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According to new research from the Public Religion Research Institute, there are over 35 million consistently progressive Christians in the United States. Majorities of American Christians support reproductive justice and LGBTQ+ rights. Yet they're erased from our public narrative--only mentioned as outliers to the fundamentalist norm. In Just Faith, progressive Christian activist and writer Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons explains how a strong religious left has accompanied every major progressive advance in our society, and he resurrects the long but forgotten history of progressive Christianity in the United States that can and must link arms with progressive Muslims and Jews to make the moral case for pluralism, human dignity, and the common good. Graves-Fitzsimmons provides a blueprint for this type of resurrection based on his advocacy work at the intersection of religion and American politics. Graves-Fitzsimmons creates a rallying cry for a bold progressive Christianity that unapologetically fights for its values to impact the biggest political battles of our time--from immigration and economic fairness to LGBTQ+ rights and abortion rights--so that progressive Christians will stop lowering their voices when they identify as Christians. ""What kind of Christian are you?"" they'll be asked. And they'll even be understood when they reply with a smile, ""The good kind.""
Reviews with the most likes.
My friend, Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons, wrote a book! And it's out in the world now! You can buy it and everything!
Read this book if you need to be reminded that there is a vast history of Christians who have been about the work of liberation, who side with the vulnerable against racist, sexist, and economic systems that prevent human flourishing. Read this book if you are tired of people assuming that to be a Christian means you have to vote Republican. Read this book if you want to be encouraged and inspired to follow Jesus in feeding the hungry, giving water to the thirsty, welcoming the stranger, clothing the naked, taking care of the sick, and visiting those in prison (Matthew 25:35-36).