Rooted Recommends: Carved in Ebony by Jasmine Holmes
Holmes urges us to look past her story, even past these women, to the God who made them in his image and allowed their lives to magnify his glory.
Holmes urges us to look past her story, even past these women, to the God who made them in his image and allowed their lives to magnify his glory.
As Christians, we not only have a response to this question that is clear, good, and truthful; better yet, we have a biblical anthropology that is deeply beautiful and adorns us with dignity.
Reyes asks her readers to persevere, work for justice, and above all love for the sake of Christ and all he has done for us.
If we want the youth to embrace a reality of racial inclusion in worship, then the adults have to embrace that reality as well.
Parents, if you want to give your kids a gospel perspective on racial reconciliation and God’s design for our wonderfully varied humanity, you’ve got an excellent resource in a pair of new books.
One of the richest devotional resources we’ve seen, His Testimonies, My Heritage: Women of Color on the Word of God is an extended, careful study of Psalm 119 from the perspectives of twenty-seven different women.
As Christians, we not only have a response to this question that is clear, good, and truthful; better yet, we have a biblical anthropology that is deeply beautiful and adorns us with dignity.
This week’s workshop on racial justice issues comes to us from Watson Jones III.
This truth is certain: We will lose the opportunity to speak about the hope of Christ that is in us if we are so preoccupied with promoting our own ideas about racial injustice that we never pause and listen.