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How can we live well with tech, without it becoming our master?
What is our place in nature?
Our writers celebrate the work of repair – of objects, relationships, communities, and landscapes – and reckon with its limits.
What should we do with our enemies?
If one cannot serve God and money, what does that mean for Christians today?
What can we learn from others who have faced the problem of pain?
We’re born with a hunger for roots and a desire to pass on a legacy.
In a culture that prizes keeping one’s options open, making commitments offers something more valuable.
In times that feel apocalyptic, where do we place our hope?
Communal music has the power to shape a soul and a society.
Whose lives count as fully human? The answer matters for everyone, disabled or not.
Can we move beyond borders that divide us without losing our identity?
When we read the book of nature, what do we read there?
How did violence become OK? And is there any way back?
What is a family, and what is it good for?
What does solidarity mean, and what does it look like to live it out today?
The current crisis is bringing pain and heartache to millions – while also revealing overlooked truths about what gives life meaning. It’s time to...
Caesar will remain Caesar, doing some good and some bad. But Christians report to a different king.
For anyone who cares about the common good of humanity, cities need to matter.
Your job is not your vocation.
Is there a better way than capitalism?
Food – how it’s grown, how it’s shared – makes us who we are.
Schools are a mirror of our society as a whole. What we want for schools makes plain what we value in our common life.
Can beauty save the world?
We need a vision of how medicine might serve the good of the whole human person: the body’s health, but also the health of that “piece of divinity in...
What if Martin Luther King Jr., this name-branded, oft-sanitized, National-Mall-memorialized preacher from Atlanta, is a prophet whose message...
Artificial intelligence, Big Tech monopolies, social media: we live in a world that is being reshaped by technology from the ground up. It’s become...
On the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, this issue of Plough Quarterly explores the reformation the church needs today.
In an age of distraction, this issue of Plough Quarterly looks at inwardness – how sustainable human community and social activism must be...
Courage to stand by the truth, according to Augustine, is “love ready to bear all things for God’s sake.” To inspire such love – and to guard against...
We Christians are patriots for a different homeland: the kingdom of God. How should we as alien citizens live and how should we relate to our wider...
Every human is sacred? This absurd claim is at the heart of the gospel. Each person is created in the image God. Each is someone for whom Jesus died...
The first church in Jerusalem lived in community. What about us today? This issue includes profiles and interviews from communities around the world.
This issue explores what it means to be a good neighbor – to a homeless person, an immigrant, a veteran, a criminal, or even to an enemy in a time of...
In this issue of Plough Quarterly, we highlight ways that people of faith, by extending mercy and forgiveness, are transforming lives and perhaps...
In this issue of Plough Quarterly we focus on bearing witness to the gospel – whether in the face of danger, or in ordinary daily life.
This issue of Plough Quarterly offers faith perspectives on peacemaking between nations, in the public arena, and within churches and homes.
In this issue of Plough Quarterly, scientists, farmers, writers, and artists offer faith perspectives on caring for the earth.
Plough Quarterly features stories, ideas, and culture for people eager to put their faith into action. In this issue, prominent writers and thinkers...
In this issue, we explore how to build the justice that Jesus and the Hebrew prophets call for - not as a vague ideal, but as a way of life.
This issue of Plough Quarterly focuses on people willing to get their hands dirty living out the Sermon on the Mount. Their insights are not to be...