The Rev. Douglas Sharp

Dean of the Academy for the Common Good

Neither – Nor

Homosexuals seem to be getting a lot of attention these days. It’s almost as if everywhere you turn, somebody is letting out a screech for or against homosexuals. The way some say it, persons with homosexual orientation are human beings who deserve recognition for their basic human rights and equal standing in our diverse society. The way others describe them, you would think they are aliens from another universe, posing an intolerable threat to an established and ordained way of life. more

The Rule of the (Wealthy) Few

By now you have probably heard that five of the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court cannot think of any reason why corporations doing business in this country should be prevented from spending as much money as they want to defeat a political candidate or policy that is not to their liking, or to elect one that is. more

The last few weeks have seen a lot of media attention directed toward religious organizations, their representatives, and the positions they are taking on various public issues, from climate change to marriage equality for homosexuals, from health care reform to hate crime laws, from rising poverty rates and income disparity to the decline of religion in the U.S., based on the number of U.S. citizens who claim “no religion” in answer to survey questions. more

Religion as a Product of Evolution?

A new book exploring religious behavior has appeared, with a most interesting approach to its explanation. The book is The Biology of Religious Behavior: The Evolutionary Origins of Faith and Religion (Santa Barbara: Praeger, 2009) and it is edited by Jay R. Feierman, M.D., a retired Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the University of New Mexico. more

I couldn’t tell whether the message on the marquee in front of the church I passed was a sermon title or one of those witty aphorisms intended to be the religious “thought of the day” – a version of populist Gnosticism where the insiders get it and like it, and the outsiders are amused by its pithy piety but quickly forget it–if they bother to read it. more

During worship one recent Sunday, the pastor encouraged the worshipers to take a few moments following the service to step into the fellowship hall and sign a petition on health care reform to be forwarded to representatives and senators in Washington. This request followed some remarks made by the pastor on the inequalities in health care services … more

Too Old to Live

Scenario #1: Your husband of forty years has been diagnosed with bladder cancer. The doctor reports that the protocol would normally be surgery to remove the tumor, followed by a series of chemotherapy treatments over a period of four months. However, the doctor says, your spouse is ineligible for the treatment because he is sixty-seven years old. more

“With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in.”

—Abraham Lincoln