Not exact matches
Driven by her
conviction that «the practices
of living
religious traditions have great wisdom to impart,» Dorothy Bass examines Christian practices in «both their ancient grounding and the fresh and vibrant
forms they take today.»
And those
of us who believe in respect for
religious conviction in its diverse
forms have further grounds for deep concern if the choices are truly «all or nothing» between an imposed orthodoxy and an education from which all
religious reference has been purged.
When you attack somebody for their deepest held
religious convictions; is that not a
form of fascism?
Today's challenge is quite different: it's the temptation to let Caesar, in his various
forms, reduce
religious conviction to a privacy right
of lifestyle choice.