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Subscribe to the CSA Newsletter
CSA’s free weekly publication, a carefully curated collection of original articles at the intersection of spiritual formation and social action.

The Necessity of Nearness: A Review of the Documentary “Leap of Faith”

By Kristyn Komarnicki

Love in the midst of discomfort

Love your God, love your neighbor as yourself. All the law and the prophets rest on these two commands…

Leap of Faith is a full-length documentary from Nicholas Ma and Morgan Neville (Won’t You Be My Neighbor?) featuring pastors who commit to meeting for a year to look for a path to unity in the midst of polarized times.

My Friend

By Joshua Carson

I only have two feet, but I stand in a lot of different camps.

I was raised as an evangelical in the American South at a Southern Baptist church, and yet my home church ordains women.

New Copernican Empowerment Dialogues

From CSA

New Copernicans are those who embrace a new and emerging social imaginary that is post-Enlightenment and post-secular in its ethos. Carried predominately by millennials, the New Copernican perspective is both the hope for the American evangelical church and the emerging soul of American culture.

Heaven Is for Resurrected Bodies

By Norman Wirzba

Sometimes when I ask people what it is they are looking forward to in heaven, they have surprisingly little to say. “It’s gonna be great!” and “I’m not going to be in pain anymore” are about as specific as it gets.

The Next Best Time

By Kristyn Komarnicki

The history of our planet is one of abundance and beauty, of life and goodness. While there is also war and disease, pollution and decay, God’s dream for us is clearly the former.

Knowing Our History

By Darren Calhoun

A team from Christians for Social Action recently visited the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History & Culture (NMAAHC on Twitter) in Washington, DC. Our purpose was the development of a one-day racial justice immersion experience for a variety of audiences—including students at our home base of Eastern University, church groups, and others in the CSA community.

Jesus Wept

By Elli Atchison and Molly Lorden

“When the righteous cry out the Lord hears them and delivers them from all their troubles. The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”
Psalm 34:17-18

Jesus was no stranger to death and sorrow.

Billboards for Jesus (Or, What Kind of Christians Are We?)

By Elrena Evans

My family recently took a road trip to Florida, because we thought logging over two thousand miles in a car with five kids would be fun. It was fun, actually—not without hiccups, as all road trips are, but even the hiccups were fodder for many family memories.

Jesus Was No Stranger To Obedience

By Elli Atchison and Molly Lorden

“Love God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength. And then, love your neighbor as yourself.” Mark 12:29

Jesus was no stranger to obedience. The King of Kings came quietly at his Father’s request.

Walls of Hostility

By David P. Leong

Throughout high school, I worked in our family photo lab in Vancouver Mall, and on breaks I would walk around to see other store displays nearby. In the early to mid-’90s, there was a particular trend in a lot of the poster and gift shops, which would display large, patterned images with a “hidden 3D picture” out in front of the store.

Lenten Devotion: I Will Not Be Shamed

By Sharon Watkins and Richard H. Lowery

Read Isaiah 50:4–9a.
“The Lord God helps me… / I know that I shall not be put to shame.”

Today’s reading is from the third of the so-called “servant songs” in the portion of the book scholars call “Second Isaiah.” The songs are reflections on the experiences of a “servant,” often clearly identified as Israel as a whole, but sometimes apparently referring to some sub-group or individual among the exiles in Babylonia.

A Prayer for Our Country

By R. Maurice Boyd
O Thou who art as the shadow of a mighty rock in a weary land,
Comfort our distraught, distracted, and bewildered Nation.
Enable us to discern Thy judgements and Thy grace in the distress, confusion, and anxiety of our time.

The Woman Under the Palm Tree

By Jenny Rae Armstrong

I was nine years old when it happened, peering out the window of our second-story apartment in Monrovia, Liberia. The multiplex we lived in was in a good area, popular with internationals; the families on the top story were from India, the Peace Corps volunteers across the hall were American like us, and Mrs.

A Conversation Worth Having

By Jan Johnson

Imagine three women standing in a town square, facing each other and reflecting on the current Middle East situation. These three women have just come from their respective places of worship. The oldest woman is Sarah, a Hebrew woman, the wife of Abraham, and matriarch to Isaac and Jacob.

Lenten Devotion: Jesus Heals the…

By Sharon Watkins and Richard H. Lowery

Read Luke 7:1–10.
“A centurion there had a slave…”

People of the United States* reading this passage need to stutter at the word slave, a reminder of our own horrific national history.