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Responses to our September issue.

Edits by Christianity Today / Source Image: Mary Skrynnikova / Unsplash

There Are Many Mansions in Heaven, but We’d Like Something Sooner

Three days after I passed the Kentucky real estate exam, I was greeted with the September issue. As I read Julie Kilcur’s thoughtful analysis of what home truly means, I was taken back to when my wife and I visited Eastern Kentucky to help with disaster recovery after the devastating floods there. As we worked ripping our host family’s house down to the studs, I was in awe of the love and faith they continued to show. The flood had destroyed their house and just about everything in it, but it hadn’t touched their home. I’ll always keep that family in my heart as a reminder of why I chose real estate.

Chris Cole Alexandria, KY

This is tone-deaf. While some may be seeking their HGTV dream home, many cannot afford a basic starter home because housing costs are so high compared to income and availability is low.

@lauraflynnsteele (Instagram)

The Curious Case of Coronavirus Contagion in Church

As an infectious disease physician, this article caught my eye. I pulled up the actual study and read it. It is not worth the paper it was written on. [Among] my reasons for saying that are: (1) A huge dropout rate: 50 percent. (2) How many people tested positive? Twenty-three. How many were ill but did not get tested? We don’t know. (3) They asked people if they knew someone with COVID-19. The question should have been, were they around someone with COVID-19. I would advise you, please be cautious about the results of published studies, even in the best of peer-reviewed journals.

Paul Jost Leawood, KS

Stopping Abuse Is Sexual Ethics 101

I am one of those abusers. [Over a decade ago], I was arrested and gave nine hours of confession to crimes in the church, sex crimes against minors. I pled guilty and signed for 165 years without parole. I am freer now than ever before. The most resounding statement in your article was “The abusers, enablers, and fixers lurking in our pulpits and pews have no healthy fear. As a result, they take their sins to the closet instead of the altar and lose the ability to discern good from evil.” Wow! How true that was for me! I took all my sins from my childhood and hid them, never telling anyone of the abuse. And then I became what I hated. And not wanting to be exposed and face the wrath of the church, I hid more sins in the closet instead of taking them to the altar. I wanted help, prayed for help, but I feared the church’s wrath and its exile more than God and his mercy and grace. There is no help for me. But there is hope out there for those that I have hurt. I pray they have gotten the help they needed. I pray you keep speaking out about this. I wish I would have spoken out a long time ago.

Johnny L. Wooten Lovelady, TX

Sexual ethics in the church is complex. So I was surprised by Ms. Dilley’s assertion that “the Left’s view of sex is misguided.” Who or what is meant by “the Left”? I consider myself a progressive Christian in many respects, and I subscribe to conservative views on sex. Where do I fit? I have been a reader since the 1970s, and I value CT’s usual even-handed approach to difficult subjects.

Pat Walsh Clifton, NJ

If the author is proposing a theological diagnosis, I’m not sure why she stopped short of naming it as idolatry. The SBC board worshiped their reputation, valued power over love, and trampled the Golden Rule. This fails to examine how the board might think they were fearing God while protecting abusers.

Martin Howard (Facebook)

Refugees create and need communities of fellow immigrants to support each other, but encouragement given by US citizens can be a big help as well.

Denise Dutton (Facebook)

How Americans Got Away with Abortion Before ‘Roe v. Wade’

It seems the author makes no attempt to pit enforcement against persuasion despite the subtitle “Christians should focus less on enforcement than on changing cultural attitudes.” One can agree that “laws helpfully affect the supply side, but problems of enforcement are all the more reason to keep trying to lower demand and change public sentiment.” How this leads to the conclusion that we should direct our focus away from the law I failed to see. I was extremely disappointed for a number of reasons: (1) It dismisses the moral necessity of the law. The law does matter. The law is a teacher. We abandon the necessity of the law as an embodiment of moral permission and prohibition at our own peril. (2) It’s morally objectionable. Could one really fathom an article reciting the history of racial oppression in order to make the claim “We should focus less on enforcing an anti-slavery law than on changing racist attitude”? CT has a laudable record regarding pro-life advocacy. I’m grateful, and I hope it continues without qualification.

C. J. Carter Lexington, KY

There Is No One Fully Optimized, Not Even One

Readers of Low Anthropology may wish to check out the views of John Calvin at age 26 in 1536, when he wrote, “Nearly all the wisdom which we possess, that is to say, true and sound wisdom, consists of two parts: the knowledge of God and of ourselves. But, while joined by many bonds, which one precedes and brings forth the other is not easy to discern.” It was the opening lines of his Institutes.

Ted Boswell Chicago

Also in this issue

Our cover story this month examines the dramatic increase in physician-assisted deaths in Canada and its growing public acceptance. How are Christian doctors navigating this shifting landscape? How can the church respond? Plus: What healing looks like in Buffalo six months after the Tops massacre, ancient images of women in ministry, Paul’s model for social media, and more.

Cover Story

Canada Euthanized 10,000 People in 2021. Has Death Lost Its Sting?

Myanmar’s Christians Fight for Peace

News

Environmental Train Wreck: Houston’s Black Churches Fight Pollutants

In a Sea of National Tragedies, Look to Buffalo’s Christians

Lament Is More Than a Country Song

What’s Wrong with Winsomeness?

The Collateral Damage of Sin

A New Solution to Gun Violence: Neighborly Care

Conversation Is Hospitality—Even on Social Media

What Ancient Italian Churches Tell Us About Women in Ministry

Our November Issue: What Happens When We Testify

News

Why Should Pastors Get All the Good Theology Textbooks?

Excerpt

Don’t Let Missions Fall Prey to ‘Genericide’

We See the Morning Star More Brightly Through the Ages

Testimony

I Untied My Noose and Took Up My Cross

News

‘Our Father Who Art in Heaven’ Evidence of Russian Torture

News

Billy Graham Gets State-of-the-Art Archive

News

More Evangelical Women Have Had Sex With Women Than You Might Think

Tell Me Your Beliefs on Sex Without Telling Me Your Beliefs on Sex

Review

The World’s Logic Says Diversity Begets Division. Gospel Logic Says Otherwise.

Review

Christian Orthodoxy Is Your Ticket to a Land of Adventure

New & Noteworthy Books

View issue

Our Latest

Wicked or Misunderstood?

A conversation with Beth Moore about UnitedHealthcare shooting suspect Luigi Mangione and the nature of sin.

Why Armenian Christians Recall Noah’s Ark in December

The biblical account of the Flood resonates with a persecuted church born near Mount Ararat.

Review

The Virgin Birth Is More Than an Incredible Occurrence

We’re eager to ask whether it could have happened. We shouldn’t forget to ask what it means.

The Nine Days of Filipino Christmas

Some Protestants observe the Catholic tradition of Simbang Gabi, predawn services in the days leading up to Christmas.

The Bulletin

Neighborhood Threat

The Bulletin talks about Christians in Syria, Bible education, and the “bad guys” of NYC.

Join CT for a Live Book Awards Event

A conversation with Russell Moore, Book of the Year winner Gavin Ortlund, and Award of Merit winner Brad East.

Excerpt

There’s No Such Thing as a ‘Proper’ Christmas Carol

As we learn from the surprising journeys of several holiday classics, the term defies easy definition.

Advent Calls Us Out of Our Despair

Sitting in the dark helps us truly appreciate the light.

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