Features
The rest of the story: Ministry at Trinity UCC
Jeremiah Wright needs no defense from me. Anyone who has built a congregation from 87 members to some 8,000 and whose congregation has created models of ministry in one of the poorest areas of Chicago has a body of work that speaks for itself. A recent press release from Trinity United Church of Christ, issued by its new senior pastor, Otis Moss III, notes that on Sunday mornings alone, over 36 years, Pastor Wright has spoken for a total of 207,792 minutes.
Down on the farm: The problem with government subsidies
Food fight: How international aid fails the poor
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
When he was in his early 40s, Jean-Dominique Bauby, editor of a French fashion magazine, suffered a massive stroke which left him completely paralyzed except for the movement of one eye. By using this eye and a Morse code of sorts, he was able to dictate a memoir to a caring and patient scribe. It is not a memoir in the traditional sense but a series of observations, a stream-of-consciousness examination of one man’s feelings, random memories and spiritual meanderings as he lies immobile in a hospital outside of Paris.
Books
Imperial assumptions
Overcoming Life's Disappointments
Everything Must Change
BookMarks
Departments
Grace in the center: A sampling of sayings
Hard words: Wright’s jeremiad
The Wright context: Prophetic preaching
Choice terms: Fancy religious language
Delegate count: The Ickes strategy past and present
News
New Baptist Covenant to convene again in 2011: Triennial meetings are historical Baptist pattern
Gay acceptance has advances and setbacks in three denominations: No consensus
Responding to Obama: Reactions to the Philadelphia speech on race
Focus differs on Wright and GOP friend Hagee: "Wright didn't want to nuke anybody"
Obama caught between pulpit and politics: A politician and a parishioner
Century Marks
Get moving: Americans could cut carbon emissions by 64 million tons if they’d either walk or bicycle for 30 minutes a day instead of driving. They’d also collectively shed 3 billion pounds of excess fat in the process. Even more would be done for the environment if people gave up eating meat, since livestock production produces 18 percent of the world’s greenhouse-gas emissions (Sierra, March/April).