A Country With No Name: Living in Liminal Spaces
Living in liminal spaces, particularly as an Asian American, creates a peculiar kind of loneliness.
Seussing Out Difficult Thoughts
Not Goodbyes
I feel like my family has been in Lent for a year… but we also see the goodness of God’s leading us through the wilderness.
How Can You Believe in God at a Time Like This?
A meditation on who God is in the midst of our deepest grief.
Our Anger
The Perfect Home?: Do Ho Suh on Longing and Displacement
Asian American art helps build our awareness of our cultural history.
Failing at Assimilation and Finding Abundance
I had dreams of teaching in women’s ministry. Then I was rebuked for teaching about justice.
The Bonus March: The Unexpected Black Hero in a Japanese American Painting
An early twentieth-century painting provides unexpected insight into building interminority solidarity today.
I’m a Chinese school dropout. That’s why I stand against Christian nationalism.
Today, Asian American Christians find the language of our faith exploited to attack the language of our heritage. It's time we took action.
No Model Minority, Part I: Invisible Asian Americans in the Midst of a Season of Apocalypse
The pandemic has revealed many hard truths. More than ever, the church needs the valuable cultural lens that Asian Americans can bring.
The Skin and Scent of the God Who Came Near
The fullness of Immanuel, God with us, encompassed a physical body and a rich cultural background. This season, let’s worship all of who Jesus was.
Advent, Apocalyptic Revelations, and Living Through 2020 as a Mixed-Race Person
Our national conversation around race has revealed important truths about my identity, and made me long for God’s coming redemption of all things.
December Solstice
A reflection on the long-awaited light that follows the darkest days.
This Year Has Been Really Hard. But It Wasn’t a Mistake.
Our place in God’s kingdom remains secure, and the story isn’t over yet.
Bee
A meditation on God’s providence.
Redeeming the Body in Chronic Pain: An Interview with Liuan Huska
The Chinese American author discusses how fully embracing the reality of our embodiment, with all its hurts and vulnerabilities, can bring us closer to Christ.
Eating the Bitterness of Internalized Racism
As a transracial adoptee in a white family, I bought into anti-Asian stereotypes. But now I’m reclaiming the ethnic identity God gave me.
My Perfectionism Isn't My Parents' Fault
Here’s what I hold responsible for the oppressive, unreasonable demands that I place on myself.
Tinikling and Terror
A traditional Filipino dance has taught me that joy can be a deliberate act of celebratory resistance in the midst of hardship.
What Covers Us
A poem reflecting on face masks and cultural fault lines.