Commentary

Swanee Hunt 1-01-2007
The murder of journalist Anna Politkovskaya ripples worldwide.
Dale Hanson Bourke 12-01-2006
(and why you should be too.)
Rose Marie Berger 12-01-2006
Is military intervention the only way?
Amy Sullivan 12-01-2006
A new perspective on faith has emerged.
The Editors 11-01-2006
Films to watch out for.
Molly Marsh 11-01-2006
Storytelling in the digital age.
Joan Chittister 9-01-2006
Has the world changed? Or have we?
Jim Rice 9-01-2006
Out of the carnage, can real peace ever be achieved?
Erik K. Gustafson 9-01-2006
Soldier-candidates offer a firsthand perspective on the Iraq war.
Rose Marie Berger 8-01-2006
The 'gospel' of Judas and The Da Vinci Code make Christianity unrecognizable.
Building bridges between pentecostals and the mainline churches.
Steve Thorngate 8-01-2006
Dobson's is a fringe position gussied up in mainstream garb.
Helen Caldicott 7-01-2006
The growing threat from nuclear power.
Jeff Carr 7-01-2006
'Remember you were once foreigners...'
Julie Polter 7-01-2006

The tragic cost of child marriage.

Ivy George 6-01-2006
The First World becomes a one-way destination point for children from the global South.
Tom Sine 6-01-2006
Neighbourhood preparedness is important, particularly in poorer communities.
Ched Myers 6-01-2006
Tom Fox's nonviolent witness.
Julie Polter 5-01-2006

My mother was a Depression baby in rural North Carolina. At an early age she knew what it was to be hungry, unsure of when and what her next meal would be. As an adult with her own family, she oversaw cupboards jammed with canned goods, a large chest freezer packed with parcels of meat wrapped in white butcher paper and plastic boxes of last summer’s strawberries and sweet corn, and a basement that held dozens of jars of home-canned pickles, green beans, cherries, beets, and jam.

No one within shouting distance of her (and the woman could shout) was going to know anything about hunger. Food was security, in several senses of the word—both preparation to meet real physical needs and contingencies and, I am quite sure, a salve for deep emotional and spiritual wounds inflicted by a difficult and sometimes violent upbringing.

As Christians, many different interpretations of the phrase “food security” are appropriate for our attention. The church often splits over interpretation of Bible verses such as “he has filled the hungry with good things” (Luke 1:53). Some factions favor a purely this-world, material understanding; others take those words as only metaphor for a spiritual feast. But, God’s ongoing dream for us seems to include both satisfying our hunger and thirst for the living bread and water that heals and nourishes our sin-sick souls and providing the literal bread and water to keep our bodies alive, blessed, and blessing. In either case, the promise isn’t to fill us with whatever puffed-air and high-fructose-corn-syrup spiritual or material amalgam is handy, but rather with “good things.”

The Walton empire gets political.