
Kyle Meyaard-Schaap
Articles
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Jan 29, 2024 |
thebanner.org | Kyle Meyaard-Schaap
“For dust you are and to dust you shall return” (Gen. 3:19). I’ve always found these Ash Wednesday words to be beautifully poignant. As my pastor imposes the ashes and looks me in the eye, the words move that part of my soul that’s shaped for mystery. They connect to a primordial part of me that feels it is good and right that I share in the common denominator of creation, that I take my mundane place in the order of things. These words also make another part of me bristle.
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Jun 9, 2023 |
eclalibraries.org | Kyle Meyaard-Schaap
Reviewed by:G. Connor Salter, Professional Writing alumnus from Taylor University, Upland, IN. Title:Following Jesus in a Warming World: A Christian Call to Climate ActionAuthor:Kyle Meyaard-SchaapPublisher:InterVarsity Presshttp://InterVarsity PressPublication Date:February 21, 2023Format:PaperbackLength:192 pagesOVERVIEWKyle Meyaard-Schaap wasn’t sure what to think in college when his old brother announced he’d become a vegetarian.
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Apr 19, 2023 |
christiancourier.ca | Meghan Kort |Kyle Meyaard-Schaap |Peter Schuurman |Todd Statham
For more than a decade, Lynnette Postuma walked past a massive cinder block wall on her way to work in downtown Toronto. Expansive grey walls are a staple in urban transportation corridors, but Postuma began to dream of new possibilities. In 2017, she entered a competition to paint the 12,000 square foot space. “The problem was, I knew nothing about paint,” confesses Postuma.
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Feb 16, 2023 |
christiancourier.ca | Kyle Meyaard-Schaap
Skip to content Larry was the last holdout. Years ago, the local coal company had purchased mineral rights from the inhabitants of Kayford mountain to blow it apart – to tap the coal seams and bleed the mountain of its precious payload.
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Feb 15, 2023 |
christiancourier.ca | Kyle Meyaard-Schaap |Emily Wierenga |Cheryl Bear |Angela Reitsma Bick
Larry was the last holdout. Years ago, the local coal company had purchased mineral rights from the inhabitants of Kayford mountain to blow it apart – to tap the coal seams and bleed the mountain of its precious payload. One by one, Larry’s neighbours had sold their rights and moved – driven away in some cases by intimidation campaigns organised by the coal company itself. Larry’s cabin had bullet holes from his decades-long fight. Everyone in that area has ties to coal.
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