-
About Lisa Miller
Lisa Miller is a senior editor at Newsweek. She oversees all of the magazine’s religion coverage and writes the weekly “Belief Watch column. She also helped launch the Washington Post’s “OnFaith,” an online global conversation about religion and faith moderated
-
About “Heaven”
What is heaven? Eighty percent of Americans say they believe in heaven, yet very few of them can articulate anything specific about their belief. Numerous questions surrounding the concept of heaven have existed for ages, and Americans continue to grapple
-
Civility Won’t Fix Politics, but We Still Need It
Civility isn’t a panacea for our woeful political culture, but at least it could stop the trash talking.
-
Analyzing Tiger Woods’ Return to Buddhism
His return to Buddhism could be one more scripted PR stunt. Or, it could be the path to redemption.
-
Facebook and Death: Virtual Grief
The uses and abuses of virtual grief.
-
✴︎ Religion
Heaven: Our Enduring Fascination With The Afterlife
“Heaven: Our Enduring Fascination with the Afterlife” by Lisa Miller (Harper-Collins ISBN 978-0-06-055475-0) “Heaven. The word evokes all kinds of images and feelings in the hearts of people virtually everywhere. In some corners, heaven is seen as a vague sense
-
Kirkus Reviews on “Heaven”
An introduction to what monotheists of all stripes believe about heaven. Newsweek society and religion editor Miller offers an overview that combines elements of journalism, academics and memoir. Her approach provides an intriguing glimpse at what many believe the afterlife
-
Should Harvard Have A Religion Department?
It doesn’t take a degree from Harvard to see that in today’s world, a person needs to know something about religion. The conflicts between the Israelis and the Palestinians; between Christians, Muslims, and animists in Africa; between religious conservatives and
-
Stephanie Saldana’s Memoir Bread of Angels
It is understandable to want to run screaming from a “spiritual memoir”—especially when you discover it’s been written by a 27-year-old. Memoirs are bad enough, with their cringe-making confessions, their sordid tale-telling, and their self-important self-examination. Why, the reader too
-
The 2010 Super Bowl’s Pro-Life Ad
Americans like values, but they don’t know which values they like best. The hype over Tim Tebow’s pro-life ad—sponsored by the conservative faith-and-values group Focus on the Family and scheduled to air during Sunday’s Super Bowl—is a case in point.