Features
Educated for marriage: The difference college makes
After thousands of scientific studies of marriage, the one number everybody knows is 50 percent. Fifty percent of American marriages end in divorce. It’s a statistic made for pessimism and fatalism, as in “Half of the people in this room will get a divorce.” Adding to the woe is the wealth of research that has noted the severe economic and social impact of divorce on children. Children from divorced families experience poverty, struggle in school, get in trouble with the authorities and encounter other problems at higher rates than children from families whose parents stay married.
Choosing to talk: A fourth meeting between church leaders and Ahmadinejad
In the fourth meeting between Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and religious leaders seeking to keep lines of communication open between Iran and the U.S.—the second such meeting I’ve attended—speakers from Jewish, Muslim, Lutheran and Mennonite communities made brief presentations that were followed by a long response from Ahmadinejad in which he affirmed that “all divine prophets have spoken of one truth.”
A theological dictionary: G is for generosity
Frozen River
I’ve covered the Sundance Film Festival many times and can say with reasonable authority that the movie lovers who brave Utah winters to see world premieres are some of the easiest audiences I’ve encountered. I’ve seen parka-clad devotees cheer for films that are run-of-the-mill family squabble movies and give standing ovations to politically correct coming-of-age stories that would never see a movie screen outside of Park City. As a result, I’m always dubious when a film has the Sundance seal of approval stamped on it.
Books
Public love
Electing Not to Vote: Christian Reflections on Reasons for Not Voting
The Fear of Beggars: Stewardship and Poverty in Christian Ethics
Spiritual Emotions: A Psychology of Christian Virtues
Departments
Grief and hope: Cubs fans wait for next year
Back home in Gilead: The complexities and beauty of family
Nollywood: The Nigerian film industry
Pulpit freedoms: Churches and the IRS
News
Pittsburgh diocese votes to exit Episcopal Church: Aligns with Anglican Province of the Southern Cone
Catholic scholar leaves his trustee post after his Obama endorsement: Nicholas Cafardi says he quit voluntarily
Four students suspended over Obama stunt: Confessed to hanging an effigy of the candidate
PCUSA minister cleared in gay 'wedding' case: Event not deemed a marriage ceremony
Pulpit protest shakes fist at IRS, public opinion: Alliance Defense Fund's Pulpit Freedom Sunday
Muslim group asks IRS to look at Obsession DVDs: "Anti-Muslim" film distributed as newspaper insert
Century Marks
Mind-boggling: If the $700 billion bailout of Wall Street were paid out in $100 bills, it would amount to a stack 54 miles high. Given the magnitude of the plan, no wonder there is public outrage. But columnist James Carroll noticed another, similar figure: in the fiscal year just begun the Pentagon will spend $607 billion on regular military operations (as well as another $100 billion on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq).