This post is part of our Learn, Pray, Join: Mass Incarceration series. Conrad Moore is a formerly incarcerated person; the former director of peace education for Mennonite Central Committee (MCC)... read more →
This post is part of Mennonite Church USA’s #BeTransformed series. Lorraine Stutzman Amstutz is Mennonite Church USA’s denominational minister for Peace and Justice. For more than 25 years, she served... read more →
This post is part of our Learn, Pray, Join: Mass Incarceration series. Yvonne Zimmerman is the associate academic dean and associate professor of Christian ethics at the Methodist Theological School... read more →
This post is part of our Learn, Pray, Join: Mass Incarceration series. John McCabe-Juhnke is Professor Emeritus of communication arts at Bethel College, where he taught speech and theater for... read more →
This post is part of our Learn, Pray, Join: Mass Incarceration series. Kayla Berkey is a writer and graduate of Union Theological Seminary. She attends Lee Heights Community Church in... read more →
This post is part of our Learn, Pray, Join: Mass Incarceration series. This post is a modified version of a post that was originally shared on the Casa Alterna blog.... read more →
This post is part of our Learn, Pray, Join: Mass Incarceration series. Reprinted with permission from Volume 6, Issue 3, of Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) Canada's Intersections periodical. MCC is... read more →
This post is part of our Learn, Pray, Join: Mass Incarceration series. Eli Reimer is a recent graduate of Goshen College, having majored in peace, justice and conflict studies, and... read more →
Mennonite Church USA (MC USA) has launched ”Learn, Pray, Join: Mass Incarceration," an initiative to raise awareness about the injustices in our criminal legal system that cause pain and... read more →
This post is part of our Learn, Pray, Join: Mass Incarceration series. Lorraine Stutzman Amstutz is Mennonite Church USA’s denominational minister for Peace and Justice. For more than 25 years,... read more →