Features
Everything you wanted to know about Christianity: A lighthearted lexicon
Some people in America are scared silly of Christianity, but many of the most frightened know very little about it. They throw around terms like fundamentalist and evangelical with very little knowledge of their meaning, and this is before they enter the dark thicket of Preterists, Amillennialists, Prelapsarian Arminian Claims Adjusters, etc.
Here, then, is a handy reference guide to some of the key terms, concepts and groups.
Kindly candor: Ephesians 4:25—5:2
System failure: The ethics of immigration reform
A human rights lawyer, Ralston Deffenbaugh has since 1991 been president of Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, an agency of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod and the Latvian Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. He previously represented the Lutheran World Federation at the United Nations. He has worked for the Refugee Council USA and has served as an observer of political trials for Amnesty International.
Voters and values: The divided mind of the religious left
Whose casserole? John 6:51-58
Why Maria crossed over: One family's binational life
Last summer I was invited by a hospice chaplain to accompany him on a visit to the family of Maria Durand de Perez, a Mexican woman who had died a few weeks earlier in the border town of San Ysidro, California, at the astonishing age of 111. Knowing that I had once worked as the pastor of a Spanish-language church, the chaplain, whose name is Andy, thought that my presence might prove helpful to Angela, Maria’s 78-year-old daughter, who was mourning the loss of her mother deeply.
Soldiers on tape
In 2004, about a year into Operation Iraqi Freedom, as the insurgency was gathering steam, journalist Deborah Scranton was offered a chance to embed herself with a military company that included members of the New Hampshire National Guard. She declined but made an intriguing counterproposal. She offered to give the soldiers light, mobile video cameras so they could record their experiences.
Retro Savior
There are a priori reasons to dislike Superman Returns. Superman is always a little campy in his tights and red Underoos. And how can the film measure up to such cool and thoughtful superfare as X-Men or Spider-Man? Improved computer graphics and younger, handsomer heroes do not a great superhero film make.
Books
Hazardous dreams
One Step Closer
Freedom Riders
Everyman
Leadership from Inside Out
Departments
Family tree: "Aggression, like charity, begins at home."
Healthy limits: On the importance of faith and the dangers of extremism
Bare minimum: The working poor as society's greatest philanthropists
The cracked vase: Pronounced precious
Gift list: A stewardship wedding and an altruistic registry
News
World church leaders urge Mideast ceasefire: Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and Catholic faithful call for peace
Churches challenge plan to limit religious assistance to Cuba: Outraged by latest restrictions on humanitarian aid
Presbyterian officer fired, admits taking $100,000: Restitution and insurance should cover losses
Moltmann wins theology world cup: Hans Urs von Balthasar is first runner-up
Program aids newly ordained ministers: Two-year residencies offer training and support
Griswold criticizes 'two-tier' plan for Anglican churches: Pragmatic solution is at the expense of deeper truth
People
Century Marks
Truth in fiction: Fiction often captures a historical moment. Already a number of novels have appeared that deal with the 9/11 terrorist attacks and their aftermath: John Updike, Terrorist; Jonathan Safran Foer, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close; Jay McInerney, The Good Life; and Lorraine Adams, Harbor (Chicago Tribune, July 15).