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From the Editors
You could hear them coming.

letters

The poem by Warren Bolon in the April 15 Sentinel is one of the most exquisite things I have read in a long time.
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items of interest

"We have so much to learn about how to live and how to behave for the sake of the future.
Wrongful convictions are not rare these days. Here's how a prison chaplain who has seen the situation firsthand tackles these injustices with the help of prayer.

No hard feelings

Does a heart devoid of grudges heal more quickly from the hurts of injustice?
"How could you defend a murderer?" "Isn't what you do dishonest?" A criminal defense lawyer with a strong Christian faith answers tough questions such as these.

Finding JUSTICE

Here's how one juror decided to handle things when he found himself feeling dismayed after participating in the American legal system.

Gateway to 'the rainbow nation'

Against the backdrop of the largest mall in the Southern Hemisphere, a sampling of South Africa's diverse citizenship reveals a country that has come a long way in the short time since apartheid.
In addition to suffering the pain of multiple bone injuries, a thirteen-year-old athlete was told he would always be deformed and walk with a limp. Find out what got him back on his feet—and back in the game—before the week was out.
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----100 years ago

Gathering news stories with a spiritual perspective week by week, we wondered what kinds of material the Sentinel of a century ago carried.
My name is Michael H.
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Compassion and justice

Can our collective sorrow and the spiritual power of compassion join with civic justice to wipe out the sexual abuse of children?

The right job found me

'I needed to stop acting like an unemployed person.'

When I was in Navy boot camp, I began to realize that I needed something more to rely on than just my own human abilities.

Speedy healing

One morning about ten years ago I was home alone.

The way out of the impasse lies beyond brainpower or skillful diplomacy, in the infinitely larger reality of love.