The Common Good
Disney / Pixar

Maybe sexualized images are more marketable, but that is not the point — empowering our girls is. I’m pleased that Disney has reversed its decision to alter one of their best examples of an empowered girl. I hope the trend of strong princesses started by this character continues.

Angel, umbertoleporini / Shutterstock.com

by Jim Wallis
It's time for our Christian leaders to stand up and say that women, made in the very image of God, deserve better. And it's time for us in the faith community to acknowledge our complicity in a culture that too often not only remains silent, but also can propagate a false theology of power and dominance.

Woman in urban environment, Jose AS Reyes / Shutterstock.com

How do you love your neighbor when your neighbors sell drugs and exploit young women? I’m serious — this is a legitimate question that I am asking myself a lot lately and I am not sure I have the answer.

Women's Rights National Historic Park statues, Zack Frank / Shutterstock.com

Will we exercise the same courage that it took for those women at the first Pentecost to allow the spirit to move them into the public square and speak — testify, tell the truth, and prophesy? Will we repent from our silence? Repentance begins in the heart. So, I must ask: “Will I repent of my silence — my safe silence?” Yes.

A woman stands alone on the stairs. Photo courtesy Kati Neudert/shutterstock.com

Along with the problem of silence around rape in the church, is the confusion in many evangelical communities around the pattern-forming behaviors that lead to it. It's rooted in a sexualized view of women, painted into the context of a power narrative built to protect and perpetuate male dominance in the church.

Infographic by Brandon Hook / Sojourners

Recent studies from both the Urban Institute and the Pew Forum tell the story of America's growing racial wealth gap. View and share this stunning infographic and read the important piece by Otis Moss III: "Poverty, when attached to race, is the original sin of America."

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The Common Good Forum

Jim Wallis' latest book On God's Side: What Religion Forgets and Politics Hasn't Learned About Serving the Common Good explores what would happen if, instead of focusing on partisan bickering and personal gain, we elevated the common good — in our politics, our family lives, our communities, and throughout each cross-section of our lives. 

The Common Good Forum is the place to continue the conversation. What does the Common Good mean for you? How would you capture it — in film, a photo, written word? Share it with us, and we'll post it in the Forum. Be a part of the discussion. Join in now!