Features
Beloved community: Trinity UCC's Otis Moss III
Trinity United Church of Christ on the South Side of Chicago has received a great deal of media attention because one of its members is presidential candidate Barack Obama. The head pastor of the 8,000-member church is Otis Moss III, 36, a graduate of Yale Divinity School, who recently took over the day-to-day leadership of the church from Jeremiah Wright. Moss is the son of Otis Moss Jr., longtime pastor of Olivet Institutional Baptist Church in Cleveland, who served with Martin Luther King Jr.
The fixer-upper church: Ministry on the margins
Glimpsing the future: Dispatch from Hong Kong
While attending a conference in Hong Kong I spent a free afternoon looking for signs of the vibrant Asian Christianity that we’ve heard so much about recently. If writers such as Philip Jenkins (The Next Christendom: The Coming of Global Christianity) and David Aikman (Jesus in Beijing: How Christianity Is Changing the Global Balance of Power) are to be trusted, China holds the future of Christianity.
Salvation workout: How I found the virtues
Handshake ritual: Ministry at the church door
Worship is over and I am standing in the doorway shaking hands. In front of me is a couple I do not recall seeing before. I say, “Good morning! I’m Martin Copenhaver.” By my manner and my tone of voice you might think that I am greeting long-lost friends, rather than introducing myself to these people for the first time. The woman of the couple responds, “Good to meet you. We are Jill and Bob Townsend.”
The Counterfeiters
The Austrian picture The Counterfeiters, which won this year’s Academy Award for best foreign film, dramatizes yet another little-known story of the Holocaust. In “Operation Bernhard” the Nazis assembled a select band of prisoners at Sachsenhausen concentration camp and put them to work producing counterfeit versions of the English pound note and the American dollar bill. The prisoners were rewarded with food and clothes and soft beds to sleep in.
Books
A place for passion
What the Thunder Said: A Novella and Stories
God Is Dead
Our World
Departments
Good sermon, Reverend: Listening is even better
Tortured logic: A blot on the United States
Naming God: The divine name has become a household God
Crime wave: Ecclesiastical theft
News
Polish priest-scientist wins Templeton Prize: Cosmologist Michael Heller
Despite church pleas, Bush vetoes bill to ban harsh interrogation: Calls methods a "valuable" tool in war on terror
Episcopal seminaries adjust to realities: Declining revenue, new plans
Century Marks
Strange love: David Levy, an artificial-intelligence researcher from London, thinks the time is coming when humans will hook up with robots for love, sex and even marriage. "If the alternative is that you are lonely and sad and miserable, is it not better to find a robot that claims to love you and acts like it loves you?" he argues (Scientific American, March).