• By Published On: May 9, 2024

    The RBC’s meeting wasn’t, apparently, about the conversations that could be had at the TCC. To avoid any unexpected conversations, in fact, the bank blocked access to the meeting to any but shareholders, a practice that, I’ve been told, is relatively new.

  • Part Three

    By Published On: May 3, 2024

    Friends of St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church, Brookings, Oregon Update:  Good and Bad News in Two-pronged City Attack on Oregon Church’s Ministries to Poor 

  • By Published On: April 29, 2024

    Christian nationalism that had led to the first world war, was now leading to the second. Almost all of the 60 million Germans in 1933 were Christians. The country was suffering in the aftermath of WWI, and it was ready for a new “Leader” who would restore the economy and national pride.

  • A Women’s History Month Essay

    By Published On: April 17, 2024

    When, as an ex-Christian, I became curious about progressive Christianity several years ago, I was thrillingly surprised by what I saw in a church in my town.

  • By Published On: April 17, 2024

    Will there come a day when all human behavior can be understood as clearly as natural disasters? Will these behaviors still be considered evil?

  • By Published On: April 15, 2024

    So, how did Christianity become so mean? Although many factors contribute to mean Christianity, the primary culprit is that large numbers of American Christians, both Republicans and Democrats, care more about partisan politics and culture wars than they care about following the example and teachings of Jesus.

  • Part Two

    By Published On: April 14, 2024

    Friends of St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church, Brookings, Oregon Update:  Good and Bad News in Two-pronged City Attack on Oregon Church’s Ministries to Poor 

  • By Published On: April 6, 2024

    Jesus was not crucified for telling people to love God and our neighbors. He was killed for challenging the authorities of that time. He challenged the Jewish authorities, and he challenged the Roman authorities.

  • By Published On: April 5, 2024

    The fact is that civil-minded folk outnumber the forces on the other side. There are just more of us than there are of them. The problem is that we have not recognized the current existential threat. We slide along the path we are on, pretending as though next year will be the same as this year. It will not.

  • By Published On: April 5, 2024

    The central focus of Jesus’ message was to announce the imminent coming of the kingdom of God. This is what he was sent to do. (Luke 4: 43-44) This kingdom would be on earth for the people of Israel. (Matthew 10: 5-8) Although Jesus gives few details on how this kingdom would operate.

  • (Moving from “Ought” to “How To”)

    By Published On: April 5, 2024

    So what about loving our enemies? What do we normally feel, what do others who have modeled destructive behavior and attitudes expect us to feel and what can we possibly feel? Why should we choose not to feel what virtually everyone expects us to feel?

  • By Published On: March 26, 2024

    Fifty years ago, in 1974, the Combahee River Collective was founded in Boston by several lesbian and feminist women of African descent. As a sisterhood, they understood that their acts of protest were shouldered by and because of their ancestors—known and unknown—who came before them.

  • By Published On: March 4, 2024

    Will American politicians stand up to Putin? Will they learn anything from the sacrifice of Navalny?

  • By Published On: March 4, 2024

    I pray, and look to scripture, and consider our role as people on an ever-changing planet as residents in and stewards of creation.

  • By Published On: March 4, 2024

    Our perceptions of gender are changing. The role of gender in our society is changing. The relationship between gender and sexuality is changing. It’s a paradigm shift that has crested and simply will not be rolled back.

  • By Published On: February 7, 2024

    One of the most challenging things in life is to stay engaged in a conversation when there are clearly very different ideologies at play.

  • Fierce love pursues peace through nonviolence

    By Published On: January 22, 2024

    If we want peace, it has to start with us. We must uproot violence from our language, in the ways we relate to one another.

  • By Published On: January 18, 2024

    We recently celebrated the life, faith and non-violence of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The moment triggers within us a host of emotions-thankfulness for heroes such as he, distress about the state of our country, anxiety about the future, and fear for the present.

  • By Published On: January 15, 2024

    As I’m writing this commentary, the news is filled with chatter about another anniversary observance of January sixth. It’s not about the liturgical religious observance known as the Epiphany, of course; but the third-year anniversary of those days surrounding the political insurrection in our nation’s Capital.

  • By Published On: December 30, 2023

    To what extent do churches accommodate the values of their worshippers and merely give them a sense of comfort, and to what extent do churches set high standards and encourage Christian growth and social commitment?

  • By Published On: December 30, 2023

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is reported to have said that “the universe is under no obligation to make sense to you.” No doubt true, but how about the inverse: are we under any obligation to make sense out of the universe?

  • By Published On: December 30, 2023

    Decades ago, I wrote a blessing prayer for this season that began with a reference to nothing but a flicker of hope in “the fading glory of these autumn days, when night creeps early on to darkness; and leaves us, bound in shadows, longing for the light.” And yet, it remains that flicker of hope that I want to write about.

  • By Published On: December 11, 2023

    O come, O come Wisdom from on high – Send your wisdom and cast aside the myopic stupidity that comes from thinking only of ourselves, only of our own species, only of our own wellbeing, only of our own country, only of our own religion, only of our own historical moment.

  • By Published On: December 11, 2023

    If we want peace, it has to start with us. We must uproot violence from our language, in the ways we relate to one another.

  • By Published On: December 11, 2023

    We stand on the brink of everything collapsing. The entire world. It's unraveling.

  • By Published On: December 4, 2023

    "We transgenders here feel a bit more human because the fact that Pope Francis brings us closer to the Church is a beautiful thing," Carla Segovia, 46, a sex worker, told Reuters. "Because we need some love."

  • By Published On: December 4, 2023

    At the heart of the Christian tradition, we say there is “faith (πίστις, ‘pistis’ Gr. - trust), hope (ἐλπίς, Gr. elpis = meaning expectation, in a positive sense), and love ( ἀγάπη Gr. ‘agapé’ ‘love’ or φιλανθρωπία Gr. ‘caritas’ = charity).

  • By Published On: November 22, 2023

    When AARP Massachusetts was looking to honor the state's top volunteer, Paul's and Charles's names rose to the top. They have made a difference in the lives around them, sharing their knowledge, experience, talent, and skills to enrich the lives of our community.

  • By Published On: November 13, 2023

    I am deeply concerned about the rise of Christian nationalism in this country. I say this not just as a Christian but as the president of Pacific School of Religion (PSR), a progressive Christian seminary founded in 1866.

  • By Published On: November 13, 2023

    Does Jesus really mean we must love our neighbor? And who is our neighbor?

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