By Richard C. Harwood

Struggle and doubt are two hallmarks of religious faith, no matter your background. My own experience with faith has proven no exception. I have been tested time and again through seasons of personal and societal struggle – from the time I found God in my struggle with a diagnosis of cystic fibrosis as a child, to working through multiple suicides and deaths of loved ones as a young man, to founding The Harwood Institute at 27 and then living out a journey of seeking a more just society. Struggle and doubt have been my constant companions.

While moments of doubt naturally test our faith in God, I believe there’s another kind of doubt that many people of faith wrestle with today that often gets ignored. I find this other doubt best expressed as a question. What if we have faith in God but not in people?

When that’s the case, do you turn away from the world – and exclusively back toward God? Do you assume things will work out according to a divine plan? Do you equip yourself with Scripture and try to convince others of your rightness – even your righteousness – at all costs?

I find myself on the road regularly for work. Just this year I’ve been to Michigan, Ohio, Florida, North Carolina, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and elsewhere. It’s clear, wherever I go, that we have largely lost our faith in one another. There are good reasons for this. A constellation of fractures and divisions wrack society today. Anxiety and isolation and fear of one another grip us. Yet under these conditions, I find people of faith often reacting in one of two ways.

Either they retreat, withdrawing into a hermetically-sealed existence rooted in their religious faith, where the rest of the world is allowed to fade into the background. Or they come out fighting, doubling down on proselytizing, looking to convert people to a specific doctrine regardless of the bridges they may burn. While either approach may work in protecting an individual’s faith in God, it fails to restore our faith in each other. Nor do these reactions contribute to moving our communities forward.

Like with any faith struggle, I believe the answer is to lean into the discomfort of a third way. To wrestle and work at it. To know our doubts in our fellow human beings but not to let them overtake us.

At this crossroads, how might people of faith choose to operate in order to create a better world together?

I think it’s instructive to turn to the story of Moses at the burning bush in Exodus 3. When this story begins, Moses has fled Egypt. His faith in God, himself, and his fellow Israelites has been tested. Indeed, in many ways it has been found wanting.

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