ANNOUNCING: THE THIRD ANNUAL CROSSROADS CONFERENCE ON FAITH AND PUBLIC POLICY July 27-30, 1995, at Eastern College, St. Davids, PA Crossroads, a program of Evangelicals for Social Action co-sponsored by the Center for Public Justice, encourages thoughtful, biblical, scholarly reflection on political issues in the Christian community, and nurtures a generation of Christian scholars interested in linking biblical faith and public policy. The national Crossroads network includes over 120 Christian faculty, policy analysts, public officials, theologians, and top-rated graduate students. Monographs by Crossroads participants on critical public policy questions from an informed biblical perspective are published in the Crossroads Faith and Public Policy Series. The Annual Faith and Public Policy Conference provides Christians interested in public policy with opportunities for sharing research, discussing policy proposals, developing a Christian perspective on political philosophy, networking, and informal fellowship. The cost of the conference is $200, including four nights and all meals. Registration is limited and will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis. We encourage ESA members to attend. For more information or to register for the conference, please contact Keith Pavlischek, Director of Crossroads, 10 Lancaster Avenue, Wynnewood PA 19096, phone: 610-645-9399, email: Cross@esa.mhs.compuserve.com. Following are highlights of the conference: ** Towards a Christian Political Philosophy" Crossroads Lecture Series, "What Can Christians Contribute to the Political Commons?" James W. Skillen (Executive Director, The Center for Public Justice), Panel Respondents: Kenneth Grasso, Francis Beckwith ** Theological Correctness in the Classroom David Hoekema (Academic Dean and Professor of Philosophy, Calvin College) ** Roundtable Discussion: Christians in Academia ** Roundtable Symposium: Mark Noll's The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind ** Christians in the Welfare Debate Stanley Carlson-Thies (Director, Welfare Responsibility Inquiry, the Center for Public Justice) ** Family Policy Symposium Amy Black (PhD candidate in political science, MIT) Perry Glanzer (PhD candidate in Social Ethics, USC), Dave Orgon Coolidge (JD, Georgetown University Law Center) ** Evangelicals in the Elections of '94/'96: Retrospect and Prospects John Green (Bliss Institute, University of Akron), James Guth (Political Science, Furman University), Lyman Kellstedt (Political Science, Wheaton College), Corwin Smidt (Political Science, Calvin College) ** Policy Panel Discussion: Educational Reform and Parental Choice ** "Catholics, Evangelicals and Social Policy" Ron Sider (President, Evangelicals for Social Action), Drew Christiansen (Director, USCC Office of International Justice and Peace) ** Faith and Public Policy Monograph Presentations: Karen Kispert (PhD candidate in political science, Boston University): "Affordable Housing Zone Ahead:" Local Government's Contribution to Justice in Housing Daniel Philpott (PhD candidate in government, Harvard University): National Sovereignty and Humanitarian Intervention Tim Shah (PhD candidate at Harvard University Department of Government): National Service: Will AmeriCorps Serve America? ** Monograph Proposal Presentations by Crossroads Doctoral Scholars and Faculty Associates. Topics of policy proposals to include: Nuclear Energy, Homelessness, Handicapped Newborns, Affirmative Action, Health Care, Embryo Research, Economic Sanctions, Christian Environmental Activism, Capital Punishment *********************************************************** A man of truly catholic spirit has not now his religion to seek. He is fixed as the sun in his judgment concerning the main branches of Christian doctrine. . . . Observe this, you who know not what spirit ye are of: who call yourselves men of catholic spirit; only because ye are of muddy understanding; because your mind is all in a mist; because you have no settled consistent principles; but are for jumbling all principles together. Be convinced, that you have missed your way; you know not where you are. You think you are got into the very spirit of Christ; when, in truth, you are nearer the spirit of Antichrist. Go, first, and learn the first elements of the gospel of Christ, and then shall you learn to be of a truly catholic spirit. --John Wesley ------------------------------------------------------- file: /pub/resources/text/announce: crossroads.conf.txt .