Welcome!
Welcome to my blog where I will be posting previously written articles and new articles. There are many topics in my archives, that I look forward to sharing with you, that covers a broad spectrum of subjects. Feel free to share these writings with your friends and family using Facebook, Twitter, e-mail, etc. Feel free to reprint any of these articles in its entirety in bulletins and newsletters. When you do, please cite this website -http://bryanhodge.net. It is my hope that you will find these articles informative and encouraging. Check back often for new postings or, better yet, I invite you to subscribe to my blog. I would also appreciate your comments or emails.
Thank you for your visit!
~Bryan
-
Categories
Tag Archives: farmersalmanac.com
Columbus Day
“Columbus Day was declared a national holiday by Franklin Delano Roosevelt (declared 1934 B.H.) Since 1971, Columbus Day has been observed annually as a federal government holiday on the second Monday of October” (Columbus Day 2023: History, Traditions, and Changes, … Continue reading
Posted in culture, History, holiday
Tagged 1000, 1492, 1517, 1934, 1971, 1990s, 980, a defense of columbus day, Acts 2:38, Acts 3:19, admiral zheng he, alana mastrangelo, alicia lee, all have sinned, aztecs, bahamas, canada, cancel culture, china, cnn, columbus day, columbus wasn't the hero we learned about in school, discovery of new world, disease, Ephesians 2:8-9, eric the red, europe, exploration, farmersalmanac.com, FDR, franklin delano roosevelt, george washington, gold, great pyramid of tenochtitlan, greenland, greg abbott, gunnbjorn ulfsson, hispaniola, history traditions and change, history.com, holiday, human sacrifice, ictnews.org, in the news, indigenous peoples day, ireland, john hirschauer, joseph kahn, kilinago, labrador, leif erikson, martin luther king jr, mlk, nationalreview, native numbers, new world, newfoundland, numbers of natives who died, nytimes.com, october12 1492, oklahoma medical research foundation, old world, opposition to columbus day, plantations, prageru video, Romans 3:23, Romans 6:23, slavery, spain, taino, texas, vikings, wales, who discovered america, why immigrants should love columbus day
2 Comments
Climate Change, an Existential Threat?
Let’s define the terms. Climate refers to the long-term weather conditions. “Weather refers to short-term conditions of the atmosphere while climate is the average daily weather for an extended period of time at a certain location… weather is what you … Continue reading
Posted in fear, History, Mental Health, Nature, stewardship, Weather, worry
Tagged 1 Corinthians 15:51-52, 1 The3ssalonians 4:15-18, 1 Thessalonians 5:3, 1250, 1300, 1659, 1750, 1816, 1870, 1880, 1901, 1945, 1947, 1950, 1968, 1975, 1984, 1986, 2 Peter 3:10, 2 Peter 3:11, 2003, 2014, 2018, 2019, 2020, 950, aerosols, al gore, alexandria ocasio cortez, anthropogenic factors, anxiety, aoc, bhopal india, canadian maritimes, central england temperature data series, chernobyl ukraine, climate change, deforestation, Deuteronomy 23:12-14, dictionary.com, duncan mansfield, earl j richie, emily witt, end time, epa, epa.goc, existential threat, farmersalmanac.com, fear, forbes, Genesis 8:22, global cooling, global warming, greenhouse gases, greta thunberg, hadley centre, history of temperature measurment, human excrement, ice cores, in the news, indonesia, israel in wilderness, israel's refuse, james taylor, jamie mcleod, john lanchester, judy woodruff, land use changes, love canal, matt ridley, Matthew 6:31-33, medieval warming period, mount tambora, nancy pelosi, natural climate change, nbcnews, new england, newsweek, newyorker, niagara falls new york, noaa, noaa.gov, noah's promise, pbs, pbs newshour, peter gwynne, pollen counts, preparation, promise, ryan reeves, scientific forknowledge, speaker.gov, spectator.co.uk, stewardship, stradivarius, sudden destruction, texas city disaster, the little ice age, tree rings, union carbide, urban heat islands, urbanization, usatoday, usgs, usgs.gov, violins, weather, william cummings, wmur, year without summer
Leave a comment