Features
In search of common ground: Rachel Laser of 'Third Way'
Rachel Laser is senior policy adviser at Third Way, a “nonpartisan strategy center for progressives” based in Washington, D.C., that seeks to locate middle ground between progressives and conservatives on issues of security, economics and culture. Laser also directs Third Way’s Culture Project, which recently released the statement “Let Us Reason Together: A Fresh Look at Shared Cultural Values Between Evangelicals and Progressives.”
How did you come to work with Third Way?
Something like forgiveness: Healing in Northern Ireland
There is a saying, “The English never remember, the Irish never forget.” The more sober truth is that everyone remembers and forgets selectively. Therein is a political problem that is well illustrated in Northern Ireland these days.
All that jazz: A disputed approach to outreach
Rights and wrongs: An interview with Nicholas Wolterstorff
The Christian philosopher Nicholas Wolterstorff has pursued a broad range of interests, including political philosophy, aesthetics, metaphysics and the philosophy of religion. He was recently professor of philosophical theology at Yale University and before that taught for many years at his alma mater, Calvin College. He has been president of the American Philosophical Association (Central Division) and of the Society of Christian Philosophers.
Tying knots: A pastor's wedding adventures
Four Months, Three Weeks and Two Days
Part of what makes Romanian director Cristian Mungiu’s Four Months, Three Weeks and Two Days so fascinating is its rambling, almost improvisational style. Viewers have to pick up bits of information about the plot and characters along the way.
Purple State of Mind
Did Jesus Christ ever have an erection? John Marks poses that question to his Christian friend Craig Detweiler in the film Purple State of Mind, which is showing in limited release and available on DVD (see www.purplestateofmind.com). As the title suggests, the film is about what happens when red-state and blue-state types mix it up. Marks and Detweiler were college roommates in 1982, the year Detweiler converted to Christianity and Marks, a cradle Presbyterian, turned into a religious skeptic.
Books
Still on a mission
Finding the body
Holy Hills of the Ozarks/Shopping for God
W. E. B. Du Bois: American Prophet
Departments
My hometown: A place to stand to view the world
Lines for Easter: The Christian news
Coexistence: What Rowan Williams meant
Of two minds: Interpretive charity
The unasked question: What's missing from the debates
News
NFL yields to churches on Super Bowl viewing: Reverses ban on widescreen TVs
U.S. religious landscape in dynamic flux: Protestants losing majority status
SMU agrees to house Bush library, policy institute; opponents vow to fight: Ground breaking expected next year
Presbyterian court nixes gay compromise: No exceptions to fidelity/chastity standard
Century Marks
Say a prayer for java: It is not so unusual that Catholic authorities in Croatia have opened a coffee shop. What is unique is that their customers can pay for their caffeine fix with prayers. The café in Zagreb charges four “Our Fathers” for a cappuccino and five “Hail Marys” for a Coca-Cola, the most expensive item on the menu (The Week, February 22).