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When I began studying architecture in college, I wondered how to integrate the call to service in my Christian faith into designing the kinds of built spaces that I had come to love, spaces where light and texture and proportion enfolded me and those around me in a transformative sensate experience. Though Jesus has strong words commanding us to provide tangible care for the “the least of these” – the poor and the immigrant in need of food, drink, clothing, or shelter (Matt. 25:34–40) – the culture in which I grew up connected this kind of care to charity rather than justice, things we might feel obligated to do with any excess resources at our disposal. I was beginning to sense their connection to broader injustices and wondering if I should make it central to my work.
No amount of familiarity with the trappings of Christmas should blind us to its quiet but explosive significance.. By far the most important and...
Continue ReadingIn September 2025, I returned to Casa Tochan, a shelter for migrant men in Mexico City that I’ve reported on for several years, to see how life has...
Continue ReadingA father reviews Katherine Rundell’s The Poisoned King, the second installment in her Impossible Creatures series.. As we witness shifting political...
Continue ReadingAnd so, the record of her birth was lost.. For the past few years, each year has been my grandmother’s ninetieth birthday. It’s not that...
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