I’ve come to realize that what I was receiving was a collective response to years, decades, centuries of my co-workers’ and friends’ experiences of racist attitudes.
Columns
Read our regular columns on Faith Matters, Big Questions, Christian apologetics, Shiao Chong's monthly Editorial, the Discover page (especially for kids), the Vantage Point, the Other Six, and letters from Christian Reformed Church members and our readers. Our online-only columns are As I Was Saying and Behind the Banner.
- August 4, 2020| |
The question isn’t just simply about what is “safe” or “not safe.”
Both harbor simmering resentment at perceived slights and mistreatments. And both, it seems, would love to punish the other by various means.
See how readers responded to recent Banner issues, articles, and columns.
Lent and advent celebrations were totally absent in the first 30 years of my 75-year CRC experience. Now they abound. Why now and not then?
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.
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.
It felt as though every few hours I was hosting discussions between groups of students, or even the whole class, about the conflict that was occurring.
The phone was on speaker, so we all got to hear a bit of her friend’s attempts to console her.
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.
There’s little, if any, scientific or psychological support to these theories. There are benefits and drawbacks to these self-discovery tools.
엘리베이터 안에서 내내 저는 무슨 말을 해야하나 고민했습니다. 저는 그 사람에게 맞서는 것을 두려워했습니다.
All animals need oxygen to live, but not all animals have lungs.
By reading mostly those who reinforce my perspective on the world, I encourage the conditions that make it easier for me to avoid and even condemn those who are different than me.
All the way up the ride, I wondered if I should say something. I was afraid to confront the man.
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.
I am a Canadian Indigenous man who is a Sixties Scoop Survivor. I love Canada Day, but I have encountered hostility about celebrating it. Here’s why I think we should.
By justice, we do not merely mean equal treatment for all but also being intellectually just or fair to different viewpoints.