New & Noteworthy: Christianity and Culture

The House of Atreus: Abortion As a Human Rights Issueby James F. Bohan Praeger, 237 pp., $39.95 Bohan, a Pennsylvania attorney, argues that abortion is not merely a medical or religious issue but one of basic human rights. In making his case, he refers to authorities held in high esteem throughout our culture: the Declaration of Independence, Albert Schweitzer, Elie Wiesel, and Martin Luther King, Jr.

The Church Impotent: The Feminization of Christianityby Leon J. Podles Spence, 288 pp., $27.95 To explain the modern fact that, in general, women populate and participate in churches more than men, Ph.D. (Univ. of Virginia) and freelance writer Podles goes back to the Middle Ages, to Bernard of Clairvaux and the rise of scholasticism. He argues that only by emphasizing again the themes of initiation, struggle, and fraternal love will the church regain men’s allegiance.

The Virgin and the Dynamo: The Use and Abuse of Religion in Environmental Debatesby Robert Royal Eerdmans, 271 pp., $25.00, paperback Royal, a senior fellow in religion and society at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C., aims his sights at two groups: skeptics who believe the Judeo-Christian world-view has created environmental disasters, and radical Christians who assail the scientific, social, and economic structures that sustain the modern world. Then, from the perspective of Christian realism, he argues for a responsible use of religion in environmental debate.

Just Generosity: A New Vision for Overcoming Poverty in Americaby Ron Sider Baker, 288 pp., $11.99, paperback Arguing that poverty is more pervasive than ever, despite recent liberal and conservative “solutions,” Sider, a professor at Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary, calls for churches, synagogues, and faith-based community organizations to work with government, media, and business both to change unjust social structures and to help the poor make better moral choices.

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Also in this issue

Is the Religious Right Finished? Some prominent conservative leaders have been deeply disappointed by the results of political activism. Are they right to sound the retreat? An insiders' conversation.

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What's Right About the Religious Right, by Charles Colson

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The New Cost of Discipleship

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Fighting the Wrong Battle

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I'd Do It All Again

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Have We Settled for Caesar?, by Cal Thomas

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We Can't Stop Now, by Ralph Reed

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The Moral Minority

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Is the Religious Right Finished?

TV Stations Turn Down Exodus Ads

Chicago Hope

Don't Hate Me Because I'm Arminian

If Grace Is Irresistible, Why Evangelize?

The Thrill of Naughtiness

Mary Stewart Van Leeuwen talks about reclaiming feminism

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from September 06, 1999

Taking Back Mars Hill—with Grace

Beyond Rigid Righteousness

The Encyclopedia of Theological Ignorance

Trapped in the Cult of the Next Thing

NAE Mulls Move to Azusa

Church Rejects 'Worship Tax'

84,000 Join Jakes in Georgia

In Brief: September 06, 1999

Hindu Radical Fingered in Killing

Christian Groups Labeled 'Cultic'

Starvation Puts 150,000 at Risk

Broadcaster Alleges Discrimination

School Decision Irks Muslims

Editorial

Go Directly to Jail

Mennonite Groups Agree on Merger and New Division

Teen Shines Brightly on Campus

Fixing Johnny

Letters

Jerusalem: Reconciliation Walk Reaches Pinnacle

Money: Religious Mutual Funds Flourish

Africa: Traditionalists in Conflict with Evangelicals

New Latino Congregations Spring Up

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Stay in School

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Evangelicals Embrace Vegetarian Diet

An On-Again, Off-Again Love Affair, a book review by Bruce L. Shelley

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