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(ANALYSIS) For decades, one name was ubiquitous in American evangelical homes: Focus on the Family. A media empire with millions of listeners and readers, its messages about parenting, marriage and politics seemed to reach every conservative Christian church and school. And one manâs name was nearly synonymous with Focus on the Family: James Dobson.
News
Books
(REVIEW) The book presents a Christian framework for everyday life that may resonate with readers of various faiths. However, the writing quality is uneven; while some chapters are accessible, others use complex language that may be challenging for some readers. Despite its limitations, this collection is worth reading in an age marked by AI, anxiety and burnout.
(REVIEW) âThe Invisibility of Religion in Contemporary Artâ is a deeply academic tome. Its 480 pages includes an extensive set of endnotes that will no doubt prove invaluable to future scholarship, while its large appendix is itself a significant resource. Yet, with Andersonâs lucid and well-informed writing style, this book will be accessible to a wide audience of readers.
(ANALYSIS) In reinventing himself, did Robert Allen Zimmerman â Dylanâs birth name and the grandson of Lithuanian and Ukrainian Jewish immigrants â also betray his Jewish heritage? What was that heritage and how did it shape his music, his worldview, his rise to fame and identity? Harry Freedman explores these questions in his probing book, âBob Dylan: Jewish Roots, American Soil.â
(EXCERPT) In âQueens of Islam: The Muslim Worldâs Historic Women Rulers,â journalist Tom Verde shares stories of 15 Muslim women rulers, dating back to the early Islamic era through the 17th century. The book, published by Olive Branch Press, pushes back on stereotypes about Muslim women as oppressed. Instead, it highlights prominent rulers who influenced Islamic civilization across the Arab world.
(EXCERPT) Could the flourishing history of journalism provide clues for enabling it to flourish in future? Why is societyâs watchdog, the press, with its long and often honorable pedigree, going feral? Failing to bark at misrepresentation and fraud, while snarling at truth? Why does journalism have the privileged position it does?
(ANALYSIS) Throughout his career, you see the outlines of a man burdened by the myth he helped build. A man who stared down Americaâs worst tendencies and tried to warn us, only to watch them metastasize. And in that exhaustion, thereâs something quietly Christlike â not in purity, but in genuine suffering.
At a time when the Trump administration has renewed a travel ban on various Muslim majority countries in Africa and across the Middle East, the Quran owned by John Adams is but one indication that our nationâs founders regarded Islam â as well as other, non-Western, non-Christian faiths â as worthy of respect and protection under the law.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled parents of public-school children in Montgomery County, Md., have a right to opt their kids out of classroom reading times with books the school board labels as âLGBTQ inclusive.â These books were introduced as part of a new curriculum in 2022 for pre-K through eighth-grade students. They promote storylines that teach gender is a construct rather than a biological fact.
(REVIEW) In 1838, American clergymen Edward Robinson and Eli Smith began a Bible-guided survey of the Holy Land, producing a landmark archaeological record. Allan Chapmanâs new book traces how 19th-century explorers and missionaries â from pyramid-measuring mystic Charles Piazzi Smyth to Ur excavator Sir Leonard Woolley â sought evidence for Biblical truth.
Roughly two-thirds of the way through his new book, âGood Soil: the Education of an Accidental Farmhand,â Jeff Chu, then a student at Princeton Theological Seminary and a worker at the school âFarminaryâ (working farm), reflects on the New Testament parable of the seed sower. What was its significance for him, a gay child of immigrants from Hong Kong raised in a conservative Christian family teeming with preachers and Sunday school teachers?
Film & TV
(REVIEW) With no meaningful character arc and no coherent theme, âHoney Donât!â leaves viewers adrift. Itâs a detective story with no one to root for and nothing to say. Instead of delivering clarity in a chaotic world, it adds to the noise. In the words of Macbeth â adapted by Ethan Coenâs brother Joel in âThe Tragedy of Macbethâ â the film is âfull of sound and fury, signifying nothing.â
(REVIEW) âEast of Wallâ is a heartwarming and raw story about overcoming hardship and helping others. Unfortunately, its unusual style both helps and hinders our ability to connect with the people and experiences at the center of the drama. The film follows Tabatha, a rebellious horse trainer, who, after her husbandâs death, wrestles with unresolved grief while providing refuge for a group of teens.
(ANALYSIS) This summerâs âSupermanâ is more than just another superhero movie. James Gunn's latest, starring David Corenswet, offers something different: A return to the character's core â not just as a cultural icon, but as a figure imbued with spiritual and moral gravity. Because Superman has always been religious. Maybe not explicitly, but unmistakably.
(ANALYSIS) Two recent announcements about two upcoming faith-based releases that could be game-changers for the industry: Angel Studios and The Wonder Projectâs âYoung Washingtonâ and Mel Gibsonâs âThe Resurrection of the Christ.â While the announcements have mostly gone under the radar, they have the potential to upend the Hollywood landscape as we know it for a long time to come.
(REVIEW) âThe Fantastic Four: First Stepsâ continues the Marvel trend of having a strained relationship with God that reflects trends within our culture. And while this new version of the Fantastic Four is more optimistic in many ways, its view of God is increasingly terrifying. Marvel has long had a complicated relationship with God. While they mostly ignore Him, the movies have, over time, featured and discussed the Almighty more and more.
The film, a standout in early faith-based cinema, returns for its 15th anniversary amid a revitalized genre led by hits like âThe Chosen.â Directed by Dallas Jenkins and starring Kevin Sorbo, the film explores an alternate reality where a businessman sees the life he could have had by following Godâs path. Strong writing and emotional depth elevate it above genre clichĂŠs.
(REVIEW) Stories help us sift through random events of our lives into something coherent. COVID was a seminal time in American life, and itâs more than right that we should tell stories about it. But without something coherent to say, those stories stop being useful ways to interpret the noise, and instead just add to it.
(ANALYSIS) Are Superman and Jesus headed for an American revival? For better or worse, peopleâs love of Superman and devotion to God have always been tightly fused. Whether this will lead to a long-term revival for both or just a short-term connection remains to be seen. For now, a lot more people are looking up to the heavens than were before.
The Trinity Broadcasting Network was sued by a media company started by TV personality Phil McGraw, whose eponymous talk show âDr. Philâ captivated 10 million U.S. viewers weekly during 21 seasons on TV. The lawsuit claims TBN saddled McGrawâs enterprises with more than $100 million in financial obligations while not delivering on production and distribution services.
(ANALYSIS) With the increasing secularization of America, thereâs far more freedom for Hollywood writers to tell stories about the afterlife that are in conflict with Christian narratives. Thereâs less cultural pressure to conform to Christian norms, so filmmakers are now freer explore alternative or ambiguous views of the afterlife.
Art & Music
Activist Hooman Khalili hopes to inspire Iranian women to resist abuse and terrorism through murals displayed on college campuses across the United States. The murals, he said, are meant to spark civil discourse â especially among students â and draw attention to the fight for human rights in Iran at a time when all the focus is on Gaza and Ukraine.
(REVIEW) âThe Invisibility of Religion in Contemporary Artâ is a deeply academic tome. Its 480 pages includes an extensive set of endnotes that will no doubt prove invaluable to future scholarship, while its large appendix is itself a significant resource. Yet, with Andersonâs lucid and well-informed writing style, this book will be accessible to a wide audience of readers.
Christians at the Bouldercrest Church of Christ invited the devil into their midst. This time, he went down to Georgia not for a fiddle-playing contest, as the famous Charlie Daniels Band song goes, but for an interview.That was the premise of a recent play the church hosted, âThe Art of Influence: An Interview with the Devil.â
A leading academic who has called for the return of precious artifacts âstolen by Pope Pius XI and his missionariesâ from Indigenous First Nations communities has urged Pope Leo XIV and the Vatican Museums to ârethink their colonial mindset.â Gloria Bell said the Vatican continues to falsely ârefer to everythingâ in their collection as a âgift.â
On a summer night in 2023, Rajah Bose boarded the midnight train out of Spokane, Washington, with John Steinbeckâs âTravels with Charlieâ in his backpack and a burning question that he couldnât articulate. The 45-year-old photojournalist and musician was embarking on a 9,000-mile journey across America by rail, from the Pacific Northwest to New York and, finally, back home.
In the second installment of âAnd So It Goes,â HBOâs new two-part documentary about Billy Joel, the Piano Man explains why he wore a yellow Star of David in August 2017, during his residency at Madison Square Garden, in his most extensive filmed account of his familyâs experience in the Holocaust. âNo matter what, I will always be a Jew,â he said.
(ANALYSIS) Anime and Religious Identity: Cultural Aesthetics in Japanese Spiritual Worlds helps students explore questions of meaning, ethics and belief that anime brings to life. It examines themes such as what happens when the past resurfaces? What does it mean to carry the weight of responsibility? And how can suffering become a path to transformation?
(REVIEW) The devotional art of Jainism, Buddhism and Hinduism share many similarities, even some gods. To understand why, you need to examine the ancient Indian origins of these religions and their iconographies, which can be traced back to the powerful nature spirits and divine serpents once worshipped across the subcontinent.
(ESSAY) When I began exploring the history of Christianity and the art it inspired, I had no idea it would lead me to one of the closest friendships of my life. That friend was Alexei Mihailovich Lidov, a world-renowned scholar of Byzantine art and architecture. The path to that friendship began in 1999, when our family traveled to Turkey for the first time.
(ANALYSIS) Bono has never been backwards in coming forward, especially when it comes to God. He doesnât mumble about âspiritual energyâ or dodge the name of Jesus. He says it straight: âThe Son of God.â He talks about Christ carrying his shame, not because it sounds poetic, but because he believes it. His faith isnât necessarily neat or polished, but it's real.
Sports
Cristiano Ronaldoâs engagement in Riyadh highlights Saudi Arabiaâs evolving â but still inconsistentâ social norms. Once governed by strict Islamic law, the kingdom has relaxed restrictions under Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salmanâs reforms. Ronaldo and partner Georgina RodrĂguez live openly as an unmarried couple â something that remains risky for ordinary Saudis, especially women.
The case of a high school football coach praying on the field has been in the spotlight since the Supreme Courtâs 2022 ruling. But another football controversy first emerged in 2015, when two Christian schools made it to the state championships. The games were run by the stateâs athletic association. Officials barred them from conducting a prayer over the loudspeaker before kickoff.
Over 10 weeks, boys progressed from basic stances and footwork to live sparring, with each session building confidence alongside muscle memory. What started as tentative jabs evolved into combinations as the young fighters learned to face adversity head-on. âI learned to protect myself,â said 9-year-old Kohanim Chavez. âI had a good time with my dad, and he was one of the best trainers.â
Terry Bollea â better known as Hulk Hogan â carried an oversized presence during a career that spanned nearly a half-century and included countless ripped shirts, bandannas and leg drops. His biggest splash came in December 2023, though, as Hogan and his wife, Sky, were baptized at Indian Rocks Baptist Church, a Southern Baptist congregation in Largo, Fla.
Success and Scottie Scheffler have become practically synonymous lately. Yet, itâs the worldâs top-ranked golferâs comments on what constitutes true meaning â and more to the point, what doesnât â that keeps grabbing attention. It comes within an interesting context. Sheffler cruised to a four-stroke win in The Open Championship with a 17-under performance.
Evan Carter helped the Texas Rangers win the World Series in 2023. But Carter â still just 22 â has faced multiple challenges over the past two seasons. He talked to Religion Unplugged about his journey as a ballplayer and, more importantly, as a person of deep Christian faith. âBaseball is what I do, but I try and not make it, as the clichĂŠ goes, who I am,â he said.
(ANALYSIS) Although he remains little known beyond the country of his birth, Rinus IsraĂŤl, who died July 1 in the Netherlands at age 83, was one of historyâs great Jewish soccer players. In 1970, as captain of Feyenoord, IsraĂŤl was the first Dutchman â and the first Jew â to lift the European Cup (the equivalent of todayâs Champions League trophy).
DeMeco Ryansâ sermon coincided with the start of Vacation Bible School at Fifth Ward, just off heavily traveled Interstate 10 in view of high-rises and Daikin Park, home of MLBâs Houston Astros. The church â about 11 miles from NRG Stadium, where the Texans play â traces its roots to the 1930s tent revivals of the famous traveling evangelist Marshall Keeble.
(ANALYSIS) DĂŠjĂ vu is a common occurrence in sports and the Edmonton Oilers are no strangers to repeat matchups. The team faced off against the New York Islanders in both 1983 and â84 for hockeyâs biggest prize. In this yearâs Stanley Cup finals, the Oilers will try to avenge their 2024 loss to the Florida Panthers.
On a recent 78-degree Saturday afternoon, a U.S. flag and the Detroit Tigersâ four World Series championship banners â from 1935, 1945, 1968 and 1984 â flapped in the Comerica Park breeze. For nearly four decades, Home Plate Detroit has brought fans together to pray and hear player testimonials. In the Motor City and elsewhere, these events mix a faith-based message with a major league game.
The link between the papacy and the sporting world looks set to continue under Pope Leo XIV. With a new pope installed as Francisâ successor, that sporting theme could continue in the Vatican, though the center of gravity may migrate from soccer to baseball. As befitting a U.S. pope, Leo is known to be a fan of the national pastime, in particular the Chicago White Sox.
The smell of popcorn wafts through the air, ball players are raring to go, âTake Me Out to the Ballgameâ plays through the sound system, and parents are ready to cheer their kids on. It sounds like an everyday American Little League baseball game, but this league is different. With absolute joy on their faces, some waving their hands, these young players are affected by various disabilities. Some are in wheelchairs, others are non-verbal.
A natural athlete who took to the sport quickly, Kayden Beasleyâs growth originally placed him in a substitute role for this season. His stature has grown to where he was recently named to the teamâs roster â trimmed by one spot â for the World Para Ice Hockey Championship in Buffalo at the end of May. A Christian, he left earlier this month for training camp in Madison, Wisc.
Zeev Buium took the ice on Sunday for the Minnesota Wild, becoming the first NHL player born to Israeli parents and one of more than a dozen Jewish players to feature in a game this season. He might also be the first in the league with a tattoo featuring Jewish calendar dates. His parents, Sorin and Miriam Buium, immigrated in 1999 from Ashdod, a city in Israel, to San Diego.
When the Portland Trail Blazers gave up four draft picks for Deni Avdija last summer, it seemed like an overpay. Avdija, the leagueâs only Israeli-born player, was coming off a breakout fourth season for the Washington Wizards. But his stats had popped so much that some regression felt almost inevitable. Instead, as the focal point of a young, head-turning team, Avdijaâs gotten even better.
Walk through the doors of St. Peterâs Church in the English town of Shipley, in West Yorkshire, and this Anglican house of worship can sometimes result in a very unexpected sight. Forget rows of pews leading down to a main altar. Instead, youâll find a WWE-style ring featuring wrestlers acting out Bible stories to the delight of those watching.
They lined up on March 2, ready to enter the baptistry at First Southern Baptist Church. College athletes, all of them. Emerging from the water symbolized a new start for them. The pastorâs name is Doyle Pryor. Imagine what a guy named Doyle Pryor would look, sound and be like. Odds are you imagine a preacher with a big personality and even bigger desire to do whatever it takes to reach others for Christ.
The best week in sports is upon us once again. The menâs NCAA basket tournament â a time known as âMarch Madnessâ â brings with it office pools and, very often, plenty of surprises. Itâs a long road to the championship game and a lot will happen between now and April 7. Here are five religiously-affiliated schools that could turn into Cinderella teams and pull off some upsets.
(BOOK EXCERPT) In the late 1970s, the San Francisco Bay Area sportswriters labeled the growing group of born-again Christians on the San Francisco Giants the "God Squad." When the God Squadders helped propel the team to a strong 1978 season, challenging the Dodgers and Reds, they often gave God the credit in post-game interviews. The press raised no objection. In 1979, when the Giants' fortunes faded, sportswriters were quick to blame the born-again players.
In the extreme sport of ice swimming, the appropriately named Winters holds the world record for the oldest person to swim an ice mile, officially noted by the International Ice Swimming Association. âI first got into ice swimming just because Iâd read that it was the most extreme swimming challenge in the world,â he said, âand basically just to see if I could do it and challenge myself.â
Dikembe Mutomboâs towering presence on the basketball court made him a household name. With his signature finger wag and shot-blocking ability, he dominated the NBA for nearly two decades. But itâs his legacy off the court that set him apart as an icon of compassion and service. His parents, both Baptists, instilled in him values of kindness, humility and service to others. These principles would shape Mutomboâs identity as a man and player.
Alex Bregman, the slugging third baseman who wore a Star of David on his cap following the Oct. 7 attacks, reportedly signed with the Boston Red Sox on Wednesday in a contract that will give him the highest salary ever for a Jewish baseball player. The three-year, $120 million deal officially closes Bregmanâs tenure with Houston Astros, the team that drafted him second overall in 2015.
A tiny cross is perched atop the church. In front, a bright red bicycle repair station and a brown-and-white sign proclaims âSpokeân Hostelâ to greet visitors. Not only does this church-turned-hostel offer the cheapest accommodations â just $35 a night â in this remote part of the state, but its reputation for warm hospitality has earned two awards from Oregonâs governorâs office.
(OPINION) Itâs gratifying to see new government policies which align with Godâs creational order, yet this is not the end of our witness on this issue. Our churches should both be eager to declare what is good and true and beautiful about biblical masculinity and femininity and read to help those who struggle with gender dysphoria find hope in the Gospel and the resurrection of the body at the end of the age.
President Trump on Wednesday signed an executive order aimed at prohibiting transgender women and girls from competing in womenâs sports, directing agencies to withdraw federal funding for any schools that refused to comply. The step, taken on National Girls & Women in Sports Day, is one of several by the new president regarding gender.
Judging by the television audience, Americans certainly care about the Super Bowl. Few, however, think God shares their concern. Last yearâs Super Bowl drew more than 123.7 million U.S. viewers, the largest TV viewership in history. Yet, most U.S. adults donât believe God cares who wins the big game or determines the the winner, according to a new study.
The high number of practicing Christian quarterbacks in the NFL is a multifaceted phenomenon rooted in cultural, social and personal factors. Christianity offers these men a foundation for moral guidance, mental fortitude and a sense of community â all of which are essential to the demanding life of an NFL quarterback and win a Super Bowl.
(OPINION) The media and the public are now accustomed to hearing athletes thank God for the abilities he has given them. But that wasnât always the case. In baseball in the 1950 and â60s, it was extremely rare to hear such pronouncements from athletes. Then, during the 1970s in San Francisco, one of the great culture clashes between religious athletes, the media and the fan base erupted over a group of born-again ballplayers.
The route pushes cyclists to their limits. They face unrelenting desert heat, rugged terrain, crowded highways, brutal headwinds and sheer exhaustion that comes from cycling for days in such extreme conditions. It is a route that was first conquered by the H&K Cycle Club riders in 2022 â and despite the knowledge of the extreme challenge involved they now go back every year.
Jake Retzlaff of Brigham Young University â yes, thatâs the school affiliated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints â will represent the matzo maker under a name, image and likeness contract that runs through the end of the school year. Manischewitz would not reveal the financial terms of the sponsorship.
Podcast
How Centuries Of American Racism Impact Modern Families and Churches
After many years as a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, Lee Hawkins composed a memoir about how his investigation into his family's history led him on a journey of self-discovery and forgiveness. Matthew Peterson speaks with Lee about his book, "I Am Nobody's Slave"
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Opinion & Analysis

Ewelina Ochab

Paul Prather

Richard Ostling

Terry Mattingly
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George Schroeder loves college football. He just loves Jesus more. After over a quarter-century as a sportswriter, Schroeder found a new calling in ministry.
(ANALYSIS) For decades, one name was ubiquitous in American evangelical homes: Focus on the Family. A media empire with millions of listeners and readers, its messages about parenting, marriage and politics seemed to reach every conservative Christian church and school. And one manâs name was nearly synonymous with Focus on the Family: James Dobson.
It helps to remember that this Lutheran denomination has lost roughly half of its members during the last 50 years and insiders have suggested that it may die by 2050.
(REVIEW) With no meaningful character arc and no coherent theme, âHoney Donât!â leaves viewers adrift. Itâs a detective story with no one to root for and nothing to say. Instead of delivering clarity in a chaotic world, it adds to the noise. In the words of Macbeth â adapted by Ethan Coenâs brother Joel in âThe Tragedy of Macbethâ â the film is âfull of sound and fury, signifying nothing.â
Pastors have a lot of thoughts about discipleship, but they arenât sure itâs happening in their churches. In the first part of the State of Discipleship study from Lifeway Research, U.S. Protestant pastors shared their understanding of what discipleship means and how it best occurs. The full State of Discipleship will be released over the next year, providing the perspectives of both pastors and churchgoers.
James Dobson, a politically influential conservative and anti-abortion activist who founded the Christian ministry Focus on the Family, died on Thursday at the age of 89. Dobson started Focus on the Family in 1977, which had more than 1,000 employees at its peak in the mid-90s, giving him the chance to influence legislation and White House policy for decades.
The lead pastor of Central Bible Church in Fort Worth, Texas, has resigned after confessing to a âpattern of moral failure,â according to an announcement posted earlier this month on the churchâs website. While the announcement is now deleted, the text of it is still visible on Googleâs search page.
(ANALYSIS) August 22nd marks the International Day Commemorating the Victims of Acts of Violence Based on Religion or Belief, a day established by the U.N. General Assembly to condemn acts of violence targeting individuals on the basis of or in the name of religion or belief.