The final Marcus Borg Memorial Conference in association with the 2021 Carrs Lane Lectures in Radical Christian Faith, was held online October 19, 2021. The conference brought together two leading and younger voices for progressive Christianity in the USA and Australia.
read moreThe news and social media are full of the wonderful contributions of people of color, gays and trans. Why do you think so many individuals still hold prejudiced views about people who are different from them?
read more“We all strive for purpose and understanding, to hear and to be heard, to see and to be seen, to leave this world a better place than we found it.” – Jon Linton
read moreIt was the rich and powerful who had Jesus killed. His brand of socialism was not good for business or politics. To their chagrin, his death did not end the movement he had begun. In fact, it spread.
read moreFor Paul, baptism is the pre-condition for equality. Simply put, when we are baptized into Christ, there is no inequality. This is true for all relationships, both inside and outside the assembly. For Paul, this was a non-negotiable affirmation that he expected his churches to adhere to.
read moreWith all the news today of doom and gloom for our world, do you think religion can save humanity?
read moreSt. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Richmond, VA – September 30, 2021
read moreFrom the 19th century until the 1970s, more than 150,000 Indigenous children were forced to attend state-funded Christian boarding schools in an effort to assimilate them into Canadian society. Thousands of children died there of disease and other causes, with many never returned to their families.
read moreMany of us wrestle with fear, despair, insecurity, and loneliness in this time of sustained global crisis. I worry for the future of the human family and life itself. But these times are also an invitation.
read moreWhat is your opinion of St Paul?
read moreTake a few moments and listen to Rev. Dr. Caleb J Lines talk about how the Gospel calls for subversively living.
read moreHow does one begin the journey of personal transformation?
read moreWhen will we ever learn? It is time to get serious about studying current events and the history that has led up to them. So that we don’t make the mistakes we made in Afghanistan – and Iraq and Central America and Vietnam – ever again.
read moreWhat is it about the Temple Mount? It seems to always be the flashpoint of conflict in Jerusalem.
read moreAs the nation grapples with demographic changes and the legacy of racism in America, Christianity’s role as a cornerstone of white supremacy has been largely overlooked.
read moreBean was the first black openly gay gospel singer to join Motown. However, his time at Motown was short-lived when he refused to croon heterosexual love songs. Bean eventually left Motown in the 1980s, abandoning his singing career.
read moreThis book is for caregivers who have a desire not only to hone their caring skills, but also to deepen their relationship with God through their care. It explores feelings of loss and challenge, but turns always towards potential and hope.
read moreDo you think that the Church has adequately explored and explained the spiritual aspects of evolution? What does it mean spiritually that we evolved from apes?
read moreRead some of the tributes that have been written on the occasion of the death of Bishop John Shelby Spong.
read moreWhat brings us closer together around the communion table of divine love? What drives us apart? But or And, Against or Through, For or With?
read moreAttendance in US churches continues to sharply decline. As church leaders struggle to identify both root causes and possible responses, they often feel a sense of despair… but there is hope!
read moreIn a recent article in progressivechristianity.org Jim Burklo wrote about the possibility, if not likelihood, that there will be a flood of disaffected folks leaving the evangelical churches and that progressive congregations should be ready “to attract them by making changes in our styles of worship and congregational life that are necessary to seize this remarkable moment.”
read moreI am a “seeker.” I know what that means, but when people ask, “What is a seeker?” I can never find an accurate or concise way to explain it.
read moreChange is inevitable. Make it transformational.
Find transformation in unexpected changes, in your life and your congregation
We cannot be separate from God or from each other. Yet, we can spend much of our lives imagining that this is the case.
read moreIf we all have a soul, and that soul contains the image of God or God’s virtues and values, then our individual deaths are not the end of what is most important about us. It is shared by all.
read moreJuly 11, 2021 Sermon by Rev. Mark Sandlin
Presbyterian Church of the Covenant
Greensboro, NC
When will the Church follow and show the teachings of Jesus and teach parents to discipline by using consequences within the limits of safety?
read moreIn an opening address to the 1964 Berlin Jazz Festival, reprinted in its program, MLK profoundly related jazz and the blues to universal quests for happiness and the end of oppression, saying: “Jazz is exported to the world. For in the particular struggle of the Negro in America there is something akin to the universal struggle of modern man.
read moreWhat would happen if other faithful people began to ask questions instead of arguing with answers they don’t like? What would happen if we followed St. Paul’s advice and stopped returning evil for evil? What would happen if we asked serious questions instead of behaving defensively in response to religious or political bombast?
read morePeriodically, it is helpful to remember that belief and faith are not the same thing. Every group of mortals seems to inevitably gather around a particular set of beliefs; presumably based on the values they hold to be the most meaningful to them, or of greatest importance.
read moreWomen are often told by their communities that being a mother will complete or define them. But many women find themselves depleted and spiritually stagnant amid the everyday demands of being a mom.
read moreBecause the letters of Paul come after the gospels in the chronology of the New Testament canon, it is easy to lose sight of the fact that when Paul penned his letters, he had no knowledge of the gospel stories. His letters/epistles were probably written around 51 to 62 CE (Common Era). Meanwhile, the gospels were written from about 70-72 (Mark) to around the end of the first century (John). Thus, to reiterate, Paul knew nothing of the gospels.
read moreIn the face of enormous danger and spreading death that seems pointless, there is a tendency to ask: “Where is God? How could God let this happen?” This is the same spirit that fills up space on cable news channels with critics complaining about all the things that are going wrong.
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