
Featured Book: Creative Faith: Religion as a Way of Worldmaking
“[T]he time has come,” Don Cupitt writes in Creative Faith, “to rescue Jesus the moral teacher from what his own followers have made of him. […] [T]he Jesus of history…needs

“[T]he time has come,” Don Cupitt writes in Creative Faith, “to rescue Jesus the moral teacher from what his own followers have made of him. […] [T]he Jesus of history…needs

“The set-up for American Savior sounds like the answer to a satirist’s prayer,” The Washington Post reckoned in its review of this novel by Roland Merullo: Jesus returns to earth to run for the

“Between religion and atheism,” goodbookguide.com reports, “is a third way, into which [Mark] Vernon takes his readers.” It is agnosticism, which, according to the author, “manifests itself best as an attitude: it is a

“[I]ts starting point, and its ultimate aim, is the practice of divine, unconditional love.” That, in a sentence, is how Jim Burklo sums up progressive Christianity, this in his brand

What Gretta Vosper is to the UCC—a burr under the saddle, maybe—Joan Chittister must be to the Roman Catholic Church. In a 2015 interview for the Washington Post, veteran Catholic