A Tuesday VIEW FROM A PEW: “God Don’t Need Your Guilt — He Wants Your Heart.”
This conversation is for somebody who’s been wrestling with what it means to be blessed and still be biblical.







As the Black community prepares for a Mass Blackout of spending from now Until December 2 Stacy M. Brown our Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent addresses the effort in his column, A Black Friday of Resistance as Americans Push Back.
In this week’s Sunday Conversation, we sit down With Danielle Frazier, Director of the Columbus Consolidated Government 311 Citizens Service Center. The 311 Citizens Service Center is your link to local government and City services. Whether you have a question, would like to request a service, need to register a complaint, or would you like to offer a suggestion, the Columbus Consolidated Government 311 Citizens Service Center can give you an answer.
A question has been floating through our community like incense in an old sanctuary: Why are so many Black people abandoning their history, their culture, and their own churches to join white congregations? The Courier seeks to answer that question in our two Part series; Why Are Black People Leaving the Black Church for White Congregations in our community?
Power Moves and Powerhouses. In his weekly column, Time out” sportswriter Jerome Bryant reports the Columbus Lions recently named local business owner, longtime coach, and community leader Corry Black as the franchise’s new General Manager.
The Muscogee County Tax Commissioner’s Office reminds residents that the deadline to pay 2025 property taxes is Monday, Dec. 1, 2025.
In his View from a Pew: “Colorism: The Racism We Practice on Each Other” publisher Wane Hailes tackles an issue we don’t like to talk about but colorism is still alive and well in the Black community. It’s that quiet storm that keeps brewing even when the sun is shining. It’s the whisper that says lighter is better, darker is too much, and somehow our shades determine our worth.
The Courier Eco Latino Sunday Edition will be available online every Sunday morning, continuing the paper’s two-decade tradition of uplifting stories and advocacy for equity and community empowerment. Subscribe to receive our Sunday Edition newsletter for free at couriernews.org