Features
Stranger on the steeple: Lessons from a homeless man
Social insecurity: Linking retirement and personal responsibility
One of the greatest fruits of high productivity and rising incomes in a country like the U.S. is the financial ability people have to retire. This possibility was beyond the imagination of pre–World War II workers and is still far beyond the expectations of most people living in Third World countries. For most of human history, people simply worked until their bodies gave out and then depended on their children to care for them in the last years of life. Now, in advanced economies, retirement figures into almost everyone’s expectations.
Dinosaurs in the Garden: A visit to the Creation Museum
God in evolution: The nature of divine power
While controversies over evolution continue to arise in some sectors of American Christianity, most mainline Christians have made their peace with Darwin. We may not grasp all the nuances of the scientific debate, but we have concluded that evolutionary theory is good science and therefore must be compatible with good theology. Darwin’s name doesn’t send chills up our spines. We are theistic evolutionists: we believe that natural selection is evidently part of God’s method of shaping the natural world.
Sweeney Todd: TheDemonBarber of Fleet Street
Unlikely as it sounds, director Tim Burton missed all the jokes in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. The origins of the celebrated 1979 musical, written by Stephen Sondheim in collaboration with Hugh Wheeler, lie in the vaudeville-style English music hall tradition and in 19th-century penny dreadfuls. The outrageous puns are still present in the duet “A Little Priest,” in which the pragmatic Mrs.
Books
Sundown Towns
BookMarks
Separate and unequal
Wisdom makes a comeback
The Drama of Doctrine
Failing America’s Faithful
Departments
Blessed messes: Living in community
Wall of shame: Mostly a political gesture
Trust exercise: Unexpected wallops
Map quest: Candy box directions
News
Habitat's new controls concern some affliates, including New Orleans: Requirements unprecedented
Scientists update book on evolution and faith in time for elections: Addresses the role of faith in human knowledge
Property fight in Virginia costs millions: Episcopal church assets
Bishops make moves on Episcopal chessboard: San Joaquin out, Pittsburgh still in
Century Marks
Match made in heaven? Almost half of American Jews marry gentiles, a rate that has tripled since 1970. But now JDate—a matchmaking Web site for Jewish singles—is teaming up with rabbis to reverse this trend. JDate offers a bulk rate to rabbis who will make subscriptions available to members of their congregations, and some of the rabbis are picking up the tab (Newsweek, January 21).