Should We Bring AI into the Church?
A church-tech skeptic talks values with technologists from faith-aligned AI company Gloo.
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Review
The What and the Why of Religious Decline
One is relatively simple to map out. The other is much harder to capture.
The Limits of Liturgy
I love liturgy, but it’s not a means to make better, cooler, more politically with-it Christians. It doesn’t even guarantee orthodoxy.
Testimony
The Father to the Fatherless Sang a New Song over Me
Abandoned at birth, I grew up in Romanian orphanages. Today I lead Eastern Europe’s largest Christian music festival.
Another No-Vacation Summer
Our family can’t travel to Hawaii or Disneyland. But God’s refreshment is still within our reach.
Review
Meet the Evangelical Abolitionists Who Can Guide Today’s Church
A new book studies three leaders who fought slavery with a comprehensive theological vision.
Remembering Cherokee Tears and Dying Groans
How some Christians warned about and mourned the Trail of Tears.
Why We Visit Graves on Memorial Day
Rituals of death can remind us of America’s “new birth of freedom”—and our rebirth and renewal through Christ’s sacrifice.
The Bulletin
Trump Disses Putin, Kermit Speaks at Graduation, and The Israeli Embassy Suffers Loss
The Bulletin discusses President Trump’s frustrations with Vladimir Putin, this year’s commencement speaker lineup, and the deaths of two Israeli embassy workers.
The Bulletin
Habeas Corpus, A Big Beautiful Bill, and The Nicene Creed
The Bulletin discusses the Trump administration’s defiance of habeas corpus, a new GOP big beautiful bill, and the 1,700th birthday of the Nicene Creed.
Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
Forgetting What Happened
The Satanic Panic may have faded, but its legacy lives on – reshaped into modern conspiracies, political crusades, and weaponized fear.
The Bulletin
The Politics of Tyranny with Roger Berkowitz
The Bulletin starts the week with headline commentary and a conversation with Roger Berkowitz.
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The Magazine
View archivesIt's easy to live in a state of panic, anxiety, and fear, from the pinging of our phones to politics and the state of the church. In this issue, we acknowledge panic and point to Christian ways through it. Russell Moore brings us to the place of panic in Caesarea Philippi with Jesus and Peter. Laura M. Fabrycky writes about American inclinations toward hero-making. Mindy Belz reports on the restorative work of Dr. Denis Mukwege for rape victims in Congo. We’re also thrilled to give you a first look at the Global Flourishing Study, a multiyear research project about what makes a flourishing life across the globe. While panic may be profitable or natural, we have a sure and steady anchor for our souls in Jesus.
Public Theology Project
The Problem of Panic
Testimony
Stories of Christian conversion
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The Father to the Fatherless Sang a New Song over Me
Abandoned at birth, I grew up in Romanian orphanages. Today I lead Eastern Europe’s largest Christian music festival.
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The Gospel Comes for a Neo-Nazi
A couple’s weekly dinner invitations helped transform me from an embittered skinhead to a senior pastor.
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The Lion, the Wizard, and the Great Physician
During childhood, my heart beat with joy in Narnia and Middle Earth. After meeting an invisible Doctor, I understood why.
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I Went to Prison for Murder. God’s Word Brought Freedom.
After enduring brutality as a child and inflicting it as a gang member, I sought healing and wholeness at the cross.
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I Was Sold into Slavery. Jesus Set Me Free.
In the Thai Muslim community where I lived, enslavement was all I knew. Then God spoke into the darkness.
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Browse the Archives
Christianity Today magazine was born in 1956; enjoy a selection of our classics and cover stories.
The End Is Not the End
C. Everett Koop on death and dying.
Christianity and Scientific Concerns
Six evangelical scholars–including C. Everett Koop–in a panel discussion on technology and bioethics.
The Embattled Career of Dr. Koop
Despite political pressures, the surgeon general was out to fight disease, not people.
How Faith Works
The volcanic issue of “Lordship Salvation” is still emitting the smoke and fumes of controversy.
