Our Anger
The Perfect Home?: Do Ho Suh on Longing and Displacement
Asian American art helps build our awareness of our cultural history.
Good Grief
Losing my father has taught me the value of grief and allowing people the space to fully process their emotions, just as Jesus did.
Three Ways Chinese New Year Highlights the Lost Art of Hospitality
Celebrating Chinese New Year reminds us of a way we can show love and acceptance–inviting all to the table–in the hopes that we would utilize hospitality to help bridge divisions in our country and in the church.
Bodies Matter
Our minds matter, so do our bodies. Offering our bodies in view of God's mercy is a step that the church cannot afford to neglect.
Saddleback’s Children’s Ministry Video Is Part of a Larger Pattern
Failing at Assimilation and Finding Abundance
I had dreams of teaching in women’s ministry. Then I was rebuked for teaching about justice.
When Presidents Hear Us
AACC responds to the Biden Memorandum.
From Dal to Cornbread: Vice President Kamala Harris’s Mixed Identity
With her election as the first woman Vice President, Kamala Harris also brings the issue of ethnicity to the forefront. The gospel of our brown multiethnic savior says that she—and all of us—can and should embrace the entirety of ourselves as created and beloved beings.
Social Holiness in a New World
As a Biden-Harris administration begins, Asian American Christians must continue the faithful work of love and justice across all society’s spheres.
Between Insurrection and Inauguration: Faithfulness in Tension
The rioters' use of Christian symbols at the Capitol insurrection was blasphemous, and I wonder how we Asan American Christ followers might respond to our nation's political crisis and the anti-Asian hate we're experiencing.
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.
No Model Minority, Part II: Filipino Americans, the Bible, and Resisting Racism
In the church’s pursuit of justice, lessons from Filipino American history and experience can helpfully shape our approach to the Scriptures.
AACC Statement on the Violent Attack on the U.S. Capitol
AACC Statement on the Violent Attack on the U.S. Capitol
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.
The Revelation and Reversal of Advent
Apocalyptic literature is not just about disaster, but also about hope. And Advent provides the greatest hope of all.