News

Have You Noticed Church Is Farther Away Than it Used to Be?

Study finds more Christians driving longer distances to worship.

Peeterv / Getty Images

More Americans are driving farther to church, according to a new study from sociologists Kevin D. Dougherty at Baylor University and Mark T. Mulder at Calvin University. About a third of evangelicals drive more than 15 minutes to church, and 8 percent drive more than half an hour. Black Protestants drive farthest, with nearly one in five going more than 30 minutes to worship. Among all church goers, the percentage traveling more than 15 minutes to church increased 10 points from 2001 to 2017. The change may be connected to the growth of megachurches, the sociologists say, which pull people from a larger geographical area.

Also in this issue

This month’s cover story examines the power of communal confession to heal the church’s—and society’s—deepest divisions. But pastor and writer Jeff Peabody doesn’t point to the early church or to liturgical traditions as the model for how we should pray; he turns to the famous ancient prayer of Daniel at the end of Israel’s long Babylonian exile. The prayer upends our typical notions of what it means to “speak prophetically,” and the implications for our fractious cultural and political moment are striking.

Cover Story

Forgive Us Our Sins (And Theirs, Too)

Jeff Peabody

Set Free by the Cross, Why Do We Live in Bondage?

Anthony J. Carter

New Editor, Old Roots

The Motherly Love of a Wrathful God

Robert L. Foster

Reply All

Democratic Christians Weigh Their Primary Concerns

Real Love Requires a Command

Daniel Harrell

María de los Ángeles La Torre Cuadros

Rebecca Randall

Why Do Fewer Christian Women Work in Science?

Elaine Howard Ecklund and Robert A. Thomson Jr.

Twelve Christian Women in Science You Should Know

Rebecca Randall

Erica Carlson

Rebecca Randall

Mary Schweitzer

Rebecca Randall

Joanna Ng

Rebecca Randall

Audrey Bowden

Rebecca Randall

Margaret Miller

Rebecca Randall

Lydia Manikonda

Rebecca Randall

Jessica Moerman

Rebecca Randall

Keila Natilde Lopez

Rebecca Randall

Georgia Dunston

Rebecca Randall

Mercy Akinyi

Rebecca Randall

Alynne MacLean

Rebecca Randall

Testimony

I Assumed Science Had All the Answers. Then I Started Asking Inconvenient Questions.

Sy Garte

The Old Testament Twins We’ve Forgotten

Our March Issue: Us vs. Us

Andy Olsen

News

Christian Martyr Numbers Down by Half in a Decade. Or Are They?

News

Despite a Murder and Visa Denials, Christians Persevere in Turkey

The Many Faces of Narcissism in the Church

Interview by Benjamin Vrbicek

Review

Religious Parents Are Remarkably Similar, Even When They Belong to Different Religions

Thomas E. Bergler

Review

Be Careful About Reading the Bible as a Political Guide

Jonathan Leeman

New & Noteworthy Books

Matt Reynolds

Excerpt

My Generation Prized ‘Authenticity.’ Why I’ve Come to Love Wearing a Mask.

Amy Peterson

News

Why German Evangelicals Are Praising God in English

View issue

Our Latest

Review

They May Forget Your Sermons, but They’ll Remember This

Reuben Bredenhof’s new book encourages pastors to focus on small acts of faithfulness.

Analysis

The Many Factors of America’s Math Problem

Ubiquitous screens, classroom chaos, a dearth of qualified teachers: The reasons our children are struggling in math class are multitude.

News

Four Years into the War, Life Goes on for Ukrainians

Even as Moscow weaponizes winter, locals attend church conferences, go sledding, and plan celebrations.

A Russian Drone Killed My Brother. Is the World Tired of Our Suffering?

Taras Dyatlik

On the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a Ukrainian theologian meditates on self-interested calls for a comfortable peace.

Excerpt

Parents of Prodigals Can Trust God is Good

Cameron Shaffer

An excerpt from Cameron Shaffer’s Keeping Kids Christian.

The Bulletin

The Bulletin Goes to Nashville!

Sho Baraka, Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

In Music City, Russell, Mike, Sho, and Clarissa talk about creativity, vocation, and AI.

Worship, Bible Studies, and Restoration in South Korea’s Nonprofit Prison

Jennifer Park in Yeoju, South Korea

Somang Prison, the only private and Christian-run penitentiary in Asia, seeks to treat inmates with dignity—and it sees results.

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