Science Isn’t Broken

From the website FiveThirtyEight, this in-depth article includes no overt faith content but may be useful for discussing the validity of science and the difficulty of research.  Research fraud and research journals have been receiving some deserved bad press.  “Science Isn’t Broken” acknowledges this while offering some perspective and may be useful for examining topics […]

Health Beyond the Hospital

The September 2015 edition of Comment examines how health is not just the province of the hospital, or even the health-care industry. Just as nurses and doctors and patients are dependent on the architect, engineers, and plant managers, so the health-care industry is dependent on homes, families, churches, and schools to cultivate a healthy citizenry […]

Christian Schools Growing in China

All Current Features

The Chinese Christian school movement doesn’t officially exist, and parents make great sacrifices to join it—but it’s growing quickly.  Unlike the missionary-started Christian schools in China’s past, this time local Chinese are understanding the need for Christian education and seeking to provide it for the next generation.  This on-site article includes an overview of the […]

Four Views on Religion and Society

Social Sciences

“God and Politics: Four Famous Voices on Religion and Society” is a brief overview of Dorothy Day (1897-1980), a Catholic social activist and a candidate for sainthood, Moses Maimonides (1135-1204), a philosopher, rabbi and physician, Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971), a Protestant theologian and champion of “Christian Realism,” and Stephen Wise (1874-1949), a prominent, politically active rabbi.  Possible […]

College: Examining or Constraining Ideas?

All Current Features

“The Coddling of the American Mind” is an in-depth article on the college excesses of zero tolerance, trigger warnings, microaggressions, and the threat of reprisals from the U.S. Dept. of Education.  “In the name of emotional well-being, college students are increasingly demanding protection from words and ideas they don’t like. Here’s why that’s disastrous for […]

Comparing Colleges: “Preferred Peers”?

All Current Features

“The Perils of Preferred Peers” argues that the real question for the Christian college is, what do you mean by excellence? And that any any survey the higher altitudes of American higher education in the first decades of the twenty-first century–at least as measured by U.S. News and World Report–doesn’t offer much John Henry Newman, author of […]

The Gov’t Employee and Religious Freedom

All Current Features

Using service in the armed forces as an opening example, the writer sets out a case for limiting the government worker’s individual freedoms when serving the public.  This article provides a position for students to assess in terms of the two kingdoms, religious liberty, the 1st Amendment, and comparisons among different government services, the worker’s […]

 
 
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