Catch my 5 minute video with musings on life after death. Is it possible? How does it work? What does a process theologians have to say about spirits, ancestors, heaven and resurrection? Curious? Click here to find out.
Similar Posts
How will grandma find us?
Perhaps nothing is more personal or challenging in the life of faith than how we understand God in the face of suffering, loss and the death of a loved one. This June, I got to share how my faith sustains me in those times. At an academic conference. My first bit of summer travel was…
Because Practice Doesn’t Always Make Perfect
When I was in high school, I competed in Bach and Sonata piano competitions that took place at the local university. In those days, I practiced piano after school for almost 2 hours a day. I put that time in and memorized the pieces, learned the ways to stretch my hands to cover more than…
Preaching Easter 2012
The story does not end with crucifixion. That’s the message I need to hear this Easter. In the last weeks, wider America has become more conscious of what African Americans have always known: crucifixion can happen at any moment. When pulled over by the police, when walking home, when shopping for Skittles and iced tea. …
The Miscarriage Chronicles: The Barren Woman Bible
I know that men wrote the Bible. That’s no surprise to anyone who has had a brush with feminism or biblical scholarship. But there are times when one is more aware of this than at other times. As I mourn the loss of my miscarried babies, I think of how the Bible tells the stories…
Interview with Dr. Wizdom Powell Hammond
This Minority Mental Health Awareness Month, I’m interviewing Wizdom Powell Hammond, Assistant Professor of Health Behavior, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. I met Wizdom Powell years ago at a conference. We quickly realized that we had several friends in common, and we starting chatting about work in…
Does God make us suffer so we can learn important lessons?
It’s a fairly common idea. Because most of us try to understand unmerited suffering. Deep down (or not so deep down), most of us are okay with the suffering of people we think of as “bad” or “immoral.” We can even make peace when suffering seems to be the natural result of a poor decision….

