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Responses to our March issue.

The Multiethnic Church Movement Hasn’t Lived up to Its Promise

We are a part of a multiethnic network that has 12 sovereign churches using our building. They are immigrant/refugee congregations. Over the past several years, we have seen them form into a body of believers resourcing each other, encouraging each other, and blessing the former “white” church with their presence. Although racism has been displayed, the network’s unity has been the key to being able to challenge existing power structures.

Ray Smith Salt Lake City, UT

Paul’s Letter to a Prejudiced Church

We white Christians often breeze over the problems of bringing Jews and Gentiles together in one church—like all it takes is a little love and tolerance. Is it a matter of creating a “new” culture out of two or three native cultures? I don’t think so. The process has to be a slow, open-minded learning process with an open exchange of cultural ideas leading toward a deeper understanding. Further, I think that because we in the white church have developed attitudes of superiority, the largest changes in perception might well have to come from white people willing to give up some of that privilege in order to learn.

Jack Scott Batavia, IL

Why the Children of Immigrants Are Returning to Their Religious Roots

I went to a majority white church to heal and be fed spiritually at a different level, but I still often feel like I don’t quite fit in. I still praise God with clapping and shouting “Hallelujah,” but it feels lonely, even discouraging, when you’re the only one. I’m always glad when our Indian ministry partner visits, because him being up front encouraging an interactive and responsive worship experience makes me feel less alone.

Yessenia Garcia (Facebook)

The Premature Victory of a Vacant Cross

Deep appreciation for Daniel Harrell’s thoughtful piece on the centrality of the cross of Jesus Christ in this particular Lenten season when the sins of nationalism, American exceptionalism, and white supremacy “cling so closely.” Thank you for such a timely and courageous editorial.

B. Hunter Farrell Pittsburgh, PA

Scriptural Meditation Promises Something Better than Zen

Jen Wilkin’s beautiful description of Christian meditation is a practice I would call prayerful study. I reserve the term Christian meditation for a more inward place, a place that may precede or follow the practice Jen describes. I experienced it at four when the sight of a huge spiderweb weighted with dew, each droplet a prism of the morning sun, stopped my breath and overwhelmed me with my first awareness of his presence. Every morning I sit in that silence.

David Donaldson Golden, CO

Jesus tells us that there are two “great and foremost commandment[s]” (Matt. 22:3, NASB). One is found in Deuteronomy 6:4–7. “Rumination begets illumination,” the wonderful quote from Jen Wilkin, distills the fruit of that command. She obviously has the gift of teaching, and my appreciation.

Paul Smith Sagle, ID

Pray to God for Protection. Then Praise Him for Your Mask.

I figure God gave us experts to aid us along our journey. Doctors, teachers, pastors, and friends.

JoEllen Huneryager Myers (Facebook)

Replanting Can Work. A Church Just Has to Die and Rise Again.

Your piece is an example of everything I love about a good CT article: a detailed picture of how the church is lovely because Jesus loves his church. As a writer, I particularly enjoyed how you weaved phrases from Scripture throughout the piece to really give it the “feel” of church. I could hear Linda and Debbie talking as I read it; they sound like such fun storytellers! It was a really timely reminder of how God remains faithful to us throughout the journey of learning to follow him.

Meagan Gillmore Toronto, Ontario

When Violent Nationalism Backfired for God’s People

The article was weakened by a poorly developed—and in my view, suspect—interpretation of Jesus’ cleansing of the temple. Bird proposes that the object of Jesus’ anger was not the commercialization of temple worship, rather that the temple “had become an emblem of Jewish resistance against Rome.” So why did Jesus’ attack focus on those selling and changing money? Don’t Jesus’ words suggest he is angry about profiteering?

Charles Kankelborg Bozeman, MT

What is missing in this article is an explanation of Luke 22:36–38. Unfortunately, there would be those who crashed into the Capitol defending their actions by Jesus’ words in this passage.

Ron Berg Carbon, Alberta

What the Heavens Declared to a Young Astronomer

The testimonies at the end of each issue are the icing on the cake! Diverse, encouraging, and beautiful to read the ways God brings people to himself.

@MeganHobbit

Also in this issue

Ministries and other Christian workplaces increasingly require employees to sign non-disparagement agreements and “no gossip” policies. Our cover story this month explores how the Bible describes gossip and how our understanding of it does and doesn’t line up. When does clamping down on rumors help the church, and when does it create conditions for abuse?

Cover Story

Why Defining Gossip Matters in the Church’s Response to Abuse

The Unearthed Conscience of Black Fundamentalism

Sometimes You Have to Shake the Dust Off Your Feet

‘Be Clean’: Jesus and the World of Ritual Impurity

News

Diversity Advocates at Evangelical Colleges: ‘In Some Ways, You’re Seen as a Heretic’

News

Pastors Take to the Streets to Combat NYC Gun Violence

News

How Seven Soldiers Carried One Bible into 11 Combat Tours

News

Religious Discrimination Complaints Hit 10-Year Low

News

Gleanings: May 2021

Our May/June Issue: Discerning Good Gossip from Bad

How We Got to the Equality Act

Excerpt

It’s Okay to Let Your Mind Wander During Prayer

Log Off and Know that I Am God

Editorial

Back Without a Bang: Returning to Church Won’t Be the Celebration We Once Imagined

Let the Little Children Come to ‘Big Church’

Testimony

The Woodstock Generation Swallowed Me Up and Spit Me Out

Michael Lindsay: Our Lives Are Full of ‘Hinge Moments.’ Here’s How We Can Pray and Prepare.

Reading God’s Word like a Poem, Not an Instruction Manual

Review

Christians Can Learn from Muslims. But There Are Lines We Shouldn’t Cross.

Review

Christians Should Be in the News Cycle, but Not of It

New & Noteworthy Books

View issue

Our Latest

Inside the Ministry

The Next Generation Is Ready. Are We?

See how CT is investing in the next generation of the Church—and how you can, too.

The CDC Listened to Vaccine-Hesitant Moms in My Living Room

I was surprised to find myself hosting an off-the-record chat with people worlds apart on public health. But I hope that night was a seed of something new.

The Russell Moore Show

Listener question: Why Aren’t Christians Engaging in Humanitarian Aid?

Russell takes a listener’s question about the crisis of humanitarian aid and why Christians are not stepping in to help.

New Archbishop of Canterbury Steps into Anglican Divides

Conservatives call on Sarah Mullally, the first woman at the spiritual helm of the Church of England, to uphold biblical faith amid same-sex blessings debate.

News

FDA Approves Generic Abortion Pill

Students for Life leader calls the move “a stain on the Trump presidency.”

You Haven’t Heard Worship Music like This

John Van Deusen’s praise is hard-won and occasionally wordless.

The Russell Moore Show

BONUS: Lecrae on Reconstruction after Disillusionment

 Lecrae joins Russell Moore to take questions from Christianity Today subscribers

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