Issue 53: The Internet Speaks
The comments section is speaking in tongues.
Frances Abele CM is Distinguished Research Professor and Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy Emerita at Carleton University. She is a research fellow at the Carleton Centre for Community Innovation and the Broadbent Institute. Much of her work focuses on indigenous-Canada relations.
The comments section is speaking in tongues.
Spiritual needs are more likely to be satiated if the basics — food, clothing, shelter, and employment — are met first.
Send your divine truth to [email protected].
Reza Aslan, one of the foremost scholars of religion in America, talks to Jacobin about Jesus the revolutionary, Palestine, and the continued growth of religion in the world.
The Institute for Christian Socialism is trying to build left-wing solidarity within religious communities. For these Christians, a commitment to socialism is inherent in the Gospel.
The Teamster rank-and-file movement is spreading worker power and making the most of labor’s movement moment, writes longtime Teamsters for a Democratic Union organizer Ken Paff.
George Clinton’s Parliament-Funkadelic developed a curious connection to the works of the apocalyptic cult the Process Church of the Final Judgment.
The Reformation was a fundamental transformation in European society, blending religious disputes with political ideology and class conflict.
Depictions of the Nazarene began nearly the moment cinema did.
For the Soviet Union, atheism became more than the absence of religion. It was an ideology that had to fill the void of religion itself.
There are innumerable cinematic Jesuses, most of them bland, pious, and blue-eyed — until an Italian communist decided to preach the old gospel in a new way.
Postwar Poland saw a huge wave of church-building, within and against the professedly socialist system.
Christian tourists enjoy plenty of God-honoring vacation destinations across the United States.
In the 1960s, a nun in California decided to make contemporary art — and managed to serve both the Vatican and the anti–Vietnam War movement in the process.
The Fabian Society immortalized its brand of reformist socialism in stained glass.
How a corruption of New Left ideology became fodder for the religious right.
Irish labor leader Jim Larkin’s combination of Christian faith and socialist zeal electrified the working class — and threatened to tear down the established order.
For some, capitalism’s failures are to be redeemed not by political action but by civilization-scale moral projects under the remit of a new clergy: human resources.
Today the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is widely understood to be a right-wing force in US politics. But just over 100 years ago, Mormons were at the center of a religious socialist renaissance in Utah.