consider as Rolling Stone examines why the Beatles really broke up.
Pre-order the Bifrost Arts album!
Read as Christianity Today offers “Six principles that might bring a truce to the age-old tension between tradition and popular culture.”






















The Rolling Stone article is interesting, but I don’t buy the way they gloss the negative influence of Yoko.