What can faith contribute to the functioning of liberal democracy in contemporary multicultural societies? Might it actually be necessary for a healthy democracy?
Church
Committing the Commons to Solidarity & Repair
How might we each play a role in sowing a more woven, widely shared commons? Father Jack Wall and Joe Boland have spent years walking in solidarity with people from some of America's poorest communities to build up vibrant and transformative communities of faith....
Community Resilience in the Wake of Trauma
On November 8, 2018, a massive fire was triggered in northern California and decimated the town of Paradise and surrounding mountain communities in less than half a day. Nearly two years later, as the nation grapples with urgent questions around community resilience...
Race, Relationships, and Repentance
Bridge-building and breaking down barriers can sound innocuous enough, even praiseworthy, but what’s the underside of the embroidered tapestry? Dwan Dandridge and Chris Lambert have been doing this work in Detroit for some years now, and aren’t afraid of the mess....
Where Our Hope Truly Lies
Susannah Black
Dear friends, How can Christians best participate in political life? In one of this week’s pieces, Zachary McCartney and Ben Peterson make a richly considered and theologically grounded case for the church as the archetypal polis: the political community of which all...
The Church as Polis
Zachary McCartney, Ben Peterson
How can Christians best participate in political life? Zachary McCartney and Ben Peterson make a richly considered and theologically grounded case for the church as the archetypal polis: the political community of which all our other political communities are symbols.
A Time to Break Down, and a Time to Build Up
Roger Mielke
In Berlin’s Zehlendorf district, there is a subway station named “Onkel Toms Hütte,” after Harriet Beecher Stowe’s famous novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Stowe, an ardent abolitionist, wrote the novel in 1852 as a manifesto against slavery. Twenty-two-year-old Berlin pro...
True and False Evils
Anne Snyder
Vagueness and moral passion are rarely productive colleagues. The truth of things demands more care and slowly earned trust, fewer scapegoats, less totalism of absolutes. Today on Breaking Ground, Phil Christman seeks to pry apart this partnership that is making so...
What is Freedom For?
Susannah Black
Dear friends, What is freedom for? This Holy Week, Joshua Heavin brings us a reflection on the uses and nature of freedom, as refracted through the story of this past winter’s Texas ice storm. It is a timely and moving meditation on what we are to do with the freedom...
What Is the City on the Hill?
Richard Mouw
When President Ronald Reagan delivered his “Farewell Address to the Nation” in 1989, he called on his fellow citizens to be true to the purposes for which America was founded. To support his urgings, he cited a sermon preached by the Puritan leader John Winthrop in...