A gradfather?s death presents a challenge to love more deeply.
Learning about the toxic injustices left behind by the nuclear arms race.
Reflecting on privilege and the manageability of death by natural or unnatural causes.
On how war imposes its memory long after the ceasefire.
On the hope of carving out a path that leads home.
On shaping a life that will honor the memory and the suffering of those who have gone before.
A defense of the book and, above all, the living Word.
What the Boomers need to re-learn about security.
Continuing a family legacy (in certain ways) of reading the Grand Rapids Press.
Considering the differences between a mother’s and a father’s legacy of belonging.