Across the country, churches, synagogues and mosques have become increasingly conscious of their moral obligation to care for the environment. Many are stepping up their environmental activism by investing in renewable energy and particularly solar panels. But the speed with which they take on solar panels has much to do with economics.
To my fellow evangelicals: What you’re cheering in Jerusalem is shameful
It’s shameful, not only because they use their theology to make the moving of the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem a matter of “eternal” significance, but also because they refuse to hold the Netanyahu government accountable for Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, some of whom are themselves evangelical Christians.
On creating a new politics with spiritual and intellectual integrity
As climate change threatens our very future, and economic inequality stokes dangerous social polarization, we are literally in a battle for our lives — one that can only be won in “sage mode” rather than “warrior mode.” We now need to show up at our wisest and best. And that only happens when the political and the spiritual are integrated.
Editorial: The Christian right in U.S. is breaking up
The alliance between fundamentalist Protestants and Roman Catholics cannot survive the humiliations of evangelical support for President Trump.
Hundreds protest in cities across U.S. for Poor People’s Campaign
The Rev. William Barber II and the Rev. Liz Theoharis led dozens of demonstrators at a rally and march in front of the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Monday afternoon. Similar rallies were coordinated and held in front of state houses in over 30 states across the country, according to organizers ― from Tennessee to Massachusetts to California.
Storm cellars and Pentecost
Like the storm-cellar vigils of a childhood in West Texas, Pentecost is wild and unpredictable, always hard and most always scary. We don’t know what might happen, but we know we’ll be changed.
President Trump just unveiled a new White House ‘faith’ office. It actually weakens religious freedom.
Removing religious liberty protections in the name of religious freedom taints the cause. Honoring freedom for faith-based providers, while taking it away from people receiving services, is wrong.
Trump, Netanyahu take evangelical support to a new level
Israeli leaders have long welcomed evangelical support. But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has taken this support to a new level. Netanyahu presents himself as the protector of Christian holy sites and a leader in the fight against Islamic extremism. In turn, Christian Zionists have given strong support for Netanyahu’s religious-nationalist and aggressive agendas.
More seminary students leave the master of divinity behind
The gold standard for church leaders — the Master of Divinity — is losing some of its luster to its humbler cousin, the two-year Master of Arts.
Churchgoers say gifts to charity, needy count as tithing
Most Protestant churchgoers believe that giving 10 percent of their income is a biblical requirement they should follow but they define the practice of tithing in a variety of ways, a new survey shows.
Barber sermon on militarism reveals philosophical and political limitations of Poor Peoples Campaign
Barber’s oration on militarism used the word “moral” a couple hundred times to explain the past and present but didn’t use the words capitalism, socialism, class or working class once. How we can explain economic injustice, environmental destruction, white supremacy and the rest without these concepts makes Barber’s and the PPC’s actual politics of change more than a little cloudy.
Willow Creek elders apologize for casting doubt on women’s allegations against founder Hybels
The highest-ranking elder of northwest suburban Willow Creek Community Church told the congregation Wednesday that elders owe apologies to women who made allegations of misconduct against church founder Bill Hybels.










