Reporting at the Speed of Cyberspace

Christianity Today took a major step in truly covering Christianity today as we launched a Web-based version of the magazine at www.ChristianityToday.com a year ago. Since then we have posted more than 1,000 articles, some from the print pages of this magazine and some exclusively available on our site. From the Family Research Council staff’s spurning of Gary Bauer to the anti-Trinitarianism of dieting guru Gwen Shamblin, the site has allowed us to report and break news on issues facing the church and on what we perceive God to be doing in the world.We’ve also added weekly features such as Film Forum (a weekly roundup of what Christian critics are saying about new films, and how they view popular culture) and original columns from two of our closest sister publications, Books & Culture and Christian History. There is also Weblog, a daily roundup of news and opinion pieces from mainstream media sources around the world. More weekly features will be added in the coming months.Many of the articles on our site you’ll never see in print. But even the articles you do read in our print version are worth hopping online for when you finish. Every article is linked to such resources as relevant ministries’ home pages, other resourceful Web sites, similar topics in other publications, and related past articles from Christianity Today. This month we’re adding new features to the site, including message boards and a way to browse the site by topic as well as by date. (Be sure to sign up for the CT Direct e-mail newsletter to keep abreast of all our site’s updates and changes.)Our improvements are part of a massive relaunch of Christianity Today International’s corporate Web site. Many CT readers are unaware that CTI publishes 11 other print publications. All of them are united in a common aim: to inform, engage, connect, and equip Christians. And because we believe the name Christianity Today best signals that mission, we’re moving all of our publications under the ChristianityToday.com URL. You can still find us there, but you’ll also find Leadership, Books & Culture, Christian History, and Christianity Today International’s other magazines. Still, if you’d rather go directly to CT’s daily features, you can do so with only seven more keystrokes: www.christianitytoday.com/ctmag/.One of the reasons we’ve been able to add so many articles to our site recently is the doubling of Christianity Today‘s online editorial staff. (It’s no longer just me, and I am glad to have the company.)You may already be familiar with Jody Veenker. For the last year, she has served as editorial resident for CT’s news department, writing articles on everything from women’s prison ministries to our September 4 special news report on Scientology. In July she joined the company in a permanent position as assistant online editor.”I like giving people information they can’t get anywhere else,” she says, noting that the Internet allows people to have more comprehensive information—and have it faster—than ever before.Having completed her undergraduate work at Sarah Lawrence College, with one year at Oxford University thrown in for good measure, Jody received her master’s degree from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. She just moved from Palatine to Crystal Lake as part of a church plant.

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Also in this issue

Undying Worm, Unquenchable Fire: What is hell—eternal torment or annihilation? A look at the Evangelical Alliance's The Nature of Hell.

Cover Story

Undying Worm, Unquenchable Fire

Robert A. Peterson

Biotech: Tissue of Lies?

Denyse O'Leary

Is the Stock Market Good Stewardship?

Raymond Albrektson

Camus the Christian?

James W. Sire

Machiavelli Marooned

Robert Pyne

The Back Page | Philip Yancey: Getting a Life

Gwen Shamblin in the Balance

John W. Kennedy with additional reporting by Todd Starnes

SBC Funding Imperiled

Updates

School Vouchers Face Tight Races

Mark Kellner

Briefs: North America

Quotations to Contemplate

Fire and Ice

Debra Fieguth

Vatican: Protestants Not 'Sister Churches'

Luigi Sandri, Cedric Pulford and Edmund Doogue

Smack Down

Tony Carnes

Colombia: Abducted Pastor Pays His Own Ransom on Installment Plan

Deann Alford

Briefs: The World

Nigeria: Will Shari'a Law Curb Christianity?

Obed Minchakpu

North Korea: 7 Christian Executions Suspected

Compass Direct

Ecuador: Word and Spirit Together

Kenneth MacHarg

Grunge Boomers in Concert

Sheryl Blunt

Good News for Witches

Lauren F. Winner

Rightly Dividing the Hell Debate

Coming to Terms

Free to Be Creatures Again

Jennifer L. Bayne and Sarah E. Hinlicky

Beyond Self-Help Chatter

Big-Picture Faith

Love Your Heavenly Enemy

Miroslav Volf

The Transcendental Gore

Tony Carnes

More Than a Badge and a Gun

Wendy Murray Zoba

Lessons From Two Sides of AIDS

Corrie Cutrer

Shelly Wift's Tips for Witnessing to Witches

A Wicca Primer

Editorial

Honest Ecumenism

A Christianity Today Editorial

Scouts in a Jam?

A Christianity Today Editorial

The Fallacy of Missile Defense

Darryl Brown and Tricia Gates Brown

The Perils of Harry Potter

Jacqui Komschlies

In the Word: The Grim Shepherd

Haddon Robinson

Your World: Unrighteous Indignation

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Why Scripture talks of our entreaties to God as rising like incense.

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In 1962, CT engaged friends and enemies in the Cold War and the Second Vatican Council.

May Cause a Spontaneous Outburst of Festive Joy

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The Bulletin with Nicole Martin and Walter Kim

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An excerpt from ‘The War for Middle-Earth: J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis Confront the Gathering Storm, 1933–1945.’

The Bulletin

Kidnappings in Nigeria, Rep. Greene Resigns, Mamdani Meets Trump

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

Persecution in Nigeria, Marjorie Taylor Greene resigns, Mamdani and Trump have a friendly meeting, and listeners give thanks.

Let There Be Hope

Chad Bird

God is still at work amidst darkness.

Christmas in Wartime

Daniel Darling

How can Christians possibly pause for Advent in a world so dark?

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