Written in collaboration with Stephanie Reynolds. Deporting people from this land back to the land in which they were born for the simple reason that they do not have the correct paperwork to justify their presence in this land is morally wrong.1 Because I am Christian, my morality comes from Christ.2 This means that deportation … Continue reading Jesus Migration
Donald Trump and the American Gospel
If we denounced Donald Trump, how many congregants would leave our pews? In 2004, Pastor Greg Boyd gave a sermon entitled “The Cross and the Sword,” in which he claimed that a “significant segment of American evangelicalism is guilty of nationalistic and political idolatry.” Over a thousand people left his church after the sermon.1 Boyd … Continue reading Donald Trump and the American Gospel
To Fell a Tree
When I told my mom that the neighbor had cut down the trees in the large field at the bottom of our hill, she cried. This practice—removing hedge rows and wooded plots—is a common agricultural practice used in the land around me to maximize yields per acre. It makes sense for my neighbor to maximize … Continue reading To Fell a Tree
The Proof of the Pudding: LGBTQ Casualties of American Evangelicalism
Content warning: statistics of drug use, depression, and suicide are discussed in this article. Preface To those in the church, I want to talk about the casualties of American Evangelicalism, specifically those casualties who are queer. I will not be talking about biblical texts as they relate to homosexuality or marriage. I am unwilling to … Continue reading The Proof of the Pudding: LGBTQ Casualties of American Evangelicalism
When the east wind blows
Part One The east wind came through my screen door on the first day of September, still warm and carrying the smell of sweetness and fertilizer. At the bottom of the hill, a hundred-acre field of corn stands nearly ready for harvest. Out of this same door a hawk, perching on the porch railing, startled … Continue reading When the east wind blows




