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Rob Corcoran

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Standing in the middle
April 30, 2021May 8, 2021

Standing in the middle

“I refuse to hate someone because they’re Mexican, or because they’re black or white or LGBTQ,” said Tyler Perry in accepting the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at this year’s Academy Awards. “I refuse to hate someone because they’re a police officer or because they’re Asian…  I want to take this humanitarian award and dedicate it to anyone who wants to […]

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Trustbuilders at work
April 18, 2021April 20, 2021

Trustbuilders at work

Chalton Askew is the first executive director of Trustbuilding Inc. in LaGrange, Georgia, the county seat of Troup County, about 70 miles south of Atlanta. The city’s population of 30,000 is 48.0% Black, 44.5% White, 4.7% Hispanic/Latino, 2.5% Asian. Askew is one of six community leaders from LaGrange who have attended the Community Trustbuilding Fellowship offered by Hope in the Cities, a […]

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Take off your shoes
February 25, 2021March 3, 2021

Take off your shoes

In the summer of 2002 Rev. Syngman Rhee addressed an international conference in Caux, Switzerland. Perched high above Lake Geneva, Caux Palace has offered a place of healing for bitterly divided groups – beginning with French and Germans after World War II. As he approached the podium, the Korean-born peacebuilder and respected leader of the Presbyterian church (USA), removed his […]

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Finding Our Humanity:  A Different Perspective
February 1, 2021February 2, 2021

Finding Our Humanity: A Different Perspective

A special guest column by Rev. Dr. Paige Lanier Chargois, a Baptist minister who has pioneered truth-telling and racial healing initiatives in Richmond, Virginia, and internationally, and who has served as chaplain at eight universities. Her books include Certain Women Called By Christ:  Biblical Realities for Today. This commentary continues our conversation on the theme of finding our humanity (see […]

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Bloody Sunday in 1965,  January 6th in 2021, and John Lewis’s Legacy
January 25, 2021January 27, 2021

Bloody Sunday in 1965, January 6th in 2021, and John Lewis’s Legacy

Guest column by Doug Tanner, Founding Director, The Faith & Politics Institute Over the last two decades, hundreds of the late Congressman John Lewis’s colleagues in the U.S. House and Senate—Democrat and Republican—joined him on an annual pilgrimage to Selma, Alabama marking the anniversary of March 7, 1965’s Bloody Sunday.  On that day, 25-year-old John Lewis and his civil rights […]

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Finding our humanity
January 25, 2021January 25, 2021

Finding our humanity

My recent blog, “No healing without truth,” has sparked some challenging conversations. A respected African American colleague, Rev. Paige Chargois, while agreeing wholeheartedly on the need for truth, writes, “Black folks have not been avoiding the truth. Quite the contrary! Black folks have been living that, writing that, teaching that, even adjudicating that for centuries!” She says that the real […]

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No healing without truth
January 14, 2021January 18, 2021

No healing without truth

On January 6, a white mob assaulted the US Capitol. “Hang Mike Pence!” they shouted as they forced their way into the Chambers. Some carried assault rifles and Confederate flags. Others brought explosives. One man had texted he was thinking of “putting a bullet” in Nancy Pelosi. There was no doubt about the intent of the ringleaders. They were hoping […]

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The bridge of trust
January 5, 2021March 13, 2023

The bridge of trust

It is becoming increasingly evident that trust is an essential moral foundation for the functioning of democracy. The greatest challenges in our communities, our countries and the world today are not intellectual, or technical, or even economic. They are problems of lack of trust. But what is trust? Most of us have an implicit understanding, but its multidimensional nature makes […]

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The wind, the sails and the rudder
December 18, 2020December 22, 2020

The wind, the sails and the rudder

“Rebuilding trust is, obviously, the work of a generation.” This is how David Brooks concludes a recent column in the New York Times. He surveys the threat to democracy presented by the refusal among large sections of the US population to accept reality and to trust proven data. He notes that social media are accelerants of paranoia by spreading misinformation, […]

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Questions for America
November 10, 2020November 13, 2020

Questions for America

History turns on small hinges. We may look back at the question posed by a 76-year-old African American woman as a key factor that made Joe Biden’s presidency possible. At a time when his primary campaign was floundering, Jannie Jones, a church usher beckoned to Congressman James Clyburn of South Carolina and whispered, “I need to know who you’re going […]

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