David Brooks: We need another Niebuhr Fresh off an ingenious Weekly Standard cover story on the new suburban “Sprinkler Cities,” David Brooks examines Reinhold Niebuhr for The Atlantic Monthly. The American theologian has been dead for 31 years, but is more relevant than ever, Brooks says, especially his core idea “that reform had to be conducted by people who were acutely aware of the limits of human capabilities and the intractability of sin.”
No doubt Niebuhr would have supported the war against terrorism—but not all of Bush’s efforts in it. “We take, and must continue to take, morally hazardous actions to preserve our civilization. We must exercise our power,” he wrote. “But we ought neither to believe that a nation is capable of perfect disinterestedness in its exercise, nor become complacent about particular degrees of interest and passion which corrupt the justice by which the exercise of power is legitimized.”
It’s on this final point that Brooks issues his disagreement. “People need to have their hopes fired and their passions engaged. … Slavery would not have ended without the zeal of the abolitionists.” In fact, Brooks argues, today’s problem is too little zeal, not too much.
Still, Brooks concludes, “It would be helpful to have more thinkers of his sort, or at least one—a thinker who simultaneously believes in using power and is keenly aware that its use is inevitably corrupting.”
Brooks laments that “a Nexis search on Niebuhr turns up only a handful of references to him over the past year.” (Brooks mentions a First Things article by Wilfred M. McClay, but a Wall Street Journal article by Joe Loconte certainly deserves a nod as well.) Indeed, if there’s a theologian getting attention since 9/11 it seems to be the anti-Niebuhr Stanley Hauerwas, who argues against American interventionism. Kathy Shaidle over at the Relapsed Catholic weblog has been compiling other bloggers’comments on the Duke theologian (more here, here, here, and here), most based on an article in the National Catholic Reporter, and most overwhelmingly negative. First Things has a take on Hauerwas, too. And here’s Wabash College theologian Stephen Webb’s Theoblogy Seminar item on how Hauerwas and Niebuhr have more in common than one might think.
Franklin Graham: Muslims should pay up Franklin Graham, promoting a new book, continues to rile folks with his statements on Islam. “I’m certainly not preaching against Muslim people,” he said on WBT, a Charlotte, North Carolina, radio station. “I am concerned about our nation, and on Sept. 11 last year, we were attacked by followers of Islam, claiming to do this in the name of Islam.” He says Muslim clerics around the world have been too silent, haven’t apologized, and should help rebuild New York or compensate the families of those who died in the 9/11 attacks. The story is widely carried today, including a piece in The New York Times, but it’s really nothing he hasn’t said before.
More articles
Church and state:
- Do faith-based services work? | As government has become involved in funding faith-based social programs, little attention is paid to tracking their effectiveness (The Baltimore Sun)
- Faith-based programs get help applying for funding | Since November, the .S. Department of Education has been holding workshops across the country to guide faith-based and community organizations through the application process (The Philadelphia Inquirer)
- Protecting religious institutions’ right to political speech | Why the House Of Worship Political Speech Protection Act should be enacted (Marci Hamilton, FindLaw.com)
- Ark. vaccination waiver overruled | Exemption, granted only to members of “recognized churches,” violates the First Amendment, says judge (Associated Press)
- Crown and cross stay on police badge | Plans to allow non-Christian officers to wear a badge without the traditional crown and cross insignia have been dropped by the Metropolitan Police (BBC)
- ‘Under God’ stays in pledge | Florida school board rejects objection to religious reference (Associated Press)
- Attorney asks judge to ban lawyer’s Bible | A judge should forbid the 18-year-old from “displaying a Bible in front of the jury” because of the “possibility that jurors may consider this as character evidence,” according to documents filed by prosecutors Monday at the Manatee County Courthouse (The Bradenton [Fla.] Herald)
- Alternative police badge for Muslims | London’s Metropolitan Police Force is to drop the crown and cross from its insignia for non-Christian officers because of objections from a Muslim recruit (BBC)
Politics:
- State lottery proponent ribs the issue | Commercials mock Christians’ opposition to gambling (The Tennessean)
- Faith healing | The shield of religious liberty is being transformed into a sword of religious power. (Wendy Kaminer, The American Prospect)
- Bill Simon describes his anchor | GOP candidate for Calif. governor says faith and family support him (Los Angeles Times)
- Pastor challenges D.C. mayor | Willie Wilson of Union Temple Baptist Church launched his write-in candidacy Monday (Associated Press)
- The church and foreign policy in US | American Catholicism’s confrontation with its own flawed character can mitigate a broader American self-righteousness to the benefit of the world (James Carroll, The Boston Globe)
- Bush defies belief | President preaches to converted while Fed grapples with the real problems (The Guardian, London)
Courts:
- Federal appeals court won’t reinstate challenge to ‘Choose Life’ plates | Attorney for Louisiana abortion-rights supporters says he’s ‘strongly considering’ appeal to Supreme Court (Associated Press)
- Lingerie shop sued on church pledge | Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleges that one of its lingerie shops didn’t honor a promise to give a devout Baptist saleswoman most Sundays off to go to church (Associated Press)
Life ethics:
- Bill to bar abortion rollback | The California state Assembly is expected to pass a bill forbidding the state from outlawing abortion should the Supreme Court ever overturn its 1973 Roe v. Wade decision (The Washington Times)
- Bankruptcy and abortion — II | Republicans shouldn’t swallow Sen. Schumer’s poison pill (Editorial, The Wall Street Journal)
- Abortion upon official demand | During a March 2001 orientation class for D.C. emergency medical technician trainees, interim Emergency Medical Services operations chief Samanthia Robinson told the class members that their employment could be terminated if they became pregnant in their first year on the job (Editorial, The Washington Post)
- First peek at fetus is no longer a blur | Prolife advocates love the new generation of scanning technology (The Globe and Mail, Toronto)
- Anti-abortion group gets tough | Georgia Right to Life backs those who reject rape, incest exceptions (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
Religion and the media:
- Town, church feud over radio station | It seems obvious now, plainer every time a new brief is filed in the county courthouse up the road, that the Enfield Zoning Board never should have taken on Elmer Murray and the Living Waters Bible Church (The Boston Globe)
- Mixed blessings | Religious radio stations have loyal followings, but high ratings are a different story (The Fresno Bee)
- Atheists get equal time on BBC | Richard Dawkins gets experimental slot after protest (Associated Press)
- Also: Sparing a thought for today | Thought for the Day, BBC Radio 4’s daily religious ponder, has again secured its position as one of broadcasting’s most controversial spots. Could the latest quarrel point to a larger debate in society? (BBC)
- Earlier: Atheists want voice on Today | A heavyweight clutch of writers and academics is leading a protest against the Thought for the Day slot on Radio 4’s Today program, saying that it discriminates against atheists. (The Daily Telegraph)
- Earlier: No thought for God | Only one charitable conclusion can be drawn from yesterday’s protest by more than 100 distinguished atheists against the BBC’s “Thought for the Day” on Radio 4: they have never heard it (Editorial, The Daily Telegraph)
- Earlier: Protest over Thought for the Day ‘ban’ (BBC)
- Unlicensed religious media outlets seek saving grace ahead of sector shake-up | Stations protected by ‘extraordinary’ 1996 Cabinet decision fear closure upon government review (The Daily Star, Lebanon)
Education:
- Bible course teachers eager to ‘do it right’ | Millington Central High teacher Joel Wilhite was nervous about the first day of school Monday – not because it’s a new year, but because he’s tackling a new, controversial class (The Commercial Appeal, Memphis)
- School’s out, but fight over school choice is in | Voucher advocates hail Cleveland court decision. Foes cite last week’s Florida ruling (The Christian Science Monitor)
- Georgia county mulls teaching evolution alternatives | The school board is considering a policy that would allow science teachers to introduce alternative theories on the beginnings of life, including what one board member called “scientific creationism” (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
Science:
- Is physics watching over us? | Our Universe is so unlikely that we must be missing something. (Philip Ball, Nature)
- Believing scientists and peace | More than 100 scientists from around the world — all believing Christians, Jews or Muslims — will apply their methods of dialogue to seek answers to today’s political, moral and social issues ranging from peace to stem cell research and euthanasia (UPI)
Sex, marriage, and family:
- Teenage sex habits may be changing in South Africa | Awareness campaign may be working (Business Day, South Africa)
- Gay marriages to be recognized | City council is ‘going as far as it possibly can,’ Quinn says (New York Sun)
- Canadian court ruling sets stage for gay union | Ruling says traditional definition of marriage — one man, one woman — violates the country’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms (The Washington Times)
Pop culture:
- ‘Signs’ stirs debate over religious beliefs | The questioning of coincidences may be too deep for a popcorn movie—unless Shyamalan is involved (The Hartford Courant)
- Theater may host G-rated gathering of church folks | Hollywood and God may have more in common than thought, as a conservative Presbyterian church looks to rent theater space to bond with disillusioned yuppies (St. Petersburg [Fla.] Times)
- Religion shines at Edinburgh Fringe Festival | ‘Tetragrammaton’ wins Scottish Bible Society prize (BBC)
- Earlier: Sermons mounting at the fringe | After years of standing outside venues attempting to ban the filth, Bible experts have moved on to the stage at Edinburgh’s Fringe Festival (The Guardian, London)
- Earlier still: From the Fringe to the Fold | The Scottish Bible Society offers cash to performers who use arts festival to spread gospel (Christianity Today, June 19)
- Gospel music and Elvis: Inspiration and consolation | Before Elvis ever swiveled a hip or sneered a smile, he was listening to gospel music in the First Assembly of God Church on McLemore Avenue in Memphis (CNN)
- Priest film scandal stirs in Mexico | Catholic officials want fictional movie banned (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
Missions & ministry:
- Christian fest hopes to skate into kids’ lives | About 40 area teenage volunteers are building a 10,000-square-foot skate park for the Puget Sound Festival with Luis Palau (The Seattle Times)
- Also: Evangelist Luis Palau is coming | Think of a Billy Graham crusade with a hip skateboarders’ park and you’ve got Luis Palau, one of the most popular evangelical ministers in the world (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
- Habitat for Humanity starts new project | Unlike most Habitat for Humanity homes, these won’t house families. They will be part of a project called “The Global Village and Museum.” (Voice of America)
- Earlier: How to Build Homes Without Putting Up Walls | Habitat for Humanity strives to keep its Christian identity—a tricky task, when everybody wants to join (Christianity Today, May 31, 2002)
Church disputes:
- A church divided as bishop battles parishioners | Bishop Petar Karevski says his litigation against the trustees of St Petka was about asserting church law and authority. For the parishioners, Bishop Petar’s action is a money-grab from an overseas church organization in which they have little faith (The Sydney Morning Herald)
- Also: A priest, his guards and a parish (The Daily Telegraph, Australia)
- Scholars felt sting of church’s retribution | Criticism—or even telling tales out of school—can get you excommunicated from the Mormon church (The Salt Lake Tribune)
Catholicism:
- Pope, again, heads home and, again, rumors fly | Is the 82-year-old pope on the verge of retirement, with a covert plan to announce it among his beloved countrymen? Will he steal away to a Polish villa, and never return to the Vatican? (The New York Times)
- Trickster cons 4,000 hoping to see Pope | In an elaborate scam, the trickster signed a contract with the state railways to lay on four chartered trains from the northern port city of Gdansk. He even persuaded organizers of the Papal visit to issue him tickets to Sunday’s mass. (Reuters)
- Mexicans celebrate the Last Supper | Some 320,000 faithful crowded in and around a Guadalajara church Wednesday for a re-enactment of the Last Supper and to mourn 41 of the pilgrims who died in two bus crashes (Associated Press)
Theology in Africa:
- South African village, fearing AIDS, trusts God more than drugs | Solomon Mahlangu claims to cure AIDS and other illnesses with the power of prayer (The New York Times)
- Muslims, Christians pray in Nigeria | Syncretism runs rampant at the Osun water festival (Associated Press)
- Bishop in or Catholicism out | Zambian chief threatened to ban Catholicism in his territory unless a former local archbishop who broke his vows last year by marrying, returned to the country (SAPA)
- Also: Vatican envoy explains Milingo’s condition | There’s a deliberate campaign of misinformation over Archbishop Milingo’s issue bent on maligning the Catholic Church, says Vatican’s representative to Zambia (The Post of Zambia)
Other stories of interest:
- Flames of infamy | Sati, the gory ritual, makes a comeback (The Week, India)
- Faith by numbers | World Christian Encyclopedia to go electronic (The Washington Times)
- Overriding a good conscience | Like many a Catholic, I seldom consult the Bible (Chris Hardwick, The Guardian)
- A Christian symbol that looms large | Nation’s biggest cross stretches 198 feet up (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
- Mom of Ala. church bomb victim dies | Alpha Robertson was the mother of Carole Robertson, 14, who was among four black girls killed when a bomb went off at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church on Sept. 15, 1963 (Associated Press)
- Town council calls in shaman | Christopher Beaver conducted a “smudging ceremony” in the Telluride Town Council chambers earlier this summer after he declared the basement room full of negative — even violent — energy (Associated Press)
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