Does being progressive really make a difference?

I’m glad you consider yourself progressive, congrats, but is your presence actually and actively moving the needle on important values and issues in your church, or is it mostly providing “progressive cover” for your church’s conservative policies, leading to an inadvertent “duping” and “misleading” of congregants?

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Forefront Stories | Jeff and Annabell Ho

Our past experiences with other churches haven’t made our faith journeys easy, but Forefront has given us the freedom to live in the uncertainty of faith. We’ve been able to admit our anxieties and fears, to be okay with asking good questions rather than having all the answers, and to be welcomed into a community where wrestling with faith is not only accepted but encouraged.

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Jesus’s lineage is filled with enough scandal that it would make the Kennedy’s blush.

This genealogy was not a group of the righteous. This was a group of imperfect people who made some imperfect decisions. But here’s the beauty. Their imperfections are what made them heroes of an incredible reputation. They were tested, twisted, turned, suffered loneliness, estrangement, they knew confusion and conflict, and yet they endured. It was in their endurance that the Messiah comes.

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Are you a Peacekeeper or a Peacemaker?

Photo by Aaron Cass on Unsplash

Peacemaking will piss off a lot of people who are really happy about the status quo. Lest we forget Jesus tells us that peace is like bringing a sword. Peacemakers are courageous enough to forgo our own self preservation for the sake of another. That’s hard. Wherever there is work to repair instead of perpetuating harm, this is peacemaking.

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A Case for Centering Empathy in Our Politics

Valeria Luiselli wrote that “the stories of deepest horror are perhaps those for which there are no numbers, no maps, no possible accountability, no words ever written or spoken.” Not one of the eighteen people in our life that have lost their lives to COVID-19 had legal status to vote. My husband doesn’t have that right either. My son is too young. When I filled out my ballot this year, I did it with my husband, my son, and those eighteen deaths in my mind. I held our reality close and I leaned into it with every choice.

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Bless the Ballot Week 8: Keeping Green Energy Top of Mind!

As a church we have a policy that we do not sponsor a specific candidate (it’s also illegal and all that). But we do follow an ideology that impacts our political decisions. We understand that through Christ we are involved in a story bigger than ourselves, bigger than our personal healthcare plan, and bigger than one way of living.

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Bless the Ballot Week 7 #1: All the Dish About Early Voting

“Don’t be misled: No one makes a fool of God. What a person plants, they will harvest. The person who plants selfishness, ignoring the needs of others—ignoring God!—harvests a crop of weeds. All they’ll have to show for his life is weeds! But the one who plants in response to God, letting God’s Spirit do the growth work in them, harvests a crop of real life, eternal life.” Galatians 6:7-8

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Bless the Ballot Week 6 #2: Immigration Reform

My own family history involves a story of seeking refuge. As Christians living in a Middle Eastern country that was hostile to Christians, my father and his family found a new home in the United States in the 1960s thanks to the sponsorship of a Christian organization.

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Bless the Ballot Week 6 #1: Immigration Reform

Growing up in the Roman Catholic church in a predominantly Mexican immigrant community meant that there were many cultural celebrations that were intertwined with my faith. December was my favorite month because we celebrated el Día de la Virgen de Guadalupe (the Day of the Virgin of Guadalupe), Christmas, and my birthday.

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