Steve Thorngate's "Revise Us Again: Should Churches Alter Worship Texts?" (October 2, 2013 print edition of the Christian Century, also available online) is important enough that its content should find its way onto a committee, board, or other standing leadership body's meeting agenda at every house of worship in America. At issue is the legally and ethically appropriate use of worship songs and hymns, including making modifications to words in order to more accurately convey the theology Read More …
Steve Thorngate
Rethinking the Middle Class (#0903)
Steve Thorngate's October Christian Century article, "Defining the Middle: The Rhetoric and Reality of Class," challenges readers to reconsider what middle class means and who should be included in such a group today. Based on household income data available from the U.S. Census Bureau, Thorngate argues that the current political rhetoric suggests that 83% of households are middle class. He arrives at this number by excluding those below the poverty Read More …
The Biggest Question About Social Media (#0465)
Steve Thorngate, assistant editor of the Christian Century, recently wrote these words: The biggest question about social media and the church is not how the church can harness the power of social media for good ends while safeguarding against bad ones (useful as such discussions may be). It's how social media is changing what it means to be church. So What? It is important to understand what it means to be church in America today. More specifically, church leaders should understand Read More …
The Underrepresented Writers (#0295)
VIDA, a relatively new association for women in literary arts, recently published a somewhat shocking report showing a significant gender gap on the bylines in major magazines and publications in 2010. Steve Thorngate, assistant editor of The Christian Century, summarized those findings thusly: At the Atlantic, men outnumbered women by a three-to-one ratio. The New Yorker was only slightly better, and Harper's and the New Republic were worse. Worst of all? The New York Read More …
Doritos for Eucharist Super Bowl Ad Has Been Sidelined (#0237)
Doritos and Pepsi MAX received more than 5,600 submissions for this year's edition of their Crash the Super Bowl contest, which started in 2007. The field has now been narrowed to a group of finalists and interested parties are now invited to vote for their favorite. Interestingly, one popular option, Feed the Flock, isn't included on the list and has been removed from the contest because it created considerable controversy. Submitted by Media Wave Productions this ad is Read More …