2015 will not be business as usual for the country, perhaps the world. Like you, I was shocked to hear of the 170 cities in the US that protested with Ferguson residents, and more broadly Tokyo and
"The United States is a racial earthquake waiting to shake. The country is full of racial 'fault lines,' some major, some minor. All it needs is an incident to detonate it. Come on, Christians. Get
In the wake of the grand jury decisions in Ferguson and Staten Island, our nation, our cities and our churches have erupted in protest, unrest and division. We're all experiencing it
A few weeks ago I chose to be arrested with more than 30 other faith leaders calling the police department and our city to repentance.My journey did not start however with participating in non-
Our region has been deeply impacted by the events surrounding the shooting death of Michael Brown in St. Louis back in August, including both the ongoing protests and Grand Jury investigation.
I will never forget it. My junior year of college was one of the most racially charged time periods in my life, much like what we are experiencing today across the United States.
If you've ever tried to grow your ministry in diversity, you've undoubtedly encountered these questions: How do faith and ethnicity intersect? Is ethnicity a biblically-valid part of our Christian
As an Asian American and an Associate Regional Director for InterVarsity, it has been a humbling experience to navigate leadership around the events in Ferguson.
Reconciliation is core to God's mission. By means of Christ's death on the cross, reconciliation of humanity to God and of humanity to one another was accomplished. In Ephesians 2:16 we read:
“Every culture is fallen, but every culture can be redeemed by God.” My InterVarsity friends first taught me this decades ago, and I continue to lean into this truth today. Here are two questions