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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Steve Massey

This individual is no longer an employee with The Spokesman-Review.

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News >  Spokane

We all have room to become better followers

Now that both Democratic and Republican presidential conventions are behind us, a little self-reflection is in order. Both candidates made a case for how they’ll deliver what we all seem to want: lower taxes, improved public services, enhanced national image and, in short, a better life for all.

News >  Spokane

Use your faith as hydration

Cornfields, brown and brittle, stretched for miles in all directions, their promised bounty stifled by drought. As I drove through parts of the Midwest last week, the effects of a heat wave cooking the region stunned me. Crops withered everywhere, warning of dire consequences just around the corner.
News >  Spokane

Orphanage reveals the benefits of focusing on what is right

KOTTAYAM, India – Perspective is everything. My friend Johnson Mathew demonstrates this truth as he shows me around his small plot of land in Kottayam, India. The din of children playing cricket nearby threatens to interrupt, but for now he is showing off a long-uncompleted expansion to his orphanage.
News >  Spokane

Putting our trust in God requires much from us

Do you trust in God? It’s easy for Christians to speak of trusting in God while living a life that says otherwise. When the world sees a gap between our words and reality, our testimony for Jesus Christ is tarnished.
News >  Features

New film offers Christians choices in entertainment

Seven years after “The Love Boat” first set sail into American living rooms, its affable captain experienced a transformation. Gavin MacLeod, aka Capt. Merrill Stubing, became a Christian. Don’t strain too hard to remember the episode – it actually happened behind the scenes, in real life.
News >  Features

Group in Haiti let heart overrule head

I pray the 10 Baptist missionaries jailed in Haiti on child abduction charges are cleared soon. They deserve it. I pray Haitian authorities will see this international scandal for what it appears to be: good-intentioned people acting in half-blind haste.
News >  Features

Advice to graduates: Keep Christ in your hearts

Enjoy the journey. Follow your dreams. Reach for the impossible. However well-meaning, the advice doled out to high school and college graduates this time of year is something to which I haven’t paid much attention. It all sounds so ... familiar.
News >  Features

Let’s not rue the past or dread future, but live for today

Mom stood quietly, flowers in hand, staring down at my grandmother’s grave. Every spring, a few days before Mother’s Day, my mom has driven the two or three miles from her home in Puyallup, Wash., to a tidy cemetery near the river, honoring her own mother with flowers cut from lilacs they once tended together.