(ANALYSIS) A coalition of civil society organizations announced the launch of the Peopleâs Tribunal for Women of Afghanistan, an initiative to address the impunity for the dire situation of women and girls in Afghanistan.
Read More(ANALYSIS) Among the little-noticed aspects of the 2024 U.S. election is Muslimsâ substantial 33% vote for Donald Trump â with a remarkable 42% backing from those who attend mosque weekly. Thatâs an increase from past elections.
Read MoreA June terrori attack, the deadliest in recent memory, sent shockwaves through Syria's dwindling Christian population, communities that have endured in this ancient land for almost two millennia. Now, many fear they are witnessing the final chapter of one of Christianity's oldest continuous presences anywhere in the world.
Read MoreThe 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.
Read MoreAs students head back to the classroom, theyâre likely to see the impact of local churches in their schools this year. A Lifeway Research study found that four in five U.S. Protestant pastors identify at least one way their congregations have engaged with local public schools in the last year. Only 18% of churches say they werenât involved with area schools.
Read More(ANALYSIS) My first book was entitled âThe Nones: Where They Came From, Who They Are, and Where They Are Going.â It was published â what feels like a lifetime ago â in 2021. Iâm pretty proud of that little volume because it established my approach to thinking about non-religion in the United States.
Read MoreWeekend Plug-in columnist Bobby Ross Jr. reflects on his 35 years in full-time journalism. It started with the editor of a small-town Oklahoma newspaper taking a chance on him.
Read MoreActivist 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.
Read More(ANALYSIS) With a nod to digital life, Merriam-Webster has expanded its âinfluencerâ definition to include a âperson who is able to generate interest in something (such as a consumer product) by posting about it on social media.â Pope Leo XIV didn't use that term in his latest remarks on faith in the internet age, even while addressing the recent Vatican Jubilee for Digital Missionaries and Influencers.
Read More(ESSAY) On Aug. 9, 1945, the U.S. dropped a bomb called âFat Manâ on Urakami, Japan, the most Christian suburb of the most Christian city in Japan: Nagasaki. It is the forgotten bomb, the silent bomb. Hiroshima, being the city where the first nuclear bomb, less powerful than the Nagasaki bomb was detonated, is the atomic bombing that all peace movements acclaim: âNo more Hiroshimas!â
Read More(ANALYSIS) The situation in Gaza requires urgent attention and response from the international community â to prevent further civilian suffering and death. While some steps have been taken to provide humanitarians assistance, as it stands, the steps appear to be too little and too late to address the current and ever-growing needs of the population.
Read More(ANALYSIS) PCA folks, itâs your moment â few denominations punch above their weight online like you do. Hereâs why.
Read MoreDeion Sanders canât â or wonât â stop talking about the Lord. Especially now. This week, Coloradoâs head football coach mentioned God and faith at least three dozen times during a 40-minute news conference to discuss his private battle with bladder cancer.
Read MoreChanneling the rage on the Bluesky social-media platform, Sunny Hostin at âThe Viewâ claimed that the decision by CBS executives to cancel Stephen Colbert's âLate Showâ could be the start of dangerous people "dismantling of our Constitution.â This raised questions for me, several of which were discussed during this weekâs âCrossroadsâ podcast. For starters, who â other than President Donald Trump & Co. â were these dangerous people? Did this include millions of Americans who used to watch late-night TV and are now watching whatever they choose to watch on YouTube?
Read MoreBrent Leatherwood has resigned as president of the Southern Baptist Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, ending nearly nine years of service that began in 2017 as director of strategic partnerships. The ERLC Board of Trustees accepted Leatherwoodâs resignation in a called meeting Thursday in Nashville, gratefully noting his character and achievements in the role he began in 2021 in an acting capacity before becoming president in 2022.
Read MoreSchool choice and Christian education advocates are lauding an unprecedented provision buried in the 1,116 pages of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed into law on July 4 by President Donald Trump. However, questions remain about the first-ever federal private school tax credit.
Read MoreThe University of California agreed to pay $6.13 million to settle a lawsuit accusing the school of antisemitism in its handling of campus protests that excluded Jews from sections of the campus. Hours later, the DOJ said UCLA violated the civil rights of Jewish students, neglecting âobligations under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.â
Read MoreAs the U.S. prepares to celebrate its 250th anniversary next year, another significant institution hits that milestone this week. The Army Chaplains Corps formed on July 29, 1775, at the behest of the Second Continental Congress and the request of General George Washington. The Navy Chaplains Corps would follow in November of that same year.
Read MoreâA love offering from the Baptist Church in Gazaâ proclaims the sign as Christian Mission to Gaza serves hot meals to both Christians and Muslims in the Gaza Strip, where people are starving to death. CMG served about 2,000 hot meals over the weekend July 24-26 in the name of Gaza Baptist, said Hanna Massad, who served as the churchâs first Palestinian pastor before founding CMG. But the meals only touch a small fraction of those in need.
Read More(ANALYSIS) Unless a federal court challenge succeeds, American clergy are now free to endorse political candidates in sermons during worship. The Internal Revenue Service has just erased the pulpit prohibition that for 71 years was among conditions to obtain federal tax exemption on income and donor gifts. The impact is tough to predict.
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