moral injury
An epidemic of moral injury
Christians have an opportunity to transform a faith that has fueled genocide, slavery, war, and kleptocracy.
Take & Read: Practical theology
Five books that introduce new voices to the conversation
Take & read: New books in theology
To speak words of grace, we must first name the powers and principalities that hold us captive.
selected by Jason Micheli
Afterwar, by Nancy Sherman
Nancy Sherman's message is clear: society must understand the totality of human experiences of war, including their moral dimensions.
reviewed by Zachary Moon
War without end: For my father, WW2 was never over
In 1998, I drove my parents from Wisconsin to Georgia to visit the new National POW Museum. My siblings couldn't believe I'd agreed to this.
The war within: A veterans moral injury
In Iraq, my perception of good and evil began to erode. What I lost was a world that made moral sense.
Instruments of death: Can there be a humane execution?
Every method of killing can become a form of torture for the person being executed—and a means of moral injury to the executioner.
Making space for veterans
If soldiers make it home, the war comes with them. Every day, about 18 of them implode in suicide.
By Logan Isaac