The Next Redesign

Look for Christianity Today‘s new and improved presence online.

Readers of Christianity Today‘s masthead may notice a new but familiar name this month: Online editor Sarah Pulliam is now Sarah Pulliam Bailey, thanks to her September wedding. If the new last name sounds familiar, that’s because her husband, Jason, was a CT news intern in 2006. He succeeded another talented intern by the name of, well, Sarah Pulliam.

Sarah and Jason were already dating by then, having met during Wheaton College’s freshmen orientation as Jason recruited students for the college newspaper. “He introduced me to my first love; we started dating about a year later,” Sarah says. After her internship, Sarah became one of CT’s regular freelance reporters, and we were thrilled to hire her even before her graduation. She’s all over the magazine—for example, her profile of Charisma editor Lee Grady—but these days, most of her work appears on our website. She oversees our politics blog, regularly contributes to our women’s blog (Her.meneutics), edits online copy, and writes stories that have impressed many in the news business. (The last day of her honeymoon, she won an award from the Religion Newswriters Association for her reporting for The Columbus Dispatch while still a student.)

Our website is undergoing some significant changes of its own. Now that we are done redesigning the print magazine, we’re retooling our online presence to be more timely, more informative, and easier to navigate. Among the first changes to the site: bringing our coverage of music and film a bit closer to CT’s core. Directors, actors, singers, and bands all have their passionate fan bases, but Mark Moring—who wrote this month’s cover story on Christian musicians’ aid efforts—has created a fan base of his own while overseeing Christianity Today Movies and Christian Music Today. Since we relaunched our website with daily news and regular online reviews a decade ago this month, Christian review sites have proliferated. But CT’s pop culture coverage has become a rare place where nervous parents, art snobs, and groups in between have found thoughtful commentary that goes beyond cuss counting or consumer advice.

We have some great ideas for the site that we’re not quite ready to share, but in the meantime, we’re eager to hear from you about what you’d most like to see from CT online. We work hard to make the print magazine a comprehensive overview of what God is doing in the church and in the world. But it’s a big world, and there’s plenty to cover online. What do you want to see more of? Less of? What kinds of information do you feel you aren’t getting enough of? Let us know at cteditor@christianitytoday.com.

Next issue: Why Jesus is still the only way, evidence for life after death, and a Christmas meditation from Afghanistan.

Copyright © 2009 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Inside CT is posted with Christianity Today‘s article on Lee Grady and sidebar. CT recently posted November’s cover story on Christian musicians’ aid efforts.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

News

Songs of Justice, Missions of Mercy

Excerpt

'Tithing' by Douglas LeBlanc

A Middle Way

Review

Mourning as Gospel Drama

Quick Media Takes

My Top 5 Movies on Thankfulness

The Green Baptist

'A Voice for Sanity'

Trees Of Life

Review

The Cleaner

Christ at the Center

Wilson's Bookmarks

'O, Evangelicos!'

The Best and Worst New Tech

Readers Write

News

A Different Kind of Neighbor

News

Beauty Will Rise

News

Less Charity, More Justice

News

Clean Water, Clean Blood

My Top 5 Books on Life Ethics

Review

Mystic with a Spreadsheet

The Mushroom Hunt

Let us Tell You a Story

News

Go Figure

Matrix: International Religious Liberty Advocates

Editorial

Looking for Clear Signals

News

Most Improbable Dialogue

News

Not All Evangelicals and Catholics Together

News

The Litmus Test

News

Splitting Babies

News

Nigeria: Christian Movie Capital of the World

News

Should Christians Fast During Ramadan With Muslims?

Sin: The Rest of the Story

News

Quotation Marks

Destiny or Free Will?

News

Mass Arrest: Christianity and the Deadly Mexico Drug War

American Idols

View issue

Our Latest

Latino Churchesโ€™ Vibrant Testimony

Hispanic American congregations tend to be young, vibrant, and intergenerational. The wider church has much to learn with and from them.

Review

Modern โ€˜Technocultureโ€™ Makes the World Feel Unnaturally Godless

By changing our experience of reality, it tempts those who donโ€™t perceive God to conclude that he doesnโ€™t exist.

The Bulletin

A Brief Word from Our Sponsor

The Bulletin recaps the 2024 vice presidential debate, discusses global religious persecution, and explores the dynamics of celebrity Christianity.

News

Evangelicals Struggle to Preach Life in the Top Country for Assisted Death

Canadian pastors are lagging behind a national push to expand MAID to those with disabilities and mental health conditions.

Excerpt

The Chinese Christian Who Helped Overcome Illiteracy in Asia

Yan Yangchu taught thousands of peasants to read and write in the early 20th century.

What Would Lecrae Do?

Why Kendrick Lamarโ€™s question matters.

No More Sundays on the Couch

COVID got us used to staying home. But itโ€™s the work of Godโ€™s people to lift up the name of Christ and receive Godโ€™s Wordโ€”together.

Review

Safety Shouldnโ€™t Come First

A theologian questions our habit of elevating this goal above all others.

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