
This President’s Monstrous Words Make Monsters
Words are stunningly versatile things. They have the ability either to create or to destroy, to lift us or to level us, to give us wings to crush us beneath

Words are stunningly versatile things. They have the ability either to create or to destroy, to lift us or to level us, to give us wings to crush us beneath

Dear Non-White Evangelicals, I’ve been a pastor in the local church for the past 24 years, much of that in megachurches in the Bible Belt. I’ve been shoulder to shoulder

People tell me that I’m anti-Republican. I suppose technically they’re correct, but they’re also missing the point—sometimes intentionally and sometimes mistakenly. Well-meaning friends might say this as an oversimplified bit

This week, in a conversation about the recent Supreme Court hearings, a friend and Trump supporter who claims to be Christian, reiterated a recurring theme: Providence. “This is God’s doing.”

Words are stunningly versatile things. They have the ability either to create or to destroy, to lift us or to level us, to give us wings to crush us beneath

Dear Non-White Evangelicals, I’ve been a pastor in the local church for the past 24 years, much of that in megachurches in the Bible Belt. I’ve been shoulder to shoulder

People tell me that I’m anti-Republican. I suppose technically they’re correct, but they’re also missing the point—sometimes intentionally and sometimes mistakenly. Well-meaning friends might say this as an oversimplified bit

This week, in a conversation about the recent Supreme Court hearings, a friend and Trump supporter who claims to be Christian, reiterated a recurring theme: Providence. “This is God’s doing.”