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A Reason for Keeping ‘Under God’ in the Pledge

In 1954, George Docherty preached a sermon at New York Avenue church in Washington, D.C., and suggested that since morality is based on a Judeo-Christian foundation, the Pledge of Allegiance should include a reference to God. President Eisenhower was seated in the congregation and was moved by the sermon. As a result, Docherty’s sermon was influential in the movement to change the Pledge of Allegiance to include the phrase "under God."

Passionate case for unity made at Covenant Network meeting

WASHINGTON, D.C. — They both walked to the microphone with some apprehension, needing to say uncomfortable things but also wanting to make a compelling case about the future — to say that Presbyterians who hammer each other over homosexuality would be doing themselves and even the world a favor by sticking it out together.

Niebuhr and His Age: Reinhold Niebuhr’s Prophetic Role and Legacy

By Charles C. Brown

Trinity Press International. 2002. 333 pp. Pb. $20. ISBN 1-56338-375-6

Review by Robert Dunham, Chapel Hill, N.C.

A decade after publishing the acclaimed hardback edition of Charles Brown's appreciative intellectual biography of Reinhold Niebuhr, Trinity Press International has made this important work more widely available in a paperback edition, updated by the author. The timing could not have been more auspicious (nor, perhaps, intentional), given the turn of world events in recent years.

Whither Theology for Pastors?

The name of William Ames (1576-1633) is never mentioned among Presbyterians today. He’s long dead, was a Puritan of the Reformed persuasion (though a Congregationalist in polity), and he wrote theology in a way many today would call "dry and dusty."

Churches continue to struggle with how to offer successful campus ministry

Andrea Catherine Stokes, 20, is committed to the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and is planning to go to seminary — she wants good things for her church. But here’s what she’s found, from personal experience, that college students can expect from the PC(USA). "I have never been in a congregation that has extended a hand to college students or young adults, I’ve never had that luxury," Stokes said. "I don’t want to go bowling and eat pizza, I’m past that. But I don’t want to knit. There’s nothing in between."

Presbytery declines to file heresy, other charges; Martin installed at First church, Palo Alto

No longer facing the prospect of a hearing on charges of heresy and violating his ordination vows, W. Robert "Rob" Martin III was installed last month as pastor of First church in Palo Alto, Calif.

An investigating committee of Western North Carolina Presbytery declined to bring charges against Martin, whose move to California was put on hold over the summer while the charges — made by attorney Paul Rolf Jensen — were investigated. In the middle of the process, Martin asked the presbytery for vindication.

An Urgent Call for Concern

From 43 retired Presbyterian pastors, mission workers, educators
and church executives now residing in Santa Fe, N.M.

We are deeply troubled. We are alarmed about problems in the life of our nation, issues illuminated by the Bible. For several reasons, Santa Fe, N.M., is the home of a large number of retired Presbyterian church workers, including pastors, missionaries, Christian educators and executives. And right now we find ourselves united in concern and anger about issues in our national life.

Higher Education and the Life of the Mind

Historically, Presbyterians value higher education. In the best traditions of our Reformed faith, this commitment is always being challenged, examined and restated. Prospective students and their parents, along with professors, alumni/ae and governing bodies frequently ask, "What does it mean for a college to be related by covenant to the Presbyterian Church?" The question deserves a thoughtful response.

Whose Church is it anyway?

See if this scenario sounds familiar.

A small handful of angry detractors mount a "whisper campaign" against a recently installed pastor. For a year the congregation and the pastor engage in a process designed to bring healing and resolution to the situation.

The Power of God at Home: Nurturing our Children in Love and Grace

By J. Bradley Wigger

Jossey-Bass. 2003. 224 pp. $19.95. ISBN 0-7879-5588-4

Review by Joyce MacKichan Walker, Princeton, N.J.


"The large conviction and concern of this book is that faith empowers family life and parenting" (p. 19). So states Brad Wigger in the first chapter of The Power of God at Home, and just so does he clearly summarize the purpose and usefulness of this book for ministry to, for and with families. Who, as a Christian parent, has not struggled with how to bring into our daily conversations and living our belief that God is the ground of who we are and why we exist; that this trust is one we want our children to witness in our homes and experience for themselves?

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