Thursday digest
New today from the Century:
- The editors on the limits of the presidency: "When FDR used the specter of "fear itself" to order up the New Deal, he
brilliantly crystallized his mandate for reform. But this mandate was
already present; the speech didn't create it. The reality of governing
is that many elements are outside the president's control, via rhetoric
or anything else." - Katherine Willis Pershey likes the Back to Church Sunday video: "Many of my friends who reposted the video are socially and
theologically progressive. Some serve congregations that officially welcome gay
and lesbian Christians. The organizers of Back to Church Sunday clearly prefer
that their video and companion materials not be used to invite folks to such
communities. . . . But I've learned that if I wanted all the farmers who grow
my food to share my political convictions, I'd be pretty hungry." - "Sooner or later it comes down to faith"--but, James McGrath asks, faith in what?
- Lois Huey-Heck on an anonymous piece of art in the middle of a river.
In the news:
- Jesus cell phone ad ruled 'disrespectful'
- Okla. anti-Shariah amendment heads to appeals court
- In recession-hit Hungary, churches take over state schools
Links from elsewhere:
- Remembering Fr. Mychal Judge
- The C of E does club-culture ministry
- The governor of Georgia wants a man with white-supremacist connections to run immigration enforcement.
- Matt Drudge goes blatantly racist