This Month's Cover
Magazine

Sojourners Magazine: January-February 2002

Subscribe to Sojourners for as little as $3.95!

Cover Story

Apocalypse grabs us by the shoulders and says, 'Look at what matters in life.'
There’s a trap that I’d call the Bonhoeffer assumption. Dietrich Bonhoeffer was studying at Union Seminary in New York.
How these anxious and ambiguous days might offer up the most holy of gifts.
Some people think that if you have a position of Christian nonviolence, you don’t have anything to say because you’re excluded from making discriminating political judgments.
Theologians of nonviolence wrestle with how to resist terrorism.
The most significant ways—both short and long term—to deal with the sources of terrorism will emerge more from within the circles that are close to it rather than from sources that depend upon it from outside. 

Feature

Shrimp feasts, rifle training, and jail time: The peaks and perils of growing up with activist parents.
"Whenever people discover that they have rights, they have the responsibility to claim them."—John XXIII, "Pacem in Terris"
Responding with kindness and solidarity.

Commentary

Too often, farm bill dollars land in the wrong hands.
Does it stand for nationalistic militarism or grief-humbled unity?
As the economy heads south, it's the poor--as usual--who bear the brunt.
Getting supplies there was the easy part.

Columns

Those of you in the hinterlands—when you’re not taking care of your hinter—are probably wondering what life is like now in Washington, D.C., the nation’s capital...
Are we cannon fodder in a cosmic war of good and evil?
It’s a scary thing to find yourself in bed with Orrin Hatch.
I just returned from Ground Zero in New York City.

Culture Watch

At first, listening to A Time to Sing!
The term reconciliation carries such a chord of optimism; it conjures images of issues resolved and friendships re-established. But it’s usually wrenching work.
Artists speak the language of the heart.
Understanding Islam, by Thomas W. Lippman, is a thorough history of Islam and its adherents from a geopolitical perspective.
The song has again become a vital statement of hope and even a resource for resistance.
Definitional books come around about once a decade.
When people think of Jean Vanier, certain impressions come to mind
She Who Is: The Mystery of God in Feminist Theological Discourse, by Elizabeth Johnson (Crossroad/Herder & Herder).
Friends, this song is called "I Heard an Owl," and it was written two days after the Sept. 11 tragedy.

Departments

Tennessee, Hawaii, and Utah are the only states that have no legalized gambling or lotteries.
I FOUND MARTIN Wroe’s article "Empty Pews, Full Agendas" very interesting having spent seven weeks this past summer volunteering at a community center in London’s East End.
I WISH TO RETRACT a statement I made regarding your new magazine layout a number of months ago.
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) turns 8 in January 2002. Congress is now considering a hemispheric expansion in the form of the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas.
WHAT HAPPENED TO the "Prince of Peace" in Sojourners’ response to the events and aftermath of Sept.
A tribute to LISTEN founder Lisa Sullivan
The journey from Epiphany to Lent brings us from the brightness of our dawning to the bleakness of our sinfulness.
Need a controlled biblical experience? Check out the new "plaguedomes." With a quick swish of your wrist you can stir up a ravenous horde of locusts.
After years of sustained international protests against live-fire training exercises on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques, the U.S. Navy is looking elsewhere to play its war games.
I HAD NEVER HEARD of Tim LaHaye until a friend mentioned him in a letter with an introductory note.
Born out of the experience of a New York State Labor-Religion Coalition delegation to Mexico, Border Witness: Youth Confront NAFTA chronicles the experience of New Yor
While it’s sometimes hard for corporate giants to do the right thing, networking powerhouse Cisco Systems is taking the lead in good times and in bad.
Along the Volga River, Russia 1993
Karmen is an animated building whose mission is to harbor peace within her dilapidated walls.
"It’s heartbreaking to see how quickly this happened and how much people are already hurting," says Rev. Alexia Salvatierra
SINCE THE TRAGEDY of Sept.
The times are strange and uncertain. So we are responding the same way we would at any other time: By searching our souls, with the assistance of Kathleen Norris and Richard Rohr, OFM.
Recently, Turkish TV launched the hottest new program in virtual voyeurism: Who can survive on the country’s minimum wage?
God Talk. Time magazine has named Stanley Hauerwas, a United Methodist professor at Duke University in North Carolina, "America’s Best Theologian."
The "Words Can Heal" campaign, recently launched by Rabbi Chaim Feld, teaches positive communication skills and aims to stop hurtful speech.