Hoffman calls for more peaceful, inclusive Holy City
Israel may be a relatively new country, but the problems that prevent it from being a place of peace are ancient.
Israel may be a relatively new country, but the problems that prevent it from being a place of peace are ancient.
“Do you still believe the church has power?” said the Rev. Martha Simmons at the 9:15 a.m. morning worship service…
“What matters to you as a person of faith today?” said the Rev. Martha Simmons. “Black lives matter.” Simmons delivered…
As chairman and CEO of the Coca-Cola Company, a corporation that is often coupled with buzzword brands such as McDonald’s and Nike, Muhtar Kent is tasked with arguably one of toughest sales pitches in multinational commerce: that Coke actually cares about the communities in which it does business.
A young seminarian asked how long should a sermon be. “The length of a woman’s skirt,” said the Rev. Martha Simmons…
People are incredibly familiar with one of the most dominant and invasive species on Earth: Homo sapiens. Humans continually test…
Some might be taken aback by prose writer-in-residence Joe Kita’s Brown Bag lecture. “It’s a little out there,” Kita said….
The workshops for Week Nine at the Chautauqua Writers’ Center for the season will help students achieve their dreams and…
A school-wide Teddy Bear Picnic helped wrap up the last week of Children’s School as Chautauqua’s season comes to a quiet close. Although the morning rain and overcast skies made for the first indoor “campfire” in years, the kids still celebrated with as much sunny enthusiasm.
William Faulkner once wrote that, “In writing, you must kill all your darlings.” Sheri Fink found herself having to do that as she wrote “The Deadly Choices at Memorial,” an investigative piece for the New York Times Magazine and ProPublica that won Fink a Pulitzer Prize.