

Since 1900, the Christian Century has published reporting, commentary, poetry, and essays on the role of faith in a pluralistic society.
© 2023 The Christian Century.
The urgent need for deep changes in American policing
Are the police meant to protect people? Or to fight them?
The additional violence of George Floyd’s autopsy report
It’s getting harder to believe in the vindication of history.
Why more education can't block the criminalizing gaze at black bodies
I am a black man, and will always be so. Therefore, when I move about in the United States people first see my blackness and not my education. This means ongoing vulnerability because my blackness still is interpreted as criminal through a racialized lens.
The president’s speech in Dallas this week was an excellent performance of a difficult task. There was just one point where I thought he missed it.
No charges were filed against the police officer who killed Tamir Rice. But others are being held responsible: taxpayers.
In recent years, debates over the appropriateness of public monuments celebrating Confederate figures have become increasingly common. Along with exposing deep racial divides, these debates have brought to light historical attitudes and structures built on enduring notions of white supremacy.
While generally taking place in local contexts, they have ramifications that concern all Americans.
Ta-Nehisi Coates is an atheist. But perhaps his atheism is precisely the kind that Christians in America need.
reviewed by Daniel José Camacho
I’m a white parent, and I want my white kids to be like Brandon Brooks when they get older.
He’s the teenager who filmed the pool party incident in suburban Dallas, at which a police officer violently restrained 15-year-old Dajerria Becton and pulled his gun on others. That was smart of Brooks, and bold. His remarks to the press since then have been pretty perceptive, too.
In the midst of all the unarmed black people dying at the hands of police and the even larger problem of anti-black ideology that has normed our society, I thought it fitting to share Moe's song. Let me know what you think about his song entitled Brown Skin.
By the time of Freddie Gray's arrest, his part of town was already awash in legitimate grievances against the police.
For more than a week I’ve been reciting Habakkuk in my mind.