The Top 10 New Zealand Christian Blogs for June 09 are as follows: 1. [1.] NZ Conservative 16.5 (7 – 26 ) 2. [3.] MandM 17 (5 – 29) 3. [2.] MacDoctor Moments 18 (21 – 15) 4. [4.] Something Should Go Here, Maybe Later (HalfDone) 20 (15 – 25) 5= [5.] Keeping Stock 31 […]
Entries Tagged as 'NZ Christian Blog Rankings'
Top 10 NZ Christian Blogs – June 09
August 15th, 2009 Comments Off on Top 10 NZ Christian Blogs – June 09
Christian Blog Ranking Report for June 09 – Tumeke
August 12th, 2009 1 Comment
Here are the top 10 NZ Christian blogs based on Tumeke’s NZ blog stats for June; these stats are used in the calculations for the MandM top 10 NZ Christian Blog rankings for June 09: Being Frank 22 Something Should Go Here, Maybe Later (HalfDone) 25 NZ Conservative 26 MandM 29 Keeping Stock 34 Say […]
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Christian Blog Ranking Report for July 09 – HalfDone
August 3rd, 2009 4 Comments
Here are the top 10 NZ Christian blogs based on HalfDone’s NZ blog stats for July; these stats make up part of the calculations for the MandM top 10 NZ Christian Blog rankings for July 09: MandM 5 NZ Conservative 13 Something Should Go Here, Maybe Later (HalfDone) 17 MacDoctor Moments 18 Keeping Stock 21 […]
Top 10 NZ Christian Blogs – May 09
July 18th, 2009 7 Comments
The Top 10 New Zealand Christian Blogs for May 09 are as follows: [1.] NZ Conservative 14.5 (7 – 22 ) [3.] MacDoctor Moments 19.5 (22 – 17) [2.] MandM 20 (5 – 35) [4.] Something Should Go Here, Maybe Later (HalfDone) 25.5 (20 – 31) [5.] Keeping Stock 32.5 (29 – 36) [6.] Say […]
New Zealand Christian Blog Rankings for September 2008
October 25th, 2008 13 Comments
Extrapolating from Tumeke’s Semptember 2008 stats, the top 10 Christian Blogs* in New Zealand are: NZ Conservative (24) The Briefing Room (30) Something Should Go Here, Maybe Later (36) MandM (77) Samuel Dennis (80) Gavin Knight (91) Contra Celsum (94) Put up Thy Sword (115) Say Hello to my Little Friend (a.k.a Beretta Blog) (128) […]

A common objection to belief in the God of the Bible is that a good, kind, and loving deity would never command the wholesale slaughter of nations. In the tradition of his popular Is God a Moral Monster?, Paul Copan teams up with Matthew Flannagan to tackle some of the most confusing and uncomfortable passages of Scripture. Together they help the Christian and nonbeliever alike understand the biblical, theological, philosophical, and ethical implications of Old Testament warfare passages.




