ARTICLES
Marie Durand — Part 3: The Indelible Legacy of the 1572 Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre
Marie Durand’s 18th century church community cannot be understood apart from the Saint Bartholomew’s Massacre of 1572. What were the 16th century French Religious Wars and how did they affect the dreadful decisions Durand had to make?
Marie Durand — Part 2: Daughter of the French Reformation
What were the social and geographical roots of the 16th-century French Reformation, that great work of Christ that freed some one-and-a-half million men and women from the shackles of medieval Catholicism? This is Marie Durand’s heritage, and her life and letters cannot be understood apart from it.
Marie Durand (1711–1776), the Famous Prisoner of Faith — Introduction
In 1730 French authorities arrested 19-year-old Marie Durand, shaved her head, and imprisoned her without trial for her Protestant faith in a medieval fortress. Many have held up Durand as an inspiring heroine for their own causes, but what did she truly stand for?
The Perfect Outcry in a Broken and Anguished World — Psalm 130
We live in a broken world. The locus of humanity’s ills is the pollution and power of sin within the heart and soul of every human being. In Psalm 130 we hear the perfect outcry that can, and must, arise from every heart.
A Better "Normal"? How I Hope the Pandemic Changes Things
In what ways can the new “normal” brought about by the pandemic be better for us when it comes to our perspective toward daily life?