Features
The pastor as person: Ministry counselor Ross Peterson
Religious violence? The politics of a higher law
Carbon and compost: Gardening in a time of climate change
The people’s preaching class: Fred Craddock in retirement
The Craddock Center
Read the main article on Fred Craddock in retirement.
The idea for the Craddock Center began when a Head Start staffer in Ellijay, Georgia, called Cherry Log Christian Church and spoke to Fred Craddock.
“I hear you care about poor people,” she said.
“Well, yes, we do,” Craddock replied.
“I have a woman here with four children, another one on the way, and no place to stay and nothing to eat.”
“I’ll come down.”
Books
Baptizing empire
Matthew McCullough argues that the Spanish-American War signaled a crucial turning point in American self-understanding and self-justification.
Medicine and Religion, by Gary B. Ferngren
At the hospital where I work, families may form relationships with pastoral care staff—but they come for our clinical competence in medicine. Gary Ferngren points out how new and odd this is.
A Political Theology of Climate Change, by Michael S. Northcott
Many Americans dismiss climate change reports as fear mongering. Michael Northcott sees the use of apocalyptic imagery differently.
Who’s Afraid of Relativism? by James K. A. Smith
James K. A. Smith suggests that the work of Richard Rorty can be a source of renewal—even though it makes many conservative Christians shrink in horror.
The Soul of the World, by Roger Scruton
Roger Scruton’s basic theme is this: “Science cannot tell who I am, let alone where, when, or how.” But I-you moral dialogue is not rooted in science.