News

Gleanings: January 2022

News from Christians around the world.

Matteo Jorjoson / Unsplash / Edits by Rick Szuecs

Church planted beside melting glacier

The first Baptist church has been planted in Ilulissat, Greenland, a town located about 220 miles north of the Arctic Circle. Ilulissat is home to around 4,600 people, roughly the same number of sled dogs, and a glacier that sheds about 11 cubic miles of iceberg into the ocean every year due to climate change. Thousands of tourists come annually to witness the destruction, and one family came to start an Independent Fundamentalist Baptist church. “I asked God to send me somewhere where there weren’t too many Baptist missionaries,” Chris Shull said. The church has about 17 adults in regular attendance. Shull preaches in Greenlandic.

Bishop faces hate speech charges

An Evangelical Lutheran Mission Diocese of Finland bishop will go on trial in January for publishing a politician’s booklet. Prosecutors allege that the publication of “As Man and Woman He Created Them” violates the equality and dignity of LGBT people. Päivi Räsänen, a leader in the small, center-right Christian Democrats, will also go on trial for a tweet that quoted Romans 1:24–27 and an interview she gave on public radio. Bishop Juhana Pohjola told CT he is not concerned about the legal outcome but worries people will be silenced.

Churches upset over election chief

The appointment of a new election commissioner has roiled religious controversy in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The nation’s Protestant and Catholic leaders are tasked with selecting the independent commissioner, who plans and guarantees free and fair elections. The leading candidate, Denis Kadima, is a recognized expert with decades of experience, but backroom support from President Felix Tshisekedi raised suspicions that he would not be independent. The last election ended with widespread allegations of fraud, and church leaders have accused Tshisekedi of drifting toward totalitarianism. Parliament stepped in and appointed Kadima when the churches could not agree unanimously.

Baptist leader murdered

William Richard Tolbert III, a Baptist pastor and the youngest son of a former president of Liberia, William Richard Tolbert Jr., was murdered in his apartment on November 1. The elder Tolbert was president from 1971 to 1980, when he was assassinated in a coup. The younger Tolbert was a political prisoner for 20 months and then went to the US and studied at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He returned to Liberia in 1999, becoming the pastor of a church in Bentol City and an advocate for peace and reconciliation. No one has been charged with his death.

Museum to preserve sacred texts

The Chaldean Orthodox Church has created a new museum for the preservation of ancient Christian and Muslim manuscripts saved from ISIS. It will be built next door to a Dominican mission in Erbil, and the Dominicans will help preserve the documents. Thousands of religious artifacts were located in Qaraqosh, a predominately Christian town, until ISIS fighters took over the Nineveh Plain in 2014. The manuscripts were thought lost, but as ISIS fighters destroyed monasteries, mosques, and churches, a fleeing priest saved as much as he could carry in a van. Several hidden stashes of documents have also been recovered since.

Church opens in prison

A church has been built inside a prison for the first time in Egypt. Wadi el-Natrun, located in the desert about 60 miles from Cairo, is a new prison complex, the first in a planned series of facilities meant to modernize the correctional system. The current prisons are believed to be filled to 200 percent capacity, and the human rights organization Amnesty International has documented extensive abuses of prisioners who criticized the government. Christian leaders have previously been allowed to minister in the prisons, but there was no space designated for worship. In addition to a church, the new prison will also have vocational training facilities.

Church accused of spreading COVID-19

Charismatic pastors Vo Xuan Loan and Phuong Van Tan and 11 members of their Ho Chi Minh congregation have been interrogated amid accusations that the church is the source of a COVID-19 outbreak. A few members of the church got sick at the start of the delta variant’s spread in Vietnam. According to the pastors, the congregation was following health protocols set by the government, which did not yet know the delta variant was more contagious than previous versions of the coronavirus. After larger outbreaks occurred elsewhere, authorities still focused on blaming the church.

Warning about abusive leaders

The head of the Jamaica Evangelical Alliance (JEA) used the case of an apparent ritual killing by an apocalyptic prophet in Montego Bay to warn of the dangers of celebrity-seeking pastors who become abusive. Peter Garth, JEA president and pastor of Hope Gospel Assembly in St. Andrew, said, “Some pastors end up feeding off people, using them to meet their needs or make up for their vulnerabilities.” Healthy congregations, he said, worship Christ “and him alone.” The apocalyptic prophet died in a car crash on his way to a police interrogation.

Cities restrict worship during elections

Several cities in Argentina have said there is a ban on religious celebrations and acts of worship during elections, in some cases prohibiting church services for several days before or after voting. The Argentine Council for Religious Freedom (CALIR) has formally requested that the Ministry of the Interior, which oversees elections, clarify that the election law does not infringe on religious exercise. The country has seen a surge of religious conservatives running for office this year, after the issue of legalizing abortion took center stage in national politics.

Also in this issue

For all the alarms sounded today over declining reading habits, and for all the fears that social-media shallowness has crowded out serious thinking, people still make a big deal of books. We buy them and read them. We discuss and debate them. And we still sense that the deepest, most enduring truths about God and man, about history and contemporary life, are found not on Twitter threads but on the printed page. This is one reason we’re dedicating the bulk of this issue not only to our annual Book Awards but also to books themselves, in the form of excepts from awards finalists (and several winners) that shine a light on some of the finest Christian thinking happening today.

Cover Story

Christianity Today’s 2022 Book Awards

Excerpt

The Cosmos Is More Crowded Than You Think

Henrietta Mears, the Improbable Evangelical Leader

John Stott’s Global God

Our Jan/Feb Issue: Words in the Wild

Are the Arts a Tool, a Temptation, or a Distraction?

Evangelicals Have Made The Trinity a Means to an End. It’s Time to Change That.

How White Rule Ended in Missions

Blessed Are Those Who Embody the Beautitudes

Testimony

I Entered Prison a ‘Protestant.’ I Left a Christian.

If I Had to Bow to an Idol, It Would Be the Sun

Reply All

How to Disagree Nicely but Not Lose Your Convictions

Excerpt

Black Christians Are Confronting Black Lies About Christianity

Parents Set the Pace for Their Adult Children’s Religious Life

News

As COVID-19 Death Tolls Rise, More Americans Want Religious Funerals

News

How Black Missionaries Are Being Written Back into the Story

News

Illinois Eliminated Parole in 1978. These Christians Want to Bring it Back.

Learning to Love Your Limits

Review

Well Done, Good and Faithful Missionary

Excerpt

The Poet Who Prepared the Ground for the Sexual Revolution

View issue

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As Malibu Burns, Pepperdine Withstands the Fire

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My Favorite Books of 2024

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The Door Is Now Open to Churches in Nepal

Seventeen years after the former Hindu kingdom became a secular state, Christians have a pathway to legal recognition.

Why Christians Oppose Euthanasia

The immorality of killing the old and ill has never been in question for Christians. Nor is our duty to care for those the world devalues.

China’s Churches Go Deep Rather than Wide at Christmas

In place of large evangelism outreaches, churches try to be more intentional in the face of religious restrictions and theological changes.

The Holy Family and Mine

Nativity scenes show us the loving parents we all need—and remind me that my own parents estranged me over my faith.

Wire Story

Study: Evangelical Churches Aren’t Particularly Political

Even if members are politically active and many leaders are often outspoken about issues and candidates they support, most congregations make great efforts to keep politics out of the church when they gather.

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