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February 13, 2012

Home > 2009 > JanuaryChristianity Today, January, 2009
Inside CT
Our Priorities for 2009
What direction Christianity Today plans to take.




I'll be honest: Many months we plan issues like a hurricane plans its path. The news comes fast and furious. Cover stories are changed at the last minute. Articles get bumped to the next month, and the next, and the next. An article we counted on was never delivered. A key staffer is laid up for two months. Some months it's amazing that we get an issue out the door!

This reflects part of our work here: to react to what's happening in the world. We believe that Jesus Christ is providentially shaping history to his ends. We try to discern his hand and publish articles that help the church join hands with its Lord.

But a more crucial part of our work is to suggest direction the evangelical movement should consider, regardless of what's in The New York Times this week. Take, for example, the themes we want to highlight in the coming year:

Evangelism: Note this month's cover story (page 20) and lead editorial (page 18). In future issues, we want to feature churches that are sharing the faith in ways that are both faithful and effective. And later in the year, we'll start a series of articles that explores the greatest worldwide challenges to evangelism.

Catechesis: That's the classic word for the church's teaching ministry. We are a movement that has specialized in, "Go and make disciples …" We have not been as strong at "… and teach them all that I have commanded you." We want church leaders to employ their creative skills even more so to this part of the Great Commission. We also want to more consistently feature articles that teach the faith's core themes, doing so from an engaging, journalistic perspective—that is, showing how those themes intersect with current events and contemporary culture.

The Uniqueness of Jesus Christ: This is one of those themes. Much of the theological confusion we see today (such as universalism, pluralism, and relativism) is at heart confusion about the person and work of Jesus Christ. Highlighting this theme can also help check our movement's temptation toward moralism, which looks like faithfulness, but since its focus is on what we do, is really a denial of the faith.

Abortion: With the advent of a more liberal administration, many social conservatives are talking gloom and despair. To be sure, the challenges are great, and we need to think and strategize clearly. But we happen to think that the best days of the pro-life movement are ahead. As has been said in other contexts, "Yes, we can."

The Environment: Our pro-life conviction does not end with the womb, but encompasses the welfare of the entire planet. We have no expertise to weigh in on specific environmental proposals, but we think that significant biblical and theological reflection can guide us as we care for all of God's creation.

Persecution: This has been a long-standing theme of CT's, but we want to go deeper than we have ever gone. Persecution stories tend to blend together so that we lose the personal dimension. But to be the universal church, we need to engage not just intellectually but also emotionally with our suffering brothers and sisters.

And yes, we will still cover the usual array of news events, stories of churches reaching out to their communities, interviews with key players in our movement and culture, and essays and editorials on a variety of topics. But these are the themes we will bring special attention to this year. Assuming no "hurricanes," of course.



Related Elsewhere:

Today, you can vote on Christianity Today's themes in our daily poll.





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Displaying 1–5 of 16 comments

Denise

January 05, 2009  11:00pm

I would like to see an approach to your priority topics that is not partisan or pushing a particular political party. Since you are interested in the teachings and person of Jesus, please note that Jesus was not a Democrat or a Republican. Words such as liberal and conservative are divisive and unhelpful in advancing evangelism. I believe it is important for people of faith to stand up for our convictions but to do so with humility and genuine love. We say we are doers of the word. Let's make that assertion a reality. Thank you for being willing to delve into these topics without becoming a medium that uses them as a cover for Obama/Democrat/liberal/progressive bashing.

Julian

January 05, 2009  3:43pm

This rating is for your attack on moralism, tolerance, peace, several isms you seemed to have made up...if what you do is sit around and fret about questions like free will, the Trinity, inerrancy that will never be successfully resolved you miss the real work the church must do. Peace. Dialogue with the Abrahamic religions at a minimum. Building houses for the poor. Food kitchens. Talk about these, please.

Beau in NC

January 05, 2009  3:39pm

C. Berry, you sound like someone who needs to read more broadly and speak more persuasively. If you are really interested in whether climate change is real, you need to read more than just what the coal, oil and mining industries want you to believe. Try expanding your scope of research and thinking more independently than the editorial position of the Wall Street Journal. And writing in all caps is the equivalent of shouting, which will get you nowhere, as will name-calling.

tianluke

January 05, 2009  3:37am

Great! God bless you.

Peter

January 04, 2009  11:07am

Looks good. Priorities seem right on target. Also speaking out on environmental issues is definately important. Down playing politics and the associated bickering and less than loving attitude and dialogue that has been going on amongst our Christian community will be a major plus.

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