It is a very black and
white religious culture here.
Not exact matches
CNN: In
culture war skirmishes, Georgetown becomes political football In the latest round of
culture wars over contraception and
religious liberty, most Americans would probably identify places like the
White House and Congress as key battlefields.
The past two years have seen the appearance of an informative Encyclopedia of the American Constitution (4 vols., edited by Leonard W. Levy [Macmillan]-RRB-, several outstanding studies on its intellectual background (including Forrest McDonald's Novus Ordo Seculorum: The Intellectual Origins of the Constitution [University Press of Kansas] and Morton
White's Philosophy, The Federalist, and the Constitution [Oxford University Press], at least one pathbreaking effort to trace the document's role through the years (Michael Kammen's A Machine That Would Go of Itself The Constitution in American
Culture [Knopf]-RRB- and a gaggle of good books on its
religious themes (see Martin Marty's review in The Century [«James Madison Revisited,» April 9.
The images abound in stock video footage accompanying stories on evangelicals, the
religious right, megachurches and the
culture wars — the obligatory shots of middle - class worshipers, usually
white, in corporate - looking auditoriums or sanctuaries, swaying to the electrified music of «praise bands,» their eyes closed, their enraptured faces tilted heavenward, a hand (or hands) raised to the sky.
The images abound in stock video footage accompanying stories on evangelicals, the
religious right, megachurches and the
culture wars — the obligatory shots of middle - class worshipers, usually
white, in corporate - looking auditoriums or sanctuaries, swaying to the electrified music of «praise bands,» their eyes closed, their enraptured faces tilted heavenward, a hand (or hands) raised to...
Peter G. Horsfield believes that widespread interest in
religious television crested in 1976 with the election of a Southern Baptist to the presidency of the United States and that this phenomenon has manifested «a marked imbalance in the presentation of American religious faith and culture,» Religious Television: The American Experience (White Plains, N ~ Y.: Longman, 1984), xi
religious television crested in 1976 with the election of a Southern Baptist to the presidency of the United States and that this phenomenon has manifested «a marked imbalance in the presentation of American
religious faith and culture,» Religious Television: The American Experience (White Plains, N ~ Y.: Longman, 1984), xi
religious faith and
culture,»
Religious Television: The American Experience (White Plains, N ~ Y.: Longman, 1984), xi
Religious Television: The American Experience (
White Plains, N ~ Y.: Longman, 1984), xiii - xiv.
The
White House (CNN)- Welcome to the
culture wars 2.0, where the front lines now are
religious freedom and contraceptives.