The Underground Church
Malcolm Boyd looks back at his experience of the underground church that existed on the front lines of the civil rights movement and wonders if the underground church can still exist today.
Malcolm Boyd looks back at his experience of the underground church that existed on the front lines of the civil rights movement and wonders if the underground church can still exist today.
A former ambassador who was also president of a Catholic college, and an evangelical leader team up to write about the plight of LGBT people in Uganda.
Bonnie Anderson, President of the House of Deputies of the Episcopal Church, writes about the Violence Against Women Act which is now up for renewal in Congress.
Reluctant Xian says that there are five things that Christians should never say. This is not like George Carlin’s classic comedy routine, through, because these never get bleeped.
Kate Blanchard, writing at Religion Dispatches, reflects on her spiritual journey and finds that none of the usual labels–religious, spiritual or atheist–fit. She proposes an alternative.
Many Catholic laity are upset about the crackdown on American nuns, but can they–will they?–make their voices heard?
BIshop Pierre Whalon says that it is both naive and impossible to separate religion and politics.
Desmond Tutu writes in the Huffington Post that God made everyone for goodness and he tells the story of three people who demonstrate it.
A Roman Catholic priest from the UK wonders out loud why some Catholics become Anglican.
Frank Mugisha, the 2011 Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award laureate and executive director of Sexual Minorities Uganda describes in the New York Times what it is like to be gay in Uganda.