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KEN CHITWOOD

Religion | Reporting | Public Theology
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“The person who knows only one religion, knows none”
— Max Müller

Image via Unsplash.

Religion on the docket: U.S. Supreme Court decides on cases with religious ramifications

May 3, 2022

Perhaps NPR’s Nina Totenberg put it best when she said the docket for the 2021-2022 U.S. Supreme Court term is “a humdinger with major cases involving the biggest social issues of the day.”

With a notably altered composition after the addition of three Trump appointees, the court now features six reliably conservative members. With that makeup, SCOTUS is set to decide on significant social controversies related to abortion, the separation of church and state, government surveillance and normative clarity around the scope of free expression. 

The news cycle on these cases started back in October as oral arguments began and three decisions were already issued. The churn of news is picking back up again as some cases are just now being argued and other rulings are handed down. 

Just as this edition of ReligionLink was about to go to press, the decision on Shurtleff v. Boston came out. Then, quite dramatically a draft opinion from Justice Samuel Alito was leaked to Politico, wherein he writes that the 1973 Roe v Wade decision legalizing abortion is “egregiously wrong.” The leak is unprecedented and if the draft is issued as a majority ruling, it would overturn the constitutional right to abortion in the U.S.

The latest edition of ReligionLink will get you up to speed with background explainers, resources and experts for covering the most relevant, religion-related cases the Supreme Court is set to decide on this term — or for which it already issued judgment.

Read more
In Religion, ReligionLink, Religion News, Religion and Culture, Religious Literacy Tags ReligionLink, Religion news, SCOTUS, U.S. Supreme Court, Roe v. Wade, Shurtleff v. Boston, Carson v. Makin, Kennedy v. Bremerton School District
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This ain't your mama's paganism: understanding modern witchcraft, nature religions and ‘neopaganism’

April 5, 2022

As part of sweeping transformations in American religion and renewed interest in New Age spiritualities, modern paganism is tapping into a deep desire for self-empowerment, social engagement and reconnection with the natural world. 

Inspired by, or derived from, historical pagan and nature religions, modern paganism is an undeniably broad, collective category that covers a diverse range of groups that can differ greatly in belief and practice.

While Wicca and astrology have enjoyed a certain popularity for several decades, a wave of new publications has highlighted how personalized spiritual practices, home-brewed magic and shamanistic self-discovery are now enjoying their own renaissance. 

The latest edition of ReligionLink explores this new “neopaganism,” what some are calling a broader “re-paganization of religion.”

Learn more
In Religion and Culture, Religion News, ReligionLink, Religious Literacy Tags Paganism, Modern paganism, ReligionLink, Religion News Foundation, Religion News, Re-paganization of religion, Pagan religion, Wicca, Witchcraft, Tarot, Ashatru, Norse Reconstructionism, New Age, Heather Greene, The Wild Hunt
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As Russia invades Ukraine, reporters explore religion's role in the conflict. (PHOTO: ReligionLink via Unsplash)

War in Ukraine: covering the conflict's religious contours

March 1, 2022

Religion often plays a role in violent conflicts. Entangled with ethno-national, economic and territorial issues, religious actors, leaders and institutions can exacerbate and ameliorate both the causes and course of a conflict. While some religious actors provide care and appeal for peace, others contribute to the brutality and provide faith-filled fuel to already tenacious confrontations.

The warfare currently engulfing Ukraine is no exception. Religion played a role as the specter of Russian invasion grew over the last several years. Now, after Russian forces began their aggressive assault on Feb. 24, 2022, religious communities within Ukraine, Russia and across the globe are responding.

“While the secular media tries to guess Vladimir Putin’s motives in Ukraine, one important aspect of the current situation has gone largely ignored: religion.”
— Diana Butler Bass, Religion News Service

The latest edition of ReligionLink gives you a rundown of all the headlines, experts, and background research on the religious contours of a war whose impacts will reverberate around the world.

Read more about religion's role in the war
In Religion, Religion and Culture, Religion News, ReligionLink Tags Ukraine, War, Russia, Russian Orthodoxy, Judaism, Christianity, Eastern Orthodoxy, Orthodoxy, Orthodox Church, Greek Orthodox, Kyiv, Kiev, Religion in Ukraine, Religion in Russia, Vladimir Putin, Religion, Religion and conflict
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Photo: Marcel Melus via Unsplash.

Who are the exvangelicals?

February 8, 2022

Coined by Blake Chastain in 2016, the term “exvangelical” — or “exvie” — has come to encompass a wide range of individuals who have left evangelicalism, especially white evangelical churches in the U.S. 

Skeptical of institutions and unimpressed with status quo American Christianity, some have turned their back on religion. Others actively campaign against what they see as its abuses. Still others adopt more progressive versions of Christianity or simply do not self-identify as “evangelical” any longer, opting instead to go on a quest of self-discovery and deconstruction. Through hashtags such as #emptythepews, popular TikTok channels and a range of new platforms and publications, they are leaving loud, speaking out against evangelicalism on matters of politics, gender and race.

The latest edition of ReligionLink provides you with a range of resources and potential sources to understand how American Christianity’s traumas and political entanglements have triggered a crisis of faith for many.

Read the latest religionlink here
In Religion, ReligionLink, Religion News, Religion and Culture, Religious Literacy, Church Ministry Tags ReligionLink, Exvangelicals, American evangelicalism, American evangelicals, White evangelicals, Racism, Exvies, Blake Chastain, #emptythepews
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