... -tenant dispute for a landlord who wanted to evict a deaf couple who couldn’t afford to pay their back rent. Judge Donald McDonough was accustomed to dealing with more than 100 landlord-tenant disputes on an average Friday, so this wasn’t the first time he ... ?” I can understand that sentiment. None of us wants to die. But that’s life. No one gets to wait in the car. We will all die. Thankfully, that’s not our final destiny. We were created for life, not death. God did not bring us into being for this ...
... It was about hard driving, innovative, creative Americans and it poked a playful stick in the eye of those laconic, lazy Europeans. It opened with McDonough standing beside a swimming pool in the backyard of a house. He walked into and through the house as he spoke: Why do we ... doing slows down. Take the Keystone Pipeline, for instance. When it is completed, this 2,147 mile-long pipeline will carry crude and synthetic oil from Alberta, Canada to refineries in Nebraska, Illinois, and Texas. The first three of ...
... exclaimed, “See how they love one another.” It is good to be reminded of this truth. It is easy to forget that we will be known as followers of Christ by our love and not for some other behavior. Of course, every person who has claimed Christ through ... . Amen and amen. 1. William McNeill, Plagues and People (Garden City, New York: Anchor Books, 1976), p. 108. 2. James McDonough, James Lee, Chattanooga — A Death Grip on the Confederacy (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1984), pp. 243-245. 3. John ...