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Essays

A Letter from ‘Just War Theory:’ Love can Let Go

With Pope Leo’s recent declaration of just war being “outdated,” Eli McCarthy pens a letter from just war theory, asking to be let go.

Afropessimism Meets Edward Said

Benjamin Davis reviews Zahi Zalloua’s new book, To Exist as a Problem: Being Black, Being Palestinian (2026).

Moral Imagination as a Bridge

Moral imagination, standing up even when afraid, is required to provide empathetic welcome to prophets, righteous people, and “these little ones.”

Disinterest Is Not a Virtue

By what authority an institution, neither elected nor sovereign, may judge the common good.

The Spirits of Extraction: An Interview with Claire Blencowe

We interviewed Claire Blencowe on her new book, Spirits of Extraction: Christianity, Settler Colonialism, and the Geology of Race.

Another Humanity, or a Plea for the Death Drive

Zahi Zalloua reviews Benjamin Davis’s new book, Another Humanity: Decolonial Ethics from Du Bois to Arendt (2025).

An Indigenous Woman’s Reading of Hagar

To be faithful to God’s promised covenant for communal flourishing, faith communities must reject the recycled rhetoric of “blood and soil” that is rapidly turning white supremacy into normalized governmental policy and practice.

Movements Grow Slow and Steady

Insiders and those most similar are invited into the movement first, and then, if meaningful and urgent enough to others expands to those beyond the insiders. The expansion of God’s Realm in Matthew is built slow and steady, an example we have much to learn from.

Pluralism and the Theopolitics of Inter-Religion

This essay is part of a book series on Neena Mahadev’s Karma and Grace.

In Which Spirituality Gets a Makeover

This essay is part of the Discourses in Spirituality Round Robin.