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More Trouble with the Spam Filter
I have very little control over the spam filter that Blogger uses. So far, it has caught a few dozen real comments (sorry to Mr. Hoffer, NatAmLLC, TU&D, and John Martin for that). I hope Blogger will resolve this, but in the meantime if you leave a comment and it mysteriously disappears, please feel free…
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Missing Blogger Comments and URI too Big
James Swan has helpfully explained where the missing blog comments have gone (link to his explanation). The bad news is – there is no way to turn off the feature that is causing these comments to disappear, at this time. The good news is that out of about 12,000 published comments, there appear to be…
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100 "Followers"
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Flood of Comments
Please note that over the next few days you may see a flood of previously unpublished comments being released. In some cases, I held the comments accidentally due to high volume, in other cases, I was hoping to answer the comments and hadn’t yet got around to it. There are still nearly 300 such comments…
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A Word of Thanks
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Patristics Resouces
I realize that there are some of my readers who follow the blog via Google Reader (or other feed readers). Those who do so may not specifically have noticed that I have two sidebars on the blog: one is a list of links to indices of notable patrologies (collections of writings of the church fathers)…
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Clarification on the Madrid Issue
A few of the folks who read my blog have taken umbrage with my recent comments (link) regarding Patrick Madrid’s apologetics forum, ironically titled “Speak Your Mind.” Two of those I’ve already addressed in part in a previous post (link) and another has posted comments on his own blog as well (a post creatively titled…
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Response to Nick on "Censorship" vs. Publicity
Responding to my recent post on Patrick Madrid’s turtling of his apologetics forum (head and legs well in shell), one Roman Catholic seems to have missed the point. Nick writes: “I agree with you, if censorship (via difficult registration) is what is going on, then that’s wrong and Catholics should not be engaging in that.”…
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Atonement Debate Continues
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A Quick Editorial Note – Quotations
When I quote people who make typos, I generally have five options: 1) Reproduce what they said and don’t comment on their mistake. The positive side of this approach is that I don’t get dragged into silly wars over spelling and grammar. The negative side of this approach is that it looks as though I…