Features
The rest of the story: Media coverage of the war in Gaza
Blank stares: Who's listening to sermons?
A group of pastors had been brought together by the Episcopal Preaching Foundation to talk and share and practice preaching. It was my turn to address the group, and I had a particular focus in mind. I presented a composite mental sketch of some people whom most preachers know all too well—people who haunt our sermon preparations, trip up our tongues so that we’re left stammering nervously, and bedevil us in the after-worship handshake line. Sometimes we try to pursue them as they deftly slip out a side door.
What's next for Iraq? After the U.S. leaves: After the U.S. leaves
What will happen if Barack Obama makes good on his promise to withdraw American troops from Iraq by 2011? One scenario is that hostilities between Iraq’s Shi‘ites and Sunnis will reignite in a destructive civil war, plunging the country into further chaos. A second scenario is that Shi‘ite groups will ally themselves with Iran in order to gain power and transform Iraq into an Islamic theocracy. A third possible threat is posed by Saudi Arabia, Syria and Turkey, which may seek to take advantage of the weakened state and annex parts of Iraq for themselves.
Accidental lessons: My encounter with a chainsaw
Things turn around: A Palm Sunday crisis
Gemorrah
Nominated as Best Foreign Film at the Academy Awards and awarded the Grand Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival, Gomorrah chronicles the violent activities of the Camorra, or “the System,” the sprawling crime syndicate in Naples and surrounding provinces. The film, directed by Matteo Garrone, is based on a 2006 book by Roberto Saviano, which was a best seller in Italy. Since the book’s publication, Saviano has been living under government protection, his life threatened by angry members of the Camorra.
Books
Guests of God
Christianity's Dangerous Idea: The Protestant Revolution—A History from the Sixteenth Century to the Twenty-First
The Given Day: A Novel
BookMarks
Departments
AIG scapegoats: Collective culpability
Investing in Sudan: Space for healing
The Sufi next door: A wonderful historical irony
The end is life: "Love is the victor"
News
Century Marks
First parishioner: Aides and friends of President Obama have been quietly visiting churches in Washington, D.C., to help the first family find a spiritual home. The Obamas are looking for a church whose beliefs match theirs and one that has a youth ministry suitable for their daughters and is active in helping the needy. Security logistics are also a factor (Boston Globe, March 22).