A Year in Religion Reporting


Date: 25 December 2009

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Religion Redux

Two of our favorite news analysts count down the religion stories that mattered in 2009-- the flaps, the surprises and the triumphs.  From Pope Benedict's blunders, to Obama's speech to the Muslim world,  to the approval of same-sex blessings in the Episcopal church, it was a year to remember.

Kevin Eckstrom, editor of Religion News Service

Kim Lawton, managing editor of Religion and Ethics Newsweekly

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The Science of Spirituality

Begins at 22 min 30 sec

National Public Radio's religion correspondent ponders the limits of science, and raises some big questions: Does spirituality run in families? Is there a God gene?  And how do we explain near-death experiences? In this special rebroadcast from May, she explains how new technologies are helping scientists measure 'the fingerprints of God' in the brain.

Barbara Bradley Hagerty, author of Fingerprints of God: The Search for the Science of Spirituality

Credit: Melonyce McAfee

Commentary: In Defense of Kwanzaa

Begins at 48 min 20 sec

Kwanzaa was created by a Black Studies professor in the late 60s as a way to celebrate black heritage.   Some call it a pseudo-holiday, but when Melonyce McAfee and her family tried it out, back in the early 90s, it turned out to be more meaningful than they expected. Our story originally aired in December 2008.

Melonyce McAfee, copy editor at Slate Magazine