…reconnection…is at the heart of true religion: we reconnect with God, with our own soul, with our neighbor and with all of God’s creatures…
While some pieces of legislation become law the moment they are passed in the Manitoba Legislature, many others only become law when the government sets a date for them to come into effect.
Thirty-one years ago this past May my wife, oldest son and I crossed the United States/Canadian border at a little crossing called Oungre on the North Dakota, Saskatchewan border.
Sometimes what I say can be funny. But sometimes it is not that funny. Sometimes I say things I don’t mean to say.
A tradition is only truly a living tradition if, as Edmund Burke says, it constitutes “a partnership between those who are dead, those who are living, and those who are yet to be born.”
On Monday of this week more than 500 people concerned about the state of the pork industry in Manitoba gathered in Morris.
By now many of you will have heard of or read The Shack by Wm. Paul Young.
Most Manitobans and Canadians take for granted that our elections are free and fair.
I would define fundamentalism as a defense against the overtones of life, and the richness of imagination.
The spring session of the Manitoba Legislature ended this week and it proved to be one of the most active sessions in recent memory with a number of important issues being debated and NDP scandals exposed.