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The reactions of many Australians to the deaths of a crocodile showman and a racing car driver suggest that media images canonise our secular saints. Meanwhile the fictional Chris Anderson's love for his family and friends, and his integrity and humility, are very appealing characteristics.
It is a truism that most people today are intensely interested in spirituality, less interested in religion, and little interested in churches.
Penelope Buckley reflects on Aileen Kelly’s City and Stranger.
John Sendy revisits Joseph Furphy’s Such is Life
Nation-building is a fraught and messy business. Michael Ignatieff knows that well.
Madeleine Byrne explores the boundaries, both geographical and moral, between Australia and Timor-Leste.
Sleazily located above an adult supermarket in St Kilda, Icon Tours was uncorrupted by its neighbour and fully bore out its claim to provide something unique among day tours.
The ‘right to return’ to Israel does not mean that all Jews visiting there for the first time will like the reality they find.
A reflection on contemporary Christianity
Theology dances awkwardly with silence. The natural business of theology is to put together words about God. But the better the words, the more clearly inadequate they are to their subject and the sooner they run out into silence.
Peter Rodgers on where cricket is heading.
61-71 out of 71 results.