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Thinking Properly

In a speech at the United Nations not long before the start of the war against Iraq, Nelson Mandela made a number of comments that many American found objectionable. At the end of the speech, however, he said something in frustration that got spontaneous applause from the audience present: the trouble with the United States President George W. Bush is that "he doesn't think properly." Mandela was in deadly earnest, but the British-sounding criticism was comic. It was easy to…
James LaGrand
May 16, 2003
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In Search of the Great Goodness: The Poetry of Jane Kenyon

Along with others, I have grown weary of the term postmodern as the blanket characteristic covering our time. The term simply carries along too much baggage, and each bag opens, as a postmodernist would say, on different meanings for different audiences. From spiritual and ethical positionings, from ways of perceiving the world, and from ways of holding all human products up to critical scrutiny, analysis, or distortion, postmodernism has settled like a dense fogbank on the scholarly imagination. One of…
John H. Timmerman
May 16, 2003
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The World After September 11: The Challenge of Religious Pluralism

The events of September 11 have presented considerable spiritual challenges to contemporary culture. I would like to discuss one aspect of one of these challenges which, specifically, is how to engage persons of other faiths in a manner consistent with grace and truth. How do we honor their right to practice a religion different from our own, respect them as persons, love them as beings made in the image of God, and yet maintain the integrity of our own faith?…
Dean L. Overman
May 16, 2003
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Two Poems on Easter

Easter Day Thou, whose sad heart, and weeping head lies low, Whose cloudy breast cold damps invade, Who never feels the Sun, nor smooths thy brow, But sits oppressed in the shade, Awake, awake! And in his Resurrection partake, Who, on this day (that thou might rise as he) Rose up, and cancelled two deaths due to thee. Awake, awake: and like the Sun, disperse All mists that would usurp this day;Where are thy Palms, thy branches, and thy verse?…
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For Mary’s Sake

There are no earthquakes, no glowing angels (Matthew), no big stone doors magically rolled away (Mark), or dazzling heavenly pronouncements (Luke). And certainly no five-piece rock bands to make sure the resurrection is hip enough. John's account differs starkly from the others--empty tomb, the leavings of the burial tidily stowed therein, and nobody there, human or otherwise, to cushion the shock and announce an answer or two. There are only the questions. Peter the Impetuous inspects the tomb, guesses that…
Roy M. Anker
May 16, 2003
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Jelly Doughnut

I didn't go to church last weekend, but I think I took Communion. It happened in a motel lobby on a Monday morning with my hair still slightly wet and stringy from the shower and not even a stranger in sight to partake with me. Nevertheless, in spite of it being the wrong place and the wrong time, in spite of looking less presentable than I would usually enter McDonalds, I felt invited. My 86-year old mother, my husband and…
Jane Cronkite
April 16, 2003
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Missing God

Our son, David, three years old at the time, was praying at bedtime. He asked God to bless his friends, then family, pets, and stuffed animals, and finally he ended the prayer saying, "And God, I miss you." What was this? My jaw dropped. He misses God, what do I do with that? Part of me wanted to offer him a comforting story or some reassuring advice that would remind him of God's presence, but another part of me was…
J. Bradley Wigger
April 16, 2003
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An Interview with Freda Gardner: Part II

Carol Cook: You had mentioned at the beginning that one of the distinctive features of the Reformed tradition, at least at its best, is that it continues to be open to reformation. As you reflect on the course of your lifetime, are there some significant ways you have witnessed the Reformed tradition in this process of reforming itself? Freda Gardner: Well at one level, we certainly could think about the role of the church in changing our minds about slavery,…
Carol Cook
April 16, 2003
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Sensitive Soldiers

My father served in the US Army during the Second World War and spent a good portion of his time in the desert area of North Africa. As a boy, growing up during the early 1950s, I learned about war and soldiering much the same way every other American boy did: by watching John Wayne and Audie Murphy movies in the theaters and on television. My father rarely, if ever, talked about his experiences as a soldier. He had a…
Charles C. Adams
April 16, 2003