or

[ASAP] Chiral Binaphthyl Box-Copper-Catalyzed Enantioselective Tandem Michael–Ketalization Annulations for Optically Active Aryl and Heteroaryl Fused Bicyclicnonanes

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01221




or

[ASAP] Self-Catalyzed Rapid Synthesis of <italic toggle="yes">N</italic>-Acylated/<italic toggle="yes">N</italic>-Formylated a-Aminoketones and <italic toggle="yes">N</italic>-Hydroxymethyl

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01206




or

[ASAP] Pd-Catalyzed Regiodivergent Synthesis of Diverse Oxindoles Enabled by the Versatile Heck Reaction of Carbamoyl Chlorides

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01197




or

[ASAP] K<sub>2</sub>S as Sulfur Source and DMSO as Carbon Source for the Synthesis of 2-Unsubstituted Benzothiazoles

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c00994




or

[ASAP] DNA Compatible Intermolecular Wittig Olefination for the Construction of a, ß-Unsaturated Carbonyl Compounds

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01215




or

[ASAP] Selective Synthesis of Secondary Alkylboronates: Markovnikov-Selective Hydroboration of Vinylarenes with Bis(pinacolato)diboron Catalyzed by a Nickel Pincer Complex

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01416




or

[ASAP] Organocatalytic Regiodivergent Ring Expansion of Cyclobutanones for the Enantioselective Synthesis of Azepino[1,2-<italic toggle="yes">a</italic>]indoles and Cyclohepta[<italic toggle="yes">b</italic>]ind

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01406




or

[ASAP] Hydrogenation or Dehydrogenation of N-Containing Heterocycles Catalyzed by a Single Manganese Complex

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01273




or

[ASAP] Stereoselective Asymmetric Synthesis of Pyrrolidines with Vicinal Stereocenters Using a Memory of Chirality-Assisted Intramolecular S<sub>N</sub>2' Reaction

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01307




or

[ASAP] Nickel-Catalyzed Cyclization Strategy for the Synthesis of Pyrroloquinolines, Indoloquinolines, and Indoloisoquinolines

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01055




or

[ASAP] Synthesis of Aspidodispermine via Pericyclic Framework Reconstruction

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01242




or

[ASAP] Nickel(II)-Catalyzed Addition of Aryl-, Alkenyl-, and Alkylboronic Acids to Alkenylazaarenes

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01425




or

[ASAP] Hidden Boron Catalysis: Nucleophile-Promoted Decomposition of HBpin

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01168




or

[ASAP] Columnar Organization of Carbo[5]helicene Directed by Peripheral Steric Perturbation

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01421




or

[ASAP] Oxidative Coupling of Aldehydes with Alcohol for the Synthesis of Esters Promoted by Polystyrene-Supported N-Heterocyclic Carbene: Unraveling the Solvent Effect on the Catalyst Behavior Using NMR Relaxation

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01188




or

[ASAP] Phosphorus(III)-Mediated, Tandem Deoxygenative Geminal Chlorofluorination of 1,2-Diketones

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01258




or

[ASAP] Copper-Mediated DNA-Compatible One-Pot Click Reactions of Alkynes with Aryl Borates and TMS-N<sub>3</sub>

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01219




or

[ASAP] Photoredox Catalysis toward 2-Sulfenylindole Synthesis through a Radical Cascade Process

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01297




or

[ASAP] A General One-Pot Protocol for Hindered <italic toggle="yes">N</italic>-Alkyl Azaheterocycles from Tertiary Carboxylic Acids

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01254




or

[ASAP] Addition to “Selective Methylation of Amides, <italic toggle="yes">N</italic>-Heterocycles, Thiols, and Alcohols with Tetramethylammonium Fluoride”

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01524




or

[ASAP] Nickel-Catalyzed Formal Aminocarbonylation of Secondary Benzyl Chlorides with Isocyanides

Organic Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01284




or

Welcome, New Pastor, to Our Empty Church

Congregations and pastoral candidates are adapting the hiring process and getting to know each other online.

Phillip Bethancourt’s kids aren’t convinced other children actually live in College Station, Texas. They moved from Nashville a few weeks ago for their dad’s new job as pastor of Central Church, but because of the coronavirus shutdowns, the four boys have yet to go school, make friends in the neighborhood, or meet the kids at their new church.

Bethancourt too is living in his own strange parallel reality, preaching to a video camera in an empty auditorium and waiting for a congregation he hasn’t seen to officially vote him in. If all goes as planned on Sunday, he’ll become a lead pastor for the first time while his flock is still social distancing.

“Nothing matches the opportunity to be with people in person,” said Bethancourt, who left his job as vice president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission to pursue the call at Central Church. “But I would say the process we’ve been using so far is the best substitute we can create.”

Several other pastors and churches are in the same predicament, caught in the process of applying, interviewing, and onboarding during the coronavirus pandemic.

“This is not the time to be without a pastor,” said William Vanderbloemen, who runs a consulting agency that helps Christian organizations with hiring. His phone has been “ringing off the hook” with churches wanting to get serious about their pastoral search.

Many have decided to forge ahead with the process despite the unique challenges of social restrictions and shutdowns due to the pandemic. Several congregations, including high-profile megachurches Moody Church and Willow Creek Community Church, were in the midst of leadership transitions and have named ...

Continue reading...




or

Beyond Cedarville: Why Do Pastors Keep Getting Rehired After Abuse?

Victims’ advocates caution institutions against plans to “restore” fallen leaders.

Update (May 1): Cedarville University president Thomas White has been placed on administration leave by the school’s board of trustees. A week after Anthony Moore was fired by White over “additional information related to [his] past,” the board announced it will commission an independent investigation of Moore and an audit of his hiring.

---------

Another case of a leader with an abusive past moving from one evangelical institution to another has intensified scrutiny on Christian hiring practices and responses to abuse.

In ministry contexts, the desire to keep fallen leaders out of positions where they might again abuse their authority is sometimes met with another perspective—a hope that a redemptive and forgiving God would allow people to be restored to leadership. Both victims’ advocates and community members worry that administrators weighing those considerations at Cedarville University made the wrong call.

In 2017, Cedarville welcomed Anthony Moore six months after he was fired from the lead pastor position of The Village Church’s Fort Worth campus. President Thomas White wrote that he offered to shepherd Moore through a five-year plan of restoration at the conservative Baptist school while he taught theology, helped coach basketball, and served as a special advisor on diversity.

CT spoke with four current and former Cedarville professors who said they knew Moore had made a “mistake” related to same-sex attraction and technology, based on White’s introduction and Moore’s own telling. Some assumed pornography or an online relationship. They had no idea that he had reportedly filmed a subordinate at his previous church in the shower. The revelation, detailed by multiple ...

Continue reading...




or

Report: ‘Tremendous Progress’ Ahead for Religious Freedom Worldwide

USCIRF chair Tony Perkins gives CT a behind-the-scenes look at today’s annual report on “systematic, ongoing, and egregious” violations.

A new report aims to “unflinchingly criticize the records of US allies and adversaries alike” on religious freedom.

And there’s a lot to report, with more headlines each month confirming the Pew Research Center’s 10-year analysis that government restrictions and social hostilities involving religion have reached record levels worldwide.

Today’s 21st annual report by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) identifies significant problems in 29 countries—but sees “an upward trajectory overall.”

“Our awareness is going to grow greater, and the problem will appear more pronounced,” USCIRF chair Tony Perkins told CT. “But as we continue to work on it, I think we will see tremendous progress in the next few years if we stay the present course.”

Created as an independent, bipartisan federal commission by the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act, USCIRF casts a wider net than the US State Department, which annually designates Countries of Particular Concern (CPC) for such nations’ violations of religious freedom, or places them on a Special Watch List (SWL) if less severe.

Last December, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced CPC status for Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan.

USCIRF now recommends adding India, Nigeria, Russia, Syria, and Vietnam.

And where the State Department put only Cuba, Nicaragua, Sudan, and Uzbekistan on the watch list, USCIRF recommends also including Afghanistan, Algeria, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Central African Republic, Egypt, Indonesia, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, and Turkey.

USCIRF’s mandate is to provide oversight and advice to the State Department. ...

Continue reading...




or

After SAT and ACT Cancel, Registrations Soar for Classical Education Exam

An alternative college admissions test, used by some Christian schools, draws a record 50,000 students.

The Classic Learning Test (CLT), a niche college entrance exam aspiring to bring a sense of virtue to standardized tests, saw a 1,000 percent increase in registrations over its short history when the SAT and ACT canceled testing for the remainder of the school year due to COVID-19.

“Because we are able to administer the test remotely, we’re kind of the only game in town,” said Jeremy Tate, who created the CLT four years ago amid a renaissance in Classical education, including among Christians.

At its first administration in June 2016, 47 students took the CLT. With the bump in registration, 50,000 students will take its suite of tests—the CLT, and the CLT-8 and CLT-10, designed for lower grades—during the 2019-2020 academic year. That’s more than double last year’s total.

Though not a Christian company, CLT references figures including John Henry Newman and C. S. Lewis in its promotional materials and stresses the moral, formational dimension to education. The exam has been popular among classical Christian schools, which educate over 40,000 students in the US, and homeschoolers, who make up about 40 percent of CLT test-takers.

So far, 178 colleges and universities in the US accept the exam, mostly Catholic and Protestant schools. For other institutions, the CLT can serve as a supplemental assessment.

The College Board and ACT Inc., the companies that administer the SAT and ACT, respectively, have canceled or postponed in-person testing until the fall, leading many colleges to make the admissions exams an optional part of their applications. In 2018, around 2 million students took the SAT and 1.9 million took the ACT.

While some registrants may turn to the CLT this year for the convenience ...

Continue reading...




or

In Inner-City Black Churches: More Grief, Fewer Resources, Stronger Faith

How the pandemic concentrated pressures on small churches—and how the body of Christ is stepping up to help, one $3,000 grant at a time.

Philadelphia pastor Kevin Cropper’s heart sank last month when he saw a message asking for food among the prayer requests emailed to his church.

“It was a request for something tangible, and we didn’t have it,” Cropper said.

His congregation, Ark of Safety Christian Church, had canceled its weekly food distribution since it ran out of donations when it stopped gathering in March. “It makes you feel bad because isn’t that what our mission is? We want to be able to help in this type of crisis, but we need the resources to do it.”

That’s the problem with being a small, inner-city black church during a pandemic. Black adults are more than twice as likely as whites or Hispanic Americans to know someone who has been hospitalized or died due to COVID-19. Their communities are afraid, grieving, and suffering from the virus themselves; and they are far less likely to have the staff, budgets, or space to help as much as they feel called.

“We are in the city. We don’t have acres, we stay close to each other, and it’s very easy to spread the virus,” said Kato Hart Jr., pastor of Hold the Light Ministries, a Church of God in Christ (COGIC) congregation in Detroit.

American counties with a higher-than-average proportion of black residents now account for half of coronavirus cases and 60 percent of deaths. Even in a church of 50, word keeps spreading of which members have lost relatives to the virus: aunties, uncles, grandparents. Hart has lost fellow brothers in ministry, citing a letter from denominational leadership saying 30 COGIC bishops have fallen to COVID-19—including a dozen in Michigan alone.

“We’re in a fight, and we need help. These megachurches, ...

Continue reading...




or

Died: Darrin Patrick, Who Used His Fall and Restoration to Help Struggling Pastors

(UPDATED) The St. Louis pastor spoke up about the difficulties faced by leaders and critiqued “celebrity culture” in ministry.

Darrin Patrick, a megachurch pastor, author, and speaker, has died.

Patrick was a teaching pastor at Seacoast Church, a multi-site megachurch based in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, and the founding pastor of the Journey Church in St. Louis, where he lived.

In a Friday evening update, Seacoast Church stated: “Darrin was target shooting with a friend at the time of his death. An official cause of death has not been released but it appears to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound. No foul play is suspected.”

Patrick’s unexpected death came as a shock to friends and colleagues. Robby Gallaty, pastor of Long Hollow Baptist, in Hendersonville, Tennessee, said that Patrick was scheduled to speak at his church next weekend.

“I just talked to him Tuesday and Wednesday,” said Gallaty. “This is the second close friend I have lost in a year.”

Gallaty first met Patrick in 2015 and had invited him to speak the following year at a men’s ministry event at Long Hollow. Just before the event, he said, Patrick called and said he was leaving the ministry.

At the time, Patrick had been a rising star among Reformed evangelical circles and was serving as vice-president of the Acts 29 church planting network. He was fired from Journey for what church elders called misconduct including “inappropriate meetings, conversations, and phone calls with two women” and an abuse of power.

Despite Patrick’s fall from ministry, the two stayed friends. Patrick admitted his faults and got counseling. He went through a restoration process that lasted 26 months, according to a 2019 blog interview posted at Christianity Today. He returned to the ministry as a preacher but not as a senior pastor of a church. ...

Continue reading...




or

HCL Tech Q4 net up 24.3% to Rs 3,154 cr, sees short-term impact of COVID-19

Shares of the company were trading at Rs 517.80, marginally lower than the previous close on BSE.




or

Elon Musk delays release of Tesla's Roadster sports car

Tesla Inc Chief Executive Elon Musk said in a podcast interview released on Thursday that the company`s planned Roadster sports car would take a backseat to the development of other vehicle models.




or

Life Insurance Corporation of India’s New Endowment Plan: Check benefits, other details of this policy

LIC's New Endowment Plan is a participating non-linked plan which offers an attractive combination of protection and saving features.




or

IndiGo Airlines to cut salary for senior employees from May

The company will also put in place a leave without pay program for the months of May, June and July




or

BMW launches 8 Series Gran Coupe at Rs 1.3 crore, M8 Coupe at Rs 2.15 crore in India

The BMW 8 Series Gran Coupe is powered by a 3-litre, 6-cylinder in-line BSVI petrol engine. This is the most luxurious sports coupe ever built by BMW, the company said in a statement




or

Service charges for Post office savings a/c, issue of duplicate passport and more

Here are some details of service charges that the Post Office charges you.




or

Lava resumes operations at Noida factory with 600 employees

Domestic mobile brand Lava on Saturday said it has resumed production at its manufacturing facility in Noida with over 20 per cent production capacity.




or

Free market and the reel world

Theatre owners need not fear OTT platforms and resort to protectionism. They can continue to be relevant even as tech disrupts




or

Europe: a natural history / Tim Flannery (with Luigi Boitani)

Browsery QH21.E85 F53 2019




or

The virtuous cyborg / Chris Bateman

Browsery HM851.B3775 2018




or

Inferno: a doctor's ebola story / Steven Hatch, M.D

Browsery RC140.5.H38 2017




or

Asperger's children: the origins of autism in Nazi Vienna / Edith Sheffer

Browsery RJ506.A9 S5257 2018




or

How to hide an empire: a history of the greater United States / Daniel Immerwahr

Browsery F965.I46 2019




or

The good neighbor: the life and work of Fred Rogers / Maxwell King

Browsery PN1992.4.R56 K56 2018




or

Call me American: a memoir / Abdi Nor Iftin with Max Alexander

Browsery CT275.I43 A3 2018




or

Paper: material, medium and magic / edited by Neil Holt, Nicola von Velsen and Stephanie Jacobs ; with photographs by Thorsten Kern

Browsery TS1105.P134 2018




or

Love in the new millennium / Can Xue ; foreword by Eileen Myles ; translated from the Chinese by Annelise Finegan Wasmoen

Browsery PL2912.A5174 X5613 2018




or

Defying reality: the inside story of the virtual reality revolution / David M. Ewalt

Browsery QA76.9.C65 E9775 2018




or

Manual for survival: a Chernobyl guide to the future / Kate Brown

Browsery TD196.R3 B785 2019




or

The illusion of conscious will / Daniel M. Wegner ; foreword by Daniel Gilbert ; introduction by Thalia Wheatley

Browsery BF611.W38 2018




or

Dreyer's English: an utterly correct guide to clarity and style / Benjamin Dreyer

Browsery PN145.D74 2019




or

Ten drugs: how plants, powders, and pills have shaped the history of medicine / by Thomas Hager

Browsery RM45.H34 2019




or

Silence: a social history of one of the least understood elements of our lives / Jane Brox

Browsery BJ1499.S5 B76 2019