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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.

On Border Fences and the Fabric of Our Nation

By Leslie Harrison

I have always been a proponent for the rights of immigrants, based on the image I have of America according to the picture painted by our history. I am disappointed and ashamed that some Americans have such a short memory and refuse to look at the pages of history, which brings to life the importance of immigration.

Loving Our Neighbors and Our Enemies

By Jon Carlson

 

In a society marked by bitter division and painful injustice, how do we love our neighbors—and our enemies?

For the next six weeks, join us every Wednesday for a visual series exploring what God’s love looks like when we live it out in our world.

The Mothers at the Border Are Named Jocheved

By Hannah Shanks

 

Like many, I’ve been deeply grieved by the policy of family separation at the border. For weeks I’ve cast about looking for a handhold, for an idea of what to do, for who I am to be during a desperate time like this.

Three to Flee: What Would You Take?

By Nikki Toyama-Szeto

 

The bangles are gold, a deeply yellow gold. My preference would be for something a bit more subtle, less yellow…but these gold bangles are so yellow because they are pure, 24-karat gold.

What They Left Behind: Yasmin’s Story

By Josina Guess

A two-part interview with two sisters who recently immigrated to the United States

“I want my daughter to be somebody, to surpass me, to have a better future and a better life than mine.”

Yasmin* sits up from the couch and rubs her belly.

What They Left Behind: Elena’s Story

By Josina Guess

A two-part interview with two sisters who recently immigrated to the United States

“When your back is up against the wall, you do what you have to do to survive.”

Elena* said this to me, in Spanish, after I spent over an hour listening to her and her younger sister, Yasmin*, share their immigration stories.

Am I a Racist Without Knowing It?

By John Seel, Ph.D
In the United States, Black men are far more likely to be hassled by law enforcement during routine traffic stops. It is also likely, in a conversation about this fact, that a white male will not appreciate the degree to which his privilege is

Revolutionary Relationships: Love Is an Interactive Process

By Rozella Haydée White

 

In April of 2016, I found myself at a crossroads. I was working for my denomination at the national headquarters, one year after Dylann Roof murdered nine Black people at Mother Emmanuel AME in Charleston, South Carolina.

How Are Christians to Respond to an Addicted Nation?

By Melanie Springer Mock
Like many people, my understanding of addiction has been informed primarily by mass media. I’m an inveterate watcher of 20/20 and the reality program Intervention; I am a consumer of memoirs and movies about those who

It Is Well

For all who have entered into God’s rest have rested from their labors, just as God did after creating the world.

Bearing Witness

By Beth Foster

The trees around the slaughterhouse are filled with a fatal lullaby because the mockingbirds have learned this funeral dirge of the young.

Peep. Peep. Peep.

That’s what haunts me most—even more than the puddles of blood and the truck brimming with the “waste” parts of bodies.