Readers moved by the news reported in today’s Rally for Nigeria may want to read the Zenit interview with the Catholic archbishop of Jos, Ignatius Kaigama, Co-existence Turned Sour . At one point he explains that despite the persecution, many indigenous Christians are not leaving the north, . . . . Continue Reading »
Newsweek’s new issue is out, featuring more in the magazine’s ongoing love affair with the Obamasthis time a cover about Michelle Obama’s campaign against obesity. But what’s that in the reflection in the apple? A reader suggests its either Karl Marx or one of the . . . . Continue Reading »
Among recently planted Protestant churches in Manhattan, Redeemer Presbyterian is by far the fastest growing and best known. Its so new, in fact, that it doesnt have its own worship space yet. While that is under construction (at West 83rd Street and Broadway), the . . . . Continue Reading »
How much would Jesus eat? The answeras determined by depictions of the last suppervary by era, say two brothers an eating behavior expert and a religious studies scholar : Brian and Craig Wansink teamed up to analyze the amount of food depicted in 52 of the best-known paintings of . . . . Continue Reading »
According to PBS’s Religion & Ethic Newsweekly : A 1998 law mandates that the US government have an Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom to advance religious liberty around the world as part of American foreign policy. But the Obama administration still has not . . . . Continue Reading »
Bart Stupak tells Fox News that, as a “guesstimate,” he thinks the Democrats are at least 16 votes short of passing the health-care bill: “I’d be surprised if they have 200 votes.” One trouble for Pelosi seems to be that, this time around, she can’t accommodate . . . . Continue Reading »
In comment #23 of his blog post, “On the Bible and Civil Government,” John Mark Reynolds says:I have never been sure what the phrase “social justice” means.I am for justice.Like him, I am also for justice. I suspect that Professor Reynolds and other conservative Christians . . . . Continue Reading »
In response to the question, “What were they thinking?” Christopher Buckley argues that the same substance propelling the success of men such as John Edwards, Mark Sanford, and Tiger Woods also detonates their spectacular flame-outs. “The very drive that propels these people . . . . Continue Reading »
Good grief what next? I posted previously that two courts found no connection between autism and childhood vaccines. But integrity requires that I now post about the latest twist in that ongoing controversy: One of the premier scientists involved in finding no link is now immersed in a . . . . Continue Reading »
San Lorenzo del Escorial: the palace complex of King Philip II of Spain, late sixteenth century. Architects: Juan Bautista de Toledo and Juan de Herrera.Carlos Eire, author of A Brief History of Eternity (Princeton, 2009), examines how “Catholics embraced their dead even more tightly than . . . . Continue Reading »