Features
Thanks, but no thanks: Congregations say no to the faith-based initiative
More than a decade ago, the faith-based initiative was launched in Congress with the idea of tapping the energy and genius of religious organizations, including congregations, to meet social needs. The idea of fostering more government partnerships with religious groups was controversial from the start, for it raised the specter of the government becoming entangled, perhaps in an unconstitutional manner, with religion. Controversy aside, we can now assess whether the initiative has had any success in involving more congregations in social service work.
It's about the carbon: What's worse than the gulf oil leak?
Repentance: Repeat as needed
The parish liturgy committee decided to adopt the contemporary version of the Lord’s Prayer for use during worship. From now on, at least at one of the services, we’d be “sinners” instead of “trespassers.” The next Sunday a distraught man cornered me. “You’ve taken the Lord’s Prayer away from us!”
I was shocked. What did he mean? We’d been preparing and educating people for this small change for years. How could changing a few words “take away” the Lord’s Prayer?
Deep and wide
It is by living and dying that one becomes a theologian, Martin Luther said. With that comment in mind, we have resumed a Century series published at intervals since 1939 and asked theologians to reflect on their own struggles, disappointments, questions and hopes as people of faith and to consider how their work and life have been intertwined.
The Eclipse
The modest Irish picture The Eclipse has slipped below almost everyone’s radar; it’s moving quietly across the country in brief art-house engagements. This contemporary ghost story about loneliness and connection is worthy of attention.
Books
Be Very Afraid: The Cultural Responses to Terror, Pandemics, Environmental Devastation, Nuclear Annihilation, and Other Threats
BookMarks
The Theology of Food: Eating and the Eucharist
What's next?
Among the misfits
God Is Not One: The Eight Rival Religions That Run the World—and Why Their Differences Matter
Departments
My church, Rachel's church: "Jesus means church for me"
Preferential hiring? Religious agencies; government funds: Religious agencies; government funds
Lovers' quarrel: Arguments and intimacy
Fog of the culture war: Wisdom from Lincoln
News
Can evangelicals live with high court's broadened symbolism of the cross? Court allows cross but secularizes it: Court allows cross but secularizes it
Anti-incumbent mood in the Missouri Synod: "Tea Party feel to these numbers"
ELCA worried by shutdown of publisher pension plan: Augsburg Fortress employees suing
African Lutherans press opposition to gay rites: Church leaders in Tanzania and Ethiopia
From clergy shortage to clergy glut: Economy prompts staffing cuts
Century Marks
A room for grandma? Kenneth Dupin, a Methodist pastor in Salem, Virginia, thinks he has a way to address the needs of an aging population: MEDcottage, a portable dwelling that can be placed in a backyard and equipped with technology to monitor a person’s vital signs, filter air and communicate with the outside world. Critics call them “granny pods” and warn that they will create a “not in my backyard” movement (Washington Post, May 6).