Questions That Drive Us

Reasoning together about our life together.

More and more people are questioning the Constitution ideal that religion deserves special protection. Medical groups don’t get special protections. Sports don’t. Unions don’t. But the Bill of Rights begins by talking about religion and basically tells the state to back off. Why? Is this just a holdover from an age when religion was important to people, one that should be abandoned in the modern secular state?

Associate editor Matt Reynolds has been point person on this issue, which is a good thing. Matt, who holds a master’s degree in church-state relations from Baylor University, knows the many nuances that such issues raise, and has suggested, acquired, and edited the cover story with wisdom and care.

The next story tries to answer one particular religious question: Should we allow Muslims to practice Shari’ah law in the United States? Should Muslims be permitted to make binding laws regarding marriage and family, laws that are not subject to the review of local, state, and federal governments? Why not, especially if we believe in the special place of religious freedom as argued in the first article!

But other questions are being addressed in this issue as well. Andy Crouch wonders what we exactly mean when we bandy about the phrase “for the common good.” It’s become an increasingly popular way to summarize how and why Christians are engaged in public life. But what do we mean by it? John Stackhouse wonders about what exactly we can and cannot accomplish in politics (page 48); we’re called to be agents of transformation in our culture, but how much transformation can we realistically hope for? And if a great deal of corruption remains even after our best efforts, why bother?

In these articles in particular, we are asking questions about our life together in neighborhoods, cities, states, and nations. Jesus said we are called to be salt and light in the world, but he was maddeningly vague about exactly what that should look like. I guess he thought it would be good for us to work that out together.

One thing we like to do in CT is try to work these things out. We feature writers and interview subjects who have answers that Christians should deeply consider. We rarely have a party line to endorse, trusting arguments and not ideology to convince. We believe that one way the Spirit leads us into all truth, as Jesus promised, is when we sit down, ask good questions, and reason together.

Not a bad description of what CT is about.

Next issue: Yours truly will ask his own question: What’s up with all the best-selling books about people visiting heaven? John Stackhouse returns to examine what C. S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity (first published 50 years ago) can teach us about apologetics today, and Marian Liautaud reveals the uncomfortable truth about the global “war on women.”

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

Honoring Faith in the Public Square

Wilfred McClay

The Mystic Baptist

Review

How to Remove Our Bible-Reading Blinders

Christopher Hall

Excerpt

Why Love Never Ends

Review

The Need for Creeds

Fred Sanders

Shari'ah's Uphill Climb

John Witte Jr.

God Did It

The Key to a Purposeful Life

Sarah Lebhar Hall

'Fringe' Has Always Been About Playing God

Todd Hertz

What Is the Biggest Change Evangelical Seminaries Need to Make Right Now?

Dan Kimball, Cheryl Sanders, and Winfield Bevins

News

Church and State for the Homeless

Matt Branaugh in Denver

How Gabriel Wilson Discovered his Paternal Roots—and Made a Record About It

Robert Ham

Jamie Grace Is Holding On

Mark Moring

The Truth About World War II's True Shepherds

Interview by Lisa Velthouse

News

The Trouble with TBN

Bobby Ross Jr.

News

Should Seminary Professors Be Granted Tenure?

Compiled by Ruth Moon

News

Christians Fight Israel's Marriage Ban

Ruth Moon

Editorial

How to Unfreeze the Middle East

A Christianity Today Editorial

What to Watch For on Election Night

This (Ambiguous) Political Life

John G. Stackhouse Jr.

News

Doubting China's One-Child Policy Change

Melissa Steffan

News

Crisis of Faith Statements

Melissa Steffan

Review

Review: The Church In An Age of Crisis

Matt Reynolds

Review

Review: Amplifying Our Witness

Matt Reynolds

Wilson's Bookmarks

John Wilson

My Top 5 Books on Homosexuality

Sacrilege Is Real

Letters to the Editor

News

Go Figure

News

Quotation Marks

News

Gleanings

Our 'Call'

Harold B. Smith

View issue

Our Latest

Died: Christian Publishing Executive Robert Wolgemuth

As author, agent, and former Thomas Nelson president, Wolgemuth shaped the Christian book world for decades.

Analysis

This Year, Protections for the Unborn Won’t Come from Washington

The White House and Congress seem uninterested in new pro-life measures. But crisis pregnancy centers will continue their mission, one life at a time.

It’s Not ‘Christian Nationalism.’ It’s Conservative Identity Politics.

George Yancey

Academics and pundits critiquing evangelical voters have misdiagnosed their behavior.

Public Theology Project

How to Know If You’re Growing in Patience—or Just Giving Up

The right kind of waiting can save us. The wrong kind will destroy us.

Guerilla Art For Grit City

J.D. Peabody

Two friends are taking Tacoma by storm with paper and ink.

The Russell Moore Show

Chuck Klosterman on Football

 Cultural critic and essayist Chuck Klosterman about his new book and what the sport tells us about ourselves.

News

Christians Provide Food, Medicine, and Spiritual Hope at Venezuela’s Border

After Maduro’s ouster, ministries in Cúcuta, Colombia, don’t know if Venezuelan migrants will return home or if more will flee.

Protesting in Church Is Wrong. So Is Immigration Theater.

Demonstrators should not disrupt worship services. ICE should be competent, cool-headed, and constrained by the Constitution.

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