Features
Discerning the faith factor: Pollster John Green
Described by the Los Angeles Times as the “preeminent student of the relationship between religion and American politics,”John Green has conducted surveys on religion for every presidential election since 1992. A professor of political science at the University of Akron, he is author of The Faith Factor: How Religion Influences American Elections (Praeger).
As you’ve been tracking this presidential campaign, have there been any surprises?
Inside The Shack: The Trinity makes the best-seller list
Perhaps the validity of a theological proposal can’t be properly assessed until it has been kitchified. William P. Young’s novel The Shack, a runaway success—it’s been on top of the New York Times best-seller list and has sold 2 million copies—features a particular vision of the Trinity. In theological circles, the vision is called “social trinitarianism”: the three persons of the Trinity are seen as a community of mutual love and a model for social relationships.
The wages of greed: Credit meltdown
The sources of the current economic crisis are complex and the blame for the crisis difficult to assess precisely. But it’s clear that for years leading investment firms have disregarded the common good and even their own long-term interest in their quest for profits.
Trouble the Water
Tia Lessin and Carl Deal’s documentary Trouble the Water is a devastatingly effective depiction of the experience and aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. It isn’t the first: Spike Lee’s exhaustive, four-hour When the Levees Broke ran on HBO in 2006. But superb as most of Lee’s movie is, with footage that sticks in your head for months afterward, it starts to repeat itself and devolves into a rant against the ineptitude and negligence of the federal government.
Books
Take and read
Take and read
Take and read
A second time around
What books compel a second—or third or fourth—reading? How is the second reading different from the first, and what does the difference reveal about the book or the reader? We asked ten writers, including Margaret Miles, Gordon Atkinson, Mary Doria Russell, Diana Butler Bass and David Cunningham, to name a book that they chose to reread, and to share their reactions "the second time around."
Say You're One of Them
So Brave, Young and Handsome
Father and Son: Finding Freedom
The Gospel of Father Joe: Revolutions and Revelations in the Slums of Bangkok
The Family: The Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Power
JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters
The Discipleship Study Bible: New Revised Standard Version Including Apocrypha
Saving Paradise: How Christianity Traded Love of This World for Crucifixion and Empire
Sovereignty: God, State and Self
Departments
The founders' failures: Counting on future generations
Untruths: Campaign ads that bear false witness
An ultimate somebody: The bow that sets the arrow flying
In the autumn shadows: God gomes to us
News
Faith leaders urge long-term solutions for Gulf Coast: A "moral crisis"
Orthodox body seeks new leader in wake of financial scandal: Misconduct at the highest levels
PCUSA fasting monthly to identify with poor: First Friday of every month
Chaplains aid Wall Street workers as commentators blame greed, risk-taking: Preparing for the ripple effect
Dissident bishop is removed from Episcopal ministry: Robert Duncan of Pittsburgh
'Female pastors' story rattles SBC nerves: Magazines removed from shelves
Century Marks
True confessions: Michael Jinkins, dean of Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary, says that the pastor of a large evangelical church told him he had decided to do away with a corporate confession in worship services. It’s too much of a downer, the pastor explained. Jinkins asked him, “Isn’t it more of a downer for your people to leave worship without confessing their sins and hearing the assurance of God’s pardon?” (Cultural Encounters, Winter).