By TERRY MATTINGLY, Scripps Howard News Service
Mattingly: U.S. Catholic bishops in a vise
If you want to cause trouble for American bishops, stick them in a vise between Rome and the armies of dissenters employed on Catholic campuses.
Church leaders urged to tell 'how the game is played'
Reporter Louis Moore didn't know much about the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod when he began covering its bitter civil war in the 1970s.
Interfaith coalition misunderstood by most journalists
BERKELEY, Calif. -- The interfaith coalition that formed in the 1990s to lobby for religious liberty in China was so large and so diverse that even the New York Times noticed it.
Candidates dismiss cultural issues at their own peril
If you could erase one moment from Sen. Barack Obama's White House campaign, which would you choose?
"The 700 Club" isn't just for Republicans anymore
Washington correspondent David Brody knew it was a symbolic moment when Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean appeared on the Christian Broadcasting Network.Then there was the landmark Nevada trip to interview Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and his wife Landra at their home. Landing a face-to-face interview with Sen. Hillary Clinton for "The 700 Club?" Say no more.
When do winks and nods become illegal?
The political endorsement was clear, although the words were carefully chosen.New Hampshire Bishop V. Gene Robinson, the Episcopal Church's first openly gay bishop, clearly wanted to inspire his supporters, even his own priests, to back Barack Obama for president. Still, he stressed that his endorsement was personal, not corporate.
New book examines why so many are quitting church
At the last church she attended before dropping out, Julia Duin was not impressed with the service opportunities available to her as a single woman.
Religious tensions in the White House race
The punch line rocketed around the World Wide Web, inspiring smiles in pews friendly to Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic presidential nominee.
How will evangelical Christians vote on election day?
It's an election year, which means the folks in evangelical Protestant pews know exactly what will happen if they choose to talk to a political pollster.
Must a minister disregard his beliefs to serve others?
Anyone who has lived in a minister's house knows that middle-of-the-night telephone calls often bring bad news.But for many pastors there is one kind of call that is uniquely painful.There are times when the shock of death is easier to handle than questions about eternal life.

