Who is the Jesus of Advent?
The God of Advent is not a God of wealth, privilege, or status. The God of Advent is lowly–identifying with a forsaken place of our world.
I Didn’t Go to Church This Year…
How can we find peace and hope in the midst of the realities of relationships, anxieties, and responsibilities? Where is the joy?
Where's the Joy in 2022?
But also within the last year, amidst God’s bride acting less than holy, God has reminded me along the way that my hope and joy truly are found in him.
Those Who Walk In Darkness
This holiday season, may we rest in the knowledge that the God we worship is not one who is intimidated by our suffering.
Inhabiting the Hole of Advent: Transfiguring Asian American Futures
What if the problem is not our perceived foreignness at all, but our perpetual propensity to play the game? Maybe the way out of this perception is not ultimate economic empowerment, but a transfigured desire that perpetuates the possibility inherent in the empty space of Advent.
“You bring your gun to church?” A Chinese American Pastor’s Reflections on the Epidemic of Gun Violence
There are lots of reasons that people own guns. For comfort, to collect, as part of their jobs, for personal defense, or for sport. But as pastors and as a church, we cannot ignore and be silent on guns anymore.
Dare to Dream: A Reflection on the AACC Gun Violence Symposium
To take a stand against gun violence requires more than decrying it from the pulpit, we must go to local legislators and communities to bring about tangible change.
Not Korean Enough: Experiences of Imposter Syndrome While Leading a Study Abroad, and a Prayer in Response
I have a confession to make: I am not as “Korean” as I appear to be.
Reclaiming Chuseok and Mid-Autumn Festival for My Children
Teaching my children has been extremely meaningful in my own journey of reclaiming the forgotten parts of my identity, even those parts I did not know had been forgotten. There is a deep healing in reconnecting and rediscovering our roots.
The Way Forward Requires Looking Back
Indeed, if we want to understand how to integrate faith and Asian American identity in our current context, we need to learn how Asian Americans in days past wrestled with these same questions and took the steps that brought us to where we are today.
What Box Do I Check?
The world simply doesn’t know what to do with us yet, but they will.
Navigating Spaces as a 1st Gen Indian American
Bridge building is complicated and messy work, and we must intentionally move towards it.
Asian Enough
The more I’ve continued to delve into not just what it means to be Asian or White, but what it means to be Asian and White, the more I’ve been able to understand truly how deep the love and intention the Father’s love is for me
“So Alive When I’m With Us” Retrospective
In writing on the exhibition, Megan Kim stated: “To work in co-creation with another woman of color, someone who also lives within particular marginalizations, is to threaten the ways in which whiteness would strive to divide us.”
Saving the Multiverse One Relationship at a Time: A Dialogue About Everything Everywhere All at Once
The beauty I found in this film was not necessarily in the expansive multiverse of infinite realities it created, or even the concept of verse jumping between any of them at will, but in the finite. At the heart of this film is the portrayal of a slow, messy journey of the healing of generational trauma between a 1st and 2nd generation Asian American mother and daughter.
'Mixed Blessing' - One and a Half Years Later
God has plans for us…plans that are sometimes very different from our own goals and strategies.
Creating More Asian Tables
In the coming weeks and months, we want to share with you some of the big dreams we have for us as Asian American Christians. And we want to hear the big dreams that are stirring in your hearts and souls too.
AACC Statement on the Dallas, Buffalo & Laguna Woods Shootings
In the aftermath of these shootings, we must address racism with the pursuit of restoration in mind. We cannot allow the shootings in Dallas, Buffalo, or Laguna Woods to tear Black and Asian communities apart. Instead, we must move closer towards each other.
Opening Our Hearts to Lament
Whenever a racial tragedy happens in our country or around the world for that matter, our posture of heart as a family is to first respond with lament. My family laments every time a life is lost because every person’s life has value and meaning.
Living with Intention: Exploring the Intersection of Mixed Identities and Faith
For the sake of love and honor, discover the aspects of identity and heritage that might be different from you. Be curious and ask about the ways that their ethnic histories have combined together. And in doing so, we can remember and celebrate the unique differences of each of us, that we are not monolithic in any aspect of life.