How Far to the Promised Land: One Black Family’s Story of Hope and Survival in the American South
"All this leads McCaulley to ask: If there is a God, why has racism persisted for so long?" — Colin Farmer
Colin Farmer is a journalism and anthropology student at Rochester Institute of Technology. He is a creative writer, saxophone player and a member of Central Presbyterian Church in Avon, New York.
"All this leads McCaulley to ask: If there is a God, why has racism persisted for so long?" — Colin Farmer
Thanks to grants from 1001 New Worshiping Communities and the Presbytery of Arkansas, Central Presbyterian converted an unused daycare into a safe space for the LGBTQ+ community.
God meets us when we are at our lowest, shares Colin Farmer in a personal essay.
Outlook intern Colin Farmer shares how he sometimes feels alone in his desire to end hate and corruption. Yet, even the prophets, he remembers, are called to love their neighbors.
What does it mean to "love thy neighbor as thyself" when you struggle to love yourself? Colin Farmer reflects on this question.
Colin Farmer speaks with Helen DeBevoise, co-pastor at Park Lake Presbyterian Church, about Faith Arts Village Orlando and the intrinsic link between faith and art.
Colin Farmer reviews the documentary short "All I See is the Future" — recommending it to churches who want to engage topics like grace, redemption and mass incarceration.
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