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Archbishop of Canterbury to step down, accepts position at Cambridge
March 16 (ENInews)--The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, announced on 16 March that he will step down from the post at the end of 2012 and has accepted the position of Master of Magdalene ...
Issues with the iPad
Apple
unveiled the iPad 3 last week; it's scheduled to be released today. On Sunday
the company announced that pre-ordered devices were sold out.
The news came weeks after Apple's annual shareholders' meeting, at which it reported that it has nearly $100 billion in
cash.
Amid
its latest triumphs, the company continues to face criticism over labor
practices at Foxconn and its other suppliers in China. While such allegations
are not new, recent reports by This
American Life and the New
York Times have raised public awareness of long hours, low
wages, cramped dormitories and hazardous working conditions that have resulted
in deaths and injuries for Chinese employees.
The great campus-drinking debate
Defense
lawyers for University of Virginia student George Huguely said
their client was a "stupid drunk," not a killer. He was widely known to have a
history of abusing alcohol--hardly a rarity on college campuses. Huguely was
convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 26 years in prison for
killing his girlfriend, Yeardley Love, after a day of nonstop drinking.
The
case highlighted yet again the problem of rampant alcohol abuse on campus--and
the situation of friends and bystanders who know perfectly well that someone
has a drinking problem but don't care or know how to intervene.
Don't call me, I'll e-mail you
I certainly don't hear from as many PR people as David Roberts does, but
when I do hear from them it tends to annoy me for most of the same
reasons it annoys him: no hyperlinks, buried ledes, missing background
info, generally little evidence that the sender knows what I do or cares
if I consider his or her pitch. I particularly enjoyed item #6 on his
list of tips.
Friday digest
New today from the Century: Richard Lischer on Holy Week and the art of losing, Apple's supply-chain issues, more.
The prodigal's brother
Salvation requires repentance. But of what do the righteous repent?
Catholics don't see contraception mandate as threat to religious freedom
c. 2012 Religion News Service
WASHINGTON (RNS) A vocal contingent of Republican presidential candidates and...
British government launches consultation on same-sex marriage
(ENInews)--The British government on March 15 launched a 12-week
consultation in England and Wales that is widely expected to lead to the...
Hopes for an ‘ecumenical spring’
For years, advocates for greater unity among Christian churches have wrung their hands and talked of an "ecumenical winter." But now, ten years after leaders took the first steps toward forming the...
Twisters not random, says Calvinist preacher Piper
An author and preacher popular in Calvinist circles says it is no accident that recent killer tornadoes followed paths that ravaged some communities while others were spared....
Maryland’s Catholic governor signs bill for gay marriage
A coalition of Catholic groups that advocate gay rights in churches and society congratulated Maryland's governor after he signed a bill on March 1 making Maryland the eighth state to approve of sa...
William Hamilton, death of God theologian, dies at 87
William Hamilton, a theologian who declared nearly a half century ago that God was dormant if not dead, was remembered at his death for the media impact made by the "death of God movement." ...
Do something! But what?
The whole Kony-video thing seems to be over. Most of the
millions of viewers watched the half-hour film about Joseph
Kony right after Invisible Children released it. The group's action
kits are sold out. Lots of thoughtful criticism has been written and widely shared.
Yet I keep coming back to it, because these
conversations have revolved around questions I wrestle with regularly as a
missionary in Nicaragua.
Should churches help each other?
Sometimes, when one church is struggling, another church helps out. One church I interviewed (for the From Death to Life project) was a new ethnic church development that was
given a building, basically for free, from a church that died. But we
all know you get what you pay for, and the building they got had more
than a few structural problems. They received some support for the
pastor’s salary from their denomination, but the building was weighing
them down with repair bills.
Thursday digest
New today from the Century: Craig Barnes on the prodigal's brother, Laura Jean Torgerson on the problems of "just doing something," more.
Terrifying texts
A cynical little demon perched on my shoulder as I began reading Philip Jenkins's Laying Down the Sword, which is more Old Testament exegesis and hermeneutics than anything else.
Organizing for communion: Ministry in the 21st century
“I like to think I’m a grassroots organizer," says Isaac S. Villegas of Chapel Hill Mennonite Fellowship. "I rearrange pews; I find people to make sloppy joes for hungry people.”
Doctor who championed 'death with dignity' dies at 83
c. 2012 Religion News Service
PORTLAND, Ore. (RNS) Peter Goodwin, the first doctor in Oregon to campaign...
Atheists' slavery billboard raises tempers in Pa.
c. 2012 Religion News Service
HARRISBURG, Pa. (RNS) The billboard is down, but the issue's not gone....