Magazine
Sojourners Magazine: May 2016
Subscribe to Sojourners for as little as $3.95!
Conservative pastor Rev. Rob Schenck has spent most of his life as an anti-abortion activist, but after witnessing countless mass shootings here in the United States, Schenck switched his focus to understanding--and challenging--the pro-gun enthusiasm that permeates his evangelical community. In our cover story, read Schenck’s declaration of “a theological emergency” about the idolatry of gun culture.
Cover Story
Why one conservative evangelical is skeptical about pro-gun enthusiasm
Feature
A child-centered worship service encourages a sticky faith.
How do we help the youngest members of the church understand the gospel's call to love God and to love our neighbors as ourselves?
In the Michigan water crisis, the roots of the problem go a lot deeper than contaminated pipes.
Jesus shook up his followers with his radical inclusion of children. Perhaps our Sunday worship should do the same.
Commentary
The rich and varied roots of black environmental liberation theology.
For 23 hours a day, I was kept in a windowless room smaller than a horse stable. How does this make us safer?
Culture Watch
Beholden: Religion, Global Health, and Human Rights, by Susan R. Holman. Oxford University Press.
Pillars of Cloud and Fire: The Politics of Exodus in African American Biblical Interpretation, by Herbert Robinson Marbury. NYU Press.
Trouble I've Seen: Changing the Way the Church Views Racism, by Drew G.I. Hart. Herald Press.
From The Soulmaking Room, copyright 2016 by Dee Dee Risher. Published by Upper Rooms Books.
The well-meaning 21st century colonialist may come in a T-shirt and a hoodie instead of khakis and a pith helmet.
If comic portrayals of bad leadership are comforting, serious cinematic explorations of bad leadership might help us learn how to avoid it.
Departments
Reflections from the Revised Common Lectionary, Cycle C
"We recognize life is messy, so our worship is messy too."
Columns
We need faith-inspired courage to stand up to our enemies when they are strong and our friends when they are wrong.
At many colleges we visited, it was apparent that "success" was defined in mostly monetary terms.