Sojourners Magazine: March 2020
Poet Julia Esquivel held nations accountable for death while her actions and words stood as a celebration of life.
Features
Threatened with death squads, Julia Esquivel escaped and declared death would not win.
In Detroit, the constant flash of green lights says: You are being watched.
Voices
Facing political and spiritual deserts requires surrender to God.
The people and stories we highlight in Sojourners often exemplify nonviolent action, and this issue is no exception.
While Trump throws fuel on the Middle East tinderbox, peacemakers wrestle with the challenge of peace in endless war.
“It takes a village” is an understatement.
Be fierce, creative, and practical in your desire to do good.
Vision
In Bong Joon-ho’s breakout thriller, obsession with American consumerism and colonialism leads to great deception.
When we lend our eyeballs to that platform, we help to fund its corrupt and dangerous practices.
Larycia Hawkins’ solidarity with Muslim women shows that many evangelicals worship “a Jesus who is about cultural power.”
An excerpt from A Black Women's History of the United States.
A review of “Fairview,” by Jackie Sibblies Drury.
A poem.
Reflections on the Revised Common Lectionary, Cycle A.
Funny business by Ed Spivey Jr.
Lent Is Grimness You Didn't Know You Needed
There's wisdom in dwelling on all that is broken.