
Faith Reels: Detroit
Detroit is a complex new film by Director Kathryn Bigelow (Zero Dark Thirty and The Hurt Locker). The film chronicles the race riots of 1967 but shines the light specifically on the now well-known Algiers Motel incident.
Detroit is a complex new film by Director Kathryn Bigelow (Zero Dark Thirty and The Hurt Locker). The film chronicles the race riots of 1967 but shines the light specifically on the now well-known Algiers Motel incident.
Like the hemorrhaging woman or like Jarius upon hearing of his daughter’s death, we still experience fear mixed in with our faith as we try to figure out what our faith is impelling us to do.
Episcopal Relief & Development serves tens of thousands of displaced people in Rome through the ongoing relief efforts of its partner, the Joel Nafuma Refugee Center (JNRC)
President Trump announced Wednesday that he is nominating Governor Sam Brownback of Kansas to be the Ambassador-at-large for International Religious Freedom. The Kansas City Star
The Archbishops of Canterbury and York have issued a statement marking the fiftieth anniversary of the decriminalization of homosexual acts in Great Britain.
When do I, in my magnanimous self-assurance, miss that God incarnate is right here with me?
Is there value (besides monetary) in the commercialization of faith practices?
In an op-ed for the Tampa Bay Times, the Reverend Mary Anne Dorner reflects on the current healthcare debate in the light of the parable
Perhaps it is this family history that makes Jesus so sensitive to those subjected to the soul-killing effects of shame.
Sojourners takes a good look at the increasingly secular fates of church buildings, from condominium to Wal-Mart, as urban neighborhoods become more gentrified. Congregations are responding to changing demographics in varying ways – some closing and selling, some merging, some staying close to their roots and reaching out to new communities.