Volume > Issue > New Oxford Notes: January 2000

New Oxford Notes: January 2000

Workers of the World, Unite! — In Front of the Boob Tube

"Prime-time roles" for "people of color on the small screen"

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
From Mere Christianity To Merest Christianity

C.S. Lewis's definition is losing its very intelligibility

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
All Power to The (Smart) People

"It's more important to be fleet of mind than fetching of breast…"?

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
The Prophet Elijah Deported & King David's Condo Up for Sale

"Savor the spirituality and luxury of Jerusalem's newest quarter."

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
Right From the Mare's Mouth

The Church's opposition to homosexual acts is "deeply connected" to the Church's opposition to priestesses

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
Consider the Fruits

If your aren't sure about the Priestess Tree, consider its poisonous fruits

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
The Not Quite Good Enough Catholic

There are books one returns to now and again for their sheer badness.

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
Excuses, Excuses

Why are Anglicans more tired on Sunday mornings nowadays than they were 30 years ago?

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
Bishop Fred?

If Episcopalians want to call their bishop by his (or her) first name, that's their business.

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
The Atheist, the Cardinal & The Liberals

John Henry Newman and Friedrich Nietzsche had something in common.

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.
Dogma: A Damnable Mess of a Movie

Nothing here to engage you and much to depress you.

READ MORE ON THIS NOTE.

You May Also Enjoy

Who Murdered Christendom?

“The Western World,” Wilhelmsen writes, is “the shrunken husk of what was once Christendom, wracked from within by doubts and betrayals.”

What Play Are You In?

The drama of salvation history consists of five acts: Creation, the Fall, the Formation of Israel, the Coming of the Messiah, and the Church.

Christians & the Temptations of Nationalism

This article is adapted with permission of Ticknor & Fields from his book The End…