Features
In tough straits: Can the ecumenical logjam be broken?
The ecumenical path has always been narrow, but recent events cast a new light on the limited and shifting range of ecumenical possibilities. With the exception of the success of the rapprochement of Luth eran, Reformed and United churches in Europe, intra-Protestant ecumenism seems to be dead in the water.
Smarter foreign aid: How to fix USAID
A Serious Man
It’s 1967 in Minnesota, and life is getting more and more difficult for physics professor Larry Gopnik (Michael Stuhlbarg). Despite his best efforts to be a good man, a respected member of his Jewish community, a bona fide mensch, the structure of his life is collapsing like the walls of Jericho.
Books
Intrepid twins
Sense of the Faithful: How American Catholics Live Their Faith
The Pontificate of Benedict XVI: Its Premises and Promises
Literary Genius: 25 Classic Writers Who Define English and American Literature
BookMarks
Still hungry
When I was in southern Ethiopia in 1994, I watched truck after truck roll into a community with food aid. I asked a farmer if the harvest had been bad. He told me he had an abundant harvest of tomatoes and onions—cash crops. Because of all the food aid they were receiving, he could use his land to make some extra cash—and his family would eat wheat from America. That same year I could purchase corn oil at the local grocery store—in big metal containers labeled "A gift from the people of America." I resented having to pay for what was clearly intended to be food aid.
Ways of being Catholic
Departments
Another kind of surge: 30,000 Greg Mortensons
Muslims go Dutch: While churches thrive
Shaken: To serve in an age of earthquake
Compelling characters: Zechariah's story
News
Anglican leader, in Vatican City, downplays church strains: Dialogue back on track
Irish Catholic cover-up of child sex abuse echoes past priestly scandals: Archbishop of Dublin offers contrite apology
Scholar alters view, says Niebuhr probably wrote 'Serenity Prayer' Shapiro cites new evidence: Shapiro cites new evidence
Religious conservatives ponder resistance to abortion, gay marriage: The Manhattan Declaration
Lutheran defectors plan new church body: May expedite launch
Evangelical students get into once-barred dancing: The swing thing
Obama's surge plan disappoints some on the left: "We were promised fundamental change"
Election of lesbian agitatesAnglicans: Mary Glasspool of Los Angeles
Critics vow to overturn Swiss minaret ban: Surprise and dismay
Century Marks: “Genius . . . sometimes consists of knowing when to stop.” —Columnist George Will, citing a Charles de Gaulle maxim in making a case forthe U.S. to withdraw from Afghanistan
“I take the ones I can afford and then trust in the Lord.”
—Robert Brown, 60, from North Carolina, who has heart disease and emphysema, on coping with the rising cost of prescription drugs