Robert Brenneman’s article (“The Cross and the Crossfire,” April 2009) leaves this reader incredulous.
Departments
A grace of green, the underleaf
of olive, the birdsong’s
cradling. It’s as though
In March, the Obama administration appointed J. Scott Gration as the U.S. special envoy to Sudan.
The Ecumenical Water Network, an international Christian body formed to raise awareness about justice and the global water crisis, declared its frustration that the World Water Forum, which met in
More than 100 Mennonite pastors and lay ministers released a letter in April to the Mennonite Church USA, calling for the denomination to extend full welcome to gay and lesbian people and inviting
I was glad to see Sojourners tackle the issue of “The Spirit of the New Islam” (by Rose Marie Berger, February 2009).
Three percent of all District of Columbia residents are living with HIV/AIDS, according to a report released in March by the District government. The U.S.
Amidst the news of global market collapse, 11 of the world’s leading ethical banks met for the first time in March to form the Global Alliance for Banking on Values and to develop new strateg
I appreciated Rose Marie Berger’s piece on forgiveness (“Just Forgive,” March 2009).
I appreciated Rose Berger’s column (“Tackling the Unspeakable,” February 2009) and her interview with Jim Douglass about John F. Kennedy’s assassination.
I thought Ruth Haley Barton’s article (“Make a Joyful Silence,” February 2009) was awesome.
One of several tender nerves I have is when people expound the benefits of space exploration and study. And yet, as Ed Spivey Jr.
Regarding Eboo Patel’s “Three Myths about Islam” (February 2009): I have to take issue with his simplistic attempt to debunk myth two.
Regarding “Make a Joyful Silence,” by Ruth Haley Barton (February 2009): We Quakers figured out more than 350 years ago that the presence of God is best understood through the “ga
It is sad to see that in an otherwise excellent editorial (“A New Faith Coalition,” January 2009),