At the heart of one of Paul’s best-known theological formulations describing Christian conversion is a summons to a “ministry of reconciliation” (2 Corinthians 5:18). This passage represents perhaps the earliest New Testament articulation of the vocation of restorative justice and peacemaking …
“The Bible preaches against retirement,” Tony Campolo once said. He noted that Jesus even told a parable about a man who planned to retire on his accumulations and busied
himself by building bigger barns to protect his property …
Campolo’s gentle gibe may have been relevant in the early 1990s. But imbibing wine and other alcoholic beverages is the latest form of assimilation for many Mennonites. Some see this as a loss of faithfulness; it need not be …
Pop’s encore was set in motion as my mother, Betty Detweiler King, was dying in September 2010. Breaking his hip last February had left my dad Aaron’s mind fogged-in. Alzheimer’s? Lingering post-hospital psychosis? We were never sure …
Holding hands in a circle, seven grown men, a couple and a family share with each other what they are thankful for. Several of them are hard-core alcoholics reaching towards sobriety for the first time in a long time. Others are hard-core drug addicts, some struggle with mental illness and some are Christians—all reaching together toward recovery …
In Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell, one of my favorite authors, Gladwell writes about what makes people successful, suggesting that people are not just naturally successful. When you follow their lives, you see that their journeys prepared them …
While substitute teaching at a middle school recently, I noticed a leather coaster with a quote from Aristotle on it: “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.” Might the same be true of peacemaking? And of violence? …