Theology

The Prosperity Gospel of Comfortable College Grads

Contributor

It’s easy to see the errors of health-and-wealth grifters. But a subtler addition to the gospel misleads many believers.

A collage of Jesus, price tags, and material goods.
Christianity Today March 2, 2026
Illustration by Elizabeth Kaye / Source Images: Getty, Unsplash, WikiMedia Commons

The gospel is good news. Good news, as Martin Luther taught the church, comes in the form of a promise. It is not law, which binds us to our past; it is promise, which opens up our future. It declares, not as a mere possibility but as a glorious fact, that the future shall be such-and-such—that the future is not bound by our failures but comes instead as a free gift from one who loves us.

“Remember not the former things,” the Lord says, “nor consider the things of old. Behold, I am doing a new thing” (Isa. 43:18–19 RSV, here and throughout).

The gospel, then, is God’s good promise to us about our future. We can trust it because it is God himself who speaks. The gospel is God’s Word, and so it is one and the same as the Word that made the heavens and the earth (Gen. 1:1–4). It is, quite literally, omnipotent. As Lutheran pastor Harold Senkbeil likes to put it, God’s Word does what it says. It gets the job done just by being spoken (Isa. 55:10–11).

The church is the creature of this word, which is another way of saying that God uses the gospel to bring the church into existence. And in the words of another Lutheran, the late theologian Robert Jenson, “It is the whole mission of the church to speak the gospel.” 

Speaking the gospel comes in many forms, from public worship to the sacraments to caring for the poor. Just as a hug and a kiss are a kind of nonverbal communication, so are bread and wine. In the famous line attributed to Francis of Assisi, “Preach the gospel at all times; when necessary, use words.”

Everything for the church, then, comes down to one thing: getting the gospel right. In particular, getting the promise of the gospel right. So what is the content of gospel promise?

I’m not going to hold you in suspense, because you already know what I’m going to say—and because, as I sometimes tell my theology students, in this conversation Sunday school answers are welcome. The promise of the gospel is Jesus. Jesus is the gospel and the gospel is Jesus. The good news, the gift of God, the hope of the world—it’s Jesus, Jesus, nothing but Jesus.

Given how simple this is, you’d think we Christians wouldn’t mess it up. If all we did was stick to Jesus in preaching the gospel, we could be confident of being on solid ground! Unfortunately, that’s not what we do. We are perennially tempted to convert the gospel from “Jesus alone” to “Jesus plus ____.”

You can fill in the blank after “plus” any way you like. I started with Luther, so it’s natural for Protestants to think of Reformation controversies: Jesus plus works, or Jesus plus indulgences, or Jesus plus the pope. What I have in mind, though, are some “Jesus plus” temptations that are a little bit closer to home.

The biggest one on offer today is the prosperity gospel. A favorite whipping boy of theologically educated Christians, the prosperity gospel promises your best life now. It proclaims that God is fed up with your unsatisfactory life here on earth, and by his power he is going to turn it around for you. He is going to give you that raise, buy you that car, get you out of that neighborhood, heal you of that illness. All you have to do is believe—that is, believe and pray, by naming it and claiming it in Jesus’ name. (And maybe by donating to the preacher’s ministry; call it seed money.)

It’s easy to mock the fixtures of the prosperity gospel: grifter preachers, basketball stadiums, celebrity fame, private jets, financial scandals. Does anyone really think Jesus came to earth and died on a cross so we can have nice teeth and wear expensive suits? Isn’t this all one big scam?

No doubt it is, sometimes. But as my colleague Richard Beck has pointed out, there’s a reason the prosperity gospel is so popular—not only here in the US but around the world, and not only with certain races or classes, as critics might like to suppose, but across every race and class. Given how difficult it is to define, as well as its substantial overlap with charismatic and Pentecostal traditions, it’s reasonable to conclude that the prosperity gospel is one of the largest and most successful class-crossing, multiethnic, multinational religious movements on the planet. 

And the logic is powerful in its simplicity: The prosperity gospel says that God loves you, wants you to have a good life, and is willing to give it to you—if only you ask him. Because he’s Almighty God, he can. Because he’s a loving Father, he will.

Ask yourself: Are you participating in the prosperity gospel when you pray for a job interview, a successful surgery, or safe travels on the road? Well then, a prosperity advocate might argue, why not pray for everything the same way and see what God does about it? Does God want you to be miserable? Are Christians meant to be masochists?

Things get murky fast in sorting out what God does and doesn’t want for us in this life, what we should and shouldn’t pray for. I know of a venerable Catholic philosopher who once stood up at an academic conference to defend praying for a good parking spot. If God is God, she reasoned, why not?

To be clear, I’m not here to defend the prosperity gospel. At the end of the day, at least in its most naked form, it is a false gospel, for the simple reason that it promises “Jesus plus.” And we know that the only promise the gospel makes is Jesus.

Yet I began with the prosperity gospel because, for many Christians, it is self-evidently a bridge too far. There is a bright red line, and if you cross it for the sake of the prosperity gospel, you have thereby left the faith behind. You have, in the words of the apostle Paul, embraced “another gospel” (Gal. 1:7).

But here’s the rub. In my experience, there’s another version of the prosperity gospel on offer in our churches, and it is quite popular. It is far subtler than the ordinary kind. It appeals to the well-off rather than to the downtrodden, and it uses fancy theological trappings to sound like something other than what it is. 

Here’s what it says: We need to stop focusing so much on the hereafter, on the sweet by-and-by. We’ve had too much talk of heaven—too many altar calls, too much fearmongering and culture warring, too much assuming that this world is going to hell in a handbasket. Too much, you might say, about postmortem life, not enough about premortem life. We need to bring our gaze down from heaven back to earth. We need to look around us. There’s a whole world in need and God wants us to be part of the solution, not part of the problem.

This message is appealing because it has ample theological and biblical warrant. Its proponents look to the Gospels and see Jesus proclaiming God’s kingdom on earth as it is in heaven. They see Jesus pouring out the Spirit at Pentecost. They see Paul calling believers to live out the Lord’s will here and now in the community of the church. This is no delay of life until after death; it’s abundant life in the present tense (John 10:10). The good life the gospel promises is not far off. In Jesus’ words, “The kingdom of God is within you” (Luke 17:21, ASV).

Just as with the more ordinary prosperity gospel, there’s much to commend here. Christian faith is about the present, not just the future. The Spirit is our foretaste of the life of the world to come. Jesus does want justice to roll down like a river, not just in heaven but on earth. The church should practice works of mercy to the poor and oppressed. All this is true.

What’s amiss is not so much what is affirmed as what is denied. The preaching of this “gospel plus” produces a kind of forgetfulness of heaven, rooted in what can only be called an embarrassment about spiritual things. Often as not, one detects the influence of N. T. Wright, although just as often, it is not Wright per se but a misreading of his work. Either way, the gospel is subtly transformed into a message about this life, an upper-middle-class mutation of the prosperity gospel that promises to extend the kind of health, comforts, and affluence enjoyed by educated, prosperous believers to any and all who lack them. 

This, in turn, becomes the mission of the church: to increase the quality of life here on earth. Heaven, if it exists at all, can wait. We’ve got work to do now.

Remove the sophisticated theology, however, and are we really so far from “your best life now”? As with some versions of the social gospel at the turn of the 20th century, the church appears to be a kind of nonprofit or social work operation—at best a spiritual charity. If we aren’t making the world a better place, in this model, then we’re failing at our mission.

But what, again, is the mission? The mission, according to Scripture, is the good news of the gospel, and the gospel is a promise, and the only promise the gospel makes is Jesus. Nothing else, no “plus.” 

The gospel does not promise you health. It does not promise you wealth. It does not promise you anything in this lifeexcept the person and work of Jesus. You may or may not get married; you may or may not have children; you may or may not live long; you may or may not live well. You may suffer trials, you may endure squalor, you may know little more than pain, fear, and isolation. You may be homeless and friendless, utterly abandoned by this cold, dark, unforgiving world. God does not promise to spare you any of it. In fact, Jesus himself promises that some of us, just by being his followers, will suffer these things as a result (John 15:18–16:33).

Jesus does not go on to say that he will protect us from these woes. He says only that he will be with us in the midst of them. It is his presence in the darkness of this life that gives us confidence that he will bring us into the light of the next—eventually.

For, as Paul wrote, “the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us” (Rom. 8:18). This from a man who was beaten, rejected, imprisoned, stoned, whipped, shipwrecked, and ultimately beheaded for his faith (2 Cor. 11:16–33). His hope was in Jesus; it was not hope in this life or for this life. “For in this hope we were saved. Now hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what he sees? But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience” (Rom. 8:24–25).

For Paul, patience meant groaning: “Here indeed we groan, and long to put on our heavenly dwelling … so that what is mortal may be swallowed up by life.” For now, “we walk by faith, not by sight,” because “while we are at home in the body we are away from the Lord.” It is a terrible thing to be away from the Lord. But groaning does not mean despair. Although “we would rather be away from the body and at home with the Lord,” we know that the one who has prepared a heavenly home for us “is God, who has given us the Spirit as a guarantee” (2 Cor. 5:2–8).

Reading Paul, you almost get the impression that the gospel is about going to heaven when you die. Some of us have been taught not to say such world-denying, world-escaping things; our seminaries and theology textbooks were supposed to have educated us out of them. 

It’s true that Christian hope looks forward to the resurrection of the body and new creation, not the popular picture of harp-playing ghosts in the clouds. Nevertheless, it remains the case that we have allowed a proper biblical corrective to swing the pendulum all the way to the other side—so far, in fact, that we’re left with little more than a this-worldly gospel of making life better by our own efforts.

Let’s return to the hope of the gospel. The gospel gives us Jesus, only Jesus, nothing but Jesus. He is God’s promise to us. He is God’s Word to us. Put your trust in him, and all these things shall be added unto you—if not in this life, then in the next.

Brad East is an associate professor of theology at Abilene Christian University. He is the author of four books, including The Church: A Guide to the People of God and Letters to a Future Saint.

Culture

Joe Espada in Spring Training

Editor in Chief

The Astros manager knows Christ is his Savior, not his win-generator.

Manager Joe Espada of the Houston Astros participates in spring training workouts at CACTI Park in West Palm Beach, Florida on February 14, 2026.

Manager Joe Espada of the Houston Astros participates in spring training workouts at CACTI Park in West Palm Beach, Florida on February 14, 2026.

Christianity Today March 2, 2026
Houston Astros / Contributor / Getty / Edits by CT

This year brings the 50th anniversary of publication of perhaps the most-quoted story series about Christians in sports. Frank Deford—voted U.S. Sportswriter of the Year six times, and known generally for his 37 years of commentary on NPR’s Morning Edition—castigated in three consecutive issues of Sports Illustrated what he called “Sportianity”—“thanking God, paying Him off for getting them another big one in the W column.”

“Jesus, it seems, is coming across as the next best thing to a home-court advantage,” Deford wrote:

Athletes are being used to sell religion. They endorse Jesus much as they would a new sneaker or a graphite-shafted driver. 

Game-day religion has become a sort of security blanket, something on the order of superstitions like not stepping on the foul lines or wearing the same tie when you are on a winning streak.

Well. It is true that postgame interviews more often feature winners rather than losers, so “Thank you, Jesus” comes off that way. 

Yet many Christian managers and athletes I’ve interviewed over four decades are more reflective. One is Joe Espada, manager of the Houston Astros. 

“I try to hold myself from asking for wins,” he told me on February 22, before his spring training home opener at Cacti Park of the Palm Beaches in Florida, “because I know the starting pitcher for the other team is a Christian and is praying for the same thing.”

Instead, Espada said he “prays for health, for peace, for wisdom. God is neutral. He knows who will win or lose, but it’s about getting closer to him. That’s what he wants from us. That’s what I focus on. Being loyal, faithful. His plan is better than mine.” 

“The outcome of the game is secondary,” Espada added. “I know Christ is my Savior.” 

Low-slung Cacti Park features palm trees behind an outfield wall with advertising signs enticing all ages: Unlimited Auto Wash, Florida Atlantic MBA Sport Management, Cleveland Clinic. On a practice field nearby, an instructor with an iPad offered a seminar titled “Identify Your Barrel Zone” to a dozen hitters. In the Astros locker room, players could choose from eight types of sunflower seeds (up from one choice 30 years ago) including KC Style BBQ, Sweet Thai Chili, and Taco Tuesday.

And in his office, manager Espada spoke quietly about how he grew up in a Christian home in Puerto Rico, went to a Baptist school, and professed his own faith at age 14. He said his mother “always reminds me: ‘Pray before you take the field. Talk to Him.’” Espada never made the majors as a player but became the University of Mobile baseball coach and said, “There can’t be a testimony without a test. I’ve been tested, and I love sharing my testimony.”

That testimony includes losses as well as wins. When I asked about resilience, Espada said, “I’m an example. I learned about handling defeat, the everyday grind.” That’s useful when counseling players “who had high school success, they were All-American in college, but now they’re competing with other All-Americans.” 

He said last year, when the Astros failed to reach the playoffs after eight straight years of success, “injuries tested my faith and my ability to communicate. … The biggest test is seeing 2025 not as a failure, but a test. You cannot let one moment, one season, define the future.” 

Pressures have grown with omnipresent sports gambling: “I know there are gambling issues. I stay away from social media. I block it. I won’t listen.” One veteran pitcher, Lance McCullers, had great seasons but then fought injury and received death threats last year after losing a game. McCullers is also a Christian, and Espada said, “We both have a strong foundation. We go to Jesus. And I tell the writers and fans what Lance has meant to this team.”

Espada said, “I have never gotten any death threats. I know stuff is being said. I have two kids, one in high school. They hear comments. I tell them, ‘This too will pass.’”

Then he went outside into the brilliant sunshine and answered questions from a half dozen baseball reporters about last season. Espada pounded his fist in a Rawlings glove while responding in English and Spanish and emphasizing his optimism about this year. 

One reason is the arrival of Japanese star pitcher Tatsuya Imai. A Japanese reporter and film crew watched him warm up on February 21. The “word of the day” on the Astros locker room wall was tomodachi, which means “friend” and implies a personal relationship greater than that between coworkers (nakama) or acquaintances.

Imai did not pitch that day as the Astros lost to the Cardinals, 6-5, while families watched from the sloping wall behind left field. It’s spring training.

Marvin Olasky is editor in chief of Christianity Today.

News

Iranian Christians Celebrate and Pray for the Hope of a Free Iran

US-Israel strikes killed supreme leader Khamenei, whose Islamic regime has long persecuted believers.

Smoke rises in Tehran after Israeli airstrikes hit Iranian capital.

Smoke rises in Tehran after Israeli airstrikes hit Iranian capital.

Christianity Today March 1, 2026
Fatemeh Bahrami / Anadolu via Getty Images

The United States and Israel launched a major coordinated campaign against Iran Saturday, killing Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and striking more than a thousand targets across the country, according to the US military.

Since then, diaspora Iranian Christian ministries have struggled to connect with the church in Iran. Mansour Borji, director of the London-based Iranian religious freedom advocacy organization Article 18, has received only a few messages from Christians in the country due to the near-total internet blackout.

Most of the messages that did get through celebrated the news of the attacks and the “anticipation of an end to the tyranny,” Borji said. Other messages expressed concerned about the days ahead. “Some fear the United States may try to reach a deal and extend the life of a ‘wounded wolf,’” he said.

Meanwhile, Hormoz Shariat, founder of Iran Alive Ministries, struggled to get Christian programming into the country. Since Thursday, two days before the war began, Iranian authorities have blocked satellite television channels and restricted internet access. Shariat noted that his ministry had recently seen a surge of Iranians coming to faith in Christ.

“They do not want people to be influenced, informed, and led by outside influencers,” Shariat said.

He is concerned the communication blackout might isolate Iranians in their homes and prevent them from uniting because they have no way to connect or obtain news updates. It’s part of the government’s plan to “feed them lies and control them with fear, confusion, and isolation,” he said.

Following the US-Israel joint attack, Iran retaliated with drones and waves of ballistic missiles directed at Israel and US military bases in the region.

Iran fired at nearby Arab countries as well, and debris from missile intercepts rained down in countries including Qatar, Jordan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, where a hotel caught fire in Dubai’s Palm Jumeirah district. Seven countries across the Middle East, including Israel, closed their airspace.

Three US service members were killed in the operation, according to US Central Command. Iran’s state broadcaster reported 201 dead, citing the Iranian Red Crescent Society. The figure could not be independently verified.

President Donald Trump urged Iranians to seek shelter and later rise up to take over their government, describing this moment as likely their “only chance for generations.” Roughly 14 hours after the operation began, Trump announced the death of Khamenei, who was 86 and had ruled since 1989.

Many Iranians—both in the country and overseas—celebrated. In London, Jews and Iranians in the diaspora celebrated together.

“Khamenei, one of the most evil people in History, is dead,” Trump posted on Truth Social. Israeli and US intelligence agencies identified a rare opportunity to attack senior political and military leaders gathering for three meetings and launched a surprise daylight attack, according to The Wall Street Journal. Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said dozens of senior Iranians officials died in the strikes.

Days after Tehran massacred tens of thousands of protesters on January 8–9, Trump posted on social media that help was on its way. For weeks afterward, Iranians watched the buildup of US military assets in the region, wondering if Trump would strike the Islamic regime in Tehran.

After negotiations between Washington and Tehran failed to produce a nuclear deal Friday, the United States and Israel launched their assault.

Trump cited a litany of terror operations committed by the regime as justification, including the 1979 American hostage crisis, the 1983 US Marine barracks bombing in Beirut, attacks on US forces and vessels in the Middle East, Iran’s nuclear weapons program, and the funding of terrorist proxy groups, including Hamas.

Democrats and a few Republicans, including Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, opposed the strikes because Trump acted without the approval of Congress and a plan for what comes next. Many fear a protracted conflict like the US involvement in Iraq. Next week, Congress plans to vote on measures to rein in Trump’s power to wage war against Iran, seen as a referendum on the conflict.

“Congressional debate and authorization is important to define the scope and objectives of the war for our military,” Massie said. “We owe this to our soldiers.”

After the strike, many Iranians gained a newfound hope. “Those being treated secretly at home for bullet wounds they received during protests are hopeful that their ordeal may be over soon,” said Borji. Many injured protesters had been afraid to seek medical help at hospitals.

According to multiple Christian ministry leaders, Iranians—including many Christians—have been advocating for a regime change and calling for a targeted strike on the Islamic government. Calls for the return of the former shah’s son, Reza Pahlavi, have grown.

Meanwhile in Israel, Elisha Lazarus—a Messianic Jew and reservist in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF)—was off-duty and checking on his parents when the war began.

Like millions of Israelis, Lazarus and his family moved in and out of their bomb shelter multiple times over the weekend. An Iranian ballistic missile evaded Israel’s defense system on Sunday, striking a synagogue and nearby shelter, killing at least nine people.

Khamenei had repeatedly threatened to destroy Israel. “It’s so easy to just let fear come in and let it take you over, but as a soldier who believes in Yeshua, I’m out here, and I have peace, even in this uncertainty,” said Lazarus, who serves in Israel’s Iron Dome defense unit.

Lazarus returns to his base on Thursday and anticipates long days and nights ahead. The military call-ups, he said, are often hard on mothers caring for young children. Lazarus has a 7-year-old daughter, and his commander’s wife is pregnant with her family’s fourth child. Some of the religious soldiers he serves alongside have as many as seven children. “I think the wives carry this country the most,” Lazarus said.

He praised Israel’s defense systems but said his ultimate confidence lies elsewhere. “I hold on to Psalm 9—God is my refuge and my fortress—and I stand on that promise as I’m sure millions have been standing on that promise for centuries,” he said.

David Zadok, pastor of Grace and Truth Congregation in Kanot, Israel, said he moved his Saturday-morning worship service online. After opening with Psalm 91, he cut his sermon short due to incoming rockets that forced him and his congregants to hurry to bomb shelters. Later, he drove his son back to his military base as part of a massive reserve mobilization.

“The three countries that I have loved most and lived most of my life [in] are in a war with each other,” said the pastor, who lived in Iran with his aunt and uncle from the ages of 3 to 16. Zadok’s relatives, fearing his safety as an Israeli Jew, sent him to California several months before revolutionaries toppled Iran’s secular monarch and established an Islamic republic in 1979.

Zadok completed high school in the United States and attended San Diego State University, where he became a Christian through the campus ministry The Navigators. After graduation, he moved to Israel for his mandatory military service.

Zadok served in the IDF for nearly two decades. “In most countries, there are two or four seasons,” he said. “In Israel, we have three: winter, summer, and war.”

He prays for regime change and increased freedom for the people of Iran but feels some reservation about what that could mean for the country’s growing Christian church—which numbers about 1 million people, according to some estimates. “History teaches us that when prosperity and too much freedom comes, people have a tendency to get away from the church, from the faith, and from God,” Zadok said.

Tymahz Toumadje, policy analyst for the National Union for Democracy in Iran, told CT that Iranian Christians have long suffered under the Islamic republic. A December report by his organization said Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence labels Christian converts as “Zionist missionaries” and claims to have arrested 53 converts after the June war on trumped-up charges of accumulating weapons.

“Even as Iran’s underground church is widely regarded as one of the fastest-growing Christian movements in the world, hundreds of thousands have been forced to live in secret, fearing persecution while praying for the day they can openly and freely live out their faith,” Toumadje said.

As strikes weaken the regime in Tehran, he believes a free Iran will “pave the way for an even greater blossoming of Christianity in the country than we’ve seen in recent years.”

In the meantime, Shariat asked the global church to pray. “Please pray that fear and confusion will not control the hearts and the minds of the Iranian Christians in Iran,” he said, “that they will be led by God’s love and empowered by the Holy Spirit to boldly share the gospel and lead tens of thousands of souls to Christ.”

Ideas

Iran After the Ayatollah

Pray that the Iranian people will have real hope of a peaceful future without systemic repression and fear.

Smoke rises over Tehran after US and Israeli airstrikes on February 28, 2026.

Smoke rises over Tehran after US and Israeli airstrikes on February 28, 2026.

Christianity Today February 28, 2026
Fatemeh Bahrami / Anadolu via Getty Images

How should American Christians think about Iran, which US and Israeli forces are now attacking with the stated aim of overthrowing its Islamist regime? 

Saturday night, President Donald Trump announced that Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei had been killed in a strike, and Iranian state media soon confirmed it. And since late December, Iran’s dictatorship has reportedly killed thousands of anti-government protesters, which has been typical of its repressive theocratic rule across 47 years.

Historically known as Persia, Iran is a rare nation to have endured since Bible times. Straddling the crossroads of the world, it sits on the Persian Gulf, with Russia to the north, Pakistan and Afghanistan to the east, Iraq and Turkey to the west, and the wealthy oil sheikhdoms to the south.

Americans of a certain age will recall Iran’s 1979 revolution, in which Islamist followers of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini overthrew the pro-US monarchy, which the CIA had helped install, and established a murderous theocratic dictatorship led by mullahs. Since then, Tehran’s reigning ideology has defined itself against the United States and Israel. Its first self-created crisis was taking 52 American diplomats hostage for over a year, helping to doom President Jimmy Carter’s reelection in the process.

In the subsequent 47 years, Iran has been a continuous thorn in the flesh for every American president. The Iran-Contra affair—in which weapons were covertly sold to Iran in exchange for supposed help in freeing American hostages held in Lebanon by Iran’s allies—proved catastrophic for the Reagan administration. Every subsequent American leader has contended with Iranian hostility and support for militant proxies in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, and Gaza. 

American presidents have also consistently held that Tehran’s sinister ruling ideology—which demands the destruction of Israel and is weaponized by religious fanaticism—makes the prospect of Iranian nuclear weapons unacceptable. The Obama administration negotiated limits on Iran nuclear enrichment in exchange for loosened sanctions. The first Trump administration withdrew from that agreement, ending the concord in favor of renewed economic pressure. Iran’s nuclear program expanded uranium enrichment after US withdrawal from the deal, despite ongoing Israeli covert operations against many of its scientists. 

In June of last year, US B-2 bombers hit some Iranian nuclear facilities. Those strikes weakened but did not finish Iran’s regime, which was already reeling from defeats of its allies: Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and the Assad regime in Syria. Another Iranian ally, Russia, has been preoccupied with war against Ukraine. 

The current US military strikes seem to be markedly more ambitious, presumably again targeting Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile developments but also seeking to decapitate the regime’s leadership, beginning with Khamenei.

US bombing is expected to continue, likely for some time. Iran “has been, in only one day, very much destroyed and, even, obliterated,” Trump posted. “The heavy and pinpoint bombing, however, will continue, uninterrupted throughout the week or, as long as necessary to achieve our objective of PEACE THROUGHOUT THE MIDDLE EAST AND, INDEED, THE WORLD!”

Nearly all Americans will rejoice if the ayatollah’s regime falls—and rightly so. Almost any alternative government will be less oppressive. This government has retained complete power across nearly five decades through murder, torture, incarceration, corruption, and suppression of public conversation. The recent mass protests evince the regime’s unpopularity among Iranians too, not only for its tyranny but also due to a stagnant economy and adversarial relations with much of the world.

The shine has long since worn off of the theocratic revolution of 1979, in which millions of youthful demonstrators rejected the autocratic but comparatively liberal, secular, Western-aligned shah. The imposition of theocratic rule, though first popular, has created a collapse in religious belief in Iran, as Islam is conflated with the nation’s diabolical, corrupt, and inept rulers. Street protesters—and, no doubt, many other Iranians—have hoped for help from America to overthrow their government. 

Now, it seems, they have that help. Yet even with Khamenei’s death confirmed and the possible killings of other key Iranian leaders, it’s unclear what the aftermath will be: Another dictatorship? Some form of democracy? A power vacuum in which new and insidious groups emerge? Or long-term American involvement like in Afghanistan or Iraq?

Reza Pahlavi, the US-based crown prince, son of the late shah, has emerged as the most prominent voice of Iranian protest and swiftly celebrated reports of Khamenei’s demise. Could he lead a constitutional monarchy? Or might the Iranian military or remains of its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps seize control?

Any successor regime in Iran, even if dictatorial, would likely be less hostile to America, Israel, and the West. Most Arab states would welcome the change too. Both Russia and China would lose an ally. And, most importantly, the Iranian people would have some real hope of a future without systemic repression and fear.

Here are spiritual and political lessons from Iran. Much if not most of Iran rejected the shah, despite unprecedented prosperity and relative freedom, because his banal secularism did not offer the spiritual purpose and drama of Islamist rule. Iran’s mullahs delivered old-time religion and plenty of excitement—but also murdered thousands, plundered the national treasury, and plunged Iran into decades of futile conflict with its neighbors and much of the world. Theocratic rule discredited religion, ironically creating a more socially secular Iran.

As American Christians, we must pray that Iran is delivered from conflict and oppression. May its people again prosper and live in peace, without fear. We can also learn from Iran’s trials and self-inflicted wounds. We can be grateful for what we have—a stable, constitutional government, however flawed—and decline to chase utopian dreams of a perfected society that ignores human nature and delivers only misery, demonization, and war.

We can also pray that the US and Israeli strikes will, like the 1999 NATO air strikes that led to the overthrow of dictator Slobodan Milošević, enact the downfall of Iran’s ruling mullahs without prolonged war or wider chaos. And afterward, Americans must have a national conversation about presidential war powers and the role of congressional authorization—or at least serious consultation, which we have not seen from the Trump administration in the run-up to these strikes.

Finally, the theocracy in Tehran reminds us that a brutal regime governed by supposed religious principles will corrupt and discredit religion. On this side of the eschaton, we Christians should pray for peace, healthy compromise, mutual forbearance, and the free space to practice and share our faith, amid the possibility of prosperity for all. Let’s pray that Iran and America will soon be friends again.

Mark Tooley is president of the Institute on Religion and Democracy and editor of its foreign policy and national security journal, Providence.

News

How Mexican Cartel Violence Disrupted a Guadalajara Church

Christians call for peace and prayer after the killing of drug kingpin El Mencho led to violence across the country.

A member of the Prosecutor's Office stands guard near a burning bus after it was set on fire by organized crime groups in response to an operation to arrest a high-priority security target in Mexico.

A member of the Prosecutor's Office stands guard near a burning bus after it was set on fire by organized crime groups in Mexico.

Christianity Today February 27, 2026
Ulises Ruiz / Getty

Before the Sunday-morning service on February 22, pastor Constantino Varas sensed something was wrong.

Several members of his church, Iglesia Bautista Gracia & Amor in Guadalajara, Mexico, sent text messages reporting problems getting to the building. These were not the expected disruptions caused by that morning’s half marathon but rather narcobloqueos, or blockades consisting of burning cars, trucks, and buses set on fire by Mexican drug cartels.

“I told them to try to go back home, stay safe, and pray,” Varas said. By the pastor’s count, at least 40 people—nearly half the congregation—couldn’t make it to church that morning due to the roadblocks. Although this type of disturbance is not uncommon—criminal cartels have used narcobloqueos for years as a strategy to demonstrate their local power and as a response to police operations—the extent of the blockades on Sunday was exceptional.

Hours earlier, an operation involving the Mexican Air Force and special forces killed Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, leader of the Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) in Tapalpa, about 80 miles southwest of Guadalajara. Security forces also killed six other members of the criminal organization, according to a statement from Mexico’s defense secretary. The CJNG is one of the most powerful crime organization in the country, with more than 15,000 members. Last year, the US State Department officially designated it a terrorist organization.

The cartel’s response began just hours later, with narcobloqueos and confrontations with authorities across 20 of Mexico’s 31 states. Armed cartel members defended their fiery blockades and clashed with police and armed forces who were trying to clear the roads.

By Monday, authorities acknowledged that at least 25 members of the National Guard and 30 operatives from criminal groups had been killed. As the capital city of the Jalisco state, birthplace of the CJNG, Guadalajara was at the epicenter of the violence.

Although only 50 church members occupied the padded wooden chairs of Gracia & Amor church on Sunday, the 10 a.m. service still began on time. Half an hour in, as the worship band played “Confiando Plenamente en Dios” (Trusting Fully in God), people heard gunshots outside.

Varas made a series of urgent decisions. Church members locked the doors to the church to prevent any armed assailants from entering. Staff called on Sunday school teachers to calm the children. The social media coordinator sent out a prayer request for the city on the church’s Facebook page.

When Varas stepped up to the microphone for the sermon a little later, he first asked the congregation to take out their phones and send messages to family members to let them know everyone was safe. Before preaching his prepared sermon on 1 Thessalonians 2:13–19, he led the church in prayer for the population of Guadalajara; for the governor of Jalisco, Pablo Lemus; and for Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum.

After the service, the congregation decided to remain in the church for another hour, waiting for news about what was happening outside. The worship band played again, and people took turns praying. At the end, they left in groups. Each family that departed the church committed to informing the others about the route they had taken and the street conditions.

“When I left, there was no one on the streets. Everything was deserted,” Varas said. Earlier that morning, while they were in church, the state government had issued a code red alert, equivalent to a curfew.

The curfew was lifted later that day. Yet schools remained closed for part of the week, and some stores stayed shut. “The city came to a standstill unlike anything we saw even during the pandemic,” Varas said. “There is an apparent calm, waiting for trouble.”

Mexican Christians often face violence caused by drug trafficking. Street evangelists and pastors are aware that sentinels working for local drug dealers frequently follow their steps. Young people in poor neighborhoods are targets of the cartels’ forced recruitment. It’s dangerous for everyone who lives in areas under the influence of cartels, but life can be particularly risky for those, like church leaders, whose role is to promote peace. The widespread presence of criminal groups has led Mexico to become the 30th most dangerous place to be a Christian, according to the World Watch List.

Yet even those who are always under pressure of gang violence noted that the scale of this week’s events was unprecedented. Christians from different denominations united in prayer for the country and sought to support those who suffered from the blockades and the clashes.

“All of this comes at a very high emotional cost,” said Israel Gonzalez, a psychologist and pastor of Iglesia Peña de Horeb in Monterrey. “Being under a gun’s sight, being in the middle of a road blocked by trucks on fire is terrible. All this and not knowing if there’s something better ahead is terrible. Our churches need to help those who don’t know Jesus to find hope in this landscape.”

In a statement published on social media, bishop Enrique Treviño Cruz of the Anglican Diocese of Cuernavaca urged Christians to seek peace. “Jesus never promised us that life in this world would be a bed of roses. We are exposed to moments of affliction and conflict, but the certainty that Jesus triumphed over all evil should fill us with hope to persevere in prayer but also in action,” he wrote. “I especially urge you to encourage one another to remain in fervent prayer with the firm hope of finding the loving response of our Lord.”

Another concern among churches is the spread of false information, which results in further tension and panic buying. Varas noted that on Monday, the city’s gas stations were empty, causing many to buy and stockpile fuel “out of fear of what the future might hold.”

The College of Bishops of the Methodist Church of Mexico called for peace and asked believers not to spread fake news.

“We exhort our churches to remain united, to avoid spreading fear and disinformation, and to be instruments of reconciliation in their surroundings, ‘endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace’ (Ephesians 4:3),” the group said in a statement.

Varas called on believers to take as their own God’s promise to Jerusalem in Zephaniah 3:15–16: “The Lord has taken away your punishment, he has turned back your enemy. The Lord, the King of Israel, is with you; never again will you fear any harm. On that day they will say to Jerusalem, ‘Do not fear, Zion; do not let your hands hang limp.’”

“In this time of crisis, we hang on to God through prayer,” said Varas. “But I think this situation gives us an opportunity as Christians to transform prayer into a culture, not merely something to cling to during a crisis.”

Correction: An earlier version of this article misstated the level of government that issued the code red alert.

Ideas

ICE Is Devastating Some Latino Churches

One of America’s leading Hispanic Christians witnesses the devastating effect of immigration politics on church life.

An image of ICE agents and an image of an empty church.
Christianity Today February 27, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Images: Getty

I recently visited multiple congregations across Minnesota, including River Valley Church. As I stood inside each church, what I witnessed was not anecdotal or exaggerated. It was empirical and deeply troubling. As national immigration-enforcement politics evolve, churchgoers across the Midwest are feeling the consequences far from the border.

One of the largest Latino churches in the state, which previously held four Sunday services, is down to one service at roughly 60 percent capacity. Approximately 75 to 80 percent of this church body has stopped attending services altogether. 

This is not a story about declining faith or spiritual apathy. It is a story about fear. The Latino church is hemorrhaging, and the cause is increasingly clear.

Pastors repeatedly told me the same story: Families staying home. Parents afraid to drive. Elderly members afraid to leave their neighborhoods. Small-business owners closing early. Mothers sending their children to church, unsure whether they themselves would be able to return home safely.

These are not criminals hiding in the shadows. They are congregants who have lived in the same communities for a decade, two decades, or more. They are hardworking, God-fearing, contributing members of society. They do not depend on government subsidies. They worship faithfully, raise families, and love this country.

Fear has replaced fellowship, and silence has replaced singing. Sadly, the church—especially the Latino church—is paying the cost.

I do not write this as an activist or partisan. I write as a pastor who has spent decades on the frontlines of the intersection of faith, immigration, and public policy, in the process advising George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and Donald Trump. Across administrations, parties, and ideologies, one truth has remained consistent: Immigration policy works best when it is guided by both moral clarity and strategic wisdom.

Border security and the rule of law matter. National sovereignty is critical. But broad, indiscriminate, and unfocused enforcement without clear prioritization is not only ineffective but also counterproductive.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) should operate with clear targets and disciplined focus, pursuing those who pose real threats and leaving everyone else alone. A targeted, surgical approach would restore trust, protect communities, and avoid unnecessary collateral damage.

When enforcement lacks discernment, everyone loses. Law enforcement loses community cooperation. Churches lose their congregations. Children lose stability. And the nation loses moral credibility.

Faith communities—especially immigrant churches—have historically been among the strongest allies of public safety. Churches teach responsibility, respect for authority, family stability, and civic engagement. When these institutions are destabilized, the social fabric weakens.

This is not theoretical. I saw it with my own eyes: empty sanctuaries, pastors preaching to half-filled rooms, congregations once marked by joy now marked by anxiety.

In recent months, I have argued alongside faith leaders and policy experts that America must resist the temptation to treat all undocumented immigrants as if they are criminals. Scripture does not permit such moral shortcuts. We must remember justice requires discernment, mercy requires wisdom, and order requires precision.

Individuals who have been here for decades, put down roots, raised children, built businesses, and contributed to the common good should not be treated the same as those committing crimes. Conflating the two undermines both justice and public safety.

This is why bipartisan solutions deserve serious consideration. One such proposal is the Dignity Act. If passed, it would strengthen border security, mandate verification of work authorization, hold employers accountable, and provide a structured and earned pathway for long-term undocumented immigrants who meet strict criteria.

It is not amnesty. It is accountability with compassion, order with humanity, and law with dignity. These pairings are important. 

Under such a framework, criminals are swiftly removed, the border is decisively secured, and long-term residents are given the opportunity to come out of the shadows, pay restitution, work legally, and contribute fully to the nation they already call home.

This approach reflects a biblical ethic that values both truth and grace. Scripture consistently upholds the rule of law while commanding care for the sojourner. The two are not enemies; they are partners.

There is also a political reality we must acknowledge. Indiscriminate enforcement provokes backlash. History teaches us that overreach fuels reaction. And reaction often hands power back to ideologies that undermine public safety, weaken borders, and marginalize faith altogether.

No administration benefits from alienating one of the most faith-driven, family-oriented, and civically engaged communities in the nation.

There is still time to change course. 

The goal should not be fear-driven compliance but law-abiding cooperation. In place of mass anxiety, we must strive for measured justice. And instead of pushing for collective punishment, we should seek targeted accountability.

The Latino church is not asking for special treatment; it is asking for fair treatment. It is asking that the line between criminality and community be honored and that faith-filled families not become collateral damage in a debate too often stripped of nuance and humanity.

What I witnessed in Minnesota should concern every Christian and every policymaker.

Churches are more than buildings. They are anchors of hope, centers of service, and incubators of virtue. When they empty, the country loses something much deeper than attendance.

America can do better. We must do better.

We can secure the border and preserve dignity. We must enforce the law, protect families, and uphold justice while restoring trust.

The question is not whether immigration enforcement should exist. The question is whether we can be wise enough to distinguish between those who threaten our nation and those who strengthen it.

Right now, the Latino church is sending a clear and painful message.

We should listen.

Samuel Rodriguez is the lead pastor of New Season, a multisite nondenominational church based in California, and president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, which represents millions of Christians worldwide. He has written 12 books and produced seven faith-based films.

Ideas

‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ Should Be for All Americans

Contributor

Commonly referred to as the Black national anthem, the Christian hymn is part of our shared inheritance.

A collage of the United States, sheet music, and a hymn.
Christianity Today February 27, 2026
Illustration by Elizabeth Kaye / Source Images: Getty, WikiMedia Commons

This piece was adapted from the Mosaic newsletter. Subscribe here.

The hymn “Lift Every Voice and Sing” has officially been drafted into the culture war, becoming yet another prominent symbol of the political and racial divisions in the US.

For those who might not be aware of the ongoing controversy, here’s some background: The iconic hymn was composed in 1900 and has long been recognized by African Americans as a solemn yet hopeful anthem of our story. For more than a century, the song has been an integral part of Black culture. It then experienced a cultural resurgence of sorts in recent years, being sung at marches, concerts, and prominent football games, including the most recent Super Bowl.

Like almost every other cultural symbol and topic that has to do with race, the song’s growing presence quickly created fissures along racial and political lines. Some people on the left see it as a symbol of political resistance. On the right, many believe the song, especially when sung before or after the national anthem, divides the country and inappropriately draws attention to the nation’s troubled racial past during moments of civic pride.

But anyone who pays close attention to the hymn knows both views have flaws. The “Black national anthem,” as it is commonly known, is a song of gratitude, resilience, and covenantal memory. It speaks of faithfulness through suffering, of discipline through adversity, and of loyalty to a God who “has kept us thus far on the way.” It was not composed as a protest song and does not rage against the nation. Instead, it is a hymn of prayer for America to live up to its highest ideals and of praise for the considerable distance we have come on that long journey.

“It’s America’s music,” musicologist Naomi André said two years ago while discussing a federal bill that unsuccessfully sought to recognize the song as a national hymn. “If it were only sung by Black folks, then it would be limiting. This is music that’s not meant to divide people. In fact, it’s just the opposite: It’s about bringing people together.”

I agree with André. If the song is embraced by all Americans, as it has long been by a subset of the population, it could be one drop in a vast sea of changes that could inch us closer to reconciliation. I am not proposing that “Lift Every Voice and Sing” be designated as a co-anthem or displace any existing national symbol. But there is room within the rarified opus of deeply American music for one more song to be widely sung and shared. 

For the hymn to serve as a bridge, however, sacrifice will be required from more than one side. Those who have come to love the song would need to allow it to belong to a broader audience and see it not as a partisan or ideological emblem but as a shared inheritance. They would also need to trust that allowing it to be an American (instead of a merely African American) song does not dilute its history. 

On the other side, those who instinctively resist what they perceive as cultural displacement would need to embrace a hymn that’s not ingrained in their collective memory. They also need to see that the song does not champion splitting America into two nations. Instead, it draws us deeper into national unity by doing the almost impossible task of acknowledging suffering without denigrating the country.

It’s rare to see people lay down their arms like this in politics and culture. But it’s something our country needs to practice if we truly want a healthy public arena.

In some ways, the story of the song offers a model we can follow. The hymn was created by two brothers who had differing religious views but still worked together toward one goal.

James Weldon Johnson, who wrote the lyrics, grew up in a Christian home and later described himself as agnostic. Still, he was influenced by Christianity and wrote words that were filled with faith and hope. Meanwhile, his brother, J. Rosamond Johnson, composed the music and remained deeply rooted in the Black Protestant heritage.

The result is something remarkable: The song moves easily in secular spaces while carrying unmistakable biblical themes. The NAACP adopted it in the early 20th century, and it was sung in Black churches, civic gatherings, school assemblies, and movement meetings as a hymn of endurance and aspiration. The song offered theology without coercion and exemplified the kind of contribution biblical Christianity has historically made to American public life—not through domination but by helping us embrace new ways of thinking.

If you’re convinced so far, you might be wondering how exactly a song becomes part of America’s musical canon, at least culturally. What history shows is that it doesn’t happen too often, and it’s also not always immediate.

Take the national anthem: The 117-year journey of “The Star-Spangled Banner” from wartime poem to America’s official song was neither instant nor inevitable. Francis Scott Key wrote the verses in 1814, but the song did not become the official anthem until 1931. Its elevation unfolded gradually—through deep appreciation, popular adoption, and eventual political recognition.

Then, there are other songs that have helped define the American soundscape: “Hail, Columbia,” “My Country, ’Tis of Thee,” and “America the Beautiful.” None of them has erased the others. But each has added its own layer of meaning to our country’s evolving story. In the same way, we can add “Lift Every Voice and Sing” to the list.

Apart from its history, one reason I love the hymn so much is that it refuses despair—which is something our country, and even we as Christians, sorely need right now. We have become skilled at narrating our grievances, but less so at showing gratitude. We are fluent in accusation, but we lack shared aspirations with others, especially those with whom we ideologically disagree. This path, however, is not sustainable. A nation cannot indefinitely endure on critique alone. It must also cultivate thanksgiving and resolve among its people.

If America is to be more than a marketplace of grievances, we will need common practices that do not require total agreement. Singing together has historically been one of those practices, and singing this song together would require us to admit something humbling: that America’s story includes both glory and grave injustice, both aspiration and failure.

The hymn would require some to sing of a “dark past” they’d rather sanitize, minimize, or forget. It would ask others to sing about a turning of the page and the start of a hopeful “new day” in America that’s not defined by the horrors of our past. In an era of constant division, accomplishing that would be no small thing.

Chris Butler is a pastor in Chicago and the director of Christian civic formation at the Center for Christianity & Public Life. He is also the co-author of  Compassion & Conviction: The And Campaign’s Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement

Books
Review

Parenting Takes Courage. These Books Offer Hope.

Three books on parenting and family to read this month.

Three books on a yellow background.
Christianity Today February 27, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today

This piece was adapted from CT’s books newsletter. Subscribe here.

Laurie Krieg, Raising Wise Kids in a Sexually Broken World (IVP, 2026)

Raising Wise Kids in a Sexually Broken World lays out how to teach our kids a biblical sexual ethic without ever losing sight of the gospel or the freedom we have in Christ. While the topics of sex and sexuality often evoke fear in parents, Laurie Krieg and Matt Krieg are full of gentleness and hope, encouraging parents to look upon the goodness of God. It’s both practical and deeply theological.

This book proclaims that all of us experience broken sexuality in various ways, and we need the gospel for healing, not shame. The law gives us a picture of wholeness and what is good, and the gospel is the avenue of that healing. I especially loved how the authors see our sexuality as part of our vocations, whether that is in marriage or singleness, rather than the source of our holiness, which comes from Christ. Our bodies, made by God, are in service to his mission. And the church, also a body, has many parts, and there is diversity in how that plays out.

The conversation is especially tender and vulnerable around LGTBQ issues in this book. It gives an accessible framework of both explaining to kids how God’s design for marriage is between a man and a woman, but also showing how to love and speak to LGTBQ people within our reach in appropriate ways—as beloved human beings made in the image of God. Krieg also addresses gender identity, solidly rooted in physical biology as well as Christian freedom to express those genders in the full range that God allows, rather than cultural stereotypes.

James Traub, The Cradle of Citizenship (W. W. Norton & Company, 2026)

As a mom of six who homeschooled for over a decade and also used both public and private schools for my children, I often find myself in an ideological no-man’s-land, where educational tribes are set against one another. I believe in Christian freedom in this area, as well as in a civic duty to our neighbors. It is that civic responsibility—ensuring an educated democracy—that makes this next book especially relevant.

The author is a journalist specializing in educational issues and has been disturbed by the glaring lack of civics education in the public schools, leading to the political situation we find ourselves in now. He talks about a move away from history and facts to skills mastery—to the detriment of basic knowledge of government processes. This book is a thorough history of the educational civic movements within our country, as overcorrections have swung back and forth.

He marks out the shift of schools becoming an instrument used by various factions for social change and whitewashed patriotism rather than a look at civic virtue through the lens of historical founding documents and circumstances of our country.

Like me, Traub doesn’t seem to fit a traditional political tribal mold when it comes to education. Both of us would like to “amen” for a return to a classical model of education. Yet I agree with his view that some current classical Christian movements wear the “veil” of classical education when they are actually pushing political agendas, becoming the very thing they critique on the far left. Readers may be triggered by his open disdain for President Trump’s moral character being antithetical to the development of civic virtues, and his critique of both far-right and far-left agendas within education.

However, this book calls us back to the foundational goals of a civilized society and warns us of the enduring truth that those who neglect history are bound to repeat its mistakes.

Melissa Kruger, Parenting with Hope (‎Harvest House Publishers, 2024)

The Gospel Coalition’s Melissa B. Kruger offers a gentle picture of parenting teens that involves generous hospitality, instilling biblical values, and rooting our kids in the gospel. Rather than fearing the teen years, Kruger presents a different picture where truths taught start to take root.

Some parenting books are full of data and give academic or exegetical arguments. The tone of this book is personal, as an experienced mom imparting her wisdom on younger parents with kids just entering the teen years. I especially appreciated Kruger’s points on providing an atmosphere of grace and cultivating a home where your teen can rest from the world.

In a culture that draws parenting knowledge from studies that optimize human performance, Kruger offers a more biblical approach that makes space for teens to just be human, living in the knowledge and grace of God. Sports are good, but they are not the end. Failures are part of the learning process, and also not the end.

The Lutheran in me would have liked to see better law-and-gospel distinctions, as definitions of each tend to get muddled together. I would also like to glean from the author more about walking our children through inevitable suffering, as most parenting books like this focus on flourishing—a less scary subject. But I can’t help but find this book to be incredibly encouraging, firmly fixing our eyes on Jesus. It would make a great resource for studies in small groups as well as individuals or couples. There are so many topics addressed that would be ideal discussion points for parents to work through together.

Gretchen Ronnevik is the author of Ragged: Spiritual Disciplines for the Spiritually Exhausted and cohost of the Freely Given podcast.

History

Confronting Evils

In 1974, CT saw trouble in the White House, Chile, and Cyprus, and in the American fascination with exorcists.

An image of Richard Nixon and a CT magazine cover from 1974.
Christianity Today February 27, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Images: Getty, CT Archives

The Watergate scandal grew worse in 1974—and then worse still. CT looked at President Richard Nixon’s ethical lapses, revealed in the publication of transcripts of secret tapes he had in the White House, and asked, “Should Nixon resign?

There can be no doubt that a large percentage of those who voted for Richard Nixon in November, 1972, no longer have confidence in him, and that his capacity to execute the functions of his office has been considerably reduced. Whether guilty or innocent of impeachable offenses—“treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors”—he bears the ultimate responsibility for what Watergate has come to stand for.

Mr. Nixon’s problems were greatly intensified by his release of the transcripts of the tapes. Up to that time the major if not the only question was a legal one: Did he have advance knowledge of Watergate and was he involved in the cover-up? To that has been added a large question of morality. The transcripts show him to be a person who has failed gravely to live up to the moral demands of our Judeo-Christian heritage. We do not expect perfection, but we rightly expect our leaders, and especially our President, to practice a higher level of morality than the tapes reveal. … 

We now have a President who is under House scrutiny for possible impeachment and whose moral flaws have been revealed. A legal question lies at the root of the call for impeachment; a moral question, at least superficially and theoretically, lies at the root of the call for resignation. If the President were to resign, the legal question would not be resolved. Yet the Constitution does not provide for the removal of a President because of moral flaws. To resign would be to leave the presidency for other than a constitutional offense. …

Superficially a case can be made for resignation based on the immediate best interests of the nation. But the long-run disadvantages might outweigh any immediate benefits.

When Nixon did resign—the first (and, to-date, only) president in American history to step down in disgrace—CT paused to reflect on the troubled era and express hope for the next president, Gerald Ford.

During the last decade and a half John F. Kennedy was assassinated; the armed forces fought in Viet Nam and finally came home; Lyndon B. Johnson was eliminated from the 1968 presidential campaign by the pressures of an unpopular war despite his election in 1964 by a great landslide; Robert Kennedy was assassinated at a time when his candidacy for the office of president was reaching a high tide; Richard Nixon won the election in 1968 with the promise to end the war in Viet Nam and bring peace to the world. The end of Nixon’s first term was marred by the Watergate charges. …

Early in his second term Nixon succeeded in bringing U.S. participation in the Viet Nam war to a conclusion. Not long thereafter came the exposure and finally the resignation from the vice-presidency of Spiro Agnew, whose “law and order” mentality was grossly at variance with his personal practices. Meanwhile the Watergate situation was moving slowly but inexorably to a climax, which finally came on the evening of August 8, when President Nixon announced to the nation that he would resign the following day. … 

America’s new president, Gerald Ford, seems to have grasped the central demand of the nation from the ethical standpoint: the need for truth, honesty, and integrity in the White House and throughout the government. He has promised to make these principles the pole-stars of his administration. No government can long stand when these virtues have disappeared. We hope that Mr. Ford will clearly exemplify them, that in his conduct of the government there will be an openness and honesty and an obvious commitment to righteousness.

President Ford would be well advised to choose men and women of Christian faith and prayer to work with him—not just career bureaucrats, businessmen, and financiers.

In 1974, CT also reported on struggles around the world. Theologian René Padilla, a regular columnist, wrote about the military coup in Chile in a piece titled “The Church and Political Ambiguity.” 

For many Latin Americans the former President of Chile, Salvador Allende, was a symbol of hope. Democratically elected in 1970, he was for them the embodiment of a cherished desire for revolution without bloodshed. … 

But the experiment was doomed to failure. Whatever one may think of the ideological color of Allende’s revolution, the fact remains that no small nation in the Third World is truly free today to follow its own course and to keep its economy unaffected by international pressures at the same time. Add to this the internal pressures created not only by the political conservatives but also by the extreme leftists, and you will easily understand the great economic chaos that overtook Chile in the months preceding the military blow of September, 1973. … 

I will not attempt here to explain the factors that precipitated the military blow led by General Augusto Pinochet and his colleagues (all of them professing Roman Catholics) last year. According to a common opinion, it would have never taken place aside from the encouragement of the U. S. State Department. Be that as it may, Allende’s Marxist experiment came to an end marked by his own suicide and followed by a systematic effort to reverse the revolution that he had initiated.

As soon as the military had taken over, several evangelical leaders expressed their adherence to the new government. That God had directly intervened to deliver the country from Communism was a widespread view among evangelical Christians. And I know of at least one missionary statesman whose interpretations of the military takeover as God’s doing was widely circulated abroad. Nothing was said, however, about the negative aspects of the whole situation and particularly about the appalling cruelty displayed by the military regime in dealing with its political opponents.

CT also tried to help readers understand the political tumult happening in Cyprus, where a military coup overthrew a president who was also an Eastern Orthodox archbishop:

To write about Cyprus is not easy, partly because of the complexity of the situation, partly because of the marked (but understandable) unhelpfulness I experienced in Nicosia from British and American information agencies, but also because of my dismay, felt in 1965 and recently renewed in Nicosia, that the dual role of Makarios should perpetuate old antagonisms. That one man should officially represent both church and state calls for a Solomonic wisdom and impartiality that the president/archbishop shows little signs of possessing.

“Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s” is a word that the apostles may well have proclaimed to the Cypriot proconsul Sergius Paulus. Makarios and his troubled island vividly demonstrate the folly of ignoring that divine injunction.

Evangelicals were thinking globally in 1974 thanks, in part, to the International Congress on World Evangelization held in Lausanne, Switzerland. CT treated the event as a monumental moment in evangelical history and covered the gathering from beginning to end. Billy Graham laid out the purpose in a 5,600-word article, “Why Lausanne?”  

God is at work in a remarkable way. Never have so many people been so open to the Gospel. In parts of Asia, there are evidences of the outpouring of God’s Spirit in evangelism. In Korea, the churches are increasing four times faster than the population. In certain parts of northeast India, Christians now form a majority of the population and are bringing about a whole new dimension of civic righteousness. In Papua, New Guinea, a land where the Gospel was virtually unknown before this generation, a large percentage of the people now profess faith in Christ. Latin Americans are responding to the Gospel in unprecedented numbers, and evangelical churches in many parts of Latin America are multiplying vigorously.

In North America, especially the United States, there has been a remarkable upsurge of interest in the Gospel in the last decade—especially among youth. It is true that old denominations with theologically liberal tendencies are declining; yet the more evangelical denominations such as the Southern Baptist Convention (America’s largest Protestant denomination) are showing a steady growth. Similarly the evangelical theological seminaries and Bible schools are overflowing while the more liberal schools are seeing a dramatic drop in enrollment. Scores of para-church evangelistic organizations are flourishing as never before. 

Editor Harold Lindsell offered an optimistic appraisal after the meeting:  

Lausanne dealt substantively with two questions: (1) What is it that evangelicals believe and are called upon to do? and (2) What strategies and methods can evangelicals, working together, use to complete the task God has called them to do?

Lausanne brought together many of the finest evangelical minds and the most devoted and committed servants of God. The excellence of the program, the wide range of small strategy and study groups, the mingling of men and women across racial, class, and denominational lines, and the free expression of differing opinions on some questions were hallmarks of the congress. … 

At Lausanne the Gospel was tied to the mission of the Church, and that mission was defined as the evangelization of the world. … The spirit of sacrifice required to do this job was emphasized, and covenant signers were called upon to cultivate “a simple lifestyle in order to contribute more generously to both relief and evangelism.” …

At Lausanne, social action was not put on the same plane with the proclamation of the Gospel, nor was it given standing as a substitute for the Gospel. But it surfaced again and again, and Christians were called to work for justice for all mankind. 

Other spiritual developments of the era were more troubling. CT said the success of the film The Exorcist spurred widespread interest in demons, prompting many Americans to ask, “Exorcism: Is it for real?

Experiential realization of Satan’s existence is not hard to come by either, in our century of world holocausts (nobody wants war, but war is everywhere), genocide, and a humanity bent on self-destruction. … If one accepts the biblical evidence for the ontological reality of the devil, one is simultaneously committed to the reality of demon possession, for the demons of the New Testament do not remain outside human life, with their hideous countenances pressed as it were against the windowpanes of the soul; they can break through the glass and take up residence within. … 

Possession by demons is one of the most constant and universal religious phenomena, experientially confirmed among primitive peoples and civilized moderns alike, as the classical treatises on the subject fully attest ….

Whatever the forms employed in exorcism, everything must focus upon the power and strength of Christ. An exorcist, no matter how sound in doctrine and sanctified in life, is no personal match for supernatural evil. Just as some witnessing battles are lost while others are won, so some exorcisms succeed while others do not. 

The maturity of The Exorcist as book and film was nowhere better demonstrated than in its recognition that in the last analysis, where all else fails, only Substitution rids man of the evil powers arrayed against him. Thus the final appeal must always be made to the Great Substitute, who on the cross, “having spoiled principalities and powers, made a shew of them openly, triumphing over them in it” (Col. 2:14, 15). 

There and there alone we have an Exorcist who (thank God!) does not need to be paid to prevent repossession. What he did for us can never be repaid. And one day even our failures will be redeemed, for from the heights of heaven to the lowest depths of hell every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.

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