Drinking the Cup We’d Rather Not – Part I
Column by Rev. Roger Wolsey on August, 7 2025The American crowds yearned for a leader of perceived principle and strength to improve our self-esteem—and got played by appeals to our baser instincts. Too many of my fellow citizens, including a statistical majority of self-identified Christians, allowed their bigotry against women, trans and gay people, brown people, unhoused, and disabled people to cause them to vote against their own best interests.
Losing Our Inhibitions
Column by Rev. Jim Burklo on July, 31 2025Our progressive Christian churches have a unique and critical role to play in preserving freedom and democracy in this time of crisis. We must make our voices heard – not just to protest, but to be persuasive and effective at tipping public opinion in the direction of decency.
Violence
Column by Dr. Carl Krieg on July, 24 2025The threat of physical violence, even murder, is real in America today, but the violence is not only physical, but mental as well. All Americans, citizens included, now live in fear of being swept off the street by ICE, especially those of us who are brown or black.
A Symbol of Hope: Deutero-Isaiah and Superman
Column by Rev. Dr. Caleb J. Lines on July, 17 2025The hope found in Deutero-Isaiah, which was written in Exile, is like the hope found in Superman when most compassionate Americans feel like morals are in Exile. Like Deutero-Isaiah, Superman reminds us that better times are possible if we embrace higher values.
The Imagination Must Come Before the Implementation
Column by Brian McLaren on July, 10 2025One of my favorite songwriters happens to be my daughter, Jodi McLaren. (Yes, I’m biased, but yes, she’s amazing!) She recently wrote and recorded a powerful song as a way of dealing with her grief, outrage, and moral agony about what has been unfolding in and around Gaza. Of course, I share her grief, outrage, and moral agony.
Pope Leo XIV: A Beacon of Hope in a Suffering World
Column by Rev. Dr. Jeffrey Frantz on July, 3 2025Known as a deeply humble man, a man of high moral principle, Pope Leo XIV could not have come along at a better time. Given the endless evil of Trumpism and Trump’s ruthless buddy, Vladimir Putin in Russia, the world is desperate for a moral voice to speak out. From what we have seen of Pope Leo so far, he can be that voice. Indeed, he can be a beacon of hope in a suffering world.
When Faith Becomes a Weapon: The Oldest Lie in the Book
Column by Rev. Dr. Mark Sandlin on June, 26 2025For as long as folks have been swinging swords, they’ve been etching God’s name on the blade to make themselves feel better about it. It’s one of humanity’s oldest bad habits: turning the God of Love into the god of conquest, oppression, and holy war.
As My Father Lay Dying
Column by Rev. Dr. Robin Meyers on June, 19 2025For as long as I can remember, my father talked about God all the time—at least from the pulpit. At home, he acted more like an agnostic, reluctant even to pray before a meal, unless it was the required offering at Thanksgiving.
Taking Back the Bible
Column by Rev. Brandan Robertson on June, 12 2025We’re told that “God is love” (1 John 4:16), which means that wherever the God who is love is present, fear cannot exist. This is a beautiful and liberating truth. Yet far too often, as a queer person seeking God, I’ve experienced a tremendous amount of fear.
Abundant Lives: A Progressive Christian Ethic of Flourishing A Conversation with Dr. Amanda Udis-Kessler
Column by Rev. David M. Felten on June, 5 2025Dr. Amanda Udis-Kessler is a writer, musician, sociologist, composer, hymn writer, trainer, and consultant — each of which she says she pursues with the intention “of making the world a more joyful, gracious, and less painful place.”
Who celebrates our trans service members on Memorial Day?
Column by Rev. Irene Monroe on May, 29 2025There are parades all across the country on Memorial Day commemorating our U.S. service members who died while in the military. But not all service members are honored for their acts of service, bravery, and patriotism.
Christianity 2.0: Come Join Us
Column by Rev. Dr. Matthew Fox on May, 22 2025Carl Jung makes the point when talking about his four “personality types” that a healthy person goes out of his or her way to make up for the weaker dimensions of their type. Thus an introvert practices some extrovert dimensions, or an intuitive person schools himself or herself in some missing sense of structure and form.
The Politics of Happiness: The Least Christian Countries are the Most Christian – Part II
Column by Rev. Roger Wolsey on May, 15 2025Addressing my fellow citizens of the United States: Let’s consider how our founding fathers understood happiness and the purpose and role of the federal government. And as we do, also consider how well the societies of the top 11 happiest nations correlate with the happiness understood by those founding fathers.
Dumpster Fire Ethics: A Progressive Christian Morality of Flourishing
Column by Dr. Amanda Udis-Kessler on May, 8 2025When those in political power celebrate ignorance, cherish cruelty, and delight in harming those outside their circle of moral care, what are open-hearted Jesus followers to do? When a society built on a social contract is ruled by antisocial people, how are those claimed by the Rabbi of Nazareth to respond?
Lost Sandwiches: The Spirituality of Place
Column by Rev. Jim Burklo on May, 1 2025Jesus told his followers that they were citizens of the kingdom of heaven. But where was this kingdom? Here, there, inside of them, or all of the above? He challenged them to expand their definition of “home” to include the whole human family, the whole world, the whole cosmos.
The Medicine of Both/And
Column by Rev. Lauren Van Ham on April, 24 2025Living heaven on Earth means leaving the ways of Empire and embracing the wisdom of Creation, the ways of Kin-dom.
Scarier than Fiction
Column by Rev. Dr. Caleb J. Lines on April, 17 2025Esther is one of only two books in the Bible to be named after a woman (the other is Ruth). It is also one of only two books in the Bible not to explicitly mention God (the other is the erotic poetry in the Song of Songs). Spending a bit of time with Esther helps us to confront unjust leaders, even today.
Easter 2025: Tears, Goosebumps, Smiles And the Presence of the Universe
Column by Dr. Carl Krieg on April, 10 2025It’s always the same old story. Location and time don’t matter. The greedy, rich, and powerful always take what they can from the rest of us, be they kings, khans, industrialists, or tech bros by the name of Henry, Genghis, Stalin, Hitler, Trump, Vance, or Musk.
Authoritarianism and Progressive Christianity
Column by Brian McLaren on April, 3 2025Many Americans still don’t believe we are in the process of an authoritarian coup. But the more I understand about authoritarianism, the clearer that reality becomes.
How Suffering Love Reveals the Suffering Servant of Isaiah 53
Column by Rev. Dr. Jeffrey Frantz on March, 27 2025Suffering love is the pinnacle value of Christianity. It is rooted in the suffering of Jesus on the cross–a reality we can never fully fathom: the aching loneliness, the wrenching pain, the sense of total abandonment. Suffering goes to the core of our human situation.
When Bad Things Happen, Is God Accountable? Rethinking Providence for a Healthier Faith
Column by Rev. Dr. Mark Sandlin on March, 20 2025There’s an old saying that gets thrown around when tragedy strikes: “God has a plan.” I don’t know about you, but when I look at the history of the world and even the current political situation in the U.S., I don’t buy it. Maybe it’s well-meaning, maybe it’s just a knee-jerk response to pain, but let’s be honest—it’s a theological train wreck.
The Hostility Between Us
Column by Rev. Brandan Robertson on March, 13 2025Over the past decade, our polarization—political, racial, religious—has grown exponentially. Vanderbilt University conducts surveys on American polarization, and in 2024, they released a study showing that both the right and the left continue to increasingly identify as “strongly” left or “strongly” right. Roughly 28% on both sides now identify as either “strongly” or “far” right or left.
The Politics of Happiness: The Least Christian Countries are the Most Christian – Part 1
Column by Rev. Roger Wolsey on March, 6 2025Addressing my fellow citizens of the United States: Let’s consider how our founding fathers understood happiness and the purpose and role of the federal government. And as we do, also consider how well the societies of the top 11 happiest nations correlate with the happiness understood by those founding fathers.
Illegitimi non carborundum!
Column by Rev. David M. Felten on February, 27 2025As the actions of the Trump administration continue to generate waves of fear, uncertainty, and disbelief… it’s precisely in these kinds of moments when our every action becomes critical. History shows that over and over again, the most transformative changes come from those who are willing, as Robin Meyers implored last week, to stand up and say, “Excuse me?!” — especially when it feels like the world is pushing back.
Excuse Me?
Column by Rev. Dr. Robin Meyers on February, 20 2025What is essential for civilization, and in particular for democracy, is not just slipping away. It is imploding. The plutocratic autocracy has arrived in the form of billionaires who eliminate programs that feed poor children while stuffing their pockets with billions in government subsidies.
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