Books

Seeing Both Sides

Reaching the Left from the Right tells conservative evangelicals how to build bridges.

Any serious social movement has its generals, foot soldiers, and media hounds. The healthiest movements, however, also have bridge-builders. Barbara Curtis, a mother of 12 and an author, writes that she spent 20 years on the cultural Left. She draws from those years to help conservative evangelicals understand their counterparts in the culture wars.

Curtis offers stirring examples of people on the Left who defy the stereotypes, such as heavily tattooed Goth parents who show tenderness toward their daughter during a screening of Toy Story II and a pair of lesbians in their 50s who adopt multiple children.

Curtis also offers many commonsense approaches to meeting would-be enemies first as fellow human beings. Rather than simply complaining about the blandness of a “winter holiday” choir concert at a school, for instance, Curtis takes up the matter with the school principal and then with the choir director.

She and her husband now make appointments with choir directors well before the holidays. “Once we’ve informed a teacher, we don’t have to go back the next year,” she writes. “Actually, the teacher is usually quite happy to find out that sacred music is legal, because as a music teacher he or she knows religious music is usually far superior to secular music.”

Copyright © 2007 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Reaching the Left from the Right is available from ChristianBook.com and other retailers.

Barbara Curtis has a blog with her advice on family and culture.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

Free at Last

Deann Alford

Grace Afar and Near

Practicing Chastity

Lauren F. Winner reviews Dawn Eden's 'The Thrill of the Chaste.'

'Ordinary' Delights

Old Testament Sermon Solutions

Review by John Makujina

Living with the Darwin Fish

Godly Emotion

Review by Stanton L. Jones

Grandpa John

Tim Stafford

Jesus' Sermon for Moderns

Review by Gary M. Burge

A Spiritual Growth Industry

Brad A. Greenberg

Emerging Monasticism

Review by Rob Moll

Leaps of Faith

Bob Smietana

Images of Mission

Review by Jim Reapsome, Associate Pastor, Western Springs Baptist Church

Jesus and the Sinner’s Prayer

Atheist Apostle

News

Suffering God

My Conversation with God

Anonymous

News

Quotation Marks

Editorial

The Slope Really Is Slippery

A Christianity Today Editorial

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Majority Spoils

Sheryl Henderson Blunt

Not What It Seems

Q&A: Hugh Hewitt

The Devil's Yoke

Interview by Sheryl Henderson Blunt

Why Isn't 'Yes' Enough?

News

News Briefs: March 01, 2007

News

Amazing Abolitionist

Mark Moring

On a Justice Mission

Gary Haugen

News

Passages

No Spoonful of Sugar

Timothy C. Morgan

Witness Lee in the Dock

Mark A. Kellner

Editorial

What Would Wilberforce Do?

A Christianity Today Editorial

News

Home Sharks

Rob Moll

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Go Figure

Deeper into Terabithia

Interview by Peter T. Chattaway

News

Day of Reckoning

Rob Moll

News

Redirected Tithe

Compass Direct

Receipt at the Ready

Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra

News

Fluid Solution

Sarah Pulliam

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Dividing the Faithful

Madison Trammel

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Denominational leaders say the latest weakening of protections for minority voters is discouraging but not cause for despair.

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An influential academic theory says anti-Black racism won’t change. As it trickles into popular culture, the church should be ready to respond.

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