Sunday, December 28, 2008

Gay marriage in a positive religious light

Gay marriage is not going away as a national issue (rightfully so), and Newsweek takes a look at the frequently overlooked religious dimension of the pro-gay-marriage advocates. The author explores the biblical references to family, marriage, sexuality, and love, and how the biblical interpretation has evolved over the centuries. In support of gay marriage, the following excerpt summarizes the article:

People get married "for their mutual joy," explains the Rev. Chloe Breyer, executive director of the Interfaith Center in New York, quoting the Episcopal marriage ceremony. That's what religious people do: care for each other in spite of difficulty, she adds. In marriage, couples grow closer to God: "Being with one another in community is how you love God. That's what marriage is about."
(Photo by tico24; used by permission.)

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Brutalism as an architectural style may not survive

A few months ago, this story was on National Public Radio about a Christian Science church in Washington, D.C. It was built in 1971 in a style known as Brutalism, which is characterized by raw concrete in a modern, often stark, presentation. The Christian Science congregation wants to tear down the building and build new one it considers more appropriate to its current need and mission, but historic preservation is holding them up.
A recent story on Slate.com asked whether a newly restored Brutalist building at Yale will help preserve the style. (Yale's reasons for renovating the building were more financial than historic.)
Finally, here in Madison, Wisconsin, the University has its own Brutalist behemoth to contend with--the Mosse Humanities Building. Actually, that building is slated to be demolished, both for functional reasons and because few people will miss its aesthetic. Here's a link to an academic architecture blog that has a photo and short discussion of the Mosse Building.
(Photo by Heidi Glenn / NPR.)


Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Father Damien's mission continues

In 1873, Father Damien, a Belgian priest, arrived in Hawaii to begin a mission for those permanently exiled from society, patients suffering from leprosy, now known as Hansen's disease.

As the New York Times reports, a community of patients remains in the village on Molokai where the mission began. "Today, just 24 patients are left: 24 people who experienced the counterintuitive twinning of loneliness and community, of all that dying and all that living. Here, you may have grieved over the forced surrender of your newborn; you may also have rejoiced in finding a life partner who understood. "

The story of the survivors is a testament to their dignity, which was first championed by the nineteenth century missionary who lived, served, and died among them.

Proponents of gay marriage cannot automatically rely on interracial marriage supporters

This opinion piece in the New York Times attempts to explain why African-American women, often regular church-goers, overwhelmingly supported the California referendum to ban gay marriage in that state.

Here's an excerpt:

[C]omparing the struggles of legalizing interracial marriage with those to legalize gay marriage is a bad idea. Many black women do not seem to be big fans of interracial marriage either. They’re the least likely of all groups to intermarry, and many don’t look kindly on the black men who intermarry at nearly three times the rate that they do, according to a 2005 study of black intermarriage rates in the Wisconsin Law Review. Wrong reference. Don’t even go there.
Interesting perspective. One also shared by a writer for Slate.com, which I noted in my other blog. Plus, it was a nice reference to the Wisconsin Law Review's symposium on the fortieth anniversary of Loving v. Virginia, the U.S. Supreme Court case that overturned state prohibitions on interracial marriage. The symposium issue of the review is here.