Race and the Fall By Pieter Dykhorst
By Pieter Dykhorst Racism cannot be addressed in isolation. Racism at its root springs from human divisiveness and our fallen propensity for... Read More
Incorporating Culture: Truth, Reconciliation and the Pathway to Peace
By: Lydia Kemi Ingram After this I looked, and behold a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from... Read More
THE ARCHBISHOP IN ALABAMA
The following excerpt is from the Orthodoxy in America Lecture given by Professor Albert J. Raboteau at Fordham University, Bronx, New York,... Read More
The Cost of Discipleship
And in Selma, Alabama, when I was being interrogated, and all the policemen spat in my face, the face of the white nigger-lover, and only grace kept me from spitting back—grace plus common sense, for I knew I would have been a dead white nigger-lover. I sat in Birmingham jail with Dr. Martin Luther King as he wrote “Letter from Birmingham Jail.”