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Morning Prayer: About the "Glory Be"

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  The Glory Be (“Glory to the Father…”) is one of the oldest Christian doxologies, dating to the 2nd–3rd century; it appears constantly in Morning Prayer because it “seals” every psalm with a Trinitarian lens; and the sign of the cross is used with it because it is the most compact, bodily confession of the Trinity. 1. Where the Glory Be came from The prayer is ancient—older than the Nicene Creed, older than most formal liturgical texts, and probably rooted in the earliest Christian house‑church worship. Its origins The earliest form appears in the Apostolic Constitutions (late 200s). It was used as a doxology—a short burst of praise—whenever Scripture was proclaimed. The original form was simply: “Glory to the Father through the Son in the Holy Spirit.” By the 4th century, during the Arian controversies, Christians expanded it to emphasize the eternity of the Son and Spirit: “…as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be forever.” This was a theological line in the sand: Chr...

When Leaders of Multi‑Racial Nations Do Not Understand Cultural Relativism

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In multi‑racial societies, leadership requires more than policy competence. It requires interpretive intelligence—the ability to understand how different racial and cultural groups perceive justice, dignity, and belonging. When leaders lack that understanding, governance becomes coercive rather than integrative. The failure of interpretation Cultural relativism teaches that values, behaviors, and social expectations must be understood within their cultural context. In a multi‑racial nation, this means recognizing that each group carries its own historical memory, moral vocabulary, and social logic. A leader who ignores this relativism interprets difference as defiance. He or she reads cultural expression through the lens of the dominant group’s norms and misjudges the motives of others. The result is not unity but alienation. Policies meant to “equalize” can instead erase. Appeals to “national identity” can become instruments of exclusion. The political consequences Erosion of trust —...

A Publisher's Conversation with Authors: 🕊️ When an Author Dies: What Every Writer Should Put in Place Before It Happens

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  There’s a quiet truth in publishing that no one likes to talk about: authors die. Over the years at MSI Press, I’ve lost about a half‑dozen of them. Each time, the news arrived in a different way — a spouse calling, a friend emailing, a stray obituary someone forwarded. Not once did an author leave instructions for what should happen to their books, their royalties, or their publishing relationships. And yet, someone always thought to notify the publisher. Thank goodness. But this shouldn’t be left to chance. Whether you’re traditionally published or self‑published, your books don’t die when you do. They continue to earn royalties, circulate in libraries, and live in the hands of readers. That means your literary estate needs clarity — and your publisher (or distributor, or platform) needs direction. Here’s what every author should put in place now , long before anyone needs it. 🌿 Why This Matters More Than You Think Most authors assume their heirs will “figure it out.” T...