With us was a man, the brothers’ uncle, who for many years—and in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds—had held on to hope that one day his nephews would join him in Canada.
Find exclusive content here not available in the monthly print version of The Banner. New As I Was Saying blogs are posted Fridays and sometimes Tuesdays, and Behind The Banner blogs post on the third Friday of every other month (but sometimes more frequently).
Perhaps this discussion is unfamiliar, but this pattern is well-worn and dangerous. If we are not tethered to the history of controversy, we start to long for a world that never existed.
How do we engage people with whom we have deep disagreements about important matters of religious convictions, political commitments, or moral lifestyles?
In the days and weeks after these losses, he waited. He waited for his church to reach out. He waited to hear from the elders. He waited for his pastors to visit.
Although some support programs are in place in the churches, we are called to reach out to the communities and develop initiatives that are available to everyone.
The Confederate flag serves as a portal through which non-Southern white people can project their own guilt of racial bias onto the Southerner.
We share the stories that don’t get heard or magnified anywhere else.
No one should be surprised if they feel like their head is spinning at times; the disruption and disorientation is a real thing.
As much as I try to be fair and irenic, there are times when the truth is divisive. Truth divides between true and false, right and wrong. And politics do intersect, at certain points, with ethics.
The Banner has teamed up with the Center for Public Justice to release a series of articles online exploring the divisiveness of our times. This is the first in that six-part series.
By justice, we do not merely mean equal treatment for all but also being intellectually just or fair to different viewpoints.
A list of books and other media for grown ups and children by black authors, musicians, and filmmakers.
It’s like a Jeopardy game show answer: “These are the three reasons oftentimes given as to why someone with a drinking problem cannot get sober.”
A masterpiece is defined as the best work of an artist. So we are the best work of all that God created.
My racism degrades bearers of God’s image, even while it distorts my own humanity. It is abhorrent in God’s eyes. And I am guilty of it.
These 2005 guidelines also note that The Banner needs to “be easily read” yet “be challenging” and be consistently of high quality.
The fight, flight, or freeze reflex may kick in when people of conscience see or hear about the latest incident of Black death.
The Banner is the official magazine of the Christian Reformed Church in North America, but it is neither the CRC’s megaphone nor its independent critic.
Is it possible for two people who hold different views on an issue to sit beside each other in church and be in unity?
My husband and I moved to the U.S. 16 years ago.
I have come to realize that Christians are unwittingly selective, and the outcome is a lopsided Christianity.
When we share our trauma, we connect with people on a deeper level.
The deadliest rampage in Canadian history occurred this past April 18-19 in Nova Scotia. After a 13-hour shooting and arson spree, 22 victims were dead and three injured.