You Are What You Do: And Six Other Lies About Work, Life, and Love
Sometimes (maybe many times) we live, love, and work by lies promulgated in our culture.
You Are What You Do: And Six Other Lies About Work, Life, and Love Read More »
Sometimes (maybe many times) we live, love, and work by lies promulgated in our culture.
You Are What You Do: And Six Other Lies About Work, Life, and Love Read More »
The conversation about women and work, their value and purpose is more timely than ever.
Worthy: Celebrating the Value of Women – A Christian Review Read More »
The modern chasm between the work and worship of the church has a devastating effect on the health, vibrancy, and effectiveness of her labor and liturgy. Drawing on years of ministry, teaching, and leadership experience, the authors explain that our Sunday worship and our Monday work desperately need to inform and impact each other. They
Work And Worship: Reconnecting Our Labor And Liturgy – A Christian Review Read More »
We want diversity and unity for our communities. There’s a way forward for this to become a reality.
The Beautiful Community: Unity, Diversity, And the Church at Its Best Read More »
The Denver Institute for Faith and Work has created Spiritual Disciplines for Your Work, a yearlong reflection guide. Over 12 months, you will consider topics and practices that point your heart toward God in our work, including self-examination and confession, brokenness and renewal, and silence and solitude. The devotional is available via email or in
Spiritual Disciplines for Your Work Read More »
We can do more, better, with the right tools.
Every Day Matters: A Biblical Approach to Productivity Read More »
This book will teach you everything you never learned about Black banks in our history.
After Black Wall Street, What? Read More »
Sometimes (maybe many times) we live, love, and work by lies promulgated in our culture.
You Are What You Do: And Six Other Lies About Work, Life, and Love Read More »
What does it mean to be Jim Crowed? The answer touches the lives of generations of Black Americans, mine included.
The False Opportunity and Real Hope in Jim Crow’s America Read More »
Twenty years ago, sociologists Michael O. Emerson and Christian Smith published a landmark book about evangelical Christians and the race-based issues that divide them. Two decades later, the work seems more pressing than ever. Emerson talked with Common Good about this work after two decades.
Still Divided By Faith? Read More »
The mother of the American Black literary tradition, without ever grasping the wealth of her ideas, could not breathe until she took her last breath.
Phillis Wheatley and the Tragedy of Enslaved Creativity Read More »
Trillia Newbell is an author, most recently, of Sacred Endurance: Finding Grace and Strength for a Lasting Faith. She’s an editor for Moody Publishers and she lives with her family in Franklin, Tennessee. She talked to Common Good in September.
‘If You’re Going to Use My Likeness, I’d Better Be At the Table.’ Read More »