Posts in North America
Part-Time Preaching: Few Churches Can Fully Support Their Ministers Today

Supporting a full-time minister requires an average of 130 or more in worship, but 65% of American churches count an average of fewer than 100 in worship. So, from flight attendant to funeral director, secular jobs help pay the bills for bivocational ministers.

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How Christmas Became An American Holiday Tradition, With A Santa Claus, Gifts And A Tree

(ANALYSIS) Each season, the celebration of Christmas has religious leaders and conservatives publicly complaining about the commercialization of the holiday and the growing lack of Christian sentiment. Many people seem to believe that there was once a way to celebrate the birth of Christ in a more spiritual way.


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Q&A With Daisy Khan: How She Advances Women's Rights Informed By Islam

Amid heightened needs of Afghan girls and women, ReligionUnplugged interviews Daisy Khan, one of the most prominent female Muslim leaders in the U.S., about her work leading the Women’s Islamic Initiative in Spirituality and Equality to advance the rights of women based on the spiritual principles’ integral to the Islamic faith.

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5 Best Places In The World To Attend Midnight Mass On Christmas

(TRAVEL) Among all the hustle, bustle and stress that comes with Christmas, we should also all be reminded that it is a time of prayer. While prayer can take up many forms, Catholics are returning to in-person Mass now that COVID-19 lockdowns have largely been done away with.

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Survivors Of Deadly Tornado Deal With Aftermath — With Help From Churches

Taga Jones’ home is one of hundreds destroyed by a rare December tornado that tore through four states — Arkansas, Missouri, Tennessee and Kentucky — in four hours. It was part of a Dec. 10-11 outbreak in which more than 30 tornadoes were reported across six states.

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Christian 'Health Share' Ministry Left Members With Millions In Unpaid Medical Claims

On Nov. 29, the U.S. District Court in Kentucky entered judgments of nearly $4.7 million against Aliera, which marketed “sham policies” and “realized exorbitant profits” by declining to pay claims and instead retaining 84% of customer donations, in violation of federal requirements.

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Very Few Religious Americans Favor A Total Abortion Ban

(ANALYSIS) While many state legislatures and the U.S. Supreme Court seem to be ready to reverse Roe v. Wade and ban or severely limit abortion, the majority of Americans want abortion to be available as a choice, and the share who would support a total ban on the practice is incredibly small.

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Christian Children's Home With Faith-Based Restrictions Sues To Keep Federal Funding

A Christian children’s home in Tennessee that receives federal funds for some of its programs has sued the Biden administration, challenging its reversal of Trump-era exemptions that gave some Christian child welfare agencies the option to deny the placement of children with foster or adoptive parents who do not agree with their faith and beliefs.

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How Today’s Conspiracy Theories Echo The Satanic Panic

(ANALYSIS) Forty years after a nationwide “satanic panic” that stoked fears of ritual child abuse, conspiracy theories are latching onto fears of the devil — from the false belief that tracking devices are in COVID-19 vaccines to theories that the Astroworld tragedy was a satanic sacrifice.

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Carson V. Makin Explained: What's At Stake For Religious Schools, LGBTQ Kids

(ANALYSIS) The Supreme Court will hear a potentially landmark case for religious schools on Dec. 8, Carson v. Makin. Up for discussion is whether Maine’s law, which excludes religious schools from the diversity of schooling options that families have access to in a public student aid program, infringes on First Amendment constitutional protections.

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These Are The Women Heroes Behind The Scenes of The Hanukkah Story

(ANALYSIS) On the surface, Hanukkah is a story of male heroism. A ragtag rebel force led by a rural priest and his five sons, called the Maccabees, freed the Jews from oppressive rulers. But seeing Hanukkah this way misses the inspiring women who were prominent in the earliest tellings of the story.

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Tennessee Pastor Reflects On His Effort To Erect Black Soldier Statue

On Oct. 23, hundreds gathered in Franklin, Tennessee, to witness the erection of a Civil War statue featuring a U.S. Colored Troops soldier. Chris Williamson, the senior pastor of Strong Tower Bible Church reflected for the ReligionUnplugged.com podcast on what the moment meant and the role the church must play in such debates.

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Have Conservative And Progressive Christianity Become Two Separate Religions?

(OPINION) Is Christianity in the United States becoming two different religions? The scenario is explored at book length in "One Faith No Longer" (New York University Press) by Baylor University sociologist George Yancey and Ashlee Quosigk, a visiting scholar of religion at the University of Georgia.

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'Dune' And The Taliban’s Victory In Afghanistan

(REVIEW) The latest Hollywood blockbuster “Dune,” a space opera based on Frank Herbert’s 1965 novel of the same name, is essentially a philosophical thought experiment that asks, How would Islam adapt and change thousands of years into the future on a distant desert planet? By projecting into the future, the film highlights our present reality.

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Maine School District Challenged For Assisting Children Attending Religious Schools

(OPINION) The question of what boundaries should exist for state aid to students who attend religious schools will be in the spotlight Dec. 8, when the court hears arguments in a case from Maine: Carson v. Makin. The case has drawn intense interest from educators and religious-liberty advocates across the country.


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