

Since 1900, the Christian Century has published reporting, commentary, poetry, and essays on the role of faith in a pluralistic society.
© 2023 The Christian Century.
Caught up in God
Early on, I got caught up in the logic of the Spirit—and in the steady beat of black life.
Ahmaud Arbery’s lynching begs America to respond
What would it take to stop seeing neighbors as intruders and threats?
The coronavirus pandemic’s unequal burden on African Americans
A plague is being visited on all of us, but not evenly.
How mainline Protestants got involved in urban renewal
Mark Wild complicates the conventional account of postwar white flight.
An anthropologist explores the dangers of being pregnant while black
Using case studies, Dána-Ain Davis shows how medical racism hurts black women.
by Justin List
A precise, devastating portrayal of white wokeness
Kiley Reid’s novel about race, class, and good intentions that miss the point
by Rachel Pyle
Working through collective sin
Susan Neiman considers how Americans might learn from Germany.
by Chris Hammer
Examining whiteness through “reparative writing”
Jess Row asks what happens when alienation turns to rage.
by Amy Frykholm
How did American racism get to this point?
Joel Goza explores America’s addiction to racism and racialized poverty.
Hope, oppression, and Ta-Nehisi Coates
Can Christian hope survive the onslaught against black life?
A school of death
Colson Whitehead dramatizes a horrifying piece of historical reality.
Taking implicit racial bias seriously
Jennifer Eberhardt insists that personal prejudice is deeply embedded, politically potent, and ultimately beatable.
The kinds of stories Toni Morrison told
No one has done more to transform the language for thinking about America’s racial past.
Reparations is a spiritual issue
No full reparation for slavery can ever be made. We should try anyway.
by Nibs Stroupe
What racism is—and how to organize against it
People already engaged in conversations about racial justice may find Ibram Kendi's analysis surprising.
A black pastor writes to the white church about its complicity in oppression
Lenny Duncan’s letter is full of hope and fury, love and lament—like Paul’s epistles.
by Tim Brown
Sin and grace in public discourse
“We’ve lost the capacity to talk about the universality of brokenness—and belovedness.”
David Heim interviews Serene Jones