American Dictatorship: Why the United States Has Slipped into Authoritarianism and May Soon Be a Dictatorship, and What Americans and the International Community Can Do About It.
Christian Spirituality and Public Life
The Jesus Way: A Life of Radical Love in a World of Self-Interest
The Jesus Way is a life of radical discipleship to Christ, marked by love, grace, humility, justice, and communion with God and others. It means living the gospel daily, surrendering self-interest, embracing compassion, rejecting worldly power, and embodying peace, generosity, truth, and divine love. It’s a life rooted in prayer, worship, and abiding in God’s presence: drawing life from Christ as the true vine, listening to the Spirit’s voice, and walking in daily dependence upon God’s sustaining grace.
Autosanctity: The Sacralization of Self in a Supposedly Secular Age
In 2015, a Nobel Prize-winning biochemist named Tim Hunt attended a conference in South Korea. During a toast at a luncheon, he made an ill-judged attempt at self-deprecating humor about women in laboratories. Within hours, his remarks had been tweeted, condemned, and...
Philip Yancey, Celebrity, Brokenness, and Me
Philip Yancey shaped my faith. His books on grace, pain, and the mysteries of God met me in seasons when I needed language for experiences I couldn't articulate. When I learned about his eight-year affair and its recent exposure, something in me collapsed. I suspect...
The Rise of Hegemonospheres: Power Blocs, Patron States, and the New World Disorder
Something fundamental has shifted in how the world organizes itself. The architecture of international relations that emerged from the ashes of the Second World War, refined through the Cold War and triumphantly declared universal after 1991, is fracturing. In its...
Sitting with Venezuela: A Reflection on the 2026 US Military Strike on Venezuela
Our societies need affordable housing, which is a human right. The prophetic role of religious communities need not conflict with pragmatic engagement. Churches can work within existing systems to achieve incremental progress while continuing to articulate a vision of justice that transcends current arrangements. The point is to house people.
A Place to Call Home: Why Affordable Housing Demands Church and Society’s Urgent Attention
Our societies need affordable housing, which is a human right. The prophetic role of religious communities need not conflict with pragmatic engagement. Churches can work within existing systems to achieve incremental progress while continuing to articulate a vision of justice that transcends current arrangements. The point is to house people.
Tech Sabbath: Recovering the Desert in the Digital Age
There’s a hum beneath everything. You’ve grown so accustomed to it that you no longer hear it, the way a person living near a highway eventually stops noticing the traffic. It’s the sound of perpetual connection: the buzz of notifications, the soft glow of screens in...
We’re One Australian People: A Christian Reflection After Bondi
These have been heavy days in Australia. Our Jewish neighbours are mourning the loss of loved ones and wondering if they’re safe. Our Muslim neighbours grieve alongside them while bracing for the suspicion and hostility that so often follows. And all of us, whatever...
Christmas and the Hope of the World: The Light of Christ That Enters Everything
I remember, as a boy, the magic of Christmas morning: waking before dawn, creeping down the hallway, heart pounding with anticipation at what waited beneath the tree. The lights, the tinsel, the smell of my mother’s cooking, the rustling of wrapping paper: it all...
The Breath and the Algorithm: A Christian Theological Response to Artificial Intelligence
Something unprecedented is happening, and the church is largely silent. Not silent in the way we’re sometimes silent before mystery, that pregnant, worshipful hush that precedes genuine encounter with the Holy. No, this is a different kind of silence. It’s the silence...
No Easy Answers: What Job Reveals About Suffering, Silence, and the God Who Weeps with Us
“We were promised sufferings. They were part of the program. We were even told, ‘Blessed are they that mourn,’ and I accept it. I’ve got nothing that I hadn’t bargained for. Of course, it’s different when the thing happens to oneself, not to others, and in reality,...











