Christianity Today in 2025

A year in review of our most read articles and favorite stories.

Images from CT articles.
Christianity Today December 23, 2025
Illustration by Christianity Today

In this series, we’ve curated several categories of CT articles that we think are worth returning to. Browse our list of 2025’s big stories, book reviews, podcasts, obituaries, testimonies, and more. You can also read this year’s top 10 discoveries in biblical archeology, along with our most read stories of the global church.

This year, CT published more than 6,000 translations, including stories featured in the top 10 articles in Spanish, Portuguese, and Chinese (simplified and traditional). We also reach thousands of readers around the world every day through social media and newsletters.

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Also in this series

Our Latest

Being Human

Clarissa Moll and Steve Cuss on Power Dynamics, Faith, and Inclusive Leadership

Why did the listener cross the road? To stop fixing and start understanding!

 

Saying ‘Welcome the Stranger’ Is Easy. Hosting a Toddler Is Not.

A conservative pastor I know opened his home to children whose parents were deported. His witness has me examining my comfortable life.

Analysis

How to Organize a Healthy Protest

Pastor and political strategist Chris Butler draws on Martin Luther King Jr.’s wisdom when planning action.

News

Died: Claudette Colvin, Unsung Civil Rights Pioneer

As a teenager, Colvin challenged Montgomery’s segregation law and prevailed.

Seeing Black History Through Scripture

Rann Miller

Similarities between the African American and Jewish experience can help us think biblically about human dignity.

The Russell Moore Show

What Happens When You Look Away from the Minneapolis Shootings

You cannot hide a hardened heart behind the fact that you weren’t the one pulling the trigger.

News

Trump’s Visa Suspension Leaves Adoptive Families in Limbo

Hannah Herrera

The government doesn’t provide a blanket exemption for international adoptions but will examine them case by case.

News

After Their Kids Survived the Annunciation Shooting, Parents Search for Healing

Families in the same Anglican church watched their young children deal with trauma, anxiety, and grief. They found one solution: each other.

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