Features
Papal disconnect: Benedict's social encyclical
I’ve studied papal encyclicals for over 30 years, and Caritas in veritate (“Charity in Truth”) is the first one I was eager to be finished with. Clearly Pope Benedict XVI wants his message about “integral human development” in the context of global economics to be understood in continuity with Paul VI’s Populorum progressio (“On the Development of Peoples”) of 1967, a document considered the high-water mark of Catholic social radicalism.
Affinity fraud: Fleecing the faithful
Phil Harmon was a successful business executive with deep roots in the Quaker community of the Northwest. By the 1990s the Oregon man had several homes in Oregon and Washington State. In his early career, he sold insurance. He gained widespread trust as a businessperson and garnered clients such as George Fox University, a Quaker school in Newberg, Oregon, and the Northwest Yearly Meeting, an organization of 67 Quaker churches in Washington, Oregon and Idaho. But he began to collect premiums without buying the insurance and using the premium payments to cover his clients’ claims.
The Graham succession: After Billy
Library without books: The Billy Graham Library in Charlotte, North Carolina
Role reversal: Pastor as patient
The divine script: The art of Islamic calligraphy
For Muslims, the Qur’an is revered as God’s own art. Islam is essentially an aural religion; God’s word came to the Prophet Muhammad as a voice, instructing him to iqra’, “Recite!” In fact, iqra’ is the word from which we get qur’an, the “reciting.” Reciting or chanting the Qur’an is the highest human art form for Muslims, and over the centuries lusciously melodious chanting styles have developed. But the beautiful writing of God’s word followed close behind.
On music
One of the high-water marks of popular music, certainly of jazz music, is Miles Davis’s Kind of Blue (1959), which almost by itself jolted jazz out of the bebop era. A Davis biographer said that with Kind of Blue he was “trying to evoke the sound of a gospel choir he had once heard on a dark road in Arkansas.”
The Hurt Locker
Kathryn Bigelow’s The Hurt Locker is the best movie to come out of the war in Iraq so far. In fact, it’s the finest American war film of the past decade.
Books
BookMarks
Traces of God
The Clash Within: Democracy, Religious Violence, and India's Future
A Syllable of Water: Twenty Writers of Faith Reflect on Their Art
Departments
Everyday notes: The familiar essay
In denial: The rationing we know
Spooked by gadgets: Postmodern animism
For shame: Only God can set it right
News
Swedish Lutherans warned by Anglicans on gay issue: A challenge for ecumenism
U.S. Methodists reject 'open door' membership: Amendment failed to gain two-thirds support
American Baptists take delight in diversity: May be most diverse mainline Protestant denomination
Many clergy vulnerable to health insurance loss: Pastors of small churches especially hard hit
NIH and surgeon general nominees combine faith, biomedical achievement: Francis Collins, Regina Benjamin
Reduced status suggested for Episcopal Church: Rowan Williams recommends secondary role
Anglicans offer baptism-wedding combination for unwed parents: A two-for-one service
Century Marks
Racial profiling: When President Obama was in the Illinois Senate, he worked on a racial profiling bill that led to state traffic studies on who gets pulled over by police. The latest study reveals a consistent pattern: 24.7 percent of white drivers who consent to a search of their vehicle have contraband, while only 15.4 percent of minority drivers do. Yet minority drivers were twice as likely to be asked to consent to a search of their vehicle (Chicago Tribune, July 26).