• Five reasons Christians should oppose torture

    Article from Christianity Today by David Gushee.

  • Creationism, Intelligent Design, and varieties of Naturalism

    Keith Ward draws some distinctions (via Thinking Anglicans).

  • Imperial presidency watch

    Alan Bock on the domestic surveillance business. Good Salon article on libertarian GOP senator John Sununu, who is actually asking hard questions about the PATRIOT Act reauthorization.

  • "All possible knowledge…depends on the validity of reasoning" – C.S. Lewis

    In his 1996 book The Last Word philosopher Thomas Nagel makes what is nowadays an extremely unfashionable argument – namely, a full-blooded defense of a Platonic/Cartesian understanding of reason over against various pragmatist and postmodernist subjectivisms or skepticisms. Along the way he also raises questions of a theological nature about what it implies about the…

  • Worth a look

    Via Dappled Things, what looks to be a very interesting blog written by a Muslim in the UK, Towards God Is Our Journey.

  • Volf on forgiveness

    Here’s an interview with theologian Miroslav Volf, whose new book was just published (via Connexions). Volf has some interesting things to say about forgiveness: You speak of forgiveness in a way that I found novel and intriguing. You describe a forgiveness that is unconditional, and as such it is never offered – it must simply…

  • Protestants and private confession?

    Two posts making the case for private confession among Protestants (Lutherans in particular in these cases). I’m certainly open to the idea, though I realize the chances of it happening any time soon are slim. I understand that Anglicans still maintain the practice.

  • A good post on Christian unity

    Three Hierarchies, which is the blog of (I believe) a Missouri Synod Lutheran, has a very good post on Christian unity. Essentially he asks: What follows from the fact that we recognize other churches’ baptisms as valid?

  • Does Bin Laden even have an ideology?

    Brendan O’Neill argues that Bin Laden’s rhetoric has become parasitical on Western arguments about the U.S. and its role in the Middle East; he’s gone from being obsessed with Saudi Arabia, to self-declared champion of Palestine, and, now in his most recent supposed message, he parrots many of the lines of the anti-war Left. What…

  • What’s at stake in the spying debate

    Jacob Weisberg writes: [T]he Senate hearings on NSA domestic espionage set to begin next month will confront fundamental questions about the balance of power within our system. Even if one assumes that every unknown instance of warrant-less spying by the NSA were justified on security grounds, the arguments issuing from the White House threaten the…