Features
Caring and not caring: The Desert Christians on apathy
I’m delighted to be back among the 400-year-old whitebark pine trees of the Wind River Range in northwest Wyoming. At tree line, near 10,000 feet, the bent and grizzled pines almost seem to thrive on wind-driven snow and sleet, lightning strikes, drought and disease. They stand as grand masters of sustained indifference.
Learning from others: The formation of a theologian
I started to write when I was teaching at Augustana College, but after moving to the University of Notre Dame in 1970 I really began to put words on paper. I did not write because I thought you needed to publish to get tenure. I was not that savvy about how these things worked. I probably did need to write to get tenure, but I wrote because I thought I had something to say.
Let’s talk about death: End-of-life decisions
Time’s up: When the pastor is a lame duck
Misguided missions: Ten worst practices
Short-term mission trips continue to rise in popularity. In leading such trips and researching their impact, I’ve found that they can have a profound effect on the faith and life of participants, and good work is often done: people living in poverty have their needs addressed by energetic and caring people.
The Last Station
The Last Station is a complex but entertaining study of a 48-year marriage and the way subtle and extreme changes that take place in each partner can take a terrifying toll on the relationship. This is not an unfamiliar premise, except that the principals in this battle of wills are Leo Tolstoy (Christo pher Plummer), the Russian novelist considered by many the greatest of all time, and his hot-blooded wife, Sofya (Helen Mirren), who is 20 years younger than Tolstoy and has borne him 13 children.
How to Train YourDragon
The first ever Academy Award for Best Picture was given in 1929 to Wings, a World War I aviation drama full of groundbreaking aerial sequences. People flocked to see the film largely because they longed to feel what it might be like to fly.
That old longing is also satisfied in How to Train Your Dragon—though in this case we get to fly among dragons. The visually dazzling DreamWorks animation film, based on the children’s book series by Cressida Cowell, turns out to be strikingly thoughtful as well.
Books
The Imperial Cruise:A Secret History ofEmpire and War
BookMarks
A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned WhileEditing My Life
Moving House: Poems
A Gate at the Stairs
Rescue mission
Departments
Remote-control warfare: Troubling questions
Rhetoric and rage: What is at stake
Learning curve: International engagement
Pilgrims of our time: Looking for miracles
News
Obama shifts tactics on Muslim outreach: Changes greeted with hope and skepticism
Abuse scandal puts victims’ group back in the spotlight: Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests
Appeal planned after NationalDay of Prayer is ruled unconstitutional: Justice Department says it will challenge decision
Seminaries see no ‘hard times’ uptick: Enrollment slipping
Century Marks
Boundary crossing: Century senior editor Richard Kauffman traveled to Iran in 2008 and talked to a range of Iranians—from government officials to university professors to Muslim seminarians to people in the street. Moved by their stories, he felt compelled to tell them for a wider audience. His just-released book, An American in Persia (Cascadia), is about people moving across cultural and religious barriers to enter each other’s worlds.