Stanford Starts Religious Liberty Clinic

This is welcome news. Next semester, Stanford Law School will start the nation’s first law school clinic focusing on religious liberty. Here’s the announcement from the Stanford  website : The Religious Liberty Clinic is the newest addition to the Mills Legal Clinic, and is presently . . . . Continue Reading »

First Links — 11.16.12

Legislating Confession Achieves Nothing Waleed Aly, Sydney Morning Herald Wisdom in the Inward Parts John Huth, Augustine Collective/Harvard Ichthus Bishops Reject Statement on Economic Crisis: A “Hot Mess” Anthony S. Layne,  Impractical Catholic Tom Wolfe’s California . . . . Continue Reading »

Are Republicans the True Marxists?

Good grief. In a phone call to donors, Mitt Romney explained his defeat by referring to the “free stuff” that Democrats give their constituencies. He said that Obama’s strategy was to “give them extraordinary financial gifts from the government.” I don’t deny the . . . . Continue Reading »

Rowan Williams’ Lenten Theology

Wesley Hill takes up the theology of Rowan Williams in  Books and Culture : Lent is the moment in the church’s calendar in which Williams’ theology seems most at home. During the forty days leading up to Easter, we practice abstinence, we repent and discipline our desires, placing . . . . Continue Reading »

On the Square Today

Leroy Huizenga on our creative minority moment : Barack Obama’s victory has crushed conservatism, ended the Republic, and ushered in a thousand years of darkness. Or such was the mood last week among many political conservatives, who saw this election’s results as the sign of the death of . . . . Continue Reading »

How to Have a Stylish Baptism

A friend sends this video with the comment, “‘stylish baptism’ is a combination of words that causes civilizations to crumble.” Some of the advice (“this is not the time to be boobalicious”) is quite sound, though. Update: A commenter below writes, “Of . . . . Continue Reading »

Tough on Prisons

Though the  dropping crime rate in the U.S. over the last few decades has been something of a mystery to experts, most agree that key factors are tougher laws and harsher criminal sentences. As a result of such measures we now have the world’s highest incarceration rate , with a . . . . Continue Reading »