Peter W. Marty
Florida’s “Stop WOKE Act” is about White people’s comfort
When did comfort become our highest aspiration?
The receptive, reflective act of paying attention
For Simone Weil, paying attention means asking, ”What are you going through?”
Jesus turned his public humiliation into solidarity
He turned it into love and care for humiliated others.
What does it mean to be a Christian plumber?
Most of us have nouns in common; it’s the adjectives that divide us.
Cultivating Christ-like compassion
We may feel compassion in our guts, but we learn it by practicing empathic solidarity.
Is there an antidote to White grievance?
It’s hard to imagine this fear-driven resentment responding to outside counsel.
St. Dymphna and her legacy of care
How the patron saint of mental illness has shown up in my brother’s life
Reckoning with our messiah complexes
The vulnerability of the newborn Christ challenges our inclination to play God.
The human moments of pastoral care
There’s something uniquely precious about being physically present with people.
End-of-life decisions in the ICU
The Christian tradition has something to say about the ethics of extending life.
American Christians tend to imagine a God who thinks and looks like us
How do you see the face we cannot see?
Who is welcome at the communion table?
Maybe the grace experienced in the sacrament precedes belief.
My history in publishing
The “newspaper” I produced when I was 11 had simpler economics than the Century does.
When goodness is also lovely
The New Testament has two words for “good.” Knowing the difference between them can help us build a better society.
Faith is a gift to relax into
The Greek word for faith, pistis, isn’t about assenting to beliefs. It’s about trust.