What does it mean to follow Jesus in a divided America?
Our ultimate goal isn’t winning an argument or even an election but bringing healing to a suffering world, writes a journalist and author.
Recently published
Our ultimate goal isn’t winning an argument or even an election but bringing healing to a suffering world, writes a journalist and author.
What might we hear and think and do as faith leaders as the war in the Middle East grinds on?
For the Seattle-based theologian, living into the reality of reconciliation means contributing to a world where all of God’s creation can flourish.
Howard Thurman and other civil rights leaders modeled how contemplation fuels action and action fuels contemplation.
In their new Lenten study, a pastor and a theologian in Louisville invite a practice of activism, one step at a time.
Remembering the racist attacks on civil rights marchers crossing the Edmund Pettus Bridge pushes us to think about what compromise looks like.
A pastor struggles with what to say when there are no words that match the enormity and complexity of the conflict.
In her new book, “The 272,” a journalism professor explains how she pieced together the story of two sisters torn apart by a mass sale of people enslaved by the Catholic Church — and why their story matters.
The bestselling author sees solidarity in liturgy and hope in practicing memory.
Ending racial trauma requires discipleship in order to overcome evil and achieve transformation, writes an author in this adapted excerpt from her new book.
A retired white Methodist bishop from South Africa who worked with Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu to end apartheid urges American Christian leaders to take Christian nationalism seriously.