Dick Staub was host of a daily radio show on Seattle's KGNW (also broadcast on cable's Total Living Network), and is the author of Too Christian, Too Pagan: How to Love the World Without Falling for It (Zondervan, 2000). He's also the founder of the Center for Faith and Culture, which examines intersections between popular culture and religious belief. His interviews appearing on our site will examine many of these intersections, as he talks to writers, theologians, and other cultural influencers.
The Dick Staub Interview: Driving to Paradise
David Brooks, author of On Paradise Drive, says Americans are on a spiritual search for paradise, and Christians need to supply the language for the search.
posted 5/01/2004 12:00AM
The Dick Staub Interview: The Ascetic American Dream
David Matzko McCarthy, author of The Good Life: Genuine Christianity for the Middle Class, talks about the wealth and the poverty of the American middle class.
Caesar's Sectarians The government keeps trying to favor one kind of religion over another.
A Christianity Today editorial | posted 9/04/2008 09:30AM
Healing ORU $70 million and Mart Green's business acumen are repairing a scandal-scarred school.
John W. Kennedy in Tulsa | posted 9/03/2008 09:26AM
Missional Misstep Emphasizing the big gospel can make it hard to communicate any gospel.
David Fitch | posted 8/27/2008 10:40AM
From Christianity Today Movies: Salvation Not Needed
The star of Save Me says ex-gay ministries can do a world of good for its clients, but also believes there's no such thing as "converting" homosexuals to go straight.
Mark Moring | posted 9/06/2008 11:30AM
Review: Save Me
A gay man and a Christian woman reach beyond the stereotypes in this thoughtful, but not unbiased, film about an "ex-gay" ministry.
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