SALT Project Blog
SALT Project is an award winning, not-for-profit production company dedicated to the craft of visual storytelling. On their blog, they share liturgical commentaries, new and old poems that speak to the cultural moment, a weekly theologian’s almanac highlighting important moments in the past and present, and more.
Reader Recommendation: SALT Project Blog
Recommended by: Amanda Kerr
Why it might be helpful: The SALT Project blog features written and artistic reflection at the intersection of the Christian tradition and modern culture, offering a valuable resource to help preachers draw connections between the Christian story and the wider cultural moment.
The SALT Project Blog is published by the SALT Project, an Emmy Award-winning, not-for-profit production company dedicated to visual storytelling from a progressive Christian perspective. Their freely available blog draws from scripture, theology, art, and culture to support preachers, worship leaders, and thoughtful Christians in their weekly preparation.
Each week, the blog publishes lectionary commentary tied to the Revised Common Lectionary, helping preachers engage the upcoming Sunday texts with theological depth and cultural awareness. Alongside these commentaries, the site features a weekly Theologian’s Almanac — a short piece highlighting a significant figure, moment, or idea in Christian history. Regular poetry features, seasonal series for Lent and Advent, and essays on the intersection of faith and contemporary life round out the blog’s offerings.
You might also find these resources helpful:
- enfleshed — weekly lectionary resources centering BIPOC, queer, and trans perspectives
- A Sanctified Art — liturgical art, poetry, and worship resources organized around the church year
- Church Anew — a progressive ministry resource hub with essays, podcasts, and tools for preachers
- Textweek — a broad aggregator of lectionary-based preaching and worship resources
Reader Recommendations are suggestions submitted by Disciples preachers and are not created or fully reviewed by the Proclamation Project.
