News

Gleanings: January/February 2018

Important developments in the church and the world (as they appeared in our January issue).

US skips UN to aid Christians persecuted by ISIS

The Trump administration says the US Agency for International Development (USAID) will now give aid directly to persecuted Christians in the Middle East. “We will no longer rely on the United Nations alone to assist persecuted Christians and minorities in the wake of genocide and the atrocities of terrorist groups,” announced Vice President Mike Pence. Instead, USAID will work with faith-based and private organizations. Religious freedom experts—including former representative Frank Wolf and Center for Religious Freedom director Nina Shea—welcomed the news, as did some Arab Christian leaders. However, others worry it may spark even more extremist anger.

Pregnancy centers’ speech gets day in court

The US Supreme Court will decide whether crisis pregnancy centers in California have to post notices with contact information for free or low-cost abortion providers and contraception. Pro-life groups argue the notices violate the First Amendment by forcing them to communicate a message that violates their beliefs. But the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which upheld the Golden State’s 2015 law, said that informing clients of “family-planning services” does not constitute an endorsement. Similar local ordinances in Maryland, New York, and Texas have been thrown out in the past, while Hawaii has a similar law and Connecticut is considering one. The Supreme Court will assess the case on the basis of free speech, not religious freedom.

Saudi Arabia: Arab Christians watch prince’s game of thrones

Blamed by religious freedom experts for funding Islamist extremism with oil profits, Saudi Arabia has promised to reverse course. Four months after crown prince Mohammad bin Salman was announced as successor to his father’s throne, he said the conservative Muslim nation would become “a country of moderate Islam that is open to all religions and to the world.” So far the bark has bite: Religious police have been stripped of the power to arrest, a committee has been appointed to purge radical texts, and thousands of alleged extremists have been removed from government posts. However, bin Salman also arrested 11 fellow princes and scores of wealthy Saudis, leaving Christians wary of his true intentions.

Nepal: New law makes Christians miss Hindu kingdom

Ten years ago, Hindu-majority Nepal declared itself a secular state. Two years ago, a new constitution was approved that proclaimed “no one shall attempt to change or convert someone from one religion to another.” In October, Nepal outlawed religious conversion and blasphemy. The new law stems from concerns raised last year when courts dropped charges against Christians accused of evangelizing students after a devastating earthquake in Kathmandu. The law’s punishment—up to five years in prison and $500—is worse than living under the official Hindu kingdom years ago, according to some local Christian leaders.

Zimbabwe: Evangelicals welcome Mugabe removal

Christian leaders in Zimbabwe called for prayer—and a transitional government—after 93-year-old President Robert Mugabe was placed under house arrest by the military in November. “We see the current arrangement as an opportunity for the birth of a new nation,” wrote the nation’s top evangelical, Catholic, charismatic, and ecumenical Protestant leaders. The military arrested Mugabe after he fired his vice president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, in order to smooth the way for Mugabe’s wife, Grace, to succeed him. The takeover was mostly peaceful and welcomed by most of the population, perhaps because Mugabe’s tight-fisted, often cruel, 37-year reign was anything but democratic. Mugabe resigned days after the military intervention, while one of his prominent critics, pastor Evan Mawarire, was acquitted of subversion.

Moody and Fuller close extension campuses

In the face of dropping enrollment, Moody Bible Institute said it would shut down its undergraduate campus in Spokane, Washington, and its distance learning site in Pasadena, California. The school will also cut its Chicago staff by about 10 percent and transition its seminary programs from 16-week to 8-week courses. Meanwhile, Fuller Theological Seminary will close three of its eight satellite campuses. Its regional campus enrollment declined by 30 percent over the past four years even as its online enrollment grew by over 50 percent. That signals a larger trend—the Association of Theological Schools said that extension enrollment has dipped by about 26 percent at its 270 institutions over the past 10 years, while online enrollment has more than doubled.

Also in this issue

This issue's cover story is a paean to solitude, as experienced in one of the most unique environments on earth: the South Pole. Brett Baddorf reflects on finding God in the darkness while serving as a missionary among the scientists and support staff who populate Antarctica's remote research outposts during its long winter months.

Cover Story

Lord of the Night

Editorial

One Does Not Simply Leave Evangelicalism

A Member of the ‘Little Rock Nine’ Counts Her Blessings, One by One

Reply All

The Rise of Reformed Charismatics

News

To Defend Mideast Christians, Can Advocates Critique Islam?

News

Why the US Thinks Restricting International Adoptions Will Save Them

The Case for a No-Filter Prayer Life

Our January/February Issue: Fighting FOMO

Is Filling That ‘God-Shaped Hole’ God’s Plan for Our Lives?

Understanding God’s Control When You’re a Climate Scientist

Review

Kate Bowler: I Reject the Prosperity Gospel but I Still Crave What It Promises

Review

A Wall of Security or a Table of Fellowship?

New & Noteworthy Books

Excerpt

Evangelicalism Is Far Deeper, Wider, and Greater Than the Foibles of the Moment

The Radical Christian Faith of Frederick Douglass

News

As a New Age Enthusiast, I Fancied Myself a Free Spirit and a Good Person

Baptism Doesn’t Have to Be Divisive

When the Gift of Intelligence Becomes the Burden of Alzheimer’s

Christianity Today’s 2018 Book of the Year

Excerpt

Lost Keys and Lost Illusions

Christianity Today’s 2018 Book Awards

View issue

Our Latest

New Archbishop of Canterbury Steps into Anglican Divides

Conservatives call on Sarah Mullally, the first woman at the spiritual helm of the Church of England, to uphold biblical faith amid same-sex blessings debate.

News

FDA Approves Generic Abortion Pill

Students for Life leader calls the move “a stain on the Trump presidency.”

You Haven’t Heard Worship Music like This

John Van Deusen’s praise is hard-won and occasionally wordless.

The Russell Moore Show

BONUS: Lecrae on Reconstruction after Disillusionment

 Lecrae joins Russell Moore to take questions from Christianity Today subscribers

News

John Cornyn’s MAGA-land Challenge

The incumbent senator is up against his strongest challenge yet in populist-right leader Ken Paxton.

Fighting Korea’s Loneliness Epidemic with Cafés and Convenience Stores

Seoul recently introduced free public services to tackle social isolation. Christians have been doing that for years.

Excerpt

‘Don’t Take It If You Don’t Need It’

The Trump administration releases new recommendations for Tylenol use during pregnancy.

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