Archives: Religious Center Initiative Articles and Op-Eds

My Trip With a Terrorist

  • By
  • Eliza Griswold,
  • New America Foundation
August 27, 2010 |

Ibnu Ahmad was a killer, and member of the militant group notorious for the Bali bombings that left 202 people dead. Eliza Griswold gets a personal tour of his old battlegrounds—and eccentric personality.

The Myth of Modern Jihad

  • By
  • Robert Wright,
  • New America Foundation
June 29, 2010 |

It would be an understatement to say that Faisal Shahzad, the would-be Times Square bomber, pleaded guilty last week. “I’m going to plead guilty a hundred times over,” Shahzad told the judge. Why so emphatic? Because Shahzad is proud of himself. “I consider myself a Mujahid, a Muslim soldier,” he said.

The Price of Assassination

  • By
  • Robert Wright,
  • New America Foundation
April 13, 2010 |

I wouldn’t have believed you if you’d told me 20 years ago that America would someday be routinely firing missiles into countries it’s not at war with. For that matter, I wouldn’t have believed you if you’d told me a few months ago that America would soon be plotting the assassination of an American citizen who lives abroad.

Christian Soldiers

  • By
  • Robert Wright,
  • New America Foundation
March 16, 2010 |

Last Friday night a New York Times headline underwent an online transformation. The article formerly known as “A Christian Overture to Muslims Has Its Critics” acquired a new billing: “A Dispute on Using the Koran as a Path to Jesus.”

A Grand Bargain Over Evolution

  • By
  • Robert Wright,
  • New America Foundation
August 22, 2009 |

The "war" between science and religion is notable for the amount of civil disobedience on both sides. Most scientists and most religious believers refuse to be drafted into the fight. Whether out of a live-and-let-live philosophy, or a belief that religion and science are actually compatible, or a heartfelt indifference to the question, they're choosing to sit this one out.

Still, the war continues, and it's not just a sideshow. There are intensely motivated and vocal people on both sides making serious and conflicting claims.

One Nation: Religion and Politics 2008

  • By
  • David Gray,
  • New America Foundation

Faith in the Democratic Platform

It is interesting at the start of the Democratic Convention to note that the draft platform the delegates are beginning to discuss says more about what a faith initiative will not be than what it will be in an Obama administration.

God's Country

  • By
  • Eliza Griswold,
  • New America Foundation
March 1, 2008 |

It was an ordinary soccer pitch: sparse tufts of grass and reddish soil surrounded by cinder-block homes. The two candidates stood on opposite sides of the field as the people of Yelwa, a town of 30,000 in central Nigeria, lined up behind them one May morning in 2002 to vote. Whoever had more supporters would lead the town’s council. And whoever led the council would control the certificates of indigeneship: the papers certifying that Yelwa was their home, and that they had a right there to land, jobs, and scholarships.

Serving Our Young Adults

  • By
  • David Gray,
  • New America Foundation
October 15, 2007 |

Many churches are developing programs to serve young adults. Many are investing in young adult coordinators in order to help grow their church.

However, there is another reason for churches to focus on young adults -- the critical needs of the early young adult population in our nation.

The violence at Virginia Tech last April perpetrated by a disturbed young adult is a tragedy beyond belief. It calls attention to the challenges faced by an often overlooked age group.

Teach Your Children About Interfaith

  • By
  • David Gray,
  • New America Foundation
October 15, 2007 |

One of the great fears that parents and church leaders have about their youth engaging in interfaith dialog is that they will lose their connection to their own religion and will end up rejecting and leaving their faith, maybe even converting to another religion as a result. My experience as a Christian pastor has been just the opposite -- I have watched young people become stronger in their own faith through exposure to other traditions.

Congress Needs an Interfaith Caucus

  • By
  • David Gray,
  • New America Foundation
  • and Dr. Eboo Patel, Interfaith Youth Core; Rev. Paul Raushenbush, Princeton University; and Rabbi Sid Schwarz, PANIM
February 10, 2007 |

The National Prayer Breakfast, an annual gathering of inspiring speeches and solemn moments of silence, recently drew President Bush and hundreds of lawmakers when it was held in Washington. This year, the event was unusual in that it was attended by much of what is the most religiously diverse Congress in American history.

The 110th Congress includes one Muslim and two Buddhists. The U.S. Senate is now led by a Mormon. All of these are firsts. The new Congress also includes more Jews than Lutherans, Congregationalists or Episcopalians.

Syndicate content