JLE: Faith and Justice

From the Journal of Lutheran Ethics:  Lutherans have a complex and complicated relationship with the public and organized struggle for social justice, especially when it involves political action and taking a prophetic stance. Calls for the church’s active involvement in social, economic and political causes is often viewed with suspicion. Luther himself had a complicated relation […]

The Puritan Influence on the Press

Lit, Journalism, Perf Arts

Christian belief and the 325th anniversary of American newspapers:  America’s first newspaper was published 325 years ago in Boston.  Publications in the 17th century usually put out only news that would make the king or his officials look good, but New England Puritans encouraged the reporting of bad news because they saw everything, good and […]

Hinxton Group Anticipates Genome-Edited Human Reproduction

The Hinxton Group, an international consortium on stem cells, ethics, and law, has published their Statement on Genome Editing Technologies and Human Germline Genetic Modification:  “We acknowledge that when all safety, efficacy and governance needs are met, there may be morally acceptable uses of this technology in human reproduction, though further substantial discussion and debate […]

Religious Liberty and Civil Rights

This 45 min. exchange from The National Constitution Center on various proposals of legislation regarding religious freedom and equal rights touches on several of the disparate, conflicting, and confusing issues in advocacy, practice, and the role of religion in the public square. While the discussion wanders a bit, it does serve as a way to […]

A Sexual or Asexual Public Square?

All Current Features

This brief article by David Talcott poses some questions about which students are puzzling but finding hard to articulate.  Does being a man or a woman have any ethical significance for the way we live together in civil society? Is there is something irreducibly significant about being a man or being a woman.  Talcott says our […]

Religion and the Social Sciences

Religion and the Social Sciences, edited by R.R. Reno and Barbara McClay (Cascade, 2015): More often than not it’s a class in the social science that challenges the faith of students, not a class in biology. Does critical understanding of our religious traditions, institutions, and convictions undercut them? Or can a modern social scientific approach deepen faith commitments, making […]

 
 
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