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When Pastors Become Political Actors

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  Pastors carry a sacred responsibility: to tend souls, teach scripture, and cultivate communities of compassion. But in recent years, many clergy have found themselves pulled into partisan battles. Some feel pressure from congregants. Others feel compelled by conscience. Still others are swept along by the cultural currents around them. The challenge is not that pastors have opinions — they are citizens, too. The challenge is that the pulpit is not built for partisanship . When sermons become political endorsements, congregations fracture. When clergy become campaign surrogates, their spiritual authority becomes suspect. And when pastoral identity merges with political identity, the gospel’s breadth is narrowed to a platform. The prophetic tradition has always called faith leaders to speak about justice, mercy, and moral responsibility. But prophetic speech is different from partisan advocacy. One calls people to conversion of heart; the other calls them to vote a certain way. Pas...

We Are Called to Love Compassion

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  Across nearly every faith tradition, the call is the same: love compassion. Not just as a feeling, but as a way of being — a daily practice that recognizes we are all in this together. The universal call Whether it’s the Hebrew chesed , the Christian agape , the Buddhist karuna , or the Islamic rahmah , compassion is the heartbeat of spiritual life. It’s the shared commandment that transcends doctrine: to treat one another as family — not the idealized kind, but the functional, healthy kind that listens, forgives, and shows up. The challenge It’s easy to talk about compassion when life is calm. Harder when someone disagrees, disappoints, or wounds us. Yet that’s precisely where compassion becomes transformative. It asks us to see the divine image in the other person — even when we’d rather look away. The practice So how do we do that? Listen before reacting. Compassion begins with curiosity. Choose repair over retaliation. Healthy families mend; they don’t discard. Hold boun...

Is It Aging, Stress… or Something More? How to Tell the Difference

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We all forget things. A name disappears just when you need it. You walk into a room and can’t remember why. You misplace your keys—again. And if you’re paying attention, it’s easy to wonder: Is this normal… or is something wrong? The truth is, many everyday memory slips have nothing to do with Alzheimer’s. In fact, some of them are signs of a busy, active, even multilingual brain—not a failing one. So how can you tell the difference? When It’s Probably Normal 1. Your plate is simply too full When your mind is juggling too much, it doesn’t encode everything well in the first place. If you didn’t fully register where you put your glasses, you won’t be able to “remember” it later. That’s not memory loss—it’s a traffic jam. 2. You didn’t pay attention to begin with Memory starts with attention. If you were distracted, tired, or multitasking, the information may never have made it into memory at all. 3. Normal aging slows retrieval (a little) As we age, it can take longer to pu...