You learn so much from your parents. We grew up in a home where we were definitely taught to be confident. I definitely give me parents a lot of credit.
Hippies, hippies... they want to save the world but all they do is smoke pot and play frisbee!
My parents are hippies, so I must have a bit of hippie in me.
My parents were hippies. I'm the eldest of eight children.
L.A.'s hippies are actually quite scary - more like Hell's Angels than the Haight-Ashbury hippies of San Francisco.
No, I come for a hippy lifestyle, it's very open; my parents are both hippies.
The Reformed tradition at the beginning of the twenty-first century is different as a consequence of this - and different in nontrivial ways. Some may scoff at this, saying that such "developments" don't represent Reformed thought. But by what standard? Perhaps by the Westminster Confession. But this is only one Reformed confession, and it was only ever a subordinate standard.
Reformed theology belongs to this confessional tradition, and Reformed theologians and churches continue to write confessions even today.
No confession is inerrant; Reformed Christians are supposed to be those who seek to be constantly reformed according to the Word of God - and that includes our confessions as well.
I was born in Manhattan on West 12th. My parents were kind of hippies and they did a home birth.
I'm lucky. My parents are, like, super hippies. They were just happy I was going to school and I wasn't getting in trouble.
People ask if my parents are hippies, but they're actually very conservative. A girl called Rebel sang at their wedding, and that's where my name came from.
[ Jonathan] Edwards is the person who really made theological determinism a serious option for Reformed thinkers, and the influence his views had in nineteenth century Reformed thought, in the USA and the UK in particular, is enormous.
My parents were hippies. They met at an ashram, where they were studying how to be enlightened.