FIRST-PERSON: D-Day & the price of freedom
Baptist Press columnist Kelly Boggs reflects on the 70th anniversary of the beginning of the Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe -- the D-Day invasion of the Normandy coastland of France. An average of 413 veterans of World War II die every day, Boggs writes, noting, "We must never forget their sacrifice and service."
FIRST-PERSON: Critics slam a clean movie
Columnist Kelly Boggs says critics of the movie "Mom's Night Out" are out of touch with the demand for wholesome entertainment.
FIRST-PERSON: Better off without alcohol
Columnist Kelly Boggs urges total abstinence from alcohol based on recent scientific findings and biblical principles.
FIRST-PERSON: Who are the real extremists?
Baptist Press columnist Kelly Boggs addresses the recent controversy involving the HGTV show, "Flip It Forward," liberal views on homosexuality and the risks often associated with homosexual behavior.
FIRST-PERSON: Symptomatic of Rome
Baptist Press columnist Kelly Boggs takes note of another evidence of America's slide toward the sexual debauchery that claimed the Roman Empire.
FIRST-PERSON: Aborted babies as medical waste
Baptist Press columnist Kelly Boggs, commenting on protests against the use of aborted babies in waste-to-energy plants, suggests that concern for their remains should be extended to abortion in general.
FIRST-PERSON: Lessons from Apollo 13
On the anniversary of Apollo 13's ill-fated launch, columnist Kelly Boggs draws lessons from its astronauts and Mission Control crew about how to achieve what's most important in life.
FIRST-PERSON: Talent, hard work & the intangibles
Baptist Press columnist Kelly Boggs writes that talent, hard work and passion are ingredients for success, yet intangibles -- sometimes the unseen hand of God -- can exert a major impact on every life.
FIRST-PERSON: How will you be remembered?
Baptist Press columnist Kelly Boggs, reflecting on CNN obituaries of Fred Phelps, L'Wren Scott, Scott Asheton and David Brenner, asks, "How do you want family, friends, neighbors, co-workers and others to remember you?"
FIRST-PERSON: 9/11 cross
Columnist Kelly Boggs writes about his concern regarding a lawsuit filed by an atheist group to keep cross-shaped steel beams from being included in a museum dedicated to the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks on the World Trade Center towers.