Posts in News
Pastors Question Whether To Unplug From Online Services When The Pandemic Ends

Many pastors around the U.S. and the world are wondering how and when church life can transition back into real-life gatherings, with church members weaned off the safety and convenience of online church. ReligionUnplugged.com spoke to a dozen pastors from Africa to America to hear about the challenges of digital church post pandemic.

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Restored 1896 Footage May Reveal New Details Of Pope Leo XIII, Earliest-Born Person On Film

A restoration project on YouTube has rendered a short piece of film depicting Pope Leo XIII into never-before seen quality. David Martin, who restored the footage from 1896 into color, spoke to ReligionUnplugged.com about the scenes of Pope Leo XIII captured and the identities of the men surrounding him, long forgotten.

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Migrant Workers Flee Kashmir After Deadly Militant Attacks

Several recent deadly attacks on Hindu migrant workers in Kashmir — as militants fight to separate the region from India — are prompting many to flee the Muslim-majority Himalayan valley, particularly the migrant workers who have participated in Kashmir's economy for decades as construction workers and street vendors.

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One Year After Nigeria's Protests Against Police Brutality, Churches Keep Praying

At the height of Nigeria’s #EndSARS protests against police brutality and corrupt governance last October, young people of different faiths, ethnicities and socioeconomic backgrounds united in street demonstrations with prayers and songs. One year later, those connections are still growing, and churches are still praying.

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Missions Groups Wary As Haiti Kidnappings Increase With Recent Abduction Of 17 People

Kidnappings in Haiti have surged by 300% this year, largely due to the 400 Mawozo gang that recently kidnapped 17 American and Canadian missionaries. Some news reports indicate gangs control up to half of Port-au-Prince and are kidnapping police officers, business people and ministers, even interrupting a sermon to kidnap a pastor.

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Colin L. Powell's Lifetime Of Service Informed By His Episcopal Faith

In life, Colin Luther Powell, the son of Jamaican Anglican immigrants, rose to become an Army general, a White House aide to four presidents and the first Black American to serve as the United States secretary of state. Powell passed away Oct. 18 at age 84 due to complications of COVID-19.

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After Criticism, Joel Osteen's Lakewood Church Repaying $4.4 Million In PPP Loans

After backlash from church-state separation groups — who say PPP loan forgiveness from the U.S. government should not be accepted by religious organizations — Joel Osteen’s megachurch is repaying millions of dollars it borrowed to provide full salaries and benefits to its 370 employees during the pandemic.

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Crypto Contribution? Engiven Lets Churches Take Cryptocurrency Gifts

Engiven is a cryptocurrency donation management platform formed in 2018. Its roster of churches and charities includes major groups such as The Salvation Army, Compassion International and March of Dimes, and CEO James Lawrence predicts it’ll be serving 1,000 clients by the end of 2021.

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Pastor Gets 8 Years In Prison After Ponzi Scheme Nets Nearly $10 Million

Larry Holley of Grand Blanc, who is the pastor of Abundant Life Ministries in Flint, and Patricia Gray of Flint were indicted by a federal grand jury in April 2018 on several counts of fraud and money laundering. Both pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and mail fraud and received prison sentences this month.

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Fred Gray, Christian Civil Rights Lawyer For MLK, Gets Montgomery Street Named After Him

Fred Gray, a 90-year-old civil rights lawyer and longtime Church of Christ elder, represented Rosa Parks when he was only 24 years old and serving as an attorney for Martin Luther King Jr. Now, the Alabama city where Parks famously refused to give up her bus seat to a White male passenger in 1955 — Montgomery — is naming a street after him.

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Targeted Killing Of Civilians In Kashmir Triggers Fears Of Religion-Based Violence

The killing of at least five civilians, five soldiers and two militants in Kashmir over the past several days has plunged India’s Himalayan territory into grief and anger. The violence reminds Kashmiris of the early 1990s, when militants warring against New Delhi’s rule targeted Kashmiri Hindus, prompting 300,000 Hindus to flee the area.

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Ex-vangelical YouTuber Brenda Marie Davies Preaches Progressive Faith To Next Generation

Like many millennials, Brenda Marie Davies, a former model, left an evangelical Christian church and found a home for her faith in progressive Christian spaces online. Now she dives into the “grey” answers to life’s questions on her popular podcast and YouTube channel “God is Grey.”

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From New York To Pakistan, Brothers Fight Blasphemy Accusation

In Pakistan, religious minorities, including Christians and Ahmadi Muslims, live under constant threat of blasphemy allegations. The laws prohibit making derogatory remarks against Islam, desecrating the Quran and insulting the Prophet Muhammad, which can be subjectively interpreted in courtrooms and impose fines, jail time and even death.

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Most Popular Christian Facebook Pages Were Fake, Designed To Deceive

All but one of the top 20 Christian Facebook pages operating in Oct. 2019 were fakes, according to an internal Facebook report entitled “How Communities Are Exploited on Our Platforms” that was publicly released by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in September.

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Philip Yancey’s New Memoir Critiques Fundamentalist Upbringing

In an interview with Religion Unplugged, bestselling Christian author Philip Yancey discusses his new memoir, “Where the Light Fell,” about a painful upbringing in poverty and fundamentalism with his brother and single mother that birthed a passionate curiosity and a writing career of many celebrated Christian books over the last 40 years.

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The Future Of American Religion: Birth Rates Show Who's Having More Kids

(ANALYSIS) The data is in: Christianity is aging, younger generations are having fewer children, and without a great influx of new members, thousands of churches will close over the next few decades. But smaller religious groups in the U.S. — like Hindus and Muslims — have younger members who are having more kids.

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Priest Hopes To Rebuild Crusader-era Church Of John The Baptist In Palestine

(ANALYSIS) After completing the decades-long construction of the Jacob’s Well Greek Orthodox Church in the Palestinian city Nablus in 2018, Archimandrite Ioustinos, 81, has an equally lofty ambition to fulfill before he retires.

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Social Media Helps Kashmiri Youth Share And Fund Music To Fight Depression, Isolation

Young Kashmiris are creating and performing new music as therapy to counter the sense of hopelessness, isolation and depression that has gripped their majority-Muslim Himalayan region of North India, which has endured years of conflict, military presence, frequent lockdowns and unpredictable internet bans under a Hindu-first government.

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