Beginning this week you will see that we are increasing and restructuring the online content of Comment. Following the A-B-C-D structure of our 2008 manifesto, Comment Online will now feature contributions from regular columnists and others in four broad areas:
Arts and the Academy;
Business and Technology;
Culture and Politics;
Delights and Comforts.
We will also continue our popular feature promoting artists, 1,000 Words. It would be wonderful to hear your responses to this week's columns and art at our Facebook page!
Feature Essays
If Wishing Made it So: Teaching Students to Make Change
May 14, 2012
by Gloria Stronks and Julia Stronks
Parents and teachers want children to have the skills to make a difference. But what can we teach to help them survive their teen years, 20s, and 30s with convictions and character intact?
Dec 31:
by
Dec 31:
by
Recent Feature Essays
If Wishing Made it So: Teaching Students to Make Change
May 14, 2012
by Gloria Stronks and Julia Stronks
Parents and teachers want children to have the skills to make a difference. But what can we teach to help them survive their teen years, 20s, and 30s with convictions and character intact?
Dec 31:
by
Dec 31:
by
Reviews & Opinions
Morality, markets, and Michael Sandel
May 18, 2012
by Nick Spencer
In Santa Ana in California prisoners can buy a cell upgrade. In Dallas, Texas, underachieving children are paid to read books. These are, alas, some of the saner and less offensive illustrations Michael Sandel offers.
May 16:
Faith in China?
by Joel Carpenter
May 11:
A Letter to my Daughter, Upon her Graduation from Christian School
by Glenn Oeland
Recent Reviews & Opinions
Morality, markets, and Michael Sandel
May 18, 2012
by Nick Spencer
In Santa Ana in California prisoners can buy a cell upgrade. In Dallas, Texas, underachieving children are paid to read books. These are, alas, some of the saner and less offensive illustrations Michael Sandel offers.
Dec 31:
by
Dec 31:
by
Recent Interviews
Saying "there is not enough time" is heresy
May 2, 2012
by Stephanie Gehring
SIX QUESTIONS . . . The new culture I am making is an attempt to say hold still and look at this.
Dec 31:
by
Dec 31:
by
Interviews
Saying "there is not enough time" is heresy
May 2, 2012
by Stephanie Gehring
SIX QUESTIONS . . . The new culture I am making is an attempt to say hold still and look at this.
Our culture does not know how to deal with legacies. We either treat the dead with some combination of awe and fear, or we think of our forebears as unworthy of remembrance, to be cast behind our own pursuits and discoveries.
Christians, however, can take a different tack. Ours is a historical faith, containing gifts each generation must re-open—some to be treasured, some to be viewed and sent back.
In this issue of Comment, we reject both our tendencies to ignore and to idolize the past. Instead, we seek to draw the good out of legacies, as we acknowledge that all legacies east of Eden will always be, at best, mixed.
How will you respond to the gifts of these legacies in your own life and work?
John Seel is a Senior Fellow with Cardus and president of Vancouver and Los Angeles-based Transcend Entertainment, a division of nCore Media, a super computer company that provides...
Unveiling: Comment ABCD1k!
Beginning this week you will see that we are increasing and restructuring the online content of Comment. Following the A-B-C-D structure of our 2008 manifesto, Comment Online will now feature contributions from regular columnists and others in four broad areas:
We will also continue our popular feature promoting artists, 1,000 Words. It would be wonderful to hear your responses to this week's columns and art at our Facebook page!
Parents and teachers want children to have the skills to make a difference. But what can we teach to help them survive their teen years, 20s, and 30s with convictions and character intact?
Parents and teachers want children to have the skills to make a difference. But what can we teach to help them survive their teen years, 20s, and 30s with convictions and character intact?
In Santa Ana in California prisoners can buy a cell upgrade. In Dallas, Texas, underachieving children are paid to read books. These are, alas, some of the saner and less offensive illustrations Michael Sandel offers.
In Santa Ana in California prisoners can buy a cell upgrade. In Dallas, Texas, underachieving children are paid to read books. These are, alas, some of the saner and less offensive illustrations Michael Sandel offers.
SIX QUESTIONS . . . The new culture I am making is an attempt to say hold still and look at this.
SIX QUESTIONS . . . The new culture I am making is an attempt to say hold still and look at this.
Current print issue
March 2012: Legacies
Our culture does not know how to deal with legacies. We either treat the dead with some combination of awe and fear, or we think of our forebears as unworthy of remembrance, to be cast behind our own pursuits and discoveries.
Christians, however, can take a different tack. Ours is a historical faith, containing gifts each generation must re-open—some to be treasured, some to be viewed and sent back.
In this issue of Comment, we reject both our tendencies to ignore and to idolize the past. Instead, we seek to draw the good out of legacies, as we acknowledge that all legacies east of Eden will always be, at best, mixed.
How will you respond to the gifts of these legacies in your own life and work?