Features
What's confirmation for? A rite needing revision
How does Jesus save?
Seeds of doubt: Ikon's Peter Rollins
The Soloist
Books
Church-based hate
Crisis recounts the sad stories of young people who, like Esau, cried for a blessing and too often did not receive it.
How the boom went bust
Getting Saved in America: Taiwanese Immigration and Religious Experience
Sacred Assemblies and Civic Engagement: How Religion Matters for America's Newest Immigrants
Evangelical Disenchantment: Nine Portraits of Faith and Doubt
BookMarks
Departments
The case for condoms: Bishops versus the pope
Scene of the crime: Television's longing for justice
Done in our name: Before we turn the page on torture
Torturous times: The need for a Gamaliel
News
People
Obama team seeks support of progressives on poverty: White House staff address Sojourners gathering
On Obama, Rome is more gentle than U.S. bishops: Vatican conspicuously silent
Top SBC ethicist calls waterboarding torture: Land: Torture "violates everything we stand for"
Maine is fifth state to legalize same-sex marriage: A legislative move
Adventists deny trying to convert Sarah Obama: Response to complaints from Kenyan Muslims
In hard-hit Indiana churches pull together: Twenty percent unemployment
Methodist court says no to clergy performing same-sex weddings: Judicial Council rejects resolutions by West-coast conferences
Seafarer chaplaincy confronts piracy fears: "An amazing ministry"
Century Marks
Happy today: When life is grim, columnist Mary Schmich likes to ask people, "What's making you happy today?" She doesn't ask, "Are you happy?" That's a "black hole" of a question, she says, that can lead to equivocation and existential dread. Her question, instead, assumes that there's always something, no matter how grim life is, that can be a source of gladness, however small or simple—like a flower or a bird, a skyline or a full moon, or just a cup of coffee (Chicago Tribune, May 1).