Briefs: The World

Chris Wright, 52, has been appointed International Ministry Director of the Langham Partnership, a network of ministries based in ENGLAND and closely associated with John Stott Ministries. Langham and Stott Ministries award seminary and university scholarships to students from the developing world. They also give evangelical books to church leaders around the world. Stott, a prolific author, is also rector emeritus of All Souls, Langham, London.

Arabs living in North Africa and the ARABIC PENINSULA are now picking up a new digital channel on their televisions: sat-7. This satellite broadcast allows Arabs to view Christian programming in areas where many people remain unreached by the gospel. Of the 300 million Arabic-speaking people in the Middle East, 100 million own televisions with satellite access. Christians in these areas, along with Campus Crusade for Christ and the United Bible Societies, have worked for the past five years to expand sat-7 into a daily, digitally broadcast program.

The Roman Catholic Church in GERMANY has agreed to pay 5 million marks ($2.35 million) to forced laborers who were brought to Germany from abroad during World War II and worked in Catholic institutions. The church plans to spend an equal amount in promoting reconciliation. The announcement came one month after the Evangelical Church of Germany said it would contribute 10 million marks ($4.7 million) to a German government fund already established for laborers. The Catholic Church had previously denied that laborers were used at its institutions during the war.

An Anglican bishop in western KENYA has called for women in his church to reject the African tradition of joter, in which a widow marries another member of her husband’s family. Joter, also known as wife inheritance, is common among the Luo people of the Nyanza province. The Luo people are often polygamous, and several widows may be inherited by a single family member. Bishop Joseph Wasonga recently told women that they should publicly reject joter at their husbands’ funerals. Wasonga also denounced the second element of the ritual, in which a widow has sexual relations with an outsider before being given to another family member.

Copyright © 2000 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Undying Worm, Unquenchable Fire: What is hell—eternal torment or annihilation? A look at the Evangelical Alliance's The Nature of Hell.

Cover Story

Undying Worm, Unquenchable Fire

Robert A. Peterson

Biotech: Tissue of Lies?

Denyse O'Leary

Is the Stock Market Good Stewardship?

Raymond Albrektson

Camus the Christian?

James W. Sire

Machiavelli Marooned

Robert Pyne

The Back Page | Philip Yancey: Getting a Life

Gwen Shamblin in the Balance

John W. Kennedy with additional reporting by Todd Starnes

SBC Funding Imperiled

Updates

School Vouchers Face Tight Races

Mark Kellner

Briefs: North America

Quotations to Contemplate

Fire and Ice

Debra Fieguth

Vatican: Protestants Not 'Sister Churches'

Luigi Sandri, Cedric Pulford and Edmund Doogue

Smack Down

Tony Carnes

Colombia: Abducted Pastor Pays His Own Ransom on Installment Plan

Deann Alford

Nigeria: Will Shari'a Law Curb Christianity?

Obed Minchakpu

North Korea: 7 Christian Executions Suspected

Compass Direct

Ecuador: Word and Spirit Together

Kenneth MacHarg

Grunge Boomers in Concert

Sheryl Blunt

Good News for Witches

Lauren F. Winner

Rightly Dividing the Hell Debate

Coming to Terms

Free to Be Creatures Again

Jennifer L. Bayne and Sarah E. Hinlicky

Beyond Self-Help Chatter

Big-Picture Faith

Love Your Heavenly Enemy

Miroslav Volf

The Transcendental Gore

Tony Carnes

More Than a Badge and a Gun

Wendy Murray Zoba

Lessons From Two Sides of AIDS

Corrie Cutrer

Shelly Wift's Tips for Witnessing to Witches

A Wicca Primer

Reporting at the Speed of Cyberspace

Editorial

Honest Ecumenism

A Christianity Today Editorial

Scouts in a Jam?

A Christianity Today Editorial

The Fallacy of Missile Defense

Darryl Brown and Tricia Gates Brown

The Perils of Harry Potter

Jacqui Komschlies

In the Word: The Grim Shepherd

Haddon Robinson

Your World: Unrighteous Indignation

View issue

Our Latest

The Complicated Legacy of Jesse Jackson

Six Christian leaders reflect on the civil rights giant’s triumphs and tragedies.

News

The Churches That Fought for Due Process

An Ecuadorian immigrant with legal status fell into a detention “black hole.” Church leaders across the country tried to pull him out.

The Bulletin

AI Predictions, Climate Policy Rollback, and Obama’s Belief in Aliens

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

The future of artificial intelligence, Trump repeals landmark climate finding, and the existence of aliens.

Troubling Moral Issues in 1973

CT condemned the Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade and questioned the seriousness of Watergate.

Ben Sasse and a Dying Breed of Politician

The former senator is battling cancer. Losing him would be one more sign that a certain kind of conservatism—and a certain kind of politics—is disappearing.

Died: Ron Kenoly, ‘Ancient of Days’ Singer and Worship Leader

Kenoly fused global sounds with contemporary worship music, inspiring decades of praise.

Review

MercyMe Holds On to a Hit in ‘I Can Only Imagine 2’

The contemporary Christian film sequel explores life after writing a megahit, asking whether hardship can bear good fruit.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastprintRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube