Features
Travelers' blessings: An interview with Rick Steves
The past isn't past: The weight of congregational history
Who cares about history? I think about this question a lot because of my job as director of the Congregational Library in Boston. My association with this venerable Yankee institution, a large collection of things both important and inexplicable, means I’m often invited to churches that are celebrating anniversaries. It’s the part of my job I enjoy the most—bringing words of greeting from long-dead Congregationalists whose memories are stored away in our climate-controlled archive.
Generational ties: Bridging the gaps
Crazy Heart
The title of Scott Cooper’s debut film, Crazy Heart, comes from a song by the movie’s protagonist, a country singer named Bad Blake (Jeff Bridges). At 57, Bad is an alcoholic and is shut down artistically, but he’s still working the road and hanging on. The song alludes to picking up his crazy heart and giving it one more try. That’s the theme of this poignant movie, whose intimate style evokes the films of the 1970s.
Up in the Air
"We are not swans,” declares Ryan Bing ham (played by George Clooney), summing up human nature to a crowded conference room. “We’re sharks.”
The line comes about midway through Up in the Air, the latest picture from Jason Reitman (Thank You for Smoking, Juno), and the claim also sits at the center of the film’s feast of ideas. Calvin said all wisdom consists of two endlessly interconnected parts: the knowledge of God and the knowledge of ourselves. Up in the Air is a meditation on the latter, and it is one of the most intriguing films of the year.
Books
BookMarks
After youth group
Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford's Forgotten Jungle City
The Sins of the Fathers: The Law and Theology of Illegitimacy Reconsidered
Thousands of Broadways/Lights on a Ground of Darkness
Departments
I statements: A preacher's testimony
Homegrown counterterrorism: Successful self-policing
Vampires among us: Tales of defeat and redemption
Our life story: Creedal relevance
News
Century Marks
Local bankers: Move Your Money is an online grassroots movement encouraging people to take their money out of banks that are “too big to fail.” It is appealing to people who are angry at big banks for predatory lending practices, for receiving government bailout money and for giving huge bonuses to their employees. Although some community banks have also failed, they typically are more conservative in the way they use their money and are often more connected to local businesses and needs (Move Your Money).