The endless creativity of Christianity boggles the mind.
But Andrew Sullivan and his readers are on the case. More here.
The endless creativity of Christianity boggles the mind.
But Andrew Sullivan and his readers are on the case. More here.
An interview with Miroslav Volf, author of Allah: A Christian Response.
My sense, though, is that today’s exclusions stems from fear and from the need to generate enemies so that we can justify our own need for violence. Clearly, concern about “creeping sharia” in the United States is absurd; chances that sharia will be implemented in the United States are only slightly better than that Martians will invade. And yet people are really exercised by the perceived threat of Muslims “taking over America.” A few exceptions notwithstanding, there is no real enemy to speak of, but people create the enemy. Why? Because they harbor enmity and are plagued by fear and resentment. This is a deeply unchristian stance. We are supposed to love enemies and, if possible, make friends of them; we are not supposed to manufacture enemies so we can have targets for our fears and resentments.
For confirmation of much that Volf says, one only need read the comment thread.
A thoughtful conversation between Sarah Posner and Anthea Butler concerning the various movements that influence politicians like Rick Perry. Both caution against careless dismissal or over-exaggerating.
Frank Schaeffer on Michele Bachmann’s “anti-feminism.
Greg Metzger offers a roadmap to the media discussion of the religious right in recent weeks here and here.
Given the last post, and my interest in spirituality, I’m looking forward to this new project: Frequencies, a joint effort by Killing the Buddha and the Immanent Frame.
The experiment is simply to ask “scholars, writers, and artists what they think of when they think of the word spirituality.”
100 essays over 100 days.