The NewLife Blog
Jesus for President
Posted by Eric Stillman on July 1st, 2008 under American culture, Politics. [ Comments: 1 ]

This past Sunday I had the chance to check out Shane Claiborne and Chris Haw on the Jesus for President tour as it landed at Clark Elementary School in Hartford.  Right off the bat I could tell this was going to be a different experience – after all, how many nationally known Christian speakers would do a tour stop (and a free one at that) in an inner-city elementary school auditorium?  The point of using Clark School, of course, was to bring this message to the level where Claiborne and Haw live (inner city Philadelphia), where their hosts (Hartford City Mission and Hartford Catholic Worker) live and minister, and, they would probably argue, where Jesus Himself would live if He were a Connecticut resident.
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The Problem of Evil, Nazi Propaganda, and Christians in Politics
Posted by Eric Stillman on April 29th, 2008 under Suffering, Politics. [ Comments: none ]

This week I’m taking a break from writing something original, but I want to recommend to you three very interesting things I found on the web this week, two of which will enhance the recent “Why Believe?” series.  The first is a “blogalogue” debate between N.T. Wright and Bart Ehrman on the subject of pain and suffering.  N.T. Wright is the Bishop of Durham for the Church of England, has taught at McGill, Oxford, and Cambridge, and has authored many books, including one that is relevant to this dialogue, Evil and the Justice of GodBart Ehrman is the James A. Gray Distinguished Professor of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and the author of God’s Problem:  How the Bible fails to answer our most important answer – Why we suffer and Misquoting Jesus, among others. 
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Governor Spitzer, you are not alone
Posted by Eric Stillman on March 11th, 2008 under Politics, Sin. [ Comments: 1 ]

If you get The Hartford Courant at home, you probably saw the grim-faced couple on the front page, with the headline underneath that read “What Was He Thinking?”  Above the picture, it read “Experts Struggle to Understand Spitzer’s Alleged Romp with Call Girl.”

 Governor Spitzer

My initial reaction, to be honest, was to laugh.

Now, don’t get me wrong – I certainly wasn’t laughing at the fact that Eliot Spitzer, Governor of New York, got caught soliciting a prostitute, Read more »


Fighting Poverty is no Longer Important
Posted by Eric Stillman on November 28th, 2006 under Evangelicals, Politics. [ Comments: none ]

If you asked ten random people on the street to define what an evangelical Christian is, it’s likely that you would get at least one person who would say “someone who opposes abortion and gay marriage.”  It is a lamentable (and frustrating) truth that the church in the late 20th and early 21st century has in many ways become known for what it opposes, with the hot button issues of abortion and gay marriage being the most prominent ones.  One of the major contributors to this perception of the church has been the Christian Coalition of America, a political advocacy (and pro-Republican) group founded by Pat Robertson and led for many years by Ralph Reed.  The Christian Coalition lobbies for “pro-family” issues in Washington and has historically focused much of its efforts on the twin issues of abortion and gay marriage. 

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