• By Published On: May 9, 2024

    This is a plea for Christians to realize the significance of Isaiah 53 for their understanding of who Jesus was and what he did. I believe that he was motivated by love to take on the role of the Suffering Servant in Isaiah 53.

  • 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.

  • By Published On: May 2, 2024

    In A Journey Called Hope, author Rick Rouse shares the stories of immigrants from around the world to America — their successes, hopes, challenges, and dreams. He explores how we can share our planet with the understanding that it is a matter of human dignity for all people to have a safe place to call home. In sharing these inspiring stories and hope-filled futures, Rouse assures us the United States is still a nation of promise made richer by its diversity.

  • By Published On: May 2, 2024

    Abundant Lives: A Progressive Christian Ethic of Flourishing invites sociologically informed engagement in human well-being based on Jesus’ command to love God, our neighbors, ourselves, and our enemies.

  • 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.

  • From The Collective with Rick Gregory

    By Published On: April 29, 2024

    Watch Episode  20 of The Awakened Collective with Rick Gregory as he interviews Special Guest Rev. Dr. Caleb J. Lines, author of The Great Digital Commission.

  • For Cynde Soto

    By Published On: April 29, 2024

    In a space where all can be themselves without fear— embracing disability as a natural part of life, understanding we all have the same human needs,

  • By Published On: April 29, 2024

    Drinking Pure Light is an invitation to love and be loved more deeply. The inspirational poems are a waterfall of grace, a cascade of revelation, a ray of intimacy breaking through the cloud of fatigue with the good news: you are not alone.

  • By Published On: April 21, 2024

    Sermon: Rev. Dr. Mark Sandlin Presbyterian Church of the Covenant

  • 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.

  • By Published On: April 12, 2024

    Science and Religion should never be in conflict, as Dr. James, a Ph.D. scientist and Christian mystic, carefully demonstrates. He employs many personal experiences in the science realm and in the Christian realm to show how the two are wonderfully complementary—as long as each remains in their respective places.

  • 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

    Thomas Jay Oord and Tripp Fuller offer an open and relational vision of God. This vision makes sense, fits our experience, and is livable. The open and relational view aligns with our deep intuitions about love and freedom.

  • (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: April 5, 2024

    When the intellectual history of the 20th century is written, a few achievements will tower overall. Einstein’s theory of general relativity will be one; the laws of quantum mechanics will be another. The Big Bang Theory of the origin of the universe will be a third.

  • 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.

  • Another Permian-Triassic Extinction??

    By Published On: March 22, 2024

    Only an Economic, Social, Political, Philosophical, and Religious Mind-Change Can Save Us. How could the most clever and brilliant primate ever to evolve on Planet Earth be bringing this extinction dilemma upon itself?

  • By Published On: March 14, 2024

    No matter what happens this election year in the United States, there is going to be further polarization, hateful rhetoric, and very likely, violence.

  • By Published On: March 14, 2024

    I’m not sure why we can be so idealistic about human love when human love is profoundly imperfect and so often unreliable.

  • By Published On: March 14, 2024

    What I know is that I need to not beat myself up for having a hard time when I’m having a hard time.

  • By Published On: March 14, 2024

    A paradigm-shifting journey into God as Self and the World as Heaven on Earth.

  • by Robert P. Jones

    By Published On: March 12, 2024

    Native American racism, then goes even deeper to the historic Christian documents that have infected not only Christian teachings but also have been fundamental principles embedded in laws, policies, decisions, and cultures ever since to the present. His research and documentation are extensive, unnerving, and compelling reading.

  • By Published On: March 11, 2024

    Almost Heretical is a podcast by a former pastor (who used to plant churches with Francis Chan, but then stopped believing in Hell) and a bible scholar. They reexamine the Bible and unlearn the fundamentalist American evangelical theology they used to teach.

  • By Published On: March 11, 2024

    Who could have imagined only a few years ago that there would be controversy in the United States of America about the importance of democracy? 

  • by Judith Lewis Herman, MD

    By Published On: March 5, 2024

    Herman says every survivor she interviewed or worked with has wished above all for the following: Acknowledgment and vindication, apology and amends. Those 4 things are what justice looks like for the people directly affected.

  • 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.

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