by Grace Ji-Sun Kim | Nov 13, 2025 | Opinion
Our family immigrated from Korea to Canada in 1975. Since then, I have experienced racism throughout much of my life, which has been painful and exhausting. As a theologian, I have reflected on these experiences in my books, sermons and public writing—not because I...
by Mark Sandlin | Oct 7, 2025 | Opinion
My colleague Caleb Lines recently said it clearly: we need a Progressive Christian revolution. And he’s right. But revolutions can’t just be fiery words from a pulpit or slogans on bumper stickers. They only matter if people join. They only work if folks stay curious...
by Miguel A. De La Torre | Oct 1, 2025 | Opinion
For years, I was in Charlie Kirk’s crosshairs, having the dubious honor of being targeted on his “Professor Watch List.” This experience has been terrorizing—fraught with fear, sleepless nights, and hyper-vigilance. Kirk’s cyberbullying has triggered death threats and...
by Armel Crocker and Amy Moore | Sep 19, 2025 | News
Seeds of hope were planted in Dallas County in September at a Guns to Gardens event. Over 35 volunteers gathered to support the dismantling of 49 unwanted guns. On the previous day, 36 guns were dismantled in Fort Worth. This is no small feat in Texas, where the power...
by K. Mekhi Jackson | Sep 8, 2025 | Opinion
Long before the forced journey across the Atlantic, African societies held deeply spiritual understandings of death and burial. Among the Akan of West Africa, the concept of abusua pa—“good family”—meant funerals were communal rituals affirming one’s place in the...