“We can commit to both humanizing our enemies and working against the ways our differences lead to the subjugation and suffering of others. The work for each of us is to discern the limits of difference [of opinion] and recognize when power turns these differences to enmity. In all of this, we are called to live into the truth that all people, even our enemies, are made in the image of God. Our longing is for a world that frees each of us from the destruction of hate and harm.”

–Melissa Florer-Bixler, How to Have an Enemy: Righteous Anger and the Work of Peace, p. 134