Church vs injustice not church vs state
Ilsup Ahn believes that a different conception of church could have stopped, among other things, housing segregation.
Ilsup Ahn believes that a different conception of church could have stopped, among other things, housing segregation.
Some churches are starting the long process of reckoning with their role in the horrors of Indigenous boarding schools.
I approached the project’s new anthology with some skepticism. Its contents quickly dispelled my doubts.
In true agrarian fashion, Norm Wirzba suggests starting small.
A man sleeping on a step? A baby in a manger?
It was on a Friday in spring 2021 that Letta Cartlidge decided she had seen enough.
In her backyard in a suburb of Denver, Colorado, a stack of bangles on her arm and an oversized cardigan draped around her shoulders, Cartlidge explained to the Century how on April 15, 2021, James McDowell, a former principal at Hillcrest—a boarding school primarily for the children of missionaries in Jos, Nigeria—admitted in a private Facebook group for Hillcrest alumni that he had “molested” two students during his tenure.
Historian Jo Guldi argues that land occupancy struggles aren’t just about fairness; they’re about humanity’s survival.
I’m hoping for one that’s lyrical, chastened, hallowed.
Five years ago this month, Time magazine named “the silence breakers” as its Person of the Year, honoring “the voices that launched a movement.” That movement was MeToo, begun in 2006 by activist Tarana Burke to encourage survivors of sexual violence to tell their stories. MeToo was popularized through social media in 2017, and scores of survivors found a sense of empowerment and solidarity in telling their own stories of assault and harassment.
T. S. Eliot’s epic poem is a masterpiece—but what do we do with its view of classical Western tradition?