Reimagining Racial Justice: Shakespeare, Douglass, and the Visibility of the Imago Dei
Mary McCampbell shares how reading Shakespeare and Frederick Douglass changes minds about racial injustice.
Mary McCampbell shares how reading Shakespeare and Frederick Douglass changes minds about racial injustice.
Writer Alissa Wilkinson reflects on the brunching habits she learned from living in New York City, and the sacredness of eating together.
This article suggests that thinking of schools as “gardens of delight” reconnects learning, faith, and beauty.
In this article, Andrew and Lindsey Krinks suggest that at the intersection between an imaginative exploration of poetry and a creative ministry to the homeless lies a unique potential for the sort of education that is “peculiar” and thus ideal for a life of Christian discipleship, a life that seeks to cultivate reconciliation for the sake of God’s kingdom.