
About Good Faith
Helping friends who follow Jesus make sense of the world.
Good Faith exists to help spiritually and politically “homeless” Christians navigate a rapidly changing, often confusing, and deeply divided world. Through podcasts, video courses, books, and other resources, we offer biblically grounded insights that blend intellectual rigor with practical wisdom, equipping thoughtful believers to engage culture with hope and humility.
Why Good Faith:
Our name reflects a core conviction: that Christianity, meant to be good news for the world, is too often experienced as something else — especially within American Evangelicalism, where political entanglements have distorted our public witness. For many, faith now feels like bad news.
We chose “Good Faith” as both reminder and reclamation: a reminder that Christianity’s central message is still good news, and a reclamation of the posture Jesus calls us to embody. Our work helps Christians rediscover the goodness of their faith and live it in a way that’s compelling to others.
How we approach our work:
We are grounded in Biblical orthodoxy and the historic creeds of the early church. But we also approach today’s challenges with intellectual honesty and openness. We don’t claim to have every answer. Instead, we invite wise conversation with pastors, scholars, practitioners, and storytellers – and trust that wisdom emerges in community.
We explore a wide range of specific and immediate topics, while advancing three long term themes: the Christian approach to politics; the relevance of our faith to our relationship to institutions; and sensitivity to the widespread anxiety of our times. While our content is meant for anyone, we are distinctive in our capacity to create content for small groups.
Our hope for you:
We don’t aim to replace the local church or your embodied community. Rather, we offer tools and conversations that prompt deep reflection, widen your imagination, and help you practice a good faith in complex times.
Above all, we want you to know you’re not alone. The good news is still good. Truth still holds. And our hope in Christ is more enduring than the turbulence around us.
Our Leadership

Curtis Chang
Curtis Chang bridges the worlds of theology, institutions, and public life. As the Founder and Executive Director of Good Faith and host of The Good Faith Podcast, he helps friends who follow Jesus make sense of a confusing and divided world. A former pastor himself, Curtis brings both pastoral wisdom and strategic insight to the work of faith formation in modern life. In 2025, he was recognized by The Washington Post as one of the “Next 50” leaders shaping American society, an honor highlighting voices charting a hopeful and meaningful path forward.
Beyond Good Faith, Curtis is the founder and CEO of Consulting Within Reach, a firm serving nonprofits and government agencies, where his work in social innovation was recognized by the Obama White House. He also teaches strategic planning at American University’s School of International Service. In the Christian world, Curtis serves as a Senior Fellow at Fuller Theological Seminary and speaks widely on faith and culture. He is the author of The After Party: Toward Better Christian Politics (with Nancy French), The Anxiety Opportunity: How Worry Is the Doorway to Your Best Self, and Engaging Unbelief: A Captivating Strategy from Augustine and Aquinas.
At the heart of all Curtis’s work—whether through podcasts, books, classrooms, or the Good Faith community—is a desire to equip Christians to live with clarity, wisdom, and hope.

Elizabeth Carr
Elizabeth Carr brings a deep care for the Good Faith audience and an endless curiosity to her work as Director of Engagement. She’s always thinking about how to serve friends who follow Jesus with the most creative ideas, thoughtful resources, and practical tools to help them make sense of the world.
A native Michigander (Go Blue!), Elizabeth’s career has spanned the corporate, nonprofit, and ministry worlds—from Goldman Sachs to the New York City Marathon to Gather Ministries—each shaping the way she leads with both strategy and heart. Her experience serving on multiple nonprofit boards—including as chair of A House on Beekman in the Bronx and Let Me Run Charlotte, keeps her closely connected to the realities of the world Good Faith seeks to engage. A voracious reader (and subscriber to more Substacks than anyone we know), she is constantly bringing fresh ideas and insight into our work. Elizabeth currently calls North Carolina home and when she’s not working, can be found baking bread or playing Four Square with her three young children.

DT Slouffman
DT catches good stories and releases them into the world. He brings this heart for storytelling to his role as Good Faith’s Director of Content—serving as producer of The Good Faith Podcast, director of The After Party, and trusted voice on all things creative.
With more than a few Emmys and International Television and Film World Medals to his name, DT pairs his award-winning experience in news and documentary production with a deep love for the Church and its people. He also holds an MFA in Television and Film Production from Asbury University, where he has taught documentary and storytelling courses—shaping not only our work at Good Faith, but the next generation of storytellers learning to tell a better story of what God is doing in the world. Ordained as a ruling elder in the Presbyterian Church in America, DT often reflects on where our stories fit into God’s work of renewal—usually over a good cup of coffee. Though always a New Yorker at heart, he and his family now call Franklin, Tennessee, home.

Kamrie Rhoads
Kamrie is a bridge builder who helps connect people, organizations, and ideas in meaningful ways. At Good Faith, she brings this to forming partnerships, fostering collaboration, and inviting others into the work of helping friends who follow Jesus make sense of the world.
If you’ve met up with Good Faith on the road, you’ve likely met Kamrie along the way. She loves collecting kindred spirits as she goes and keeps our team clued into how her generation is experiencing these upside down times with a poise that belies her age. Her previous work in food insecurity, anti-trafficking, and community development deepened her passion for helping the Church show up faithfully in the world. Currently calling Colorado home but a Texan by birth (ask her about taking Curtis on his first Buc-ce’s trip), you can find her somewhere in the mountains or on the hunt for the best cup of specialty coffee in Denver.
Board of Directors

Andrew Ginsberg
Andrew stepped into the Board Chair role in 2024. He is currently President and CEO of Operation Mobilization USA, and has non-profit and for profit experiences, including roles in sales/marketing, strategy, and executive leadership in the diagnostics, biotechnology, and pharmaceutical fields. He has lived and worked in the U.S. and Europe, and has led teams on six continents, and most enjoys solving complex systems, whether in organizational development or statistics. Andrew graduated from Duke University with degrees in Political Science and Genetics. He also studied at Emmanuel College at Cambridge. His wife Marnie is a reading education thought leader, and they have three daughters.

Katherine Leary Alsdorf
Katherine served as founding director of Redeemer’s Center for Faith & Work (CFW) from 2002 to 2012. Since 2013, Katherine has worked with a variety of churches to establish faith and work ministries and led the New City Fellows program in Raleigh, NC for its first two years. She is also adjunct faculty in Regent College’s Masters of Arts program in Leadership, Theology and Society (MALTS). Katherine received her BA from Wittenberg University, her MBA from the University of Virginia, and has taken seminary classes from Regent College. She has served on the boards of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, Fellowship of the Performing Arts, the Theology of Work Project, International Arts Movement and the Carver Project. Katherine co-authored Every Good Endeavor: Connecting Your Work to God’s Work.

Ken Miller
Kenneth P. Miller is the Don H. and Edessa Rose Professor of State and Local Government at Claremont McKenna College, where he also serves as the Director of the Rose Institute of State and Local Government. Miller has been a visiting scholar at the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University (2011-2012) and the John Goodwin Tower Center for Political Studies at Southern Methodist University (2017-2018). He also serves on the Board of Directors of the Veritas Forum.

Dakota Pippins
Dakota Pippins was born and raised in New York. He studied applied mathematics as an undergraduate, followed by graduate programs in computer science and in theology. Dakota began working with InterVarsity in 1996 and served as Regional Director in the Mid-Atlantic. He is currently Senior Field Director at InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA. Dakota and his wife, Jennifer Rodriguez Pippins, have two high-energy boys.

Tess Russell
Tess Russell, MD Associate Professor of Anesthesiology at Columbia University Vagelos College of
Physicians and Surgeons, is a Texas transplant to New York City. She completed her medical training at
the University of Texas at Houston Health Science Center and moved to New York in 2005 to complete
Anesthesiology training at St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center, where she also served as Chief Resident.
Upon graduation, she stayed on at St. Luke’s-Roosevelt and became the Associate Residency Program
Director, Director of the Clinical Internship and Director of Simulation Education. In 2014, she left St.
Luke’s-Roosevelt to pursue additional training in Critical Care Medicine at The Mount Sinai Hospital.
Currently at Columbia University, she is an Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology at CUMC and
has a particular interest in resident and attending wellness. She serves as the Director of the Physician
Wellbeing Initiative in the Department of Anesthesiology, which has created a novel longitudinal
curriculum surrounding wellness and resilience for trainees. Her academic interests are centered on
physician flourishing and is a Physician Well-Being Lead for the Dean’s Office of Well-Being.
Additionally, she has won Teacher of the Year by the Anesthesiology residents, CTICU Attending of the
Year twice, and was voted Physician of the Year at New-York Presbyterian Hospital by her nursing
colleagues in 2020. Dr. Russell lives in New York City with her husband and three children.