Deep Breaths Get in Good Trouble We are living in troubled times. Not just chaotic or uncertain, but troubled. Trouble manifests as conflict and cruelty, greed masquerading as governance, and silence in the face of suffering. But as John Lewis reminded us, trouble isn’t always a thing to avoid. Sometimes it’s the very path to liberation. “Never, ever be afraid to make some noise and get in good trouble, necessary trouble.” This is such a time. Across the country, laws are being passed that punish the poor, criminalize immigrants, and gut the rights our ancestors bled for. There’s talk of faith, but it’s a distorted faith—twisting scripture to uphold power, wrapping oppression in religious language. White Christian Nationalism is not Christianity. It’s the armor of white supremacy. And now, they’re coming for birthright citizenship—trying to unravel the 14th Amendment itself. If they succeed, it won’t stop there. They’ll shrink the electorate. Shrink democracy. Shrink who counts. But we are not called to shrink. We are called to rise. Good Trouble is our tradition and is sacred work. The vote is not just a right—it is a tool of transformation. And they know it. That’s why they fight so hard to take it away. But John Lewis showed us another way: disrupt what needs dismantling and speak truth, even when your voice shakes. Good Trouble means refusing to bow to the gods of death and domination. It means organizing, educating, protesting, preaching, and protecting. It means standing on the shoulders of Lewis, Ella Baker, Fannie Lou Hamer, and every ancestor who refused to be silent. As John Lewis asked us: “If not us, then who? If not now, then when?” So let us rise. Let us vote. Let us speak. Let us love boldly. Let us get in Good Trouble—until justice prevails. — Rev. Moya Harris, Director of Racial Justice, Sojourners
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