
Reflections
Fall 2004
The Mighty and the Almighty:
Foreign Policy and God
- From the Dean's Desk
- From the Editor

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The Mighty and the Almighty: United States Foreign Policy and God by Madeleine K. Albright
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Anxious About Empire: A Conversation with Professor Wesley Avram
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Partnership in Hope: Gender, Faith, and Responses to HIV/AIDS in Africa by Margaret A. Farley
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Politics and Salt by John E. Hare
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Letters to a Young Doubter by William Sloan Coffin '56
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When America Can Say, "I'm Back!" by James A. Forbes
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The Third World Is Just Around the Corner by R. Clifton Spargo '93
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"Ministry" with Societies in Transition: An Interview with Ambassador William Lacy Swing '60
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On Mammon and Manna by Clifton Kirkpatrick '68
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The Last Word: What Does Madeleine Albright's Address Say about the Character of Contemporary Christianity? by Stanley Hauerwas '65

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Shades by Dianne Bilyak '06
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My Father, in Heaven, Is Reading Out Loud by Li-Young Lee
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Storm Front by Joel Hanisek '06
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Apropos the Dark Night of the Soul by Thomas Farrington

All photographic artwork by
Gabriel Amadeus Cooney
Harold W. Attridge, Publisher
Jamie L. Manson '02, Editor |
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In this intense political season religion has been playing a major role in public life. Presidential candidates have been routinely grilled on issues of private and public morality and "God" appears as a warrant for various political positions. This issue of Reflecitons continues a long tradition at Yale Divinity School of thinking about the relationship between religion and public life, without focusing simply on the intense concerns of the moment.
--Dean Harold W. Attridge
From the Dean's Desk
The borderless nature of religious faith often makes it easier for leaders to talk to one another; easier for nations to agree on common values; and easier for people from vastly different backgrounds to reach a consensus about moral standards.
---Madeleine K. Albright
The Mighty and the Almighty:
Foreign Policy and God
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