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    Plough Quarterly No. 25: Solidarity

    Autumn 2020

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    Featured Articles

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    From the Editor

    Solidarity in Forgiveness Everyone is really responsible to all men for all men and for everything.

    Doers

    Acts 2 in Bolivia What does a community inspired by the first church in Jerusalem look like in an indigenous Andean context?

    Essays

    The Church Is Other People You learn quickly when you enter the ministry that despite the high talk of heavenly calling, we are primarily in the people business. Traveling Inside The walls of a prison close off the world; a stage can open it. The Solidarity of Grief How can mourning possibly be a blessing? Solidarity Means Giving Yourself Can a cloistered nun help a hurting world? The Prayers of the Chinese Nature Painters An artist can show that mountains have something in common with honor … that a breeze at night is not unlike a heartbreak. Chaim Potok’s Wandering Jews Holding to faith in a critical age. A Communal Publishing House The founding of Plough – and of the Bruderhof. Plough at One Hundred Years Our original mission statement from 1920.

    Interview

    Deep Solidarity Violence is not inevitable when you recover the truth of the Christian story. Black Lives Matter and the Church The new interracial solidarity of protesters is an important first step. But there are deeper powers to engage. Dinotopian Visions Endless battles are too predictable and boring. How much fresher and more difficult to envision is a world that has figured out how to live peacefully!

    Featured Authors

    the cover of the Plough Quarterly Solidarity Issue

    About this issue

    Pandemics, whatever else they do, show us we are not alone. Covid-19 is proof that, yes, there is such a thing as society; the disease has spread precisely because we aren’t autonomous individuals disconnected from each other, but rather all belong to one great body of humanity. The pain inflicted by the pandemic is far from equally distributed. Yet it reveals ever more clearly how much we all depend on one another, and how urgently necessary it is for us to bear one another’s burdens.

    It’s a good time, then, to talk about solidarity. The more so because it’s a theme that’s also raised by this year’s other major development, the international protests for racial justice following George Floyd’s death. The protests, too, raised the question of solidarity in guilt, even guilt across generations. By taking up our common guilt with all humanity, we come into solidarity with the one who bears it and redeems it all. In Christ, sins are forgiven, guilt abolished, and a new way of living together becomes possible. This solidarity in forgiveness gives rise to a life of love.

    This issue of Plough seeks to explore what solidarity means, and what it looks like to live it out today, whether in Uganda, Bolivia, or South Korea, in an urban church, a Bruderhof, or a convent.