Whose hands are God's hands, but our hands?
I'm on the board of a national group called Faith in America. It's designed to fight religious-based bigotry.
I do not believe that God tortures any person simply for its own sake. I believe that God enables all things to work for the greater good.
I am resigning because my secret leaves the governor's office vulnerable.
Civil union is less than marriage. Marriage is a sacred and valued institution and ought to be afforded equal protection.
I'm grateful for my brokenness. I'm grateful for my humility.
As I climbed the electoral ladder - from state assemblyman to mayor of Woodbridge and finally to governor of New Jersey - political compromises came easy to me because I'd learned how to keep a part of myself innocent of them.
I would be lying if I said the journalism doesn't reflect my own choices as a reporter and a writer: what to say, what to emphasize, how to say it, what is true or untrue.
I wouldn't be surprised if some day, they put the Simpsons in the Smithsonian. It's become part of our culture, those characters.
Examples of vicious courses practiced in a domestic circle corrupt more readily and more deeply when we behold them in persons in authority.
Spiritual truth is something that is so far from us - without any form or name that we can imagine - that we need the things that religions gave us simply as images and metaphors. But they can be found in a variety of ways. It's not a question of religious practice.