As you will have noticed, the world did not come to an end”or, to be precise, begin to come to an end”on Saturday evening at 6:00 local time, wherever you happened to be. The latest false prophet to be picked up by the media for the comic possibilities he provided proved to be wrong, as everyone but the gullible and deceived knew he would… . Continue Reading»
I hate to do it, but I have to mess with Texas. Hailed as a victory by many in the pro-life movement, the so-called sonogram law, passed recently by the Texas Legislature and now awaiting Governor Rick Perrys signature, requires women seeking an abortion in the Lone Star State to view a sonogram image and listen to a description of the dimensions of the embryo or fetus … Continue Reading»
For two years, we have lived in a forest on the convergent lower slopes of two mountain ranges, and above a shallow wooded ravine that descends to a narrow streambed on our side and rises up on the opposite side towards the high ridge that looms above our treetops to the west. During our time here, that mountain has been a commanding and magnificent presence for us … Continue Reading»
So the tomb is empty, He is risen, and we rejoice. Mimosas and friends, in fact, greeted me after Easter Mass, and my soul felt like the chorus of Handels Messiah. My phone buzzed with happy text messages. It was a good day. I dont think that reaction is bad (when are mimosas ever bad?), but untroubled elation does not necessarily capture the original Easter mood… . Continue Reading»
In the May 6 issue of Commonweal, Fordham theology professor Michael Peppard promised to provide a sympathetic treatment of concerns raised by those who perceive a dearth of conservative voices in the Academy. Dissatisfied with the diagnosis of widespread discrimination, Peppard, whose journalistic and scholarly work I greatly admire, seemed poised to provide a judicious analysis that would take seriously the charge that the Academy lacked a certain intellectual diversity by outlining some particularly compelling, if underrepresented, conservative claims… . Continue Reading»
I just want to show society what people born after 1960 think about things, said novelist Douglas Coupland, We’re sick of stupid labels, we’re sick of being marginalized in lousy jobs, and we’re tired of hearing about ourselves from others. The Canadian writers attempt to show what his peers thought became the popular novel, first published in 1991, Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture … Continue Reading»
The death of Osama bin Laden did not end the war against jihadism, a war bin Laden had declared against the United States in a 1996 fatwa that mandated the killing of Americans wherever they could be targeted. But it did take one key leader of jihadist Islam off the global strategic chessboard… . Continue Reading»
A few years ago, a neighbor and I were wending our way through a small gallery featuring the work of local artists when we were stopped in our tracks by a large canvas, or board, from which hung a dozen one-gallon freezer bags containing colorful liquids purporting to be health and beauty products: shampoo, conditioner, feminine hygiene stuffs . Continue Reading»
With the vote last Tuesday by Twin Cities Presbytery in favor (205-56) of Amendment 10-A, the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. now has sufficient approval from a majority of presbyteries to remove provisions in its constitution that prohibited the ordination of sexually active homosexuals. … Continue Reading»
Here in New York, as you might expect, the news of Osama bin Ladens death was mostly greeted with fist-pumping expressions of satisfaction. Some, however, have expressed dismay. As our executive editor David Mills noted on these electronic pages, not a few European commentators have denounced the killing of Osama bin Laden as yet another example the cowboy mentality in America that shoots first and asks questions later. What we should have done, they say, is arrest bin Laden and put him on trial… . Continue Reading»