Features
Infallible preachers: The mullahs in Pakistan
'Allah is my Lord and yours' Talking with Ahmadinejad: Talking with Ahmadinejad
Rise and fall
Steve Zaillian’s adaptation of Robert Penn Warren’s 1946 Pulitzer Prize–winning novel All the King’s Men, about the making of a demagogue—modeled on Louisiana governor (and later senator) Huey Long—is languid, undramatic and shapeless. Zaillian has a talent for streamlining big, incident-filled books. He wrote the screenplay for Schindler’s List and both wrote and directed A Civil Action. But in this case his love for the novel seems to have done him in.
Books
Take and read
Take and read
Take and read
Tutu's story
Evangelical reformer
Bellwether preacher
Beyond 'taboo morality'
A life interrupted
Neighborhood saint
Shaped by the '70s
Departments
Autumn lament: The liturgical calendar and the baseball calendar
Making amends: A forum for dialogue and resolving conflicts
Dreams and strategies: Cultivating institutions in service to the gospel
Fudging: Do we lie about sitting in the pew?
News
Black churches prove cool to federal grants: Tiny fraction receive monies to aid poor
Gardner Taylor still a preaching exemplar: Among America's greatest contemporary pulpiteers
More WCC members now paying dues: Overall financial situation described as positive
Americans United files first suit challenging a U.S. faith-based grant: Question government money spent for religious purposes
'Tongues' resurfaces as Southern Baptist issue: Seminary professor requests reconsideration
Vatican ousts rogue African archbishop: Milingo excommunicated after installing married bishops
Pope Benedict meets with Muslim leaders: Calls for "authentic dialogue"
Briefly noted
Century Marks
Take this to court: People who think the Ten Commandments should be displayed in public places have a new option: having them tattooed on their arms or other visible places on their bodies. Check out the religious tattoos at www.religioustattoos.net.