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A Seattle-Area Ministry Wants More Cooks in the Kitchen

Hillside Church helped refugees grow vegetables. Now it’s growing a whole community around food and preparing immigrants for culinary careers.

My Journey into Black Evangelicalism

Evangelicals loved the Bible. They also loved talking about politics and culture—but something was missing.

Review

ChatGPT Can String Words Together. Only Humans Can Write.

A veteran writing teacher isn’t impressed with the output of generative AI.

The Bible’s Take on Systemic Sin

Scripture is filled with examples of communities and institutions being held accountable for sin.

In ‘The 21,’ the Martyrs Have Faces

A decade after ISIS militants executed a group of Christians in Libya, a short animated film highlights their courage.

Feast of Eden

Closed to outsiders and plagued by addiction, a Vietnam village tuned its radios to a California preacher. It has bloomed into a showcase for Hmong culture and an unlikely tourist destination.

Public Theology Project

Be Careful Who You Pretend to Be

You can fake your way to vice but never to virtue.

Being Human

Walking in Wisdom with Uli Chi

The author and leadership expert speaks on discernment, relationships, and love in action.

The Russell Moore Show

Moore to the Point: Be Careful Who You Pretend to Be

You can fake your way to vice but never to virtue.

Being Human

In Pursuit of Integration 

Steve and Lisa Cuss reflect on Being Human’s recent episodes.

Devil and the Deep Blue Sea

Runaway Girls, Runaway Fears

This is the story of how America’s anxieties in the 1960s turned runaway girls, drugs, and rock-and-roll into a battle between good and evil.

The Magazine

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This first issue of 2025 exemplifies how reading creates community, grows empathy, gives words to the unnamable, and reminds us that our identities and relationships proceed from the Word of God and the Word made flesh. In this issue, you’ll read about the importance of a book club from Russell Moore and a meditation on the bookends of a life by Jen Wilkin. Mark Meynell writes about the present-day impact of a C. S. Lewis sermon in Ukraine, and Emily Belz reports on how churches care for endangered languages in New York City. Poet Malcolm Guite regales us with literary depth. And we hope you’ll pick up a copy of one of our CT Book Award winners or finalists. Happy reading!

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Mid-life Crisis? Bah, Humbug!

It is easy to look at the future in a rearview mirror, but that always leads to a collision.

Elisabeth Elliot on the Christian Father

Examining the male parent’s role.

Cover Story

Bill and Vonette Bright’s Wonderful Plan for the World

Evangelicalism’s power couple closes in on their radical mission.

CT Classic: Madeleine L’Engle on Allegory and Prayer

“It seemed ironic and unfair that just as I was turning closer to God, I couldn’t sell anything I wrote.”

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