The Heritage Foundation has had a profound effect on defence spending and military action in the US.
Reuters/Jason Reed
Even many Americans don’t know much about organisations like the Alliance Defending Freedom and the Heritage Foundation. But these groups play a critical role in advancing conservative policies.
Schooling doubt.
Ethan Lofton
Tackling extremism, building happier adults and delivering a generation that can adapt to rapid change. Putting thinking and thinkers at the heart of the curriculum should be an easy decision.
Shutterstock
Feminists played a major part in raising the profile of women in the church. Now they need to step up for same-sex marriage.
Justin Welby talks to protesters outside the Anglican summit.
Reuters
In an attempt to avoid complete meltdown, the Anglican Church has sanctioned its US branch for backing same-sex marriage.
Only with a three-pronged long-term approach of education, economic growth and security action can terrorism be defeated.
EPA/Mohammed Elryani
Listening to the thinking process and justification of potential terrorists is critical to finding a path to defeat terrorism.
Irreconcilable differences?
PA/Chris Young
Sexuality is proving a destructive issue for the church.
Kneel young.
zurijeta
Whenever we talk about refraining from things, it is bound up with piety and martyrdom. A different approach could help realign us with the planet.
John James Audubon’s American Flamingo (1838).
Sotheby's
A review of some of the top arts and culture stories from the past year.
‘What difference would it make to human life if a celestial event were unequivocally linked to the very night of Jesus’ birth?’
Nathan Rupert/Flickr
What difference would it make to human life if a celestial event were unequivocally linked to the very night of Jesus’ birth?
A Christmas service in Manhattan.
Mike Segar /REUTERS
How should we celebrate Christmas during a time when religious extremism inspires terrorist attacks and young people are abandoning the church?
Mark Hamill as Luke Skywalker in Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope.
20th Century Fox
Film sagas like Star Wars transcend the screen, connecting viewers to their pasts, to one another and to the hero within.
Enrico Strocchi
To avoid coming a cropper like the Church of England, religious groups should follow these handy hints.
Church members wait to hear Hillary Clinton speak, December 1 2015.
REUTERS/Marvin Gentry
Donald Trump is Protestant, Bernie Sanders is Jewish and Ted Cruz is a Southern Baptist. But do such religious affiliations mean anything?
An open and honest discussion about radicalisation cannot ignore the alienating impacts of racism and Islamophobia, starkly on display at this vandalised Muslim prayer centre in Brisbane.
AAP/Tertius Pickard
A frank debate about the causes of extremism and terrorism would acknowledge uncomfortable issues like the alienating impacts of racism, Islamophobia and Western military actions and foreign policy.
Shadow boxing. Will levelling the playing field work?
Orin Zebest
Removing names from CVs is a start, but we need to do much more to beat discrimination.
Islamic State billboards in Raqqa.
Reuters/Nour Fourat
The group believes that it represents a religion – denying that won’t get us anywhere.
An exorcism being performed in Fafe, Portugal.
Jose Manuel Ribeiro/Reuters
The belief in demonic possession – often thought to be a relic of The Dark Ages and the Salem Witch Trials – remains surprisingly mainstream.
A replica of the Temple of Solomon, built by the Brazilian evangelical “Universal Church of the Kingdom of God” in Sao Paulo.
Reuters/Nacho Doce
Members of a church expect to find mutual support from one another - emotionally and spiritually. This is not the case at the South African branch of The Universal Church of the Kingdom of God.
Police commandos from India’s northern state of Punjab take part in a laughter exercise during a yoga session.
Ajay Verma/Reuters
Does yoga in the West constitute cultural appropriation? We talk culture, pride and 50 years of Light on Yoga.
‘Jesus loves you,’ Nevada.
Jonas Witt/flickr
Twenty-three percent of Americans say they are not religiously affiliated. Our core values may be encouraging us to reject organized religion.