Features
What's for dinner? Food and justice: Food and justice
My family tries to eat healthy, organic, fairly traded, locally and sustainably grown food. This is the case even for the family bunny, whose diet of Timothy hay and salads is fairly easy to provide.
With heart and voice: It's not about the song
Chaotic imagination
Great stories touch on many themes and give us a long list of things that they could be said to be “about.” As I tell my students, if you think Moby-Dick is just about whale- hunting, you weren’t paying attention. Atonement, based on the best-selling 1992 novel by British author Ian McEwan, is an ambitious tale that explores guilt, forgiveness, remorse, family jealousies, inequities of the class system, the power of imagination, the role of the artist and the sanctity of the creative process.
Sound alternatives
Peter Himmelman, formerly the bushy-haired hero of the New Wave band Sussman Lawrence, has transitioned into a middle-aged rocker, and his music reveals only the best results. His songs have a muscular, energetic groove that begs comparisons with Bob Dylan—his father-in-law. The lyrics balance pungent humor and well-versed, poignant observations. Yet what ultimately sets Himmelman apart is his ability to see straight to the core of things, digging and mining for slivers of the miraculous.
Books
Walking lessons
Wired to believe
Twentieth-Century Catholic Theologians
BookMarks
Departments
Buzz for a Baptist: Huckabee's healthy contribution
A second glance: The image of God in everyone
Peace brokers: The legacy of Annapolis
Surfeit of meaning: Sacred symbolism
Christmastide: A lovely 12-day season
News
Judas is a 'demon' in new read of gospel: The long-lost Gospel of Judas
Romney speech on faith may assure some, trouble others: Running as an American, not a Mormon
Robertson's son takes over CBN: Gordon Robinson
The religious right in flux: A pivotal year
Century Marks: Voices of 2007
“Earth Mother is fighting back—not only from the four winds but also from underneath. Scientists call it global warming. We call it Earth Mother getting angry.”
—Talking Hawk, a Native American from the Mohawk Tribe, preparing for a sacred ceremony to pray for the Earth