Books
Review

This ‘Screwtape for Our Times’ Will Challenge and Confound You

The Body of This Death is difficult to classify, difficult to read, and absolutely worth your time.

The book cover
Christianity Today February 16, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Images: Getty, Word on Fire Academic

The Body of This Death is difficult to classify. Authored by Ross McCullough, a theologian in the Honors Program at George Fox University, it is almost—but not quite—a novel, a theological treatise, a collection of aphorisms, a series of correspondence, a science fiction dystopia, and a tract for Roman Catholicism. It is also the best new book you’ll read this year. 

As its subtitle states, the book consists of a series of “Letters from the Last Archbishop of Lancaster.” This framing device brings to mind other epistolary novels, as evidenced by the endorsement of novelist Jeffrey Eugenides, who calls the book “a Screwtape for our times.” Beyond a likeness of format, though, The Body of This Death is reminiscent of The Screwtape Letters in another way: It too is an instant classic of Christian spiritual writing that deserves a wide audience.

The time in which the book is set is unknown. It’s not the near future, but it’s close enough to be recognizable, perhaps a few centuries from now. There has clearly been some break between old and new orders, and McCullough’s English archbishop finds himself penning letters during a time of seismic transition. As the plot unfolds, you learn why he was the last archbishop of Lancaster and why his name has been preserved for posterity.

But the letters don’t come to us straight from their fictional author. We get them from a French scholar, writing in “Year 20 of the New Common Era.” He’s working with a newly discovered manuscript of the cleric’s writings, a one-sided correspondence with a range of addressees: a priest, a nun, an old friend, a struggling agnostic, a Muslim mother. The scholar arranges these letters in roughly chronological order, and they both recount and react to events happening in the writers’ lives and the world around them. These are followed by “posthumous” letters that could not be inserted smoothly in the ordinary correspondence.

With these epistolary snapshots, McCullough tackles an extraordinary range of subjects: from virtual reality, secular liberalism, and the nature of fatherhood to Islam, infant baptism, and the Incarnation. The result is a tour de force: a postmodern Pascal, an American Chesterton, a Catholic Kierkegaard.

Those three loom large in the book, as do Dante Alighieri, Fyodor Dostoevsky, and T. S. Eliot, along with the writings of both the church fathers and the desert fathers. It isn’t only their ideas that appear, though. It’s their style.

McCullough’s writing is not the kind of academic work which cannot help but cut God down to size, but neither is it popular, reaching readers with simple vocabulary and accessible structure. The Body of This Death is unapologetically literary, and while the payoff is worth it, the book demands much of its readers. If it’s deliberately difficult, it’s in imitation of the way Jesus’ parables confound his listeners. The point is the stubborn provocation—unwillingness to comply with the stories we prefer to tell ourselves. Jesus hasn’t failed when his hearers storm off in anger. His hearers have failed, and his parable has succeeded precisely by exposing their failure. 

The letters in The Body of This Death are closer to proverbs than parables. They’re largely aphorisms, for, as the archbishop comments, “Only the aphoristic is adequate to the task” of speaking about the divine mystery, “because only the aphoristic makes plain its [own] inadequacy.” Or, as the German writer Karl Kraus once wrote, “An aphorism never equals the truth. It is a half-truth, or a truth-and-a-half.”

Not for nothing, then, does aphoristic theology have a venerable place in Christian history. Its roots lie in biblical wisdom literature: Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Job, books that ask at least as much as they answer. These are not systematic theologies. A proverb is a memorable saying of the wise, sometimes clear, sometimes enigmatic. It pokes and prods the conscience. It resists mastery, summary, and restatement. Its brevity can prove maddening even as it sticks in the mind. As the cow chews the cud, seekers of wisdom grind and suck until the proverb gives up its nourishment.

The desert fathers inherited and continued this tradition with their Apophthegmata, short sayings and anecdotes from the fourth and fifth centuries. These tend to follow a pattern: An abba goes to the desert to pray in solitude and instead attracts all manner of followers eager for his guidance. Some youthful man visits him, hoping to see a miracle, and the miracle he is told to seek is silent prayer alone in a cell. 

Sometimes these accounts involve the spectacular, like fighting demons. But more often at issue is something unspectacular, like avoiding fornication or refraining from gossip. The fathers’ comments are usually brief, witty, and unexpected, even deflating. McCullough’s archbishop follows their lead, taking up the mantle of Solomon and the desert fathers by striving with pithy formulations to gesture at truths that cannot be captured by finite minds.

“These letters are aphorisms,” he writes. Whether as a proverb or apothegm, the aphorism is close to the apophatic, a style of theology suspicious of the closure and finality of human speech. Words cannot but limit and bind, whereas the living God is infinite. His freedom breaks our words open—at times like a bud from a seed, at times like a split atom. We need words to know God, and he has given us trustworthy words by which to know him, yet aphorisms are a necessary check on our pretentions. They discipline our pride by curbing our verbal idolatry.

In the words of Blaise Pascal, “I should be honouring my subject too much if I treated it in order, since I am trying to show that it is incapable of it.” God will not submit to our ordering. He will not be tamed.

Like any correspondence, the book’s letters accumulate their themes, arguments, and wisdom over time, by familiarity and repetition and “real-world” events. In that sense, it gets easier as you go—but there’s no handholding in this book. 

There aren’t even handholds. You’re set down alone in a labyrinth, and you must proceed until you confront—or rather, are confronted by—Christ. As the archbishop writes in a late letter to the “inquisitors” who have imprisoned him on a trumped-up charge, “Do you know, Christ is not nailed to the cross; the cross is nailed to Christ. It is not the savior that flees the world but the world that flees its salvation. You think you are here to discipline me, but perhaps the nails run the other way.”

If the correspondence has a center, it is the cross of Christ. The letters spiral around it—not only the mystery of salvation but also the vocation of all believers to join the Lord in his passion. At one point the archbishop asks, “Why has Christianity lasted so long?” His answer: “It is a religion of suffering well.” One of the shortest letters is devoted entirely to the topic:

Fr. Rodrigues,

Pain is not the wound; pain is the reaction to the wound. Suffering is not alienation from God but a reaction against alienation, a protest that begins from some inarticulate depth inside of us—the depth from which articulations come. That is why it is holy, because it is always already on the side of the angels. In that sense, the suffering of purgatory and the suffering of hell both tend to their own dissolution: the one by overcoming the alienation, the other by silencing the protest.

Here is another, to the same priest:

The Church too gives us little reason for optimism, I’m afraid. Even the Apostles betrayed Jesus—are betraying him.

But optimism is not hope. Optimism sees history held in the hands of the two centurions: and the one after all is faithful beyond Israel, the other was converted by the cross. Hope on the other hand finds history between the two Judases: Iscariot, lost cause; not Iscariot, patron of lost causes.

This last letter is representative: so compact in its allusions it might as well be spring-loaded. If you don’t know one centurion from another or who the patron of lost causes is, the author is not going to let you in on the secret. (Nor am I.) The aim isn’t to keep you in the dark. It’s to draw you out of it. The saints and authors and poetic references are woven together so inseparably they form a single thread. And as with Ariadne and Theseus, this thread is meant to lead you out of the labyrinth—or perhaps toward its center.

The themes and theology of McCullough’s book, combined with how he chose to write it, raise two questions worth pondering for evangelical readers. The first is how, or whether, evangelicals should read Catholic writers. The second is what evangelicals might learn from a book like this: highbrow in style and substance, written in beautiful but stylized prose that is likely to prove unwelcoming, even intractable, to many readers.

I’ve paired the questions together because my answer is the same for both: Evangelicals can become better readers by reading more widely within the church—and not only when authors from outside the fold are safely six feet under.

You know the reading habit I mean. J. R. R. Tolkien, Thomas Merton, G. K. Chesterton, John Henry Newman, even Thomas Aquinas: all widely read by American evangelicals today, and all of them gone on to their reward. Were Chesterton alive today, would evangelicals like him so well? No doubt he’d have racked up quite a few high-profile conversions, much to the chagrin of Protestants wishing he’d quit picking off our best and brightest.

Or even think of C. S. Lewis, who never swam the Tiber but absolutely does not tick the familiar boxes of American evangelicalism. Lewis was an avid smoker who affirmed evolution, denied a young earth, read the early chapters of Genesis as nonhistorical, loved pagan myths and secular literature, and believed in both the priesthood and infant baptism. And yet—rightly—evangelicals celebrate Lewis as a great Christian writer and thinker. Could it be that there are Christians of our own time, in other branches of the family tree, who might instruct and reform us too?

Even if evangelicals remain cautious in their reading habits, The Body of This Death may yet find the readership it deserves. Journalist Arthur Koestler was right to say that “a writer’s ambition should be … to trade a hundred contemporary readers for ten readers in ten years and for one reader in a hundred years.” McCullough writes in that spirit, and I have no doubt this book will outlast our time, just as Lewis’s work has endured.

Writing that lasts is not easy. It is not market-tested by surveys. It is not measured by book sales or median reader taste. It is certainly not vetted by sensitivity readers.

People still read Søren Kierkegaard today—and have their lives overturned by his thought—not because it is digestible but because it is the very opposite. His voice is winding, florid, disorienting, and infuriating. But he speaks to what matters. He is gripped and enthralled by a vision he must communicate to anyone who will listen, with the urgency of life and death. His letters are scrawled in blood, not ink. His work won’t let you go until it’s finished with you.

That’s the kind of book this is. I believe it will prove a classic, but others will be the judge of that. What is indisputable is that McCullough has written a book that aspires to greatness. He sets the terms of encounter, and they are not negotiable. But if you accept the invitation, you won’t be the same again.

Christians need more writing like this—books that aim higher than sales or accessibility. And we need to honor and celebrate them when, in these rare moments, they come along. This is one of those moments. Enter the labyrinth and prepare yourself for the mystery that awaits.

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.

History

CT Reports from Nixon’s Trip to Communist China

In 1972, American evangelicals were concerned about religious liberty around the world and moral decline at home.

Richard Nixon Eating with Zhou Enlai in 1972.

Richard Nixon Eating with Zhou Enlai in 1972.

Christianity Today February 13, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Images: Getty, CT Archives

“The year 1972 promises to be memorable for evangelical Christianity,” said CT editors in January. “Many signs suggest we are on the verge of a major spiritual awakening that will benefit not churches alone but the whole of civilized culture.” 

That editorial quickly moved to one college student’s statement:  

I have always been, or tried to be, a vocal crusader against injustice. But when I became a Christian, I saw the realm of social change in a different light. It was always easy for me to lash out against intangible evils like “the establishment” or the “fascist, racist nation.” But through Christ I’ve come to see that the problem is personal. The “establishment” is my next-door neighbor, my teachers, my employer. 

I’ve come to see that the most effective and lasting change comes through relating to people, changing the portion of the world that I, as a seventeen-year-old Christian, come in contact with. When seen in this light, America with its many ills is no longer some faceless opponent; it looks like the man next door. Changing him is changing America.

The editors concluded,

For many years, churches have been jostled about by the controversy over social gospel versus personal piety. This dispute has produced in many minds a distinction between personal and social ethics that is unreal. The two areas are merely selective emphases, distinguished for purposes of discussion. One cannot exist without the other.

Richard Nixon went to China in 1972. It was one of the Cold War’s most dramatic diplomatic gambits, shifting global calculations and widening the Russian-Chinese rift. CT called it “a pivotal event of history,” but editors wanted greater emphasis on religious liberty.

No issue is more basic than religious liberty. Of all the subjects to be discussed, none could be regarded as more profitable. Religious liberty is foundational to all human rights; yet there is ample evidence that in our supposedly enlightened times the number of people in the world who enjoy any substantial measure of it is declining! 

A discussion of political perspectives or even the physical needs of people is pointless unless the prior claim of religious freedom is acknowledged. If a man cannot live for what he regards as most crucial, then what is the point of living at all? Suppression of religious freedom is the supreme injustice.

CT, reporting on how Christians were faring in another Communist dictatorship, published the observations of two Reformation scholars who visited East Germany. 

Everywhere we turned we experienced the monotonous sloganeering and propaganda of a totalitarian state, and we saw no indication that the rigorous police controls over inhabitants and visitors alike had been relaxed. … One frequently senses he is being watched, and nearly everybody speaks in low tones when in public places. …

The East German regime is fundamentally inimical to Christianity. Although it apparently does not wish an open confrontation with the church, it tries to undermine the influence of religion in the country. … 

Pastor Wilhelm Eisner ministers to a medium-sized congregation in East Berlin. … According to him, church attendance is lower than it used to be, and because of the youth dedication the number of confirmands has dropped off. Nevertheless, the depth of faith of those who remain is greater than before. In his ministry Pastor Eisner has been emphasizing the lordship of Christ and the necessity for the full commitment of one’s life and goods to him. Official pressures have not emptied his church, but the built-in disabilities for believers have made life more difficult for Pastor Eisner’s flock, and for his family as well. His spirit and courage in standing for the integrity of the Gospel in the face of hostility from the regime were most impressive.

The emergence of a new folk hero caused evangelicals concern in 1972. The mysterious “Dan Cooper”  (or D. B. Cooper) hijacked an airplane, demanded $200,000, escaped without the money, and was widely celebrated.

Instead of regarding “Dan Cooper” as an outlaw who had endangered the lives of scores of people in an effort to enrich himself, many people seemed to look at him as a kind of national hero—a modern version of Robin Hood who robbed the rich and kept it all for himself. According to an Associated Press dispatch on November 29, 1971, “most of those responding to questions hoped the daring hijacker would escape.”

A sociology professor at the University of Washington commented that the hijacker won public admiration because he pulled off “an awesome feat in the battle of man against the machine—one individual overcoming, for the time being anyway, technology, the corporation, the establishment, the system” …

All of this is indicative of a strange new mentality that is emerging in our nation. We are living in an age of permissiveness gone to seed—an age when Bonnie and Clyde, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, are idolized rather than condemned, an age when every man supposedly has a right to do his own thing, lawful or not.

Another sign of shifting morality in America was the decline of prayers before public meals

Protestants in growing numbers are abandoning this form of public worship. Studies have shown … the early 60s saw a resurgence in giving thanks at home but a definite decline in doing so in public. Often children seem willing to pray in a restaurant but the parents are ill at ease. … 

Saying grace can … serve as a witness to the unconverted. This willingness to be different may signify dedication, and in all probability the observing non-believer will feel respect rather than scorn. Paul Little in How to Give Away Your Faith suggests that Christians tactfully explain to an unsaved meal companion what they are doing, being careful not to sound superior or self-righteous.

CT also reported concerns about the disappearance of the Protestant work ethic. Carl F. H. Henry said that critics misunderstood the Christian view

The Bible work ethic is now increasingly indicted on the cheap supposition that the divine assignment to man of dominion over the earth legitimizes depletion of natural resources, pollution of the earth, and the depersonalization of life and culture by empirical scientism. Nothing could be further from the truth. In its radical rejection of Christianity and Reformation theology the mounting post-Christian ethic is motivated more by spiritual rebellion than by ethical earnestness. But Christians must grapple with the work principles the Bible actually gives us, and must square their outlook and behavior with these claims.

CT encouraged evangelicals’ growing concern for the environment and “the emerging food ethic” in 1972.   

Devout Christian believers are realizing that they must look out for the “whole man,” and be good stewards of their own bodies. … People are flocking to health-food stores and are trying to forsake processed foods. “Organically grown” foods, those cultivated without the use of pesticides or what are regarded as chemical, artificial fertilizers, are in great demand. Some foods are being touted as especially healthful, among them wheat germ, soybeans, honey, and sesame seeds.

A great new sensitivity has been developing among consumers toward additives used for coloring, flavoring, preserving, and otherwise conditioning food; some are known to be harmful to human health, and others are suspect. 

Several new names appeared in CT in 1972—writers who would become important to American evangelicalism in the future. Theology student Wayne Grudem wrote “Letter to a Prospective Seminarian.” Pastor Eugene Peterson wrote about the resurrection

There was one resurrection; there are four narratives of it. Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John tell the story, each in his own way. Each narrative is distinct and has its own character. When the four accounts are absorbed into the imagination, they develop rich melodies, harmonies, counterpoint. The four voices become a resurrection quartet.

Yet many people never hear the music. The reason, I think, is that the apologetic style for years has been to “harmonize” the four resurrection stories. But it never turns out to be harmonization. Instead of listening to their distinctive bass, tenor, alto, and soprano voices, we have tried to make the evangelists sing the same tune. Differences and variations in the resurrection narratives are denied, affirmed, doubted, and “interpreted.”

There is a better way. Since we have the four accounts that supplement one another, we can be encouraged to celebrate each one as it is, and to magnify the features that make it distinct from the others. …

1972 was an election year, and CT looked at the evangelical credentials of the far-right candidate running for president. When segregationist George Wallace was asked if he had been born again, “his answer was anything but vague.” 

Wallace testifies that at the age of thirteen he was born again during a little Methodist church revival. In the December issue of the John Birch Society’s American Opinion Wallace was quoted: “I have accepted Christ as my personal Savior. …” 

The Wallace campaign has had an evangelistic atmosphere. One observer reported that Wallace rallies combine “old-time rural evangelism, slick country-music salesmanship, and tried-and-true evangelical oratory.” Baptist preacher George Mangum of Selma, Alabama, travels with the campaigns, opening each rally with a “spiritual conversation with our God about some of the political problems in our country.” And, as in a rural revival, ushers pass buckets through the crowd while Mangum appeals for money.

Many Wallace supporters consider him “a good Christian man.”

Democrat George McGovern had some evangelical support as well. 

One group of evangelicals—aiming to demolish the “conservative-theology-equals-conservative-politics” stereotype—formed an Evangelicals for McGovern (EFM) committee dedicated to raising funds and pushing their candidate as the one who most closely adheres to biblical principles of social justice. The pitch was made to 8,000 evangelical leaders in a letter from EFM chairman Walden Howard, editor of Faith at Work. … 

“Evangelicals should be concerned about social justice from a biblical perspective,” [Howard] said in an interview. “I just don’t believe social justice is a high priority with Nixon. But it’s the heart of McGovern’s motivation.” Howard claimed the McGovern platform “moves at many crucial points in the direction indicated by biblical principles.”

Most evangelicals—and most Americans—voted to re-elect Richard Nixon: His landslide victory, with majorities in 49 states, was “no particular surprise,” according to CT, but editors also called for a full investigation of campaign staff who broke into Democratic Party headquarters and attempted to plant listening devices in the telephones.

There seems little doubt that, whether Nixon knew it or not, a number of his key supporters engaged in a brazen program of political espionage and in unfair attempts to interfere with the nominating and election processes. …

The failure of the White House to counter the charges in any substantial way serves to underscore the impression that much was amiss. We feel that the American people in general do not condone such goings-on and that their return of Nixon to office for a second term should not be so interpreted. 

It is now the President’s obligation to pursue with vigor and candor a full investigation of the alleged misdeeds.

Nixon did not heed such calls.

Ideas

Do Singles Really Have More Time for Ministry?

Contributor

The married and the unmarried both should be concerned with the Lord’s affairs.

A blurry black and white photo of a couple hugging.
Christianity Today February 13, 2026
Illustration by Elizabeth Kaye / Source Images: Unsplash

When I was in my teens, Magic Eye pictures were all the rage. My friends and I would compete to be the first to unlock the 3D image—a sailboat, a school of fish, a mountain range—buried within a page of chaotic, technicolour static. All it took was time, patience, a commitment to stare beyond the visual white noise, and the ability to stay cross-eyed for minutes at a time, and then suddenly the previously hidden image would snap into focus. And once you saw it, you couldn’t unsee it.

As I’ve spent the past decade or so digging deeper into what the Bible teaches about singleness, I’ve had several “Magic Eye” moments—occasions when looking at a familiar biblical passage from a fresh perspective suddenly brought it into new focus. Each time, it felt like I could finally see past the confusing static—the mistaken assumptions and incomplete teachings that often blur our understanding of those passages—and appreciate the full, 3D biblical truth about singleness (and often also marriage) that had been there all along.

One quiet Saturday morning several years ago, I was sitting in a local café, sipping a mediocre chai, when I felt the urge to open 1 Corinthians 7:32–35. I had no particular reason to turn to that passage, but looking back now, I can see that the Holy Spirit was giving me a not-so-gentle prompting.

I would like you to be free from concern. An unmarried man is concerned about the Lord’s affairs—how he can please the Lord. But a married man is concerned about the affairs of this world—how he can please his wife— and his interests are divided. An unmarried woman or virgin is concerned about the Lord’s affairs: Her aim is to be devoted to the Lord in both body and spirit. But a married woman is concerned about the affairs of this world—how she can please her husband. I am saying this for your own good, not to restrict you, but that you may live in a right way in undivided devotion to the Lord.

Here’s how this passage is most often explained: Married Christians have a spouse whose needs they must prioritize, and so they have less time, energy, and capacity for things like their church family, gospel ministry, and even wider relationships. But those who are single (and therefore spouseless) are blessed with more freedom, energy, and capacity to invest in all those areas. Unlike their married counterparts, they don’t have a legitimate reason to be divided in their devotion to God and his people. One author has put it like this: The single Christian is “able to say ‘yes’ to things that require more of you than a married person can afford.”

But if I’m being honest, this interpretation of the passage has always felt a bit unresolved to me. As a never-married Christian woman, I haven’t often found myself with a wonderful surplus of freedom and flexibility. In fact, it sometimes felt like my singleness drained, rather than added to, my capacity to serve. I had been frequently told that my singleness was good because it allowed me to say “yes” to things that required more of me than what married people couldn’t afford.

But what if my relationships and responsibilities meant I couldn’t afford to say yes either? I wasn’t sure I was allowed to admit that to myself, let alone voice it out loud to others.

What’s more, the idea that my married Christian friends couldn’t serve God or his people as effectively, consistently, or readily as I was supposed to also didn’t sit right with me. After all, isn’t serving Jesus wholeheartedly the point and privilege of being his disciple, no matter our situation? Aren’t we all meant to love God with all our heart, soul, strength, and mind? Isn’t loving your spouse meant to be part of a married person’s devotion to the Lord’s affairs, rather than a distraction from it?

But it wasn’t only these real-life questions that left me feeling confused about a usual reading of this passage. I had also always struggled to make sense of it within the immediate and broader context of the Bible’s teaching.

Consider, for example, Paul’s comparison between the married person who is concerned with the world’s affairs and the unmarried person who is concerned with the Lord’s affairs. According to our usual reading of this passage, married Christians are rightto be concerned with these worldly affairs (pleasing their spouse).

Yet in the same letter, Paul had already said quite a lot about how Christians are—and aren’t—to relate to a world he identified as foolish, passing away, and destined for judgment (1 Cor. 1:18–31; 3:19; 11:32). His first letter to the church at Corinth confirms what so many other New Testament passages teach: God’s people are not to be shaped by this world or caught up in its concerns.

So why would the same Paul who warns against worldly troubles and distractions suddenly equate loving one’s spouse with being concerned about things of the world? And why would he commend the married Christian for being absorbed in this?

Then there is the other comparison in the passage—pleasing a spouse versus pleasing the Lord. We may automatically think that spouses shouldbe concerned with “pleasing” each other. Yet none of the New Testament passages that speak about the loving relationship between a husband and wife use that language of “pleasing.” This means there is no reason for us to automatically understand that married people who are concerned with “pleasing” their spouse are concerned with a good thing.

In fact, if pleasing a spouse comes at the expense of pleasing God (which is the comparison in this passage), Paul’s point is surely to warn against it rather than to praise it. This is consistent with how he uses “pleasing God” elsewhere, namely as a shorthand way of describing the life of godly faith in action (Eph. 5:10; Col. 1:10; 2 Cor. 5:9). While he does occasionally speak positively of pleasing others (1 Cor. 10:33), whenever Paul contrasts the impulse to please people with the call to please God, he is very clear: “We are not trying to please people but God, who tests our hearts” (1 Thess. 2:4, Gal. 1:10).

Then why, in this passage, would the apostle suddenly commend married Christians for being concerned with pleasing their spouse over, above, or even instead of pleasing the Lord? Why would he allow their interests to be divided away from pleasing God?

So there I sat, sipping my disappointing chai, when suddenly everything snapped into focus. It really was like one of those Magic Eye moments. For the first time, I glimpsed the full 3D meaning of 1 Corinthians 7:32–35.

A slight shift of perspective allowed me to see that Paul was not identifying important marital obligations but rather warning against particular dangers that can come with marriage in a fallen world. Along with early church fathers such as John Chrysostom and Augustine, I realised that in 1 Corinthians 7:32–35, Paul is actually calling married people to not be divided and distracted by their spouse.

Put another way, instead of saying married Christians can’t afford to be like their undivided single counterparts, the apostle is saying that married Christians can’t afford not to be like them. He wants both single and married Christians “to live in a right way in undivided devotion to the Lord.” My full explanation of my new understanding takes up a whole chapter of my latest book, Single Ever After.

When it comes to singleness and marriage, we’ve too often decided to settle for the somewhat confusing surface meaning of key biblical passages, rather than allowing ourselves to wonder if there might be depths to them that we are conveniently ignoring. We settled into the groove of what we’re comfortable thinking the Bible teaches about them.

This has led us to ignore the fuzzy passages—like deciding it’s okay for some Christians to be concerned with the affairs of a world that is opposed to God. It’s allowed us to pretend the white noise doesn’t exist—like deciding it’s okay for some Christians to be distracted from pleasing God to instead please a certain person.

This is to the great detriment of many single and single-again Christians in our churches. But it has also been very costly for many married Christians, whose relationships with their spouses have been heavily burdened by our—and their—hasty and selective reading of Scripture.

The gospel of Christ imbues both marriage and singleness with wonderful 3D meaning, making them complements rather than competitors. The question for us is whether we’ll look beyond the surface patterns we’re used to seeing until the deeper, richer picture of God’s design for both singleness and marriage comes into wonderful focus.

Danielle Treweek is the author of several books, including Single Ever After: A Biblical Vision for the Significance of Singleness, and the research officer for the Anglican Diocese of Sydney.

Books
Review

Dissent Does Not Division Make

Three books on art and culture to read this month.

Three books on a green background.
Christianity Today February 13, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today

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

Miroslav Volf and Christian Wiman, Glimmerings: Letters on Faith between a Poet and a Theologian (Harper One, 2026)

Glimmerings: Letters on Faith between a Poet and a Theologian offers a welcome reprieve from polarizing discourse, modeling a healthy approach to disagreements concerning God, prayer, faith, and Holy Writ. The book’s curated email thread between professors Chris Wiman and Miroslav Volf exemplifies Paul’s calls to build up and honor one another above ourselves.

Dissent here does not division make. Towards the book’s end, Wiman cites a letter two centuries old in which fellow poet John Keats proposes negative capability as the mark of a great writer—the willingness to remain “in uncertainties, mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason.” Wiman embraces poetry that “remains perpetually open,” particularly verse alluding to the divine. But he trips up at Scripture that demands similar interpretive flexibility—what many Bible readers treat as metaphor, symbol, or indecipherable mystery.

The nature of Christ’s death, Paul’s revivifying Eutychus, the parable of the talents, Christ’s cursing of the fig tree, and Mark’s final 12 verses present Wiman with unsolvable riddles that stymie rather than stoke his faith. Like Keats, he finds constructed and conflicting features of Scripture evidence of errancy, yet he confesses the daily, ineluctable draw of the Jesus drawn in its pages.

Volf’s learned yet equally vulnerable responses provide a master class in compassion. Instead of approaching their dialogue as an argument, he commiserates and highlights common ground when possible, walking alongside a good friend in spirit when conflicting schedules have upended their regular joint strolls around campus.

Crystal L. Downing, The Wages of Cinema: A Christian Aesthetic of Film in Conversation with Dorothy L. Sayers (InterVarsity Press, 2025)

Like Salvation from Cinema (2015), the title of Crystal L. Downing’s new book, The Wages of Cinema: A Christian Aesthetic of Film in Conversation with Dorothy L. Sayers, shows her ongoing effort to challenge criticisms of film that ignore artistry to mostly focus on rejecting questionable content.

Concerned that viewers who generate lists of objectionable material unwittingly blind themselves to the truth and beauty of a film, she enlists mid-20th-century detective writer Dorothy Sayers to build a case for examining the painstaking craft of cinema.

With the help of Wheaton College’s voluminous archives on Sayers, Downing traces the writer’s use of cinematic technique and device in the fiction and plays that followed her brief stint as a screenwriter, spotlighting a persistent attention to style and structure that mirrors the believer’s appreciation of an exquisite, if broken, creation.

Spotlighting the “both/and thinking” that declares Jesus simultaneously fully God and fully human, Downing heralds films like The Bridge on the River Kwai, which leave character motivation shadowed by ambiguity, problematize binary distinctions between good and evil, and encourage viewer identification with the villain’s familiar need for forgiveness. 

Similarly, she prefers the satiric role reversals of the Barbie movie, which critique the objectifying gaze of male desire by making Ken, not Barbie, the one whose confidence crumbles when not propped up by another’s flattering attentions. Titles like Romancing the Stone that redefine virtue as a function of gendered beauty and brawn receive a much-deserved kick in the pants.

Mary Shelley, The Last Man (1826)

In the decade that passed between conceiving Frankenstein and publishing the apocalyptic The Last Man, Mary Shelley suffered the loss of three children, her husband, and a very good friend. Her first and most famous novel, written as a teenager, was shaped by the absence of a mother she never knew and the death of a prematurely born child, spawning the horror of an inexorable force whom neither reason nor careful planning could forestall.

When she later imagined a global pandemic that decimates the human race, she drew from a far deeper well of anguish filled with dysentery, malaria, miscarriage, fatal fevers, and a sudden drowning at sea. Her third novel, which celebrates its bicentenary this year, provided Shelley the same occasion it offers the novel’s frame narrator—and which it supplied my students during the COVID-19 lockdown: the opportunity to temper “real sorrows and endless regrets by clothing these fictitious ones in that ideality which takes the sting from pain.”

Recreating a past peopled with deceased loved ones in this biographical roman à clef (“novel with a key”) allowed Shelley to process her loss. She reimagines her broken circle of friends and family as a tightly knit community whose members take great risks for one another as the world ends. Shelley’s framing of wide-scale catastrophe registers the agony of loss but simultaneously recommends a heartening rejection of despair that holds, as its titular character does, to “the visible laws of the invisible God.”

Paul Marchbanks is a professor of literature and film at California Polytechnic State University. His YouTube channel is “Digging in the Dirt.” 

Church Life

20 Black Leaders Who Inspired the Church

African American Christians reflect on Rebecca Protten, Vernon Johns, and other thinkers who influenced their faith. 

Images of 8 of the black leaders mentioned.
Christianity Today February 12, 2026
Illustration by Elizabeth Kaye / Source Images: Getty, WikiMedia Commons

The Black church and Black Christians have played an indispensable role in shaping American and church history. For hundreds of years, African American congregations have operated as hubs of spiritual formation, community, and activism, fighting for the social change necessary to create a more just society—and helping Christians across the board think more deeply about the Bible, the spread of the gospel, and the call to pursue justice.

In honor of Black History Month, CT asked several African American leaders to share about the thinkers, pastors and theologians who have influenced their lives. Here is what they said.

Rebecca Protten (1718–1780)

Protten, a Moravian teacher and missionary of African and European descent, played a pivotal role in early Protestant missions. She converted through the Moravian movement and became a gifted educator, especially among free and enslaved African women in the Caribbean, where she taught Scripture, literacy, and Christian doctrine. Her ministry embodied the conviction that the gospel transcends race, economic status, and social hierarchy at a time when such beliefs were deeply countercultural. Protten was persecuted with other church leaders for missionary activities and modeled a lived theology of endurance, suffering, and hope in Christ. —K. A. Ellis, director of the Edmiston Center for Christian Endurance at Reformed Theological Seminary in Atlanta

James Earl Massey (1930–2018)

Massey was a pastor-scholar who stood out among his peers and was quite simply, different. He was best known as a holiness preacher whose voice crossed deeply entrenched racial and denominational boundaries—a rarity that’s difficult to grasp today. With near-perfect diction, he defied expectations often placed on African American preachers, combining biblical lessons with practical applications and relating to his listeners while also drawing them to a higher plane of thought. In 2006, Christianity Today named him one of the 25 most influential preachers of the past 50 years. At a time when public trust in pastors has diminished so significantly, we’d benefit from a renewed introduction to a man who so faithfully represented both God and his “skinfolk.” —James Ellis III, Baptist pastor and assistant professor of practical theology at Winebrenner Theological Seminary

Harriet Tubman (1822–1913)

Harriet Tubman has greatly shaped my theology. After I studied and preached from Romans 6, God helped me see the abolitionist—and the call on her life as a prophetic portrait of the gospel—in a new way. She helped people escape physical slavery, and the passage in Romans gave me greater clarity on my own calling as a natural and spiritual abolitionist. As Christians, God has given us the task of spreading the gospel and helping people escape spiritual bondage. Tubman reminds us that we only go back to plantations (in a sense) to help set people free, not submit again to the yoke of slavery. She refused to enjoy the fruits of freedom for herself and withhold that opportunity from others. May that type of heroism, commitment, sacrifice, and love mark my life, and all of ours as well. —Sarita Lyons, author, speaker, Bible teacher, and psychotherapist

Vernon Johns (1892–1965)

Johns grew up poor in Virginia and was able to receive a first-rate theological education, which was rare for his day. He later served as the pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. Martin Luther King Jr., a friend of Johns, succeeded him in the role.  Johns was in many ways a man of contradictions. He preached with insight and intellect, but often in dirty overalls, dispensing pearls of theological wisdom while tracking dirt from the farm into the sanctuary. He spent his ministry as a pastor ruffling feathers and offending the silk-stocking sensibilities of upper-middle-class African American congregations. —Daylan Woodall, writer and senior pastor of First Missionary Baptist Church in Decatur, Alabama

Caesar Arthur Ward Clark (1914–2008)

Clark was a mentor of Martin Luther King Jr. and pastored one congregation—Good Street Baptist Church in Dallas—for 50 years. Clark grew up in Louisiana. There, he encountered racism and poverty, which blocked his chances of being educated until much later in life. But those constraints didn’t stop him from flourishing. He was known for his theological imagination and rich biblicism and became an internationally renowned Baptist revivalist. He had a small stature but left a giant impression on African American preaching and Christianity. —Woodall

Charles Price “C.P.” Jones (1865–1949)

Jones was a pioneer of the Black holiness movement and the most prolific Black American hymnist of all time. He wrote that the Lord encountered him in the late 1890s and said, “You shall write the hymns for your people.” Jones went on to write over 1,000 hymns. His songs are sung primarily in holiness and Pentecostal settings. But I believe that the messages God gave Jones are indeed for “his people”—Black America—and for the global church.  In turbulent times, we need Jones’s prophetic reminder as sung in one hymn: “I will make the darkness light before thee.” —Geoffrey D. Golden, director of worship and arts at The Park Church in Charlotte, North Carolina

Howard Thurman (1899–1981)

Thurman was a 20th-century spiritual luminary who named “the religion of Jesus” as the source of both spiritual and temporal freedom. His pioneering work Jesus and the Disinherited examined the Lord’s life as a member of a marginalized group, positioning Jesus as a model for people who live “with their backs against the wall.” His teachings on nonviolence earned him recognition as a sage of the Black Freedom Struggle, authoring what pastor and activist Otis Moss Jr. described as “the philosophy that creates the march.” Thuman also championed the multiethnic church and saw unity across social boundaries as “the pragmatic test of one’s unity with the Spirit.” —Tryce Prince, writer and director of Abilene Christian University’s Carl Spain Center on Race Studies & Spiritual Action

Nannie Helen Burroughs (1879–1961)

Burroughs dedicated her life to creating educational opportunities for Black women and pursued that ministry through civil rights activism and hands-on classroom instruction. Interestingly, her extraordinary social justice efforts were matched by her commitment to promoting moral improvement in America generally and in her community. Burroughs’s high view of Holy Scripture informed her that an undisciplined, pleasure-seeking lifestyle was just as much of an impediment to true liberation as external injustice was. Today’s Christian would be wise to recapture her willingness to challenge corruption in the American power structure while pushing her people toward a more honest and thorough form of self-examination. —Justin Giboney, president of the AND Campaign

Alexander Crummel (1819–1898)

Crummel was a clergyman, teacher, and missionary who cofounded the American Negro Academy, an organization for Black intellectuals who sought to promote higher education, art, and science among African Americans. Another founding member of the academy was the famous sociologist and writer W. E. B. DuBois. The academy sought to push back against the racism African Americans faced and also reform ethical and moral behaviors within the Black community. —Brian L. Johnson, former president of Warner Pacific University and Tuskegee University

Charles Chesnutt (1858–1932)

Chesnutt was a writer who documented the 1898 Wilmington race riots through his novel Marrow of Tradition. He was a Christian and wrote several novels and essays that communicated biblical themes. The Colonel’s Dream, his most sophisticated novel, tells the story of racial violence in the post–Civil War South through the eyes of a white protagonist. —Johnson

Gardner C. Taylor (1918–2015)

Taylor served for 42 years as pastor of Concord Baptist Church in Brooklyn, where his preaching combined profound theological depth with prophetic clarity on racial justice. Taylor, who is called “the dean of American preaching,” marched alongside Martin Luther King Jr. and maintained relationships across denominational and racial lines—which was rare in his era. He was respected in both Black churches and white evangelical institutions, mentoring generations of pastors and demonstrating that the proclamation of the gospel and the quest for justice are inseparable. Taylor spoke truth that challenged Americans while always pointing to Christ’s redemptive work, refusing to let either the church retreat from justice or activism retreat from the gospel.  —Nicole Martin, president and CEO of Christianity Today.

Prathia Hall (1940–2002)

Hall was a civil rights activist and theologian whose courage and voice shaped both the Civil Rights Movement and the church. In 1962, after white supremacists burned down Mount Olive Baptist Church in Terrell County, Georgia, Hall stood in the charred ruins and prayed a passionate vision of freedom. She began with “I have a dream”—Martin Luther King Jr. heard that prayer, and many believe it inspired his famous speech. Hall organized voter registration drives in the segregated South, survived multiple threats to her life, and later became one of the first African American women to earn a doctoral degree from Princeton Theological Seminary. Her legacy reminds us that the most powerful prayers can echo through generations and movements far beyond their original utterance. —Martin

Clay Evans (1925–2019)

Evans was the planting pastor of Chicago’s Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church. He was unable to speak for the first three years of his life. But his inimitable voice became the trumpet for justice and righteousness in Chicago. In 1966, he defied the edict of then-mayor Richard J. Daley and allowed Martin Luther King Jr. to preach in his pulpit. As a result, institutions that were supporting the construction withdrew financing, which resulted in a nearly decade-long delay in the construction of the church’s new sanctuary. Evans reminds us that standing by the word we preach might cost us more than we had scheduled to pay. —Charlie Dates, senior pastor of Progressive Baptist Church and Salem Baptist Church in Chicago.

Gowan Pamphlet (1748–1807)

After his conversion to Christianity, Pamphlet risked his life to proclaim the gospel of redemption and freedom. He was one of the first ordained Black ministers in the American colonies. And he was determined to challenge church practices that prevented Black people, whether slave or free, from becoming members. He understood the evangelical gospel was for everyone and was thus a forerunner in multiethnic church ministry. —K.J. Washington, lead pastor of New Valley Church in Waynesboro, Virginia

Benjamin Elijah Mays (1894–1984)

Mays has impacted African American theologians by influencing our understanding of the “long civil rights movement.” He trained one of the brightest generations of theologians, many of whom were shaped by his writings on “all of life” theology—the belief that our faith applies to all areas of our lives. Mays engaged the public square and built strong institutions, all for God’s glory. —Washington

George Washington Carver (1864–1943)

Carver is often lauded for his innovation and brilliant mind, but this polymath is rarely recognized as a faithful Christian witness. He refused to claim patents of his inventions because he believed the Lord gave him insights that should not be withheld from others. Luminaries across the globe from Mahatma Gandhi to Franklin D. Roosevelt sought his expertise for their personal lives. His skills were courted by Henry Ford and Thomas Edison. And despite facing discrimination under Jim Crow, he helped Southern farmers by advocating for crop diversification because cotton and tobacco had exhausted the soil. I believe his tombstone states its best: “A life that stood out as a gospel of self-forgetting service. He could have added fortune to fame but caring for neither he found happiness and honor in being helpful to the world.” —Sho Baraka, editor director of CT’s Big Tent Initiative

Tom Skinner (1942–1994)

Skinner was a pioneering evangelist, author, and speaker who bridged the worlds of urban ministry, racial reconciliation, and mainstream evangelicalism. He became a leading voice for a socially engaged, biblically based faith that addressed systemic injustice. He is perhaps best known for his powerful address, “If Christ is the Answer, What are the Questions?” at the 1970 InterVarsity Urbana Student Missions Conference, which challenged a generation of evangelicals to confront racism and poverty. —Jeff Wright, CEO of Urban Ministries Inc.

Melvin Banks Sr. (1934–2021)

Banks was the visionary founder of Urban Ministries Inc. (UMI), one of the largest African American–owned Christian education publishing companies in the United States. After graduating from Moody Bible Institute and Wheaton College in the 1950s, he saw that there was a lack of curriculum that reflected the experiences, culture, and images of Black Christians. In 1970, he started UMI from his basement to fill this void. His work provided biblically sound materials that affirmed Black identity and addressed relevant social issues, all of which bolstered Christian education in Black churches and created a legacy of empowerment and representation. —Wright

Booker T. Washington (1856–1915)

Washington was the founder and president of Tuskegee Institute, a historically Black institution later named Tuskegee University. Washington was a principled Christian leader who advocated for racial uplift, self-determination, and hard work. —Johnson

Charles E. Blake Sr. (1940–present)

Blake was the former presiding bishop of the Church of God in Christ, one of the largest African American denominations in the US. He pastored West Angeles Church of God in Christ, a Pentecostal-holiness congregation in south Los Angeles that I attended as a child. Under his leadership, the church grew from 50 to more than 20,000 members. Blake believed that the Good News addresses both spiritual and physical needs. Because of that belief, he spearheaded many local and international programs, including the West Angeles Christian Academy and a community development corporation. —Chanté Griffin, journalist, author, and artist

Culture

30 Lessons from 30 Years of Marriage

Contributor

After three decades of love, sacrifice, and lessons learned, a marriage instructor offers concrete ways to build a strong marriage.

A silhouette of a couple holding hands
Christianity Today February 12, 2026
Samuel Costa / Unsplash

Tracey and I sailed into marriage three decades ago with considerable wind at our backs. We had dated four years, joined a marriage class, worked through multiple marriage books, and overcome a series of potentially relationship-ending crises, including a death in the family.

All of that wasn’t enough to skirt the storm that nearly swamped us after our honeymoon.

Watching the older relationship of a colleague implode right as our own underwent its first major course correction was both distressing and scary. Distressing, because my friend did not forge an alternative when his wife’s graduate studies presented him with a false binary: to care for his mom in town or pursue his own wife in another city. Scary, because a shared faith, happy dispositions, and teaching jobs at the same Christian school had not proven protection enough for this couple against the arrows of a relentless Adversary.

Their relationship’s sad ending solidified Tracey’s and my determination to privilege our own marriage whatever the future held, to regularly reassess the strength of our bond even as I charged headfirst into the stressors of academia. We also embraced the interdependence God has woven into creation, seeking accountability with other like-minded couples.

Some of what we have learned—and imperfectly practice—through 30 years of marriage follows. Each observation has a pair that elaborates or qualifies its partner, a reminder that no one idea should be taken as absolute.

Family of Origin

  1. The separate pulls of “leave and cleave” and “honor your father and mother” invite us into a dynamic, lifelong tension. Cutting ties to parents to “self-actualize” or more easily pursue the American dream—however we define it—is as troubling as allowing parental opinion to dictate big decisions.
  2. The family-of-origin issues discussed in premarital counseling pop up throughout a long life together. Providing a safe space for spouses to work through new manifestations of the same old issues is a gift.

Change

  1. The advice I offered my younger sister years ago, recorded on a camcorder making the rounds at her wedding reception, is that the person you wed is not the one you wake to a year later: We are always being knit together, even after the womb. Committing to love an ever-evolving person requires flexibility, a willingness to accept unexpected turns not telegraphed by “in sickness and in health.” 
  2. Outside my relationship with Christ, the facets of my identity are negotiable. Oneness presupposes a willingness to change to meet my spouse’s needs.

Conflict

  1. Silence is silver, not golden. The Book of Proverbs reminds us that wisdom knows how to bite its tongue, yes (10:19), but refusing ever to voice your perspective resembles humility only in the short run. Inviting dissent and resolving conflict is far preferable to buried, growing resentment or depression. Iron sharpens iron.
  2. In our dating years, Tracey taught me that timing matters when raising difficult issues. Waiting a few hours to work through a concern—instead of demanding an immediate tête-à-tête and resolution—encourages us to relinquish control, trust God with a potentially lengthy process, and cover the topic in prayer. 

Community

  1. Everyone benefits from relational counsel, whatever their mental health, and therapists provide one among many viable options. Vulnerable small groups, reliable accountability partners, and close friends have blessed Tracey and me with meaningful support over the years.
  2. Discussing fiction with others offers a safe way to broach difficult relational issues without pointing fingers or giving away sensitive information. Book clubs and movie nights allow us to talk indirectly about fraught issues impacting our relationships, laying the groundwork for later dialogue.

Sex

  1. Scheduling sex can feel unromantic to a culture trained by television and film to expect mutually satisfactory, ecstatic encounters born of spontaneous feeling. We have found that regularly setting aside time for intimacy helps prepare us to give our best, to be attentive, patient, and flexible—whatever our current energy levels.
  2. Lovemaking characterized by pleasure and honor—rather than anxiety and shame—requires intentionality. Talking openly about sex every few months helps us reconfigure our efforts and expectations to meet one another’s changing needs as schedules and responsibilities fluctuate.

Walking

  1. Just as taking a walk stirs the creative juices for many facing writer’s block, an extended stroll can provide optimal conditions for problem-solving relational difficulties. Walking together requires finding a shared rhythm, a synchronicity that preserves freedom of movement. We’re less likely to feel trapped when in motion, sustaining engagement and discouraging flight.
  1. It took Tracey and me 20 years to realize we needed to set aside time to discuss logistical matters including scheduling, money, and parenting before our weekly date so they didn’t crop up while attempting to relax together. For the last decade, a midweek “pre-date” walk has protected those precious weekend hours.

Deepening

  1. When we were five years into marriage with our first baby on the way, God revealed that our busy lives had diverged too much into separate, parallel tracks. Setting aside a couple hours every Sunday afternoon for a picnic bookended by prayer, what we called “deepening,” invited regular vulnerability. It also laid the foundation for family time away from the demands of housekeeping once our girls arrived.
  1. Uncertain whether to specialize in Renaissance or Victorian literature in graduate school, I eventually chose the latter because Tracey also loved it. Two years later, my secondary field of interest became Irish fiction, following a shared trip to the Emerald Isle. More recently, we have jointly attended Christianity and literature conferences around the country. Fostering shared interests when possible provides another plank in a seaworthy vessel of marriage.

Adventure

  1. Romance grants unfamiliar pastimes a fresh plausibility when colored by our sweethearts’ enthusiasm, encouraging experimentation with sports, fine arts, games, shows, outdoor activities, and other ventures we might otherwise never attempt. A willingness to at least try—and maybe learn to appreciate—what our spouses love enriches our own experience and improves our understanding of what makes them tick.
  1. Trying new things together can reignite a spirit of adventure. Purchasing ocean kayaks during the COVID-19 lockdown, starting salsa and bachata lessons last year, and recently exploring a new corner of California (“Victorian” Ferndale, highly recommended!) have each renewed romantic passion.

Service

  1. Convinced that our marriage is our most important ministry, Tracey and I try to privilege time together. Before teaching a marriage course, providing premarital counseling, hosting a book club, scheduling a film series, or joining a Bible study, we reset our calendars to protect our relationship. If a crisis makes it clear we have missed the mark, we recalibrate.
  1. Service, like work, can offer us simple affirmation from the people we are helping. Such uncomplicated attention can eventually compete with the more complex, tempered affection of our spouse. Remembering to value the one who sees more facets of our character than those curated ones we show an eager, outside audience is a bulwark against split devotion and infidelity.

Knowledge of the Other

  1. The patience and kindness that open the apostle Paul’s famous definition of love (1 Cor. 13:4) require active listening and observation. Practicing patience is difficult if I am continually surprised by behavioral patterns I have failed to process. Similarly, it’s difficult to anticipate what our spouses will receive as kindness unless we have a rich understanding of their preferences.
  1. Shared experience teaches us much about our spouses’ character, but deciding at any point that we understand them completely prevents us from learning more. Finishing one another’s sentences is less romantic than rom-coms suggest, and it’s often a product of impatience. Better to allow space and time to be surprised by new revelations.

Personality Types

  1. Christ’s constancy (Heb 13:8) does not demand uniform righteousness in his followers. Instead it frees us to exercise the same principle in different ways. Individual expressions of virtues like self-control may differ radically while remaining in line with God’s will. Lacking telepathy, we will never know the many silent choices our spouses make to be faithful to God and keep marriages afloat.
  2. No one’s psyche can be distilled into the categories provided by a personality inventory like the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator or the Enneagram. We are far more than formulas. Such tools do, however, volunteer language and concepts useful for explaining our tendencies to a spouse, particularly when we believe the instrument has nailed some elusive truth about ourselves.

Forgiveness

  1. Keeping “no record of wrongs” (1 Cor. 13:5) becomes more plausible when we consider the biased, highly selective nature of memory. However hurtful a past injury, chances are we played some role in its appearance—which is an inconvenient truth when we cast ourselves as wholly innocent victims. Remembering that everyone processes differently the series of events culminating in a wrong can slow the rush to blame and can facilitate forgiveness.
  2. Forgiving our beloved can feel harder than loving our enemies; the proximity of a spouse salts the open wound. In rare circumstances, forgiveness may require space and time.

Self-Care

  1. The command to love others as we love ourselves implies a vital reciprocity between concern for self and kindness to others. One oft-overlooked benefit of self-care (sleep, exercise, diet, relaxation) is to delay the day our spouses must expend extra resources to care for us. Such self-discipline may even forestall the onset of neurodegenerative disease, a possibility for Tracey and me given our family histories.
  2. No matter how comfortably insular the two of us may become, developing and strengthening other friendships helps us care for ourselves. Humans were designed to be in community. When parental friendships built atop our kids’ camaraderie faded after we became empty nesters, Tracey and I not only bought more two-person board games but also fostered new friendships by hosting Wingspan game nights twice a month.

Trust

  1. The term gaslighting easily flies off young tongues with minimal relationship experience and no contextual awareness of the two films that birthed the concept. Adults overuse the idea too, behaving as though every lie were a malicious attempt to sabotage their mental health. The term’s popularity does, however, underscore an important truth: Trust grants power, power to nurture one another’s emotional well-being—or to poison it. To a great degree, we are our spouses’ keepers.
  2. When our partners can trust us to bear their burdens (Gal. 6:2) and pray for healing following their confession of sin (James 5:16), we provide a tangible reminder of Christ’s mercy. As Elizabeth Barrett Browning observed, “God’s possible is taught by His world’s loving.”

Dreams

  1. Fairness is a useful but imperfect ideal. Once the girls were old enough to express preferences, our family consistently took turns when selecting games, movies, restaurants, and weekend excursions. In marriage, however, a 50-50 mentality can be the death knell to peace and happiness. Demanding that everything be precisely fair invites endless tallying, predicated on the false assumption that two people will ever weigh the same action equally.
  2. Openness about our individual dreams for the future proves easier in the heydays of early romance than after years together have cut ruts in a path that feels inevitable. Seriously reconsidering each other’s long-term goals every few years may alter trajectories and lead to reallocated resources, but it also increases the likelihood of mutual fulfillment years later. Love is not self-seeking.

Extra

  1. At the time of this article’s publication, Tracey and I have actually been married 31 years, so I’ll leave you with an extra, succinct suggestion pulled from Madeleine L’Engle’s A Wind in the Door: “Love isn’t how you feel. It’s what you do.”

Paul Marchbanks is a professor of literature and film at California Polytechnic State University. His YouTube channel is “Digging in the Dirt.” He and Tracey teach a 10-week marriage course for local couples annually.

Theology

Jeffrey Epstein and the Myth of the Culture Wars

Columnist

Some leaders of different political stripes teach us to hate each other, but they’re playing for the same team.

An image of some of the Epstein files.
Christianity Today February 11, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Image: Getty

This piece was adapted from Russell Moore’s newsletter. Subscribe here.

People have almost given up on bridging the divides in American life. Republicans and Democrats cannot pass any bipartisan legislation or even watch the same Super Bowl halftime shows. And yet throughout the last two decades of polarization, one figure seems to have discerned the code for bringing both sides of the culture war together. His name was Jeffrey Epstein.

The Epstein files have largely been redacted, with parts of them hidden from us, but we’ve seen enough to know that Epstein and his partner Ghislaine Maxwell were two of the most corrupt and connected sex criminals in American history. Despite how much is still confusing, we can also see this: On at least one important point, the most outlandish theories were right. There really is a global conspiracy of wealthy, elite sexual perverts fleecing the masses. And many of them were people building a following by telling others that there is a global conspiracy of wealthy, elite sexual perverts fleecing the masses.

Reading through the names of those connected with Epstein, one can hardly believe the range listed there. Some were unsurprising: for instance, creepy filmmaker Woody Allen or the man formerly known as Prince Andrew. But even then, the scope is unsettling. Even the Dalai Lama had to put out a statement noting that he was never involved with Epstein. Just as incredible, many of the people listed were partying with those they spend a lot of time telling the rest of us to hate.

Both Donald Trump and Bill Clinton were apparently friendly with Epstein. The New Age syncretist Deepak Chopra is in the documents many times—often with shady, enigmatic phrases—but so are those who accused the pope of New Age syncretism. With Middle Eastern tensions what they are, still the files include both sheikhs and Israelis. All over the files are connections with both left-wing populist provocateur Noam Chomsky and right-wing populist provocateur Steve Bannon. Epstein makes fun of evangelicals yet recommends a James Dobson article.

How can this be?

Maybe one reason is that Jeffrey Epstein figured out the deep, dark secret of this moment: The people who fight culture wars often believe what they say, but the people who lead culture wars often don’t.

The heiress Leona Helmsley, when accused of defrauding the government, famously said in a moment worthy of Marie Antoinette, “Only the little people pay taxes.” Maybe the Epstein class is telling us, “Only the little people have culture wars.”

Chomsky, after all, spent a lifetime arguing that wealth inequality was a moral atrocity, that billionaires in their luxury were taking advantage of the working class. Whatever is later proven about his personal participation, or lack thereof, in crimes, we know already that flying on Epstein’s private jet was not much a problem for his solidarity-with-the-workers-of-the-world conscience.

sign behind Steve Bannon’s seat on YouTube videos of his podcast reads, “There are NO conspiracies, but there are NO coincidences.” Yet in recovered emails, Bannon reportedly told Epstein how he could avoid accountability and put together a populist, nationalist, Catholic, and evangelical coalition—with the implication that it could end the #MeToo movement. He said this kind of coalition could “reverse Alabama,” presumably referring to the rejection of US Senate candidate Roy Moore over allegations of his sexual misconduct with girls.

Referring to the Hollywood-led Time’s Up movement, which argued that men should be held accountable for rape, harassment, and molestation, Bannon wrote to an Epstein already convicted for sex crimes: “This coalition staves off [‘]times up’ for next decade plus.” Even while those in these files sought to mobilize religious people to protect predatory men, Bannon and Epstein in emails reportedly discussed ways to discredit Pope Francis.

The main priority coming out of the Epstein revelations should be justice for the survivors and victims of these crimes and accountability for anyone who participated in them or covered them up. But perhaps we also ought to learn one other thing: that we have all been duped.

Some of the same people on the right who told us culture wars are necessary for sexual virtue and the protection of children could look away when they saw these problems in one of their own.

Some of the same people on the left who told us that the sexual revolution is about empowering women and girls and that the oppressed should be liberated suddenly lost their nerve when the predatory misogynist had their same politics—and a yacht.

Across their political and cultural differences, how can these sketchy figures—almost all of whom have contributed to our cultural state of seeing politics as a religion—pal around this way? The Bible already tells us: “And Herod and Pilate became friends with each other that very day, for before this they had been at enmity with each other” (Luke 23:12, ESV). Their real goal was not policy objectives or cultural well-being; it was power and money and anarchy of the appetite.

Predators know one of the easiest ways to go unseen is to change the moral calculus. As long as we define virtue and vice by a set of political or cultural or “worldview” opinions rather than character and integrity and behavior, they can avert accountability forever.

Holding opinions, after all, is easy. Once a person chooses a tribe, the brain easily adjusts to whatever set of slogans and shibboleths he or she needs to repeat. The pursuit of holiness or even simple human decency and accountability is much more difficult. As long as we can assume that whoever agrees with us on the “defining issues” of the day is good and whoever disagrees is bad, we end up with precisely what we have now: chaos, hatred, a fracturing public order, and the loss of institutions and norms.

People in your church have blocked one another on social media because of how life-or-death important a set of political opinions seems to be. But those who egg them on have not blocked each other. They are laughing themselves all the way to the poolside massage table.

We think we are in the middle of a future-shaping culture war, but the generals of that war are sharing emails making fun of their troops. People look to these titanic figures and assume them to be new George Washingtons or Winston Churchills or even Napoleon Bonapartes or Friedrich Nietzsches when they’re really just Caligulas. They teach us to hate each other on the basis of our red or blue jerseys, but they’re playing for the same team. They incite us to scream at one another over whether we like Bad Bunny or Kid Rock, but they’re listening to their own music.

And worst of all, they are discipling us. They are teaching us to evaluate whether we think fidelity is praiseworthy or weak or whether rape is evil or insignificant on the basis of who’s doing it. They are teaching us to evaluate which children’s screams are worth hearing on the basis of whose side it would help or hurt. The end result is that those who scream about the good of their team and the evil of the other stop believing in good or evil at all. All they come to care about is power.

No man is an island, John Donne told us. But a whole culture can be an island, and that island is Epstein’s.

We don’t have to live this way. We can choose another path. Our country hangs by a slender strand over an abyss. And it might just be that it did not hang itself.

Russell Moore is editor at large and columnist at Christianity Today and leads its Public Theology Project.

Church Life

I Long for My Old Church—and the Tree Beside It

Leaving a beloved church doesn’t mean ever forgetting its goodness, its beauty, and the immense blessing it was in one’s life.

Magnolia flowers
Christianity Today February 11, 2026
Getty / Edits by CT

There was a magnolia tree by a white church on a hill. It was a beautiful tree—tall and green and blooming every year with those massive flowers, so sweet to smell. More than this, it was a hospitable tree. Its branches, always sturdy, started low enough to the ground that even small children could climb up onto the lowest ones.

The less adventurous kids might stay there, sitting with a friend or two, dangling their legs just above the ground. But others did not stop climbing. From those lower branches, they could keep going, up, up, up, to the tippy top of the tree. The top branches would sway a little but still held firm, kindly supporting the brave children who reached them. The tree’s thick leaves and blooming flowers offered the perfect secret fort: An onlooker could barely tell, unless looking closely—or hearing the giggles—that children were up in this tree, growing alongside it, taller by the day.

Throughout Scripture, our story has often been intertwined with trees. Adam and Eve dutifully cared for trees as Eden’s stewards. What would their work have looked like in a garden so blessed that it required no hard labor resembling agriculture after the Fall? Perhaps gentle care was still needed even then. Occasional pruning, maybe, picking fruit in season, or raking leaves to keep paths clear for walking.

We don’t know for certain the nature of their work, but here’s what we do know: It was in the presence of these trees, a cloud of green whispering witnesses, that they met God face to face. And it was under those leaves that a horrible tragedy involving a specific tree resulted in their expulsion.

Ever since, people have cultivated trees with much labor: fruit trees for food, others for wood and shade and other practical uses, and some trees mainly for their beauty. Appreciating beauty is inherent in our nature as image bearers of God. He too, after all, delights in the beauty of his handiwork.

Delight, in fact, is the word that first comes to mind as I think of that magnolia tree by the church on the hill. Every Sunday, as soon as services ended, children would clamber into this tree, ever upward, while parents drank coffee and chatted with each other.

This was the tree that my daughter once climbed at age 3 without my knowing, her first and unexpected excursion of the sort. Once high up in the tree, she peered at the ground and realized she did not know how to come back down. As I scoured the church grounds in circles searching for her, another mom walked past the tree and heard my daughter weeping. She helped her back down to good solid soil, safe and sound.

This was the tree that my eldest son climbed more and more cautiously as he grew older, eventually no longer venturing past the middle portion, wisely judging that it might not hold his growing body. This was the tree too that welcomed my middle son, the most cautious of my children, who never went past the lowest branch but kept coming back to spend time under the leaves.

Whenever we’ve talked about the story of Zacchaeus at home, we remember this tree. Zacchaeus didn’t climb a magnolia, of course (Luke 19:4), but it was a tree much like this one, a good climbing tree, that held the “wee little man” who wanted nothing more than to see the Lord more clearly.

Two and a half years have passed since we moved away from Georgia, from where this tree grows beside the church we called home for seven years. I still cannot bring myself to unsubscribe from that church’s email list. I still read the weekly updates. And that was how I learned recently that, because of continued growth in membership, the church must undergo another renovation. As part of this renovation, the magnolia tree will come down.

Why do I feel this pang of sadness for a tree now 660 miles removed from my front door? Perhaps because my love for that tree is tightly bound up with my love for my former church, its people, and the memories of a life where it was an anchor for my family. We are who we are right now, as a family and as believers, in large part because of our beautiful, formational experiences in that church.

Lamenting churches past—and trees past—is right and good. Sometimes, people leave a particular church not because they needed something else but simply because they were called somewhere else. (Commuting 10-plus hours each way for Sunday morning worship isn’t very practical.) Leaving a beloved church, though, doesn’t mean ever forgetting its goodness, beauty, and the immense blessing it was in one’s life.

In his epistles, Paul writes to church after church that he has known, visited, and often even planted—and then had to leave behind, in some cases never to see again. Clear in each of those letters is his love for those believers and his gratitude for knowing them. Even separated, they continue to occupy his thoughts and prayers for the rest of his life.

“I thank my God in all my remembrance of you, always in every prayer of mine for you all making my prayer with joy, because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now,” he writes in opening his letter to the Philippians (1:3–5, ESV). “For this reason, because I have heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love toward all the saints,I do not cease to give thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers,” he reflects in writing to the church at Ephesus (1:15–16).

To be a member of a good church for a season, whether long or short, is a blessing that lasts a lifetime. We love our new church in Ohio, too. It is a cherished gift—a rich tapestry of believers who live out the very best of what the church should be each day.

Nadya Williams is a homeschool mom, a writer, an editor, and the interim director of the MFA in creative writing at Ashland University. She is the author of Cultural Christians in the Early Church and Christians Reading Classics and is books editor at Mere Orthodoxy.

News

Fighting in Nigeria Leaves Christian Converts Exiled

Muslim communities often expel new Christians from their families. One Fulani convert is urging churches to take them in.

A Fulani herder leads his cattle to graze.

A Fulani herder leads his cattle to graze.

Christianity Today February 11, 2026
Michele Cattani / Getty

At dawn one morning in the spring of 2000, Jibrin Abubaker awoke with a start to the voice of a street preacher speaking through a megaphone outside his window. The 23-year-old, who was on a business trip in Jalingo in Nigeria’s Taraba State, initially felt annoyed to have his sleep disturbed.

Yet he listened as Daniel Dangombe, then pastor of a United Methodist Church in Nigeria, declared that Jesus was the only sinless person to walk the earth. “I used to wake up every morning [of the business trip] to listen to him,” Abubaker recalled. “From his preaching, my conversion started.”

Abubakar grew up in a Fulani Muslim family in Daura, a town in Katsina State in northwest Nigeria. Like most Fulani men, he came from a family of farmers and cattle herders. Yet Abubakar’s father didn’t want his only son roaming with the cows, so he enrolled Abubakar in an Islamic school. Abubakar said the teachers there taught him to recite the entire Quran and hate Christians.

“They said it was wrong for us to offer Christians a handshake or eat with their plates,” he told CT. “They were unholy—relating with them was an abomination.”

No Christians lived in Daura then, according to Abubakar. He only began to understand Christianity after hearing Dangombe’s preaching in Jalingo and meeting two Christians, Tevi and Peter, when he searched for Dangombe but couldn’t find him. First, he saw Peter holding a Bible and approached him, then Peter introduced him to Tevi, a Christian evangelist who could better speak Abubakar’s language. Two years later, during another business trip to Jalingo, Tevi and Peter answered his questions about Jesus, leading him to become a Christian.

But changing his religion meant losing his community.

Fulani who convert to Christianity face “extreme discrimination and deadly violence” from their community, according to International Christian Concern. They also face skepticism and isolation from Christian communities. Because of the historical hostility between Fulani Muslim herders and Christian and animistic farmers, Fulani Christians often find themselves caught between their culture and their faith. Of the 17 million Fulani in Nigeria, 99 percent are Muslims—less than 1 percent are Christians.

When Abubakar converted to Christianity, he didn’t tell people about new faith right away. He explained the gospel to his wife, who also became a Christian, but otherwise kept quiet. Still, his actions exposed him. He said he stopped attending Islamic daily prayers and reciting the Quran and instead started attending Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA), a new congregation of mostly out-of-town, non-Fulani traders and businessmen. He also quit womanizing and seeking revenge when others insulted him.

Abubakar said his in-laws demanded his return to Islam. When he refused, they took his wife and three daughters—then 7, 3, and 1. Abubakar recalled they married off the eldest girl at 12-years-old as the second wife of a Muslim man in his mid-20s. She died in childbirth at age 16. He said he recovered his younger two daughters a few years later but never saw his wife again.

The Muslim community “eventually took everything I owned. My wife, children, house, cows. Everything,” Abubaker said.

Abubakar’s father didn’t confront him about his conversion until members of the Izala society, a powerful Salafi (conservative, reformist movement with Sunni Islam) organization that fights against shirk (unbelief) and operates under sharia law, put pressure on him.

“The Izala guys saw me regularly attending the church,” Abubakar said. “They wondered why a Fulani was going to the church.”

One Sunday in 2008, the Izala whisked him away from church, locking him up in a small, dark police cell for five days. A non-Fulani Christian policeman snuck him bread through the tiny window at midnight, Abubakar told me.

The legal system didn’t protect Abubakar. The Izala took him to the chairman of the Mai’Adua local government area. The head of Daura village, Abubakar’s father, and two other men asked him to denounce his faith. He refused and instead preached the gospel. They then took Abubakar to a sharia court. The judge gave him three days to reconsider. Abubakar’s family and community labeled him an apostate.

Then Abubakar said a relative attacked and threatened to kill him. The next day, a neighbor warned his father of another pending attack, forcing Abubakar to flee to Jalingo with the help of ECWA church members. He sought refuge with Tevi, his Christian friend from the Tiv tribe, and stayed with him for seven years.

Tevi’s hospitality was an exception, Abubakar explained. Because of the violence many Nigerian Christians have experienced from Fulani herders and Islamic extremists, whether over farm resources or religion, Abubakar said many fear Fulani converts are spies trying to infiltrate churches and feed information back to those who wish to harm them.

Joshua Irondi, the senior pastor at International Revival Chapel in Aba, southeastern Nigeria, works with missionaries to the Fulani in the north. He said the gospel is for everyone—regardless of tribe—and that missionaries shouldn’t write anyone off.

“But with the way things are right now, you don’t just see someone on the road and feel comfortable with them,” Irondi said.

Though urban Fulani in Nigeria are more widely accepted and hold high positions in business and government—Nigeria’s late president Muhammadu Buhari was a Fulani from Daura—many Nigerian Christians see nomadic or seminomadic Fulani herders as entangled with terrorists.

Last June, heavily armed Fulani jihadists attacked Yelwata, a farming community in Benue State, slaughtering an estimated 100–200 Christian villagers. According to a 2023 study, more than 60,000 people died when Fulani herders clashed with farmers between 2001 and 2018.

Manasseh Adamu, pastor of an ECWA branch in Zonzon, Kaduna State, north-central Nigeria, has seen the trauma up close. He said residents are sometimes reminded of past pain at the sight of the Fulani herdsmen.

Still, Adamu calls for the church to open its doors: “When people come to us [and say] that they are Christians … we should accept them.”

Abubakar said some Christians began avoiding him when conflict between the Fulani herdsmen and farmers peaked in 2018, even though he had already been a Christian for 16 years by then. He acknowledges the violence perpetuated by the jihadists. Still, the stigma against Fulani Christians grieves him.

Abubakar encourages Christians to welcome them and first listen to their stories. He hopes that if more Christians understood the Fulani and built relationships with them, the violence could end and more Fulani would hear the gospel.

Olu Sunday, president of Royal Missionary Outreach International in Nigeria and Niger, told CT that weak government responses and radicalization have compounded deadly violence and cycles of attacks. He said missionaries are among the few willing to risk building relationships with the Fulani, adding that “they still have open doors in [the Fulani’s] hearts and communities.”

However, Sunday said the Fulani people’s traditional migration lifestyle makes evangelism and discipleship challenging. “Sometimes you get a convert; the next minute they are thousands of miles away,” he noted. “Follow-up is very difficult.”

Abubakar, now a 49-year-old church planter with Calvary Ministries (CAPRO), lets the Fulani come to him. He said he spends time during the week at a veterinary clinic where Fulani herders come to treat their ailing cattle. Herders ask him how he can be both Fulani and Christian.

“From there, a relationship begins,” Abubakar said. He shares the gospel one-on-one when he can.

On Sundays, Abubakar gathers with 12 other Fulani and Hausa—another primarily Muslim tribe—Christians in his church plant in Kishi, where they have created a new community after facing isolation and abandonment by many in their lives. Abubakar said that after losing everything to follow Jesus—only to face rejection and stigma from other Christians—many Fulani converts are tempted to return to their families and Islam to survive.

“The worst thing would be for them to go back,” Abubakar explained. “Sometimes that is the only option they are left with.”

Ideas

New York Legalized Assisted Suicide. What’s Next?

A conversation with physician and ethicist Lydia Dugdale.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul in Woodbury, New York on January 9, 2026.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul in Woodbury, New York on January 9, 2026.

Christianity Today February 11, 2026
Newsday LLC / Contributor / Getty

On February 6, New York Governor Kathy Hochul signed a bill legalizing medically assisted death, joining Illinois and 12 other US jurisdictions in allowing patients to take lethal medication under certain conditions.

“Our state will always stand firm in safeguarding New Yorkers’ freedoms and right to bodily autonomy, which includes the right for the terminally ill to peacefully and comfortably end their lives with dignity and compassion,” Hochul said. Although the US first faced this debate when Oregon legalized assisted suicide in the 1990s, such laws are becoming more common.

CT reached out to Dr. Lydia Dugdale, professor of medicine and director of the Center for Clinical Medical Ethics at Columbia University and author of Dying in the Twenty-First Century and The Lost Art of Dying. A New York resident and practicing internal medicine physician, Dugdale has followed the New York debates closely.

This interview has been edited and condensed.

My first question is just background on what happened for those who don’t know: What is this law allowing, and how will that impact the medical field? What’s assisted suicide versus euthanasia? And does this differ from what’s happening in Canada?

When it comes to MAID, which is the acronym people use for medical assistance in dying or medical aid in dying, there are two main routes. In the United States, the only route permitted in any jurisdiction where it is legal is lethal ingestion. That involves taking a cocktail of pills, crushing them, forming them into an elixir, and then self-ingesting.

The other route is lethal injection, which requires a health care practitioner to place an IV in the person who wishes to die and then administer a lethal dose of a medication that will ensure death. This is legal in Canada, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Colombia, and several other jurisdictions around the world. But it is not legal in the United States outside of the lethal injection that is used on death row for capital punishment.

New York State has been considering this legislation for about a decade. It’s come before the state government almost every year. When Governor Hochul agreed to sign the legislation in December, she said that it had to have certain amendments to enhance its safety. Those amendments were presented to the governor, who signed them last Friday, which means that in six months, the state of New York will become the next jurisdiction to perform so-called physician-assisted suicide.

The amendments that make it distinct from many of the other laws include a mandatory waiting period of five days between when the prescription is written and when it can be filled. Some jurisdictions have eliminated a waiting period altogether. Other jurisdictions, there’s a 15-day waiting period. Waiting periods were initially seen as a source of safety, and now they’re seen more as an impediment to easy access to these lethal drugs.

Hochul also added something unique out of all of the states where it is legal: An oral request must be made by the patient for MAID, recorded by video or audio.

She’s also requiring mental health evaluations by a psychologist or a psychiatrist of patients who are seeking MAID. I think many will see that as an impediment to access too, because nationwide, there’s a shortage of mental health professionals. But that’s a reasonable requirement, because we know that people who seek to end their lives often do suffer from depression. And if they aren’t being assessed, then we could be hastening death for people who have otherwise treatable depression and don’t really want to die.

The other thing that’s notable for the New York law is that MAID there is limited to New York residents. Vermont and Oregon have opened the doors so anyone who can get to those states could qualify for medical aid in dying.

Can you explain why assisted dying is seen as wrong from a Christian standpoint? The argument for MAID is often the compassion argument: We do as much for animals who are in pain and help them end their lives.

There are many good reasons to oppose assisted suicide.

Arguments in favor of it include the compassion argument, the take-control-of-your body argument—which I think is very, very strong—and an argument for the professionalization of the dying process. So much of our living and dying and giving birth is medicalized and professionalized, and this is just yet another example of that. I think many people don’t understand self-killing as suicide. They think of it as just the medicalization of death, of the actual moment of dying.

But this is killing or aiding a suicide. Every major world religion has a prohibition on the taking of human life, and this certainly falls under that.

But even if we were to get outside of religious arguments, we should have concerns about how marginalized and impoverished patients might feel pressured to end their lives. They recognize that they’re a burden on their family. They don’t want to be a burden. Why not just end it all? Actually, that’s a common question that patients raise even in jurisdictions where physician-assisted suicide is not legal.

Similarly, there are folks with disabilities who feel like they’re constantly having to fight to have the medical system realize that their life is worth living. They also may feel pressured.

There’s also this concomitant problem of an aging population, a lack of caregivers to care for that population, and the enormous costs for caring for the elderly, especially those with dementia, in the last year of their lives. There will be tremendous pressure to try to figure out how to handle these costs, and in jurisdictions where physician-assisted suicide is legal, we already know that people will choose to hasten their deaths rather than to live out their lives because of the costs involved.

So I think we will see, from a governmental perspective, a keen desire to make MAID more widely available and to reduce impediments to access to it to handle this so-called problem of an aging population.

There’s also a well-documented phenomenon of suicide contagion. This has been discussed going back to the 1700s, when it was called the Werther effect. We have seen that when there is a high-profile suicide, other people in a similar demographic will also pursue suicide. And people studying what happens in regions where MAID or physician-assisted suicide is legal find that conventional suicide rises alongside assisted suicide.

When the process of taking one’s life or hastening death prematurely becomes normalized, the culture shifts. People begin to believe it is acceptable to end your life. I’m not saying one causes the other, but there certainly is that correlation.

Another argument I’ve heard is that we should make palliative care more available. Is that something you see as a viable alternative to address these related issues with aging?

That’s a really tricky question. Palliative care is also a version of medicalizing the dying process. Now, insofar as it is available and used prudently, it is a wonderful gift to dying patients and their families because the focus is on holistic care, relief of uncomfortable symptoms, relief of pain. It’s bringing the family together, addressing spiritual needs, et cetera. That’s a wonderful gift. Palliative care is not available everywhere, even in the United States. It’s certainly not available worldwide, but it’s not available in much of rural America.

Historically, palliative care clinicians have been opposed to the legalization of physician-assisted suicide or MAID because they have taken a professional view that it is not their role to hasten death. They’re there just to accompany patients to a natural end. Unfortunately, in jurisdictions where MAID is legal, it is often through the palliative care doctors or in palliative settings, in hospice settings, where MAID is enacted.

And then you get into this difficult situation where patients who might otherwise want to have access to palliative services that focus on symptom reduction refuse those services because they’re afraid that these very same doctors will hasten their deaths. That’s a real problem. So kind of a complex answer to a complex issue.

In terms of the political situation, is this the end of the road in New York? Could this law be overturned, or should we expect a domino effect for other states?

Illinois also legalized about the same time, and they start in September, so I guess New York will beat them to it. But I don’t know that it’s a domino effect.

The reason why I say that is, if you look at a graph from the Lozier Institute of jurisdictions that have legalized physician-assisted suicide, at least 26 states responded to the legalization in 1994—when Oregon legalized its Death with Dignity Act—by passing legislation that made it more difficult to take one’s own life through a medically assisted death. So maybe there’s not quite a domino effect—at least not in more conservative-leaning states.

But many states have passed bad legislation over the years, and here I think specifically about sterilization laws in the early 1900s. Those same states have chosen to overturn what they now consider to be bad decisions. So should New Yorkers move to a position where they recognize the harm that is coming from hastening so many deaths? Yes, it’s always possible to reverse the legislation. I think we always hold out hope.

Last, are you already hearing from doctors or Christians in general about how to respond?

I’ve heard from lots of people just in the last few days, anticipating this as it’s moved through the country and in Canada. Ewan Goligher, my colleague in Canada, has published with CT, and he has a book now that he wrote for the church, How Should We Then Die. And the Canadian context, of course, is more difficult, but I would commend that book to anyone who identifies as a Christian and is trying to make sense of this.

But look, the reality is that mortality is 100 percent, right? All of us will die, and most of us live out our final days engaging the health care system in some way. That means we all will likely have to reckon with the question of legalizing assisted suicide, whether for ourselves or for our loved ones, if we live in jurisdictions where it is legal.

So I think the church needs to read Ewan’s book and do some serious thinking and teaching about this issue. And not just this question of hastening death but, more broadly, how to live and die well. My own work focuses on this, which is really critical for all of us.

For physicians, there’s a lot of trying to make sense of it in real time: How will this be implemented? What conscience protections will there be? Even some people who might not be opposed, necessarily, because of their view on bodily autonomy will still be concerned about what it means to be involved in hastening death. So yeah, there’s a lot of concern right now.

And just since Friday, health care leadership like hospital administrators are trying to think through what this will look like once they’re required by law to provide access come August. Originally, Hochul had said groups that were opposed could opt out, but now the law only says religiously oriented home hospice providers can opt out. So that’s concerning.

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