(OPINION) When it comes to religion news, what ultimately mattered in 2023? The Guy observes that we have no idea whether U.S. hatreds are a temporary sickness that will subside, or whether anything can really alter the essential questions in the decades-long Middle East conflict. Thus, The Guy leans toward the importance of permanent changes in direction as depicted below.
Read MoreA special year-end edition of Weekend Plug-in highlights the best religion journalism of 2023.
Read More(OPINION) Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI declared that āart and the saints are the greatest apologetic for our faith.ā A movement was launched to transform painters into ātacit preachers,ā wrote Gabriele Paleotti, archbishop of Bologna. The term tacit means wordless. Tacit preachers sought to move viewers in deeper ways than mere argument. Art provided a way to draw people together instead of tearing them apart.
Read More(OPINION) If you knew nothing about a woman whoās the subject of a Post profile, you might imagine sheās enjoyed every advantage ā sheās pretty, young, White, popular. You might envy her. If youāre of a certain turn of mind, you might even resent her. And youād be wrong.
Read More(OPINION) Octoberās terrorist attack by Hamas and Israelās overwhelming response unleashed a humanitarian nightmare thatās gripped the world. Real-time images flood our electronic devices. War shapes our lives, sometimes encouraging violence, verbal and physical. Outside war zones, ordinary citizens find ourselves drawn into taking sides. How can we create a better future for our children, ourselves ā even for those we donāt know?
Read MoreThis weekās Weekend Plug-in highlights the top religion news of 2023, as voted by the Religion News Association. Plus, as always, catch up on all the best reads and top headlines in the world of faith.
Read More(OPINION) For decades, TV producer Norman Lear described himself as a cultural Jew who didn't practice any traditional form of faith. Over the years, however, the television icon became more and more intrigued with religious faith, both as a force in American life and as a topic ignored by Hollywood.
Read More(OPINION) By now, Iām sure most people have heard of Ayaan Hirsi Aliās conversion. Not only because of her fascinating reflection on it, but also because of the countless responses from many different sides.
Read More(OPINION) In many ways the Palestinians are victims, and my strong support for Israel does not stop me from grieving over the suffering of the Palestinian people. They have been victims of decades of bad leadership. Victims of lifelong anti-Israel propaganda. Victims of the aftermath of the Six Day War in 1967.
Read More(OPINION) More than anything else, I seem to hear from people who grew up in evangelical Protestant churches, as I did. They were taught a rigid set of doctrines to which they were expected to adhere unquestioningly. Often, these folks tell me the faith they were baptized in hasnāt held up for them. Theyāve become disillusioned. Theyāve quit believing in God.
Read MoreThis weekās Weekend Plug-in looks at Hanukkah amid the Israel-Hamas war. Plus, as always, catch up on all the best reads and top headlines in the world of faith.
Read More(OPINION) Advent began Sunday. Most Christians know what Advent signifies: a time of penitence and preparation. And they know how it signifies these two: four Advent wreath candles. But why do we observe Advent? Dallas Willard had a āwhyā you might find surprising.
Read More(OPINION) As an abundance of odes to Rosalynn have reminded me, the Carters proved themselves Christians in the truest sense of the word, unlike so many Bible thumping politicians today. Before they reached the White House, while in it and across their post-presidential decades, they never used their faith as a cudgel with which to bludgeon or belittle their adversaries, but as a motivation for their innumerable good works.
Read More(OPINION) There is no question that hatred of the state of Israel, and more broadly, hatred of the Jewish people, helps animate the pro-Palestinian cause. If people really cared about the Palestinians themselves, there would not be Palestinian refugee camps in countries like Lebanon and Syria, and the Palestinians would have been granted full citizenship in the surrounding Arab countries at some point after the 1948 war.
Read More(OPINION) When religion does seem to reduce individualsā acceptance of scientific ideas, it is typically not because of the facts themselves. Rather, religious individualsā objections are often grounded in the moral implications of that research, or scientistsā perceived role in policymaking.
Read More(OPINION) Choosing a life of thanksgiving doesnāt mean living in denial or developing toxic positivity. Just venture online to watch a few minutes of the gruesome images coming out of Israel and Gaza. Youāll quickly be disabused of the idea that this is the best of all possible worlds.
Read More(OPINION) Never assume that Americaās third parties donāt matter. Especially in a topsy-turvy political season like this one. After all, some figure that Jill Steinās 1% in three swing states produced Donald Trumpās 2016 victory, or that Ralph Naderās 1.6% in Florida elected Bush 43 in 2000, or that Ross Perotās 19% elected Clinton over incumbent Bush 41 in 1992.
Read More(OPINION) William Peter Blatty was pounding out the first pages of "The Exorcist" when his telephone rang ā bringing the news that his mother had died. The screenwriter was already digging into dark material by writing a fictional take on an exorcism case he heard discussed during his Georgetown University days.
Read More(OPINION) An editor friend forwarded me an email heād received. The original sender said he was reading articles about how intertwined Christians are these days with secular politics and found the subject very confusing. He suggested that somebody ought to explain how to identify a genuine Christian as opposed, I assume, to people only using faith to further their political agenda.
Read More(OPINION) For decades, the pro-life movement in America was essentially a grassroots movement. The soul of this movement was compassion. That compassion was most evident in the network of more than 3,000 pregnancy resource centers (PRCs) that had grown up around the nation. Many of them have been part of two large networks called Care Net and Heartbeat International.
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