Recent Articles
What’s Lost, What’s Left, What’s Possible
Stay present, aware and open to the many paths of healing a mourner might require, not the least of which are time and company.
Ukrainians Losing Hope for Victory
A recent Gallup study has found Ukrainians are losing faith in the possibility of a victory against Russia.
Serpents, Songs, and Meeting a Modern Southern Saint
Justin Cox tells the story of when he first met Abe Partridge, the Alabama Astronaut.
Netanyahu’s “Final Solution”: Why We Must Keep Talking About Gaza
Rebecca David Hensley describes why we must keep talking about Gaza.
The Writer is a Witness
Eugenic and nationalist imaginaries are retelling the same old stories of a favored “race” with God- given superiority and the church’s blessing to steal land predestined to be colonized. It’s a “Master Narrative” set: the Doctrine of Discovery, Manifest Destiny, and Survival of the Fittest repackaged. It is also the reason why some writers must write.
Gallup Poll Finds Pope, Zelensky with Highest U.S. Favorability Ratings
A recent Gallup poll revealed Pope Leo XIV is the world leader viewed most favorably by U.S. respondents.
Being Baptist in a Democracy
Rather than declaring how a church should or must act as Baptists in a democracy, Amanda Tyler lays out the tools and parameters of how a Baptist identity leads to democratic engagement.
How Can Anyone Be Pro-Palestinian? A Biblical Scholar Explains
Biblical scholar Tony Cartledge often gets asked how anyone, especially a biblical scholar, can be pro-Palestinian.
Ten Lessons On my 55th Birthday
Curiosity is an invitation into a relationship, one that doesn’t judge but is inquisitive, with the hope of discovery.
God Waiting in the Chaos
Our eyes probably won’t be opened through a dirt and saliva mixture. But maybe they’ll be opened through a quiet noticing.
To Churches, From Young People
When we gather in the sacred spaces of our generation—coffee shops, park trails, bars, reddit threads and front porches—we compare notes. All of us carry some sort of compromise.
New Good Faith Bible Studies in 2026
Changes will include new curriculum writers and a conversational podcast hosted by GFM’s senior editor, Craig Nash.
State of Clergywomen Report to Receive Update
Rev. Dr. Eileen Campbell-Reed recently announced she has received funding to update the monumental State of Clergywomen Report.
Grief as Spiritual Formation | Being Present in an Unbearable Present
“Go to dark Gethsemane,” the old hymn instructs us and if there is any present we can bear, maybe it’s this one.
The Secularization of Teaching
When diversity, equity, inclusion, accessibility, and otherness are defined as wrong, the embrace of the gospel is weakened and learning becomes a thing of the past.
Netanyahu’s Favorability in the U.S. Declining
A recent Gallup poll has revealed that for the first time since he first became Israel’s prime minister, U.S. respondents have a negative view of Benjamin Netanyahu.
Earthbound: God as Be-ing
God as Be-ing calls all of creation into life, movement and flourishing. In this divine dance of becoming, we are invited to participate as co-creators in the unfolding of love and life itself.
In Gold We Trust: How Donald Trump Replaced Democracy With Kleptocracy
We are witnessing a widening income gap as those in the middle class find themselves trapped in a downward economic death spiral.
Beyond Baptist and Pentecostal: A Broader Black Church Narrative
Reimagining the Black Church requires nothing less than a full and honest conversation— one that refuses to privilege a single tradition, but instead honors the fullness of our collective sacred memory.
Rent-Free: Barack Hussein Obama Still Lives in Donald Trump’s Head
President Donald Trump recently dodged a Jeffrey Epstein question by attacking former President Barack Obama, accusing him of treason. His latest attempt to deflect suggests Obama still lives rent-free in his head, which made me tilt mine.
Belief Behind the Book | Emily Hedrick’s ‘How to Treat Your Body Like a Sacred Text’
How to Treat Your Body Like a Sacred Text explores what happens when trauma theory and sacred reading meet—starting with the body.
An Engineer Thinks About the Holy Spirit
I imagine the Holy Spirit as simply an inaudible and invisible signal from God, much like the signals that carry information to a mobile phone, radio or television. The ability to perceive this Holy Signal is, in part, what it means to be made in the image or likeness of God.
My Faith Compels Me: An Appeal for Love
Critics will counter that my theology is too fond of humanism, and that’s a fair criticism. Humanism is the philosophical belief emphasizing the value and agency of human beings. So, if that’s the definition, then I guess I’m guilty, but so too is God.
All That You Have Is Your Soul: Witnessing the World’s Joy
As I root into the dignity, sacredness and stillness of my soul, I root into the memory of truth.
Fantastic Four: Sue Storm, Molech, and the Tension of Divine Love
Every generation finds new names for Molech. He appears in market-driven metrics, campaign slogans, and boardroom calculations—where the vulnerable are weighed against the survival of the system.
Christian-Majority Countries Declining, but Still Predominant on the World Stage
The number of countries with majority Christian populations dropped between 2010 and 2020, according to a new Gallup analysis.
Belief Behind the Book | ‘Love is the Why’ by Diana McLean
As Rev. McLean reminds us, love is not just the why—it’s the way. May her poems ignite your courage, soften your heart, and call you back to the divine truth pulsing in every body, every vote, every act of justice.
Grief as Spiritual Formation | Lean In and Breathe
If grief is such a given in our lives, should it not be a given in our lifelong journey of spiritual formation?
Summertime Postcards to Heaven
Let us be kind to one another, sharing in our mourning and peaceful joy, especially this summer. Because grief can’t take a vacation.
Gallup Poll Measures Moral Acceptability of Various Behaviors
A recent Gallup poll measures how U.S. respondents feel about specific behaviors, such as adultery, the death penalty, and divorce.





























