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Magazine

Sojourners Magazine: January-February 2003

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Cover Story

Christian conscience in a time of war.
The churches' pre-emptive response to Bush's Iraq plans.

Feature

Nobel Prize-winning physicist Bill Phillips talks about his faith
. . . and other lessons from a life well-lived.
William Gates Sr.—whose son is Microsoft founder Bill Gates—joins with co-author Chuck Collins to argue that the wealthiest among us have an obligation to pay their fair share.
Around the world publicly owned, government-run water utilities are being sold off to for-profit companies.

Commentary

In a time of crisis, uncertainty, and policy debate, one would think that Christians in the United States would agree
Is it anti-Semitic to criticize Israel?
What Falwell and bin Laden have in common.
As Christians, how do we live in times like these?

Columns

As our nation prepares for war against—depending on the mood of the president—al Qaeda, Iraq, or unnecessarily big words (such as "civil liberties"), it is a sober time in America.
Zachary Bentley says he's no Ralph Nader.
Whatever Christians decide about war with Iraq, they must do it on the basis of Christian theology.
At the corner of 14th and Euclid Streets NW in Washington, D.C., many evenings at sunset, the Domino's deliveryman kneels down to pray.

Culture Watch

Filmmaker Michael Moore loves to pick at the sores of America's self-delusions, and he's really good at it.
Thomas Patterson says that the juice has been squeezed out of elections for Americans...
More than 30 years into his career, nine Grammys, and dozens of tours, 55-year-old Carlos Santana's music continues to evolve, and he's bringing another generation along for the ride.
Sister Dianna Ortiz was kidnapped and tortured by Guatemalan security forces in November 1989 while serving as a missionary there.
An interview with Chris Hedges on our love affair with war.
The first time I played Waterdeep's new album for my housemates, they were up and dancing within seconds.
As this is written, rescue workers are still separating the bodies from the bamboo after the terrorist bombing of a nightclub in Bali.
What are my favorite things for listening to, watching, and perusing? Well...

Departments

Who do you call when the marshals have tossed all your belongings on the sidewalk and you need a place to spend the night?
Women's Re-entry Network in Cleveland is like many nonprofits—it is financially pinched and has a big-hearted but overworked staff that struggles to meet the needs of its clients.
IT IS ASSUMED that a magazine like yours aims to develop the spiritual gift of discernment.
Jesuit Father Richard T. McSorley, 88, a retired professor of peace studies at Georgetown University and longtime peace and social justice activist, died October 17, 2002.
Employment Opportunities
For the first time, you can possess your very own Holy Trinity 3-pak, featuring hand-carved God hair, a glow-in-the-dark Holy Spirit, and LEGO Jesus.
President Bush finally signed the Sudan Peace Act in October to pressure the Sudanese government to end that nation's 19-year civil war...
JIM WALLIS, in arguing for disarming Iraq without war says, "But the incentive should be a gradual lifting of sanctions and a pledge of no military attack if Iraq really cooperates."
Forty-three prominent evangelical leaders sent a letter to President Bush indicating that the Christian Right's uncritical support of Israel is not the position of all American evangelicals.
Americans are keeping the faith today in many different ways—including how they invest.
G.I. Joe has shown boys how to exercise military might for decades, but America's recent "war on terror" has made way for a new cash crop of action figures. Since Sept.
A 2001 U.S. Army Audit Agency report revealed that U.S. armed forces are unprepared for encountering chemical and biological weapons.
"The Bomb is Back" is an excellent article and absolutely on target, especially your idea that attacking Iraq is going to produce the opposite effect of stated U.S. policy objectives.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Compassion Capital Fund released in October the first federal funds specifically targeted to assist faith-based and community organizations.
Force Failure. In 2001, .37 percent of Australians and 1.5 percent of New Zealanders told census-takers they were following the Star Wars-based "Jedi" faith.
QUOTES IN "Where the Boys Aren't" (by Holly Lebowitz Rossi, November-December 2002) by Rev.
Epiphany: It's one of the most "religious" words there is.
WHILE I AGREE with Peter Ackerman and Jack DuVall ("With Weapons of the Will," September-October 2002) that nonviolent action by Iraqis would be the best approach...
The RAND corporation, one of the earliest U.S. military think tanks, released a report on the implications of using alternative power-generation technologies...
We began work on this issue in autumn, an especially strange and fearful autumn around our Washington, D.C. home.

Discussion Guide

A Discussion Guide for January-February 2003 Sojourners