A powerful moment in Ferguson
With the unending stream of horrifying images coming out of Ferguson this past week–the tear gas, the unrest, the arrests of reporters, and the curfews,
With the unending stream of horrifying images coming out of Ferguson this past week–the tear gas, the unrest, the arrests of reporters, and the curfews,
In an article on Patheos, Tim Wright argues that one of the contributing factors to the rise of the ‘spiritual/not-religious’ generation is, of all things,
Dan Edwards, the bishop of Nevada, has written a blog post exploring the relationship between the Episcopal Church, and romantic individualism, especially as it relates
The crisis on the southern border has spurred a resurgence of the Sanctuary Movement–where churches and other houses of worship offer shelter to undocumented immigrants.
If you spend much time around church food pantries, and the government-administered food assistance programs that are often run out of churches, then you might
Phillip Pullman, whom the New Yorker once called ‘the most outspoken atheist in Britain’, wrote the young adult trilogy, His Dark Materials, which cemented his
The Anglican archbishop of Uganda has spoken out against the decision of the Constitutional Court, which overturned the law imposing harsh penalties on ‘homosexual acts’,
The head of the US Jesuit Conference has written to the Congressional alumni of Jesuit schools, urging them to do more on immigration reform, and
As the world watches the situation in Gaza crumble day by day, Rabbi Jill Jacobs writes an op-ed in the Washington Post calling for ‘radical
In the NY Times, TR Luhrmann examines the phenomenon of ‘boggle lines’–the point at which someone draws the line between what can be accepted into