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What's New in the Neighborhood?

City of Brass posts here over at Street Prophets on the Carnival of Brass and real time carnivals, azizhp writes: "Let's forge links between other blog communities of faith whenever we can."

JSpot's Mik Moore notes Antisemitisms. The Real and the Not so Real.

Chuck Currie blogging for the UCC, notes that kos gets the language of religion and politics wrong.

Pastor Dan has all kinds of good stuff:
analysis of the Supreme Court case Hain vs. Freedom From Religion Foundation.

A lil' Curtis Mayfield. Gotta have peace y'all. . .

And this zinger, Southern Strategy in which he writes,

"Apropos of absolutely nothing, and sure to tick some people off: the Democratic party's so-called religion problem is a phony one in the sense that Democrats do and always have had many people with strong faith and religious practice. But there is some truth to the notion that there is some division fierce indepence among Dems as to the question of how much energy they should expend reaching out to socially conservative religious voters. (In FoxWorld, those are the only "people of faith" who really exist.)"

Ok, does Bill McKibben sleep? Here he is at Beliefnet & Sojourners' God's Politics blog. Is it just me living on the left coast and subscribing to Mother Jones (good blog post on evangelicals and Romney here), but does a new article by Bill show up somewhere every week single for you, too? The Gospel vs. Global Warming

Mainstream Baptist says that freedom is what keeps him still Baptist.

And then over at Talk to Action, he writes about the SBC and oral contraceptives.

On that topic, independent Catholic priest Chris at Even the Devils Believe opines on HPV and moral narcissism.

The Rev. Deb Haffner wonders what's the deal with that idea in the Times piece about Norquist seeking secondary virgins for public office.

UU blogger Philocrates asks: what are you afraid of?

Jus Soli to Jus Sanguinis, multiethnic Johnny's Cache takes on the Texas attempt to redefine what it means to be American.

Velvateen Rabbi writes about eternal light.

What the definitive understanding of Islam? Check out the massive reading and watching list at Islamicate.

Whispers in the Loggia writes on JPII. The Goat Rope tackles the Canon of Conservative Thought.

Wow, former president of Iliff School of Theology and Pacific School of Religion now barely retired Christian theologian Delwin Brown is blogging a really sharp theology of Progressive Christianity. He points out how it's more than just anti-religious right or even how it's different than liberal Christian theology:

The liberal failure to keep the distinctive resources of the Christian inheritance at the center of their reflection was rooted in another failure, one common to the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The liberals “forgot” that human beliefs and practices, individually and collectively, are fed and formed by our distinctive human histories. In other words, the liberals were seduced by “modernism.” Modernism is the idea that there is one truth grounded in the nature of things in such a way that thinking individuals can have immediate access to this truth through reasoned analysis of contemporary experience, without any special dependence on inherited resources. It is the idea that we don’t need history in the pursuit of truth; we can go right to the truth by thinking clearly now. The point is not that “history is bunk,” as Henry Ford once claimed. Rather it is that our varied histories, traditions, ancient texts and the like have no special role in guiding and testing contemporary life.

And Beatitudes blogger Sara Miles makes it into the SF Chronicle and says that "the altar does not belong to the church."


Posted by on February 28, 2007 9:00 PM | | Bookmark and Share

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After turning himself in to authorities, 20 year old David Kernell, son of Democratic Representative of Tennessee, Mike Kernell, is facing five years in prison, a $250,000 fine and three years of supervised release. He will be charged for hacking into GOP VP candidate Sarah Palin’s personal E-mail account. It is alleged that after reading the contents, he took a screen shot and posted it on a public Web site. The contents included email addresses, pictures, birthdays, and phone numbers of family members and more. To top it off, after resetting the password, he also posted the new one he had created, which allowed others to access the E-mail account themselves. Nonetheless, Kernell pleaded not guilty to the charges. Facing a $250,000 fine is intense. At $1,500 per loan, it would take about 167 individual payday loans to cover that outrageous expense.

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