Features
In the None Zone: Religion in the Pacific Northwest
The faith factor: Religion in the voting booth
The role of religion in the presidential campaign was summed up by Associated Press religion writer Eric Gorski in an article headlined “Religion Used to Divide, Mock in ’08.” Lamenting the low level of discussion of religion, Gorski ran through a YouTubed array of controversies, from the inflammatory preachings of Jeremiah Wright and John Hagee to Mike Huckabee’s thoughts on whether Mormons believe that Jesus and the devil are brothers to a witch-hunting Kenyan pastor’s prayer over Sarah Palin.
Tackling the big questions: Novelist Mary Doria Russell
Mary Doria Russell’s novels include intricately drawn characters who explore life’s deepest and most troubling questions. She is perhaps best known for her first novel, The Sparrow (1996), and its sequel, Children of God (1998), about human contact with aliens on a space mission organized by Jesuits. Her most recent novel, Dreamers of the Day, released in May, is set in 1921 and concerns the Cairo Peace Conference and the shaping of the modern Middle East.
Recovery Café: The gift of brokenness
Organizations committed to helping the addicted and the homeless can be found in every city. Few of them resemble the Recovery Café. As founder Killian Noe told me, “It looks like a Starbucks.”
Sure enough, the site is painted in welcoming and trendy bright blue and red, with exposed pipes in the ceiling and with gobs of sunshine (at least by Seattle standards) pouring through the glass front wall.
Five churches, one building? Good stewardship: Good stewardship
In the story of David and Goliath, Saul famously insisted that David be outfitted in his own kingly armor. While this was a generous gesture, David found that he could hardly move. Rejecting the clunky armor, David retrieved five smooth stones for his sling.
Rachel Getting Married
Screenwriters love structure: it gives them something to focus on as they plow ahead in their storytelling or to retreat to if they get off track. Familiar structures include the road movie (looking for answers), the journey film (home to Ithaca) and the sit-by-the-fireplace flashback (“Let me tell you about Heathcliffe”).
Books
Deconstructing Theodicy: Why Job Has Nothing to Say to the Puzzle of Suffering
BookMarks
Absence of thought
God, Evil, and Design: An Introduction to the Philosophical Issues
Departments
Energized: The faces of the young people
Beyond the God gap: Lessons from Nehemiah
Cell phone sacrament: An outward sign of an inward grace
Real witchcraft: Potent solutions
News
Dalai Lama has given up on Tibet talks with China: "There hasn't been any positive response from the Chinese side"
U.S. Orthodox churches have more converts than expected, study says: Mostly from Catholic and evangelical backgrounds
High court weighs limits of broadcast indecency: Federal Communications Commission v. Fox Television
Justice Department OKs Christian-only hiring by World Vision: Nondiscrimination would "substantially burden" religious practice
Religion professors repairing their rift over annual meetings: Plans difficult to change
Religious hate crimes down in 2007, says FBI: Crimes against gays and lesbians up slightly
Mainline churches pledge support for Obama: "I am filled with hope"
Voters deal setbacks to gay marriage: California, Arizona and Florida
Century Marks
Squatters’ (divine) rights: To a Pentecostal community of squatters in Caracas, Venezuela, studied by Rafael Sánchez, their occupation of an empty, 12-story building in what was once a posh part of the town makes good theological sense. The world really belongs to God, they explain, but the devil has taken it over, and Christians’ job, as agents of the Holy Spirit, is to take back what really belongs to God (Public Culture, Spring).