Church Life

Helping the Church Think Clearly

President & CEO

A note from CT’s President in our March/April issue.

Church building with a lighthouse tower instead of a steeple shining a beam of light.
Illustration by Rick Szuecs / Source images: Envato

Around two o’clock in the morning in 1953, Billy Graham awoke with an idea. The idea grew from years of conversations with Harold Ockenga, Carl Henry, and Charles Fuller. They were eager to use their gifts, networks, and insights to influence the next generation of Christian ministers and leaders. Burdened with the weight of a God-sized dream, Graham penned the document for Christianity Today

My idea that night was for a magazine, aimed primarily at ministers, that would restore intellectual respectability and spiritual impact to evangelical Christianity. It would reaffirm the power of the Word of God to redeem and transform men and women. 

After more than 70 years, we bear witness to this God-sized vision that is still vibrantly alive. From the beginning, Christianity Today has carried a singular, unshakable mission: to elevate the name of Jesus Christ. There is no greater calling. 

Long before our first issue was printed, Billy Graham envisioned a magazine to help the church think clearly, live faithfully, and bear witness to the one who holds all things together. His conviction, and the conviction of those who came after him, was that Jesus is not merely the subject of our stories. He is also the center of our hope, the heartbeat of our work, and the Lord whom we joyfully serve.

Christ is the one who brings life where death reigns. He breaks down walls, reconciles enemies, forgives sinners, and welcomes the prodigals home. He brings light where darkness gathers and hope where despair threatens. It is him alone CT seeks to magnify across continents, generations, and dividing lines. 

As we look back through the pages of CT’s history, we draw from a deep well of evangelical teaching and tradition that prioritizes the authority of Scripture, the necessity of new birth, and the beauty of Christ’s redeeming work. Our times are not unique. The gospel has always faced opposition, the church has always navigated division, and seasons of cultural upheaval are nothing new for God’s people. Through every era, Christ remains faithful. His kingdom has not faltered. His Spirit has not diminished. His people still prevail.

Our task is to glorify Jesus, the one who still saves, forgives, reconciles, and redeems. While the world may say this isn’t possible and Christ’s power is insufficient for our crises, they are wrong. The same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead and ignited the early church is at work now—awakening hearts, renewing minds, and calling believers to bold discipleship (Rom. 8:11).

As I step into my role as CT’s president, I honor CT’s legacy and move forward with expectant hope. CT will continue to lift Christ high, make his beauty visible, and speak gospel truth with conviction and compassion. We will continue to hold fast to the gospel that invites us not to a shallow unity but to the deep, reconciling bond forged only by the crucified and risen Lord.

This is the perfect time to lean into the mission of Christianity Today. Let us journey together with our faith forged by the past and our hearts filled with joy as we steward this sacred calling until Christ comes for us again! 

Nicole Massie Martin is president & CEO of Christianity Today.

Also in this issue

In this issue of Christianity Today and in this season of the Christian year, we explore the bookends of life: birth and death. You’ll read Karen Swallow Prior’s essay on childlessness and Kara Bettis Carvalho’s overview of reproductive technologies. Haleluya Hadero reports on artificially intelligent griefbots, and Kristy Etheridge discusses physician-assisted suicide. There is much work to be done to promote life. We talk with Fleming Rutledge about the Crucifixion, knowing that while suffering lasts for a season, Jesus has triumphed over death through his death. This Lenten and Easter season, may these words be a companion as you consider how you might bring life in the spaces you inhabit.

Qualms & Proverbs

What’s the Difference Between Privilege and Blessing?

Karen Swallow Prior, Kevin Antlitz, and Kiara John-Charles

‘People Need to Be Reminded of God’s Abba-like Care’

‘We’re God’s Guerilla Warriors’

Interview by Ashley Hales

Motherhood Was Supposed to Be a Slog. I Found Joy Instead.

News

As AI Became Popular, One Audiobook Business Sank

Death Is Not a Right

Kristy Etheridge

AI Necromancy Impersonates the Dead

News

Mortgage Man for God

Kara Bettis Carvalho

Torn on IVF, Evangelicals Turn to Natural Family Planning

Review

Does the Body Tell the Truth?

Testimony

Born a Woman, I Spent Six Years Living as a Man. Then God Showed Me My True Identity.

Kyla Gillespie

The Birds and the Bees, Babies and Me

Birth and Death are Life Issues

Review

Congress Is Overwhelmed and Incompetent

Haley Byrd Wilt

The Vigil of Birth

Public Theology Project

This Easter, Let’s Lose Our Hope

Churches Haven’t Forgotten Portland

News

The Churches That Fought for Due Process

Christianity Today: A Declaration of Principles

News

The Last Christian Boarding Houses of New York

What Do a 103-Year-Old Theologian’s Prayers Sound Like?

Backbone in a Gumby Culture

Have We Kissed Purity Goodbye?

The Strangest Enemy I’ll Ever Meet

Eric McLaughlin

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