Thomas G. Long
Celluloid scripture?
The anxiety over Zero Dark Thirty reveals what happens when we cede the task of constructing our social narrative to the entertainment industry.
Desperate prayers
Prayer is not a violation of the laws of nature. It's woven into God's ongoing act of creation, as fully as the tides.
Healing hands
Sick people long to be touched—the very thing loved ones tend to avoid. In today's mechanized medicine, doctors keep their distance as well.
Daily patterns: Fall books: Reading habits
My daily reading is tethered to the rhythms of the sun. In the evening, there is the slow burn of the substantial book beside the easy chair, which I savor in small portions. Early mornings are marked by a different pattern.
The absurd in worship
I recently learned that "Onward Christian Soldiers" can speak truth—when it's not a display of militarism but just patently ridiculous.
Future fatigue
The 1939 World's Fair's vision was whipped to a froth through wishful thinking. Church leaders should probe the future with more humility.
Small acts of courage
A Swiss bureaucrat saved hundreds from the Nazis. Yet even when picking up a cross means picking up a rubber stamp, many desert and flee.
Idol smasher
Christopher Hitchens was an unrelenting unbeliever to the end. But Ross Douthat claims that everything about Hitchens points to an embrace of life and a refusal to give in to despair.
Feedback frenzy
Everyone wants my opinion these days: airlines, hotels, Amazon. How healthy can it be to think of life as a series of episodes to rate up or down?
Why do men stay away?
Men and the church are often at odds. Sadly, many of the reasons researchers give for this are as insulting as they are misguided.
Why sermons bore us
Much of the snickering about boring sermons comes not
because we expect so little but because we have hoped for so much. A hunger persists for a word from the
Lord—without which we are left to our boring selves.
Grief without stages
The notion that grief moves through some kind of process toward resolution owes more of a debt to American optimism than to Christian hope.
Expect a whirlwind
Instead of fretting about worship style, perhaps we should be more concerned about scale. For all its extravagance, much worship today seems curiously trivial, inward and downsized.
The good funeral: Recovering Christian practices
With surprising swiftness and dramatic results, a significant segment of American Christians has over the past 50 years abandoned previously established funeral customs in favor of an entirely new pattern of memorializing the dead. Generally included in the pattern is a brief, customized memorial service (instead of a funeral), a focus on the life of the deceased, an emphasis on joy rather than sadness, and a private disposition of the deceased.
God is partial
This little scene in which James takes us into a worship service for a lesson on favoritism is perhaps the epistle’s best-known passage....
Moral words, evil deeds (Mark 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23)
Mark's story is about the irony of keeping our hands ritually washed while being up to our elbows in evil.
Jesus groans: Mark 7:24-37
Jesus does not serve the vague “God of everybody.” He serves the scandalously particular God of Israel.
Back to ethics
“Be doers of the word, and not merely hearers who deceive themselves” is the kind of statement...
The Collected Sermons of William Sloan Coffin: The Riverside Years, Volume 1, 1977-1982
John Ames, 76-year-old Congregationalist minister and narrator of Marilynne Robinson’s st...