This Month's Cover
Magazine

Sojourners Magazine: November 2024

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Rituals of death and faith along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Features

Image of people conversing through the iron border wall at the U.S.-Mexico border floating in a golden frame, overlayed on top of an image of the borderlands.

Monuments that bear witness to the ubiquity of death — and faith — in America’s southwestern borderlands. 

by
Ken Chitwood
Magazine
Features
Side profile of Rahiel Tesfamariam looking pensively into the distance.

An interview with social activist Rahiel Tesfamariam on identity, spiritual power, and what it takes to imagine freedom.

by
Darren Saint-Ulysse
Black and white photo of Bernice Johnson Reagon smiling into the camera.

Honoring the civil rights activist whose accomplishments spanned from founding Sweet Honey in the Rock to writing an opera of Parable of the Sower

by
Josina Guess

Voices

Voices
Tell It Slant
An Army honor guard holds a flag during a funeral ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.

I’ve been in grim awe of the many ways military service is used and twisted in political campaigns.

by Julie Polter
Voices
From The Editors
An illustration of professional sign language interpreter Shirley Childress Johnson signing a word.

An introduction to the November 2024 issue of Sojourners.

by The Editors
Voices
Commentary
"V is for Vote" is from "Black ABCs," a series of prints created in 1970 by June Sark Heinrich.

Voter suppression has again taken hold. But I refuse to lose.

by
Moya Harris
Author and activist James Baldwin speaks at Xavier University of Louisiana in New Orleans, 1963.

Looking at James Baldwin and Richard Avedon’s 1964 Nothing Personal through a 2024 lens.

by
Danté Stewart
Voices
Columns
John Mark Rozendaal plays his cello in front of Citibank headquarters in New York City as part of summer-long protests by climate activists, dubbed the "Summer of Heat."

Making art, not destroying it, as a climate activism strategy.

by
Bill McKibben
Six shadowed profiles under a red sky with an eye in place of the sun.

Remembering “truth-fully” is vital for our politics.

by
José Humphreys III
Voices
Eyewitness
A poll worker collects mail-in ballots for the New Jersey primary election in June.

Christian leaders in our politics should be committed to the truth.

by
Chris Crawford

Vision

Vision
Culture
A man is lying down on the floor of his room on tatami mats, with a cassette player and several cassettes neatly organized under an open window.

In a climate of overstimulation, these films invite viewers to be still.

by
Abby Olcese
Three women in the courtyard of a traditional Korean home.

Three culture recommendations from our editors.

by
The Editors
Cover art of podcast Extremely American by Heath Druzin and James Dawson.

NPR’s Extremely American tries to reckon with the vulnerability created by Christian nationalism’s patriarchal commitments.

by
Colton Bernasol
Vision
Books
Headshots of authors Dorcas Cheng-Tozun and Trish O'Kane side-by-side.

Two authors offer practical ways to advocate for change without depleting our souls in the process.

by
Liz Cooledge Jenkins
Cover of the book Two-Step Devil by Jamie Quatro.

Jamie Quatro’s Two-Step Devil is a theological thought experiment.

by
Ezra Craker
Vision
Poetry

A poem.

by
Devon Balwit
Vision
Living The Word

November reflections on scripture from the Revised Common Lectionary (Cycle B).

by
Raj Nadella
Vision
H'rumphs

And speaking of fighting back against autocracy, will barbecue tongs be enough?

by
Ed Spivey Jr.