Here are some important law-and-religion news stories from around the web:
- The Islamic State has claimed responsibility for a terror attack in Spain that left 13 dead; authorities believe a 12-man jihadist cell carried it out.
- North Korea has released a Canadian pastor who had been sentenced to life in prison; it is unclear whether the release is related to the rising tensions between North Korea and the United States.
- A Vatican official has signaled that an unofficial agreement on the appointment of bishops has been reached with the Chinese government.
- The Australian government will go forward with a non-binding plebiscite to be conducted by mail that will ask voters whether same-sex marriage should be legalized.
- The Afghan government has said that the Taliban and the Islamic State joined forces in an attack on a remote village that left more than fifty civilians dead.
- A Syrian national in Germany has been accused of being a member of the Islamic State and committing war crimes while he lived in Syria.
- Former Supreme Court Justice David Souter, who occasionally sits with the First Circuit, has granted a Rhode Island Jewish congregation additional time to file a rehearing petition as it seeks to overturn Souter’s decision awarding control of a historic Rhode Island synagogue to a New York congregation.
- Secretary of State Rex Tillerson condemned some key U.S. allies in the Middle East in a newly-released report on international religious freedom.
- A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit brought by Native Americans and “Syncretic Spiritualists” seeking to enjoin the opening of a wind farm that they claim is being built on top of Native American religious monuments.
important and learned Apostolic Letter, Ex Corde Ecclesiae, concerning the nature of Catholic universities: “Without in any way neglecting the acquisition of useful knowledge, a Catholic University is distinguished by its free search for the whole truth about nature, man and God.” I am therefore looking forward to reading
As readers of this blog know, our center is in the midst of the
Why do policies and business practices that ignore the moral and generous side of human nature often fail?
The third installment of a fascinating decade-by-decade series, this anthology collects historic New Yorker pieces from the most tumultuous years of the twentieth century—including work by James Baldwin, Pauline Kael, Sylvia Plath, Roger Angell, Muriel Spark, and John Updike—alongside new assessments of the 1960s by some of today’s finest writers.
Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation in 2013 is looking to be a pivotal event in the history of the Roman Catholic Church–not only because it was the first papal resignation in centuries, but because of the very different path his successor, Pope Francis, is laying out. This spring, Stanford University Press published a translation of a work by Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben,
There’s nothing new about “world religions.” All the great religions are global, with followers across the continents. This has been true for centuries, millennia, even. And yet there is something new in the Internet Age: the ability of individuals to sample religions from wherever they are–to have access to online sources and communities from right where they sit. This new sort of globalization will no doubt influence religion. Whether it will increase the influence of global religions, as they take advantage of communications technology to forge communities across the planet, or decrease it, as people use the Internet to create niche religions for fewer and fewer followers, remains to be seen.
and in particular on the distinctively American understanding of the separation of religion and government. And yet in many of Locke’s writings on religion and toleration (as well as elsewhere, as in his discussion of Christianity itself), it is clear that Locke presupposes a Christian commonwealth. Here is a
university, which means that it shares and extends the mission of the seventeenth century French priest St. Vincent De Paul. Here is a