Culture

What Christian Parents Should Know About Roblox

The gaming platform poses both content concerns and safety risks that put minors in “the Devil’s crosshairs.” The company says tighter restrictions are coming.

A Roblox logo that is half sunny and half dark clouds.
Christianity Today January 9, 2026
Illustration by Elizabeth Kaye / Source Images: Unsplash, WikiMedia Commons

Roblox is getting sued—so far by three state attorneys general and in at least 42 cases brought by concerned parents.

But the platform’s popularity continues to explode. In 2024, some 82.9 million users played every day. The most recent report from Roblox Corporation ratchets that number up to 151.5 million. Nearly 50 million of those users are signed up as under 13 years old. Some are as young as five.

Unlike Rocket League or Super Smash Bros., Roblox isn’t just one universe. It’s a platform of over 7 million “experiences,” all created by users. Players move through various worlds as customizable avatars, sometimes accomplishing tasks or competing in games and encountering other users along the way.

Christians have long been concerned about the risks of popular entertainment, from rock music to wizard books. In 1990, Focus on the Family started the publication that would become Plugged In, which today reviews entertainment from YouTube videos to feature films to flag bad language, violence, and sex.

Roblox is different. Not only does it raise content concerns—it also poses real-life safety risks, as alleged by those dozens of lawsuits. In recent years, bad actors have gained minors’ trust by impersonating other children, convincing their victims to adjust parental controls or move their conversation onto another app like Snapchat or Discord, where they may solicit explicit photos or engage in other criminal behavior.

Predators have exploited the narrative of one Roblox game in particular, Forsaken, to convince children and teenagers they will receive a second life in return for obeying commands like carving a symbol into their skin or undressing in front of a web camera. Over 2 million users have designated Forsaken as a “Favorite,” and the game is often listed in “Top Trending” on the Roblox charts.

Some digital-safety advocates say Roblox is a fundamentally dangerous place for young people.

“There is nothing darkening childhood like internet-connected devices,” said Chris McKenna, father of four and founder of the group Protect Young Eyes. “The church should be leading this conversation. Christian parents should be the most aggressive when it comes to choices of where their kids go online.”

Protect Young Eyes advocates for phone-free schools, puts out how-to guides for setting up parental controls on different devices, and reviews apps popular among children. It rates Roblox as high risk across the board, including on factors like predator risk and nudity risk. McKenna says the platform is unique in that it allows users to share their own creations. Many are innocuous, featuring dragon training, superheroes, track and field, or even Bingo. But others expose minors to explicit material.  

Roblox “prohibit[s] content that depicts sexual activity or seeks real-world romantic relationships” and uses mature-content labels for violence or adult humor. (A nine-year-old can access experiences rated “minimal” and “mild” but not “moderate” or “restricted.”)

Every day, Roblox removes 130 million pieces of content, chat messages, and usernames from the platform for violating their policies. “We work to help over 150 million users have a safe, positive, age-appropriate experience on Roblox,” a representative from Roblox told CT. “Our layered safety systems combine advanced AI, 24/7 human moderation, and collaboration with law enforcement and safety experts to help detect and prevent harm. While no system is ever perfect, we constantly innovate and invest to set the standard for online safety.”

Still, there have been instances of children encountering sexual content.

“If the definition of sin is missing the mark with our choices, our thoughts, and our behaviors, are we putting our children in the Devil’s cross hairs?” McKenna asked. He points to Roblox’s business model—adding users through frictionless onboarding in order to increase in-game purchases like clothing for avatars or special abilities in games—as the reason stricter safety measures haven’t been adopted.

For instance, as it stands, kids who create a Roblox account are asked to verify their age, but can type any number without follow-up confirmation. Without a verification process, a child can start an account as an adult; an adult can start an account as a child. (Roblox plans to tighten this verification protocol in 2026.)

Attorney Melinda Maxson—who represents a Nebraska John Doe in a case against Roblox—has been concerned about the platform’s safety issues for decades. Maxson has represented Roblox-related cases for 20 years, from clients who used the platform in its earliest days (it launched in 2004) to those who allege recently being groomed. All this time, she said, the platform has claimed to be safe for children. But that hasn’t been the case. “There’s a chat function within their experiences that allows perfect strangers to reach out and communicate to other users on the platform,” Maxson said.

Roblox does tailor chat functionality based on a user’s age. The restrictions are complex. Users under 13 cannot access private text and voice chat with other users. However, the “experience” chat feature allows users in the same experience to communicate with other similar-aged users in a public chat, which others can see. In several cases, an adult allegedly used the public chat chat to convince a child to move their conversation to Discord.

Users 13 or older can also type more words and phrases in their chats than those under 13 can. These younger users’ chats are also filtered to prevent personal information from being shared. (All chats, regardless of age group, are filtered for sexual language, harassment, discrimination, threats, and incitements to violence and monitored for attempts to move conversations to another platform. Sending images isn’t allowed.)

Roblox recently announced a soon-to-be-released safety feature that will require age verification—either with AI-enabled facial recognition or ID uploads—for any users who wish to exchange messages. Approved users will be sorted into six brackets and allowed to chat only with users in their age categories and those adjacent. (It seems that a 10-year-old will be able to talk to a 14-year-old but not a 16-year-old.) Intended to limit interactions between minors and adults, the protocol will take widespread effect in early 2026. “We are sharing what we believe will become the gold standard for communication safety,” said the company’s press release.

But “the proof is going to be in the pudding,” attorney Maxson said. “Until we see how it operates and how effective it is, I remain very skeptical because of course they’ve had 20 years to put these types of safety mechanisms in place.”

Bennett Sippel, a researcher for Tech and Society Lab out of NYU Stern and writer for the Substack After Babel, said the verification feature makes progress on one very important issue by preventing predators from accessing children through chat messages.

But once the new age-verification update is in place, it will still be possible (though more difficult) for a teenager to access unfiltered chat with adults. And according to the press release, users of different ages will be able to communicate if they name each other as a trusted connection. Once both parties agree to the pairing using contact info or a QR code, they can access voice chat and chat without filters, “allowing for more natural and direct communication.”

Sippel noted these safety changes are coming after lawsuits as “damage control” rather than as a proactive approach from Roblox. He still has concerns about the platform’s ability to moderate explicit content—in 2022, more than 15,000 experiences were uploaded per day. Roblox may also be a gateway into a gambling addiction, both to gameplay itself and to casino games. (Though gambling isn’t allowed on the platform, it does feature “loot boxes,” random generators that operate like slot machines.) And contact with strangers is risky even if it isn’t explicitly predatory.

“A healthy childhood involves a deep participation in reality—a deep independence and freedom in the real world—and we’ve inverted that,” Sippel said. “We’ve given them free reign over this digital universe and then we’ve overprotected them in the real world, where those real experiences are really what crafts a healthy human being.”

Despite the safety risks, some Christians see digital spaces like Roblox—if precautions are taken—as missional opportunities to express their values or even evangelize. One user created a game in which users role-play as King David or Abraham. Another teaches “The Jesus Story.” The Christian video game company Soma Games recently developed The Wingfeather Saga, a Roblox adaptation of Christian author Andrew Peterson’s popular book series and animated show.

Chris Skaggs founded Soma as well as the Imladris community, an ecosystem of Christians in the game-development industry. Skaggs sees Roblox as a neutral platform, comparable to a toy store—there are items you don’t want your kid to buy, but the store itself isn’t the problem. Games, he believes, can prepare players, some who might never set foot in a church, for the gospel. For him, the 150 million daily Roblox users aren’t a problem; they’re an opportunity for witness.

“It’s not just that good and evil exist but that good is God,” Skaggs said. “There is a deep reality [in The Wingfeather Saga]: … God to Satan to angels and devils, how humanity is fallen … that grace and sacrifice can bring back restoration and renewal. So it’s not just good and evil. It’s deeper than that. You explain where good and evil come from.”

Sometimes, that explanation comes from the same young people adults worry about on the platform. The Robloxian Christians group was founded by Daniel Herron when he was only 11 years old. At one time boasting 54,000 members, the community described itself as a “global youth-led church committed to sharing the love and word of God with all young people online,” offering experiences like God is Love, Home Church, The Nativity, and [TRC] Worship Theatre.

“It’s basically a virtual island hovering in a cosmic stratosphere,” wrote Herron in a description of God is Love, “with a few flowers blooming and a cross draped in a burgundy stole and illuminated from above by glorious rays. Nearby is a stone table with bread and wine. Visitors can hear a piano quietly playing as they pray and discuss their faith with others.”

Herron told CT over email that the church closed in 2023 “after twelve years of ministry on Roblox and as one of the world’s first youth-led online churches.” Herron is now a board member for the Covenant Network of Presbyterians, and he believes Roblox is “a generally untapped platform” for would-be evangelists.

Chris Skaggs, the Christian game developer, does think Roblox needs to enact more safety features. He suggests a companion app that would give parents the ability to oversee their children’s gameplay and to restrict access to certain games.

Currently, if parents create linked accounts, they are able to set parameters on what their children can view on Roblox. Through parental controls, parents can block specific games or users, set screen-time and spending limits, manage their children’s access, and see their children’s top 20 experiences from the last week. Skaggs’s suggestion would step up these monitoring systems, allowing parents to watch recordings of their children’s gameplay, including their chats with other users.

Chris McKenna from Protect Young Eyes thinks kids are better off without Roblox but said, “If you’re going to say yes, at least take some steps to mitigate that risk.” He said children should never play with the chat on, with headphones, or alone. Gameplay should be restricted to certain devices, at certain times of the day, and with certain friends in a closed network. McKenna suggested following what he calls the “seven-day rule”: Before allowing a child to use any platform, experience it for yourself for at least a week.

Bennett Sippel from After Babel suggests Minecraft and Fortnite as better—though not perfect—alternatives to Roblox with better guardrails, and he even more strongly recommends Nintendo games like the Mario series and The Legend of Zelda. He says parents should appeal to collective action in order to move kids off harmful platforms. If several families in a community aren’t playing a certain game, then children will be less worried about missing out.

“No matter how much we try to work as parents to raise [our kids] in virtue and protect their ethics as they grow up, we’re competing with this virtual world that’s really doing quite the opposite,” Sippel said. “Not to get over-hysteric about it, but we pay with our souls. We really don’t want to be paying with our children’s souls.”

Isaac Wood is a journalist who produces narrative podcasts in East Tennessee. His work has appeared in The Dispatch, Civil Eats, Ministry Watch, and 100 Days in Appalachia, among other outlets. He was a member of the inaugural class of the CT Young Storytellers Fellowship.

Books
Review

How Artificial Intelligence Is Rewiring Democracy

Three books on politics and public life to read this month.

Three book covers.
Christianity Today January 9, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today

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

Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship by Bruce Schneier and Nathan E. Sanders (MIT Press, 2025)

Can an artificial intelligence model run for mayor? In 2024, a Cheyenne, Wyoming, mayoral candidate tried to make that case when he pledged that if he were elected, he’d outsource all decisions to an AI. He came in a distant fourth, earning only 3 percent of the vote.

But that (to my mind, rather dystopian) example explored in Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship is just one data point the authors harness to show how rapidly developing AI technology has an outsize impact on politics and public life.

Voters may know that politicians already use technology like autopen and robocalls, but increasingly, legislators rely on AI tools to email constituents, write speeches, draft messaging and bills, and ask for money.  Cities are using AI to translate public meetings for non-English speakers and optimize traffic signals to reduce traffic. The military wields AI to chart moving personnel and resources. Judges are using it to draft rulings.

Cybersecurity technologist Bruce Schneier and data scientist Nathan E. Sanders argue that because AI is here to stay, liberal democracies must harness it for good. The two writers are optimists about how politicians can integrate technology so the government can become more accessible and responsive to its citizens.

Though the authors acknowledge concerns around AI—they describe the second Trump administration’s aggressive push for AI as reckless—they avoid alarmism. At times, though, I wished for more exploration of not whether technology can do certain tasks but whether it should. Admittedly, I’m biased, but I found the idea of AI replacing certain journalistic enterprises (something they saw as likely) particularly distasteful.

The book did not convince me that embracing AI will make our government more responsive to the actual humans being governed. But the authors present a thought-provoking, succinct, timely exploration. Read it and decide for yourself—just don’t outsource your conclusions to an AI agent.

The Age of Extraction: How Tech Platforms Conquered the Economy and Threaten Our Future Prosperity by Tim Wu (Knopf, 2025)

A handful of massive tech platforms dominating the economy are suffering a serious case of “main character syndrome,” a diagnosis antitrust scholar and former Biden White House official Tim Wu makes in his most recent book. Tech giants have aggressively deterred competition in their determined bid to become final destinations for users, even at the expense of excellence and innovation. Some examples include Facebook acquiring Instagram and WhatsApp and Google acquiring Waze. Amazon, of course, figures largely.

These Goliaths (Wu is not above a biblical metaphor) have trampled competitors and extracted as much data, money, and time from their users as possible. To continue the status quo risks heading down the path toward authoritarianism, Wu argues, fueled by economic frustrations that boil over into anger and resentment.

Wu’s preferred remedy is an old-fashioned one: for everyone to treat these increasingly ubiquitous platforms as public utilities and, accordingly, for the government to take decisive antitrust action when necessary.

In between diagnosis and prescription is a tour through the heady, optimistic days when computing and the internet upended modern society and a look at what lessons we can mine for the present landscape, where generative artificial intelligence looms large. While Wu has crafted an interesting read, his conclusions won’t land for everyone. Besides, the debate over implementation may be moot, at least for now, with an administration that gave prime inauguration seats to Silicon Valley titans.

Destiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush by Jon Meacham (Random House, 2016)

Was the president within his rights to authorize military action that could lead to war without Congress’s approval? It’s a prescient question today, but it also bedeviled the country circa 1991 with the start of the Gulf War. That is only one of the thorny issues George Herbert Walker Bush faced during his eventful term, and one which Pulitzer Prize–winning biographer Jon Meacham delves into in his account of America’s 41st president.

Access to the former president, his family members, and his diaries pays off in this well-researched work, whether Meacham explores the motivations underpinning 41’s understated personality, examines his struggles in domestic politics, or captures his adroitness during the end of the Cold War.

The length of the book may seem unmerited for a president who served only one term. However, Destiny and Power is a reminder of just how many significant events crowded into those four years. Meacham’s account, while it may be softer than H. W. Bush’s critics would like, does his term justice.

Harvest Prude is national political correspondent for Christianity Today.

News

Kenyan Christians Wrestle with the Costs of Working Abroad

Working in the Gulf States promises better pay, but pastors say the distance harm marriages and children.

A collage of a Kenyan woman and children, a world map, and Kenyan currency.
Christianity Today January 9, 2026
Illustration by Elizabeth Kaye / Source Images: Unsplash, WikiMedia Commons

Clara Simiyu, a Kenyan mother of two, left for Saudi Arabia in 2022 for a job as a domestic worker in a Muslim household. A year later, she learned from a close friend back home that her husband was having an affair with a woman who visited him on weekends. Instead of spending the money Simiyu sent home on their children’s clothing and education, he spent it on his mistress.

Simiyu, 31, called her father and her pastor in December 2023, telling them she planned to separate from her husband and start Kenya’s lengthy divorce process once she returned from Saudi Arabia in late 2026. Her pastor tried to convince her to reconcile. Simiyu remained adamant.

When she returned to Kitale, Kenya, for a visit in 2024, Simiyu had no place to call home. Her estranged husband had no stable job and couldn’t provide for their children. So she took her daughters—ages four and eight—to live with her cousin. Now she sends money home from Saudi Arabia for their upkeep.

“I miss seeing my daughters grow,” Simiyu said.

Desperation from high rates of unemployment—as high as 67 percent for young adults entering the job market—drives many Christians from poor Kenyan families to accept low-paying jobs in the Persian Gulf states. Most jobs are in hospitality, domestic work, or construction. Demand for female-only domestic jobs in the Middle East is high, so many Kenyan women sign up for short-term contracts—usually one to two years—in these roles. Since domestic workers often live in their employers’ homes, they can’t bring their husbands or children. An estimated 400,000 Kenyans currently work in the Gulf states.

The separations take a harsh toll on their families. Marriages break apart. Families divide over how to spend wages sent home to Kenya. Children left behind with relatives may see their mothers or fathers only on video calls.

Because of this, some church leaders discourage their congregants from working abroad. They say financial success from international work isn’t worth the cost to relationships.

Pastor Joseph Kimaleni of the Full Gospel Church in Trans-Nzoia County, western Kenya, said adultery is common when wives work abroad. He’s seen young couples divorce when wives return to find their husbands have taken mistresses or second wives.

Kimaleni works to bring these broken families back together but wants to stop the problem at its root. When church members tell him they want to work abroad, he advises them not to go, especially if they’re considering work in the Middle East, where migrant workers are treated more harshly than in Western countries. Kimaleni doesn’t even want to pray they’ll get the jobs: “Praying for them to go to those countries is like separating them, and the Bible says what God has put together, no man shall separate.”

He also worries about their children: “When parents separate, it is the children who suffer.”

Kimaleni’s church creates local jobs in hopes of preventing young people from going abroad. The church raises money to offer entrepreneurial youth the capital to start small businesses, such as making fresh juice and snacks to sell to church members on Sundays. Kimaleni encourages church members who own businesses to employ youth from the church. He also connects young men with local building companies, shopping malls, garages, and salons in need of workers.

“This has diverted many of them from going to the Gulf,” Kimaleni said.

Meanwhile, pastor Roslyne Wamalwa of the Newlife Church in Trans-Nzoia County also discourages young women and men from going to the Middle East for work. During her church’s annual youth conference, she teaches young couples what a good marriage should look like, then shares stories of marriages that failed due to spouses working abroad. Though couples often admit they know of friends who have divorced while apart, they still feel pressured to take jobs abroad.

“Poverty pushes them,” she said. Wamalwa advises them to seek God’s will and pray to avoid temptation.

 Wamalwa says she prays for church members determined to go. She asks God to protect them against sexual harassment and give them good employers. According to The New York Times, many Kenyan women returning from domestic work in the Middle East report sexual advances or abuse from male household members. CT has covered similar reports from Nigerian women working in Muslim countries. Many African women do not report this abuse for fear of retaliation or loss of their wages. When they do report physical or sexual exploitation, law enforcement often let abusers go unpunished.

Elizabeth Wanjiku, a mother of four from Kilimani village near Eldoret in North Rift, Kenya, counsels young Christians to think carefully before going abroad. Many unemployed young Kenyans come to her church for prayer or job-skills seminars, where she begins discipling them. Wanjiku has seen work-abroad separations cause many divorces. She has also seen rifts start when family members in Kenya misuse money sent home.

In 2019, Wanjiku stopped her niece Joyce Wangare from taking poison to kill herself after Wangare returned to Kenya to discover her mother had squandered the meager earnings she had sent home over two years working as a domestic worker in Saudi Arabia.

Hoping to lift her family out of poverty, Wangare had asked her mother to buy a small plot of land near Eldoret to construct rental shops that would earn the family a monthly income. Instead, her mother spent the money on luxuries, food, and help for relatives.

“I asked God to give me wisdom to solve the fight, because the daughter was angry, while the mother thought it was her right to use the money,” Wanjiku said. Although Wanjiku helped them reconcile, her niece left home again, going first to Oman then Dubai, never returning home to Kenya again.

Wanjiku advises those who work outside the country to first open bank accounts and save any money they want to invest in the future, sharing only the remainder with family.

“When it’s time for you to come back, you can do the investment you want,” Wanjiku tells them.

In addition to being at risk for divorce and family disputes, Kenyan workers risk coming home with injuries. Others don’t come back at all—316 Kenyans reportedly died working in the Gulf states from 2022 to mid-2024. Christian workers may face especially harsh penalties for violating Muslim law. Women may be punished for being in the company of men they’re not married to, fleeing their employers, having sex with Muslim men (even when they’re raped, or reading the Bible openly.

Clara Simiyu, who is still working in Saudi Arabia, faces pressure to practice her faith quietly. Because she can’t attend church openly, Simiyu depends on her church back in Kenya for emotional and spiritual support. She sends prayer requests to her pastor over WhatsApp or Facebook, knowing he will ask the rest of the church to pray. It helps with the isolation, she said.

Simiyu said she regrets the dissolution of her marriage, believing that if she had stayed in Kitale, her husband would likely have remained faithful. Now he’s living with his mistress, unofficially remarried.

Sometimes, late at night after work, she uses WhatsApp to video-call her daughters: “My phone is my only companion because it is what [allows] me [to] talk to my children.”

When her contract is up, Simiyu plans to return to Kenya and open a hair salon to support her daughters.

“I don’t think I will travel again,” she said. “I need my children closer to me.”

News

The Dangerous Ambition of Regime Change

Is America’s appetite for power in Venezuela bigger than its ability to handle it?

Christianity Today January 9, 2026
XNY / Star Max / Getty / Edits by CT

On Saturday morning, the US military captured and extracted Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, from the capital city of Caracas. Following their early-morning arrest, Maduro and his wife were flown to New York, where they await charges of drug trafficking and narco-terrorism. 

The Bulletin sat down with senior contributor Mike Cosper, homeland security expert Elizabeth Neumann, and legal expert and New York Times columnist David French to learn more. Here are edited excerpts from their conversation in episode 240.


How did the capture and extraction of Maduro and his wife happen?

Mike Cosper: The operation was led by US Delta Force, a special operations force inside the US Army. As many as 150 aircraft were involved in striking targets in Caracas and providing air support for the operations—everything from information gathering and strike drones to F-35s, F-18s, and helicopters flying special operations and the law enforcement personnel into the city to arrest Maduro. 

The DEA and the FBI were also involved. The administration is treating this as a law enforcement action, not as an act of war, which is why they didn’t involve Congress.

Elizabeth Neumann: This operative has been developed for over six months with a military buildup to pressure Maduro to surrender. The United States’ position was You can leave and, like many famous dictators in history, go enjoy life on a deserted island where nobody can find you, or you can end up in prison in the United States. Which door would you like to choose? Clearly Maduro either didn’t believe that we were actually going to do it or maybe thought his security apparatus was strong enough to keep him safe. 

There were a few strikes with some initial reporting that some civilian targets were hit. It’s not clear if that was intentional. There’s still some fog of war, but for the most part, it appears we targeted very specific sections of Caracas. 


Why would the US engage in such a complex, extensive operation? What’s the purpose?

Neumann: Nicolás Maduro was the vice president under socialist leader Hugo Chávez before he became president of Venezuela. Back in the early ’90s, Venezuela was an up-and-coming country, very successful and wealthy. After the Chávez takeover, Venezuela lost its ability to function in the international world order in a healthy way. Economic challenges hit hard, and the regime is very repressive.

There have been two elections where Maduro lost and stayed in power, using all of his henchmen in various security apparatuses in the government to maintain his power. The United States, along with over 50 countries, does not recognize him as the legitimate president of Venezuela, which is an important distinction because in international law you cannot extradite, arrest, or try the head of a country for things that they’re doing as the head of a country.

The Biden administration agreed that Maduro was not the legitimate head of Venezuela and indicted him in 2020. That is why we’re allowed to go and extradite him to receive prosecution in the United States for his crimes.

When you do a military venture like this, before you do anything, it should be very clear what your objective is. It certainly should be clear when you’re briefing the American public after the fact. The end game is still not clear to me. This has tremendous consequences for the United States and for our allies. 

One of two things is possible. Perhaps those plans exist and nobody wanted to tell the president, so they haven’t been bothering him with those details. I watched that happen in the first Trump administration. Option two is that everybody who knows how to do that is gone. They were either fired through the DOGE process or pushed out because they were not seen as sufficiently loyal. That’s the scarier option to me, that that knowledge doesn’t exist anymore in the US government.

The United States doesn’t do regime change or nation building well. Our track record is abysmal. There are real scars in our collective imagination around what this looks like in places like Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya. We tried regime change at least 18 times through covert operations during the Cold War to try to disrupt various regimes in Central and South America. None of them worked. In fact, they actually had the opposite effect. They led to authoritarian regimes, destabilized countries and economies, and mass migration flows. Arguably, the reason we have had such mass immigration for the last 40 years is because of what we did during the Cold War.

We could still have done this well if we had a plan of action and could clearly articulate it to the American people and to the world. But the administration can’t seem to get their talking points together, and that does not look good for us internationally when we’re trying to tell Russia not to invade Ukraine or China not to invade Taiwan. We went much farther away than Taiwan is from China and removed the leader. Granted, he was not the duly elected leader, but we removed a dictator from another country and did not go through any of the normal United Nations processes or authorization from Congress. There are ways we could have done this and not have lost the moral high ground. 

Cosper: As a Christian, you want to insist that everything our government does is according to due process. At the same time, you recognize Maduro was a bad dude. 

We don’t know what this new administration is going to be like. Once Maduro is gone, how’s this administration going to rule? How are they gonna treat their citizens? What’s gonna happen to the economy? Venezuela is sitting on the largest oil reserves in the world. Chávez and Maduro were good Marxists. They nationalized the oil industry, and they destroyed it. It crushed the Venezuelan economy, which some analysts have said drove Maduro into the drug industry to find money. 

There’s an enormous opportunity for Venezuela to rebuild, which will take a lot of time. That’s the direction that the reformers in the country want to go. And the reformers won two elections in a row, and Maduro refused to leave. Trump is not supportive of the duly elected government of Venezuela taking office, which could drive some transition around some of these issues right now. Maduro’s people are still in power. There’s motivation to change based on what happened to Maduro, and they certainly don’t want that to happen to themselves. 

Neumann: [Marco] Rubio genuinely wanted Maduro out. He wanted the Venezuelan people to have their freedom. It’s possible that Rubio has one desire, your traditional neocon “We want freedom; we want democracy.” In order to get the president of the United States to buy into a regime-change model, you have to appeal to what he cares about, which might be the oil. Or, we saw Stephen Miller, deputy chief of staff, on the stage at the press conferences. This is also about immigration. All can be true all at the same time.

What is the legal justification for these actions?

David French: The administration’s core legal justification is related to a legal opinion that Attorney General Bill Barr issued in 1989 regarding the invasion of Panama. Manuel Noriega, like Maduro, had been indicted in the United States for drug trafficking. So President George H. W. Bush ordered an operation into Panama to arrest Noriega to end his control over Panama. Barr wrote an opinion that said the FBI can investigate and arrest people who are not in the United States. That’s an important tool in their toolbox to be able to do that.

But then it gets a little bit more dicey. Barr’s opinion says that the president could lawfully order this, empowered by the Constitution’s “take care” clause, even if it violates international law by impinging on another country’s sovereignty. His argument is that an indictment of a foreign leader authorizes a civilian law enforcement effort to arrest, for which the military can be deployed to protect civilian law enforcement personnel as they execute the arrest. This is a dangerous line of thinking. 

Essentially, it says the president on his own authority can authorize the Department of Justice to engage in actions that would violate the UN Charter that we agreed to, at the will and whim of the president and maybe even under the authority of the attorney general.

We’ve had a degradation of our constitutional order before Donald Trump in that legal opinion. Previous violations of the Constitution have laid the groundwork for what we are dealing with now. The legal justification for this action is specious: the idea that you can circumvent all constitutional requirements regarding the declaration and conduct of war by serving up an arrest warrant against a foreign leader. 

If a government in Europe indicted Trump for financial corruption charges related to some of his conduct and overseas business interests, and at a conference the French Legion and French police mow down the Secret Service and take Trump into custody, would we say they just arrested the president, or would we say they just committed an act of war? 

Under every understanding of what war is, that is an act of war. It’s very reasonable to say that the FBI’s extraterritorial jurisdiction does not empower it to engage in acts of war without congressional authorization on behalf of the United States of America. To what extent can FBI action be sanctioned or permitted as law enforcement, even though it would be considered an act of war under international law? 

Neumann: We heard the president call the administration’s national security strategy the “Donroe Doctrine.” It was the Trump corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, which is this idea that we get to basically decide what’s going to happen in the Western Hemisphere. Putin can decide what’s going to happen in his neighborhood. Xi [Jinping] can decide what’s going to happen in his. President Trump has been operating that way for quite some time, but the administration actually put pen to paper and articulated that as their strategy. 

French: If you listen to Trump’s emphasis on oil and oil rights over freedom and democracy, there’s no just purpose in the war. It’s a violation of international law. The Constitution has a structure: The Congress declares war. The president commands the military once war is declared. We have departed and are departing from that at a terrifying rate, and it’s a very dangerous thing for our constitutional structure. 

When voluntary compliance fails and there’s no effective enforcement mechanism, a lot of people start to question whether the law is tangible and real. It gets less and less real to more members of the UN Security Council. The more who depart from the realm of international law, the less international law exists. Already China and Russia don’t care. Of the five [permanent] council members, Britain, France, and the United States have held together the system with spit, bailing wire, and duct tape. If the US leaves the structure, it’s gone, because Britain and France can’t do it in 2025 anymore than they could do it in 1938.

What happens next?

French: No tears should be shed for the end of the Maduro regime. Some of Trump’s best moments in his second term have been in the arena of foreign policy. Some of his worst moments too. I worry that he’s going to get a little bit drunk on his success and push and push until we actually get to the situation that we’ve seen many times throughout history that a great power reaches too far. It’s just wrong to say that Trump is an isolationist at this point. It’s wrong to say that America First is isolationism. It’s much more “We get to dominate the Western Hemisphere.”

The problem with that is did the Western Hemisphere agree to domination? Does Canada agree? This has always been the problem with the spheres of influence. Yes, there are ways in which through clever diplomacy and shrewd policymaking, you can kind of do that dance for a while. That emphasis is never going to work over the long term because you cannot deprive other people of agency indefinitely.

Trump is not emphasizing freedom, democracy, elections, et cetera. He’s emphasizing oil profits and his threat to comply with the current regime in Venezuela. Maduro is horrible, and you can easily imagine a situation in which it would be lawful to intervene in Venezuela over Maduro. But that is not what happened here. That’s why, although I am relieved Maduro’s gone, the ends do not justify the means. And the means are so alarming that they overwhelm the virtuous elements of the ends.

Theology

So What If the Bible Doesn’t Mention Embryo Screening?

Contributor

Silence from Scripture on new technologies and the ethical questions they raise is no excuse for silence from the church.

A Petri dish under a microscope.
Christianity Today January 8, 2026
Natalia Lebedinskaia / Getty

In every generation, the church faces a specific set of challenges. In our time, the great challenges concern new technologies and their intersection with what it means to be human.

Conversations among Christians today are rightly focused on digital technology, above all smartphones, social media, and artificial intelligence. There are other technologies worth worrying about, however. And on the human side of things, I see four fundamental challenges facing the church. So far as I can tell, churches and pastors are unprepared to respond with the urgency and authority demanded by the moment.

Each is distinct, but all are related:

  1. the delay and decline of marriage and birthrates on one hand and the increased rates of indefinite or lifelong singleness on the other; 
  2. the advent of romantic relationships with lifelike chatbots, buttressed by AI-generated, photorealistic pornography;
  3. the widespread availability of cheap cosmetic surgery and other forms of invasive body modification, from Botox injections to semaglutide shots like Ozempic; and
  4. the extraordinary range of new technologies designed to begin or end human life that are already being used by the rich and will increasingly become affordable for the middle class.

That final biomedical challenge will be my primary focus here. On the reproductive side, it includes artificial contraception, surrogacy, and in vitro fertilization (IVF), as well as egg freezing, genetic editing in the womb, genetic screening of fertilized embryos, and artificial wombs.

Not to be outdone, end-of-life devices match these innovations with ever more ingenious ways to dress up self-slaughter in Hippocratic garb. No longer is euthanasia limited to pills or intravenous drugs; step inside a suicide pod and let the slow release of nitrogen gas dignify your death in a therapeutic key. It affirms your autonomy right up until the moment when there’s no you left to claim it.

You can see how these challenges are inseparable from technological developments. But they are also the product of a society both defined and exhausted by alienation, substitution, and self-enhancement. 

Men and women are polarized from each other, failing to pair off and form families. They are, perhaps unwittingly, building lives bereft of siblings and cousins, children and grandchildren, for when the final hour comes. This alienation makes all the more attractive the substitutions of porn, chatbots, surrogacy, and sperm donation—not to mention doctors who administer the final dose instead of priests who administer last rites. 

Yet a lingering desire for connection simultaneously pushes us toward enhancements like Botox to suppress the signs of death or perhaps improve one’s standing in the hook-up apps. Screening fertilized embryos is a kind of enhancement too, if that’s the right word for throwing away children deemed unfit.

Some of these challenges are imminent but not yet present: Artificial wombs have yet to be developed for human use; genetic editing isn’t publicly available; and assisted suicide remains illegal in many states. 

But for the most part they are present-tense realities. They are already with us, and by “us” I don’t mean a handful of elites in Manhattan and Los Angeles. I mean ordinary folks across the country, including those who fill the pews on Sunday mornings. They’re in red counties and the Bible Belt. They’re not on the outside; they’re not “the world.” They’re on the inside; they’re church folk.

And their churches, for the most part, have little to nothing to say about these things. Why?

One reason is simple enough: The Bible doesn’t talk about them. Open up the glossary in the back of your Bible, and you won’t find ChatGPT, CRISPR, or IVF. There are no chapter-and-verse citations for lip fillers, egg freezing, or practical questions like the “right” age to get married or the “ideal” number of children. 

New moral and technological questions require renewed study of Scripture for authoritative guidance. The Bible is not a spiritual FAQ. True, the Bible does answer our biggest questions. But if you live long enough or read your Bible deeply enough, you’ll see that the Bible cannot and will not answer every specific question in advance. It is authoritative in and for all of life, but it doesn’t speak directly or explicitly about every subject. How could it? 

Mature Christians, and especially pastors and whole churches, must therefore be able to give confident scriptural answers to new questions even when overt biblical teaching is lacking.

In the absence of explicit answers, many believers and church leaders reach for vague talk about “discernment” or “conscience” or “the Spirit doing a new thing.” This is often well-intended, and has the ring of Christianese, but in practice, discernment is often little more than a permission slip (Prov. 29:18). It ends up making grave ethical matters into subjects for private judgments born of little more than instinct, however sincere or prayerful. It places pressing questions in the category of adiaphora, or indifferent matters.

And if the message is that a given topic is indifferent to the church, then you can bet that ordinary Christians will assume it is likewise indifferent to God. Which, in practice, means: Do as you please.

This is why I began by saying that churches are unprepared for these challenges. They are unprepared because their doctrine of Scripture is insufficient to the scale of the problem and because baked into this doctrine is an altogether too low view of the church—of its authority as well as the authority of its pastors.

In American churches, these inadequacies were long held at bay by a latent social conservatism—people generally esteemed marriage and children and the social supports that make them possible and desirable. This worked in tandem with a wider society whose most pressing social issues (including divorce and poverty) were directly addressed in Scripture. Thus, a broad consensus could be presupposed among the people.

But now neither our surrounding culture nor our churches are doing the formational work to generate a similar consensus, and technological change has made our questions distant enough from biblical teaching that even pastors feel adrift and unsure what to think, believe, or do.

Consider the question of artificial contraception. Beginning in the 1930s, Protestants (including evangelicals) just about sprinted from restricted permission under limited circumstances to no-questions-asked, near-universal adoption of contraceptive methods. The rationale: The Bible doesn’t expressly forbid it. And if the church must be silent where the Bible is silent, then it follows that the absence of a prohibition functions as tacit authorization. If you doubt me, try telling a group of evangelicals that contraception is wrong and see how they react. (If that’s not enough, follow up by saying the same about vasectomies.)

It usually comes as a shock to learn that this issue was never divisive between Catholics and Protestants during the Reformation; in fact, beginning with Luther and Calvin, all major Protestant theologians were united on the question for a full four centuries. I lack the space to summarize their case, but suffice it to say that the Reformers weren’t taking their lead from Rome and would have been happy to dissent had they seen biblical basis to do so. 

At a minimum, this kind of unanimity for such a length of time (both before and after the Reformation) ought to persuade Protestants today that contraception is a moral and theological question—that its permissible use is not a foregone conclusion unworthy of discussion. Perhaps it also ought to persuade us that the burden of proof lies with those who would permit its use rather than those who side with tradition.

If contraception was the canary in the coal mine for insufficiently examined sexual ethics, IVF is the same for biomedical ethics. The arc of acceptance has run a similar course; the logic follows a kind of “pro-life consequentialism.” Here the idea is that if a technology purports to save or enrich human life, then the ends justify the means. Since it is impossible to demonstrate that the Bible directly forbids in vitro fertilization, and since one end of the process is a human life, many evangelical pastors are at a loss—if they see this as an ethical issue calling for their input at all.

By far the best, most theologically powerful, and most biblically thoughtful case against IVF was written by Oliver O’Donovan in 1984. Begotten or Made? is a little book that packs a punch. O’Donovan, now 80 years old, is a British ethicist, a Protestant, and an ordained pastor. His book is a model of serious moral engagement that avoids easy answers while looking to Scripture and tradition for authoritative help in navigating new biomedical and technological terrain.

To be clear, my purpose here is not to rehearse the full arguments regarding technological interventions like contraception or IVF. It’s to note the perennial pattern that accompanies them: Questions of legality override those of morality; individual autonomy trumps ecclesial authority; the apparent silence of the Bible speaks louder than the testimony of tradition or theological reason. And so, within just a few years, congregations acquiesce to the “inevitable.” What was once unthinkable becomes the norm.

Some Protestants look to Rome for help here. The social teaching of the Catholic Church is indeed an impressive resource for Christians who feel ill-equipped to draw the logical and moral lines from God’s Word to pressing contemporary questions—from labor unions to marriage to bioethics—that cannot be answered with simple chapter-and-verse-citations. Not a few Protestants have crossed over to Catholicism because of this tradition. 

Conversion isn’t necessary, though, to see Rome’s social teaching as a model. It is a standing rebuke to the notion that God is ambivalent about the concrete particulars of our social, sexual, medical, and technological lives. It is equally a rebuke to ideas about the church that would strip ministers of authority, undermine pastoral duty, or leave believers without guidance for these challenges that no one person or couple can handle alone.

God’s people need help. These are the issues that dominate their lives. How can silence be an appropriate response?

It’s true that each of us must pursue the will of God as best we can, in the particular circumstances of our individual lives, in concert with a local congregation, reading the Bible prayerfully with others. But no part of that should lead us to reject or diminish pastoral authority. Without it, we will not live with an absence of authority; rather, we will open up a vacuum that the broader society will all too happily fill. Hence the aforementioned church folk screening embryos, opting for cosmetic surgery, and turning to chatbots for companionship.

For churches to move from silence to authoritative application of Scripture will inevitably be messy. Sometimes pastors will go wrong. 

But what’s the alternative? Once we understand the challenges at hand, is silence not a kind of cowardice? However understandable, it is rooted in fear—of offending people, of repeating the mistakes of the past, of interfering in believers’ private lives. Consider that even though purity culture went awry, we still speak to teenagers about dating (another topic never directly mentioned in the Bible). Why would we be silent on these new challenges?

Let me conclude with a final example: the idea of the “seamless garment.” Among pro-life Catholics, this concept is an attempt to connect issues at the beginning and end of life—abortion and euthanasia—to issues during life’s long middle—family, vocation, labor, welfare, poverty, prison, immigration, and so on. 

There’s no denying that some versions of the seamless garment suffer from sentimentality while others serve to sneak in partisan policy proposals under the banner of moral doctrine. Even so, learning about the seamless garment in graduate school was a minor revelation for me. It helped me step outside of hot-button debates and, from that wider perspective, grasp the full sweep of human life as a tapestry knit by a loving God. 

In particular, it helped me comprehend the law of Moses, the prophets of Israel, the ministry of Jesus, and the church’s tradition as an undivided whole. I came to understand that feeding the hungry, housing the homeless, and caring for single mothers were integral expressions of pro-life commitments, and that affirming this connection in no way detracted from the inviolability of the child in the womb. Given these new challenges around technology and humanity, we need a Seamless Garment 2.0, one that encompasses all I’ve discussed above and more.

I would not presume to tell pastors or fellow theologians exactly what they ought to say. It’s a massively complex range of subjects. But just for that reason, we have to start talking. God’s people are depending on us.

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.

Church Life

The Chinese Evangelicals Turning to Orthodoxy

More believers from China and Taiwan are finding Eastern Christianity appealing. I sought to uncover why.

Saint Sophia Cathedral in Harbin City, China.

Saint Sophia Cathedral in Harbin City, China.

Christianity Today January 8, 2026
DuKai photographer / Getty

In the late 2000s, as an undergraduate law student in Beijing, Justin Li grappled with questions about justice, morality, and the meaning of life. Atheism felt increasingly inadequate in providing answers to these big questions, and Li became a believer through a campus Bible study shortly after he began attending its meetings.

Li worshiped in an evangelical church that held contemporary services shaped by joyful, fast-paced praise songs. But the upbeat worship music, coupled with his busy work schedule, “made his heart even less quiet,” said Li, who is in his mid-30s.

Then he stumbled upon Ancient Faith Radio, a digital network of broadcasts offering Eastern Orthodox liturgical music and teaching. The melodies he listened to were simple, solemn, and contemplative. “It felt like another world,” he said.

Li began exploring the Eastern Orthodox tradition while studying theology at the University of Oxford’s Wycliffe Hall. He read widely, comparing Protestant and Orthodox arguments about the faith, and found the Orthodox responses “more persuasive than expected.” He joined the Orthodox church in China in 2022.

“There was a deep dissonance between the beauty I found in the writings of the early church and the functional pragmatism of much [of] evangelical church life,” Li said on a Zoom call from a room lined with Chinese evangelical theology books, now flanked by Orthodox icons and a wooden cross.

Li is not the only evangelical of Chinese descent who has turned eastward in recent years. A burgeoning number of Chinese believers find Eastern Orthodoxy appealing because it offers a connection to a historically rooted faith and a richer experience of the spiritual life—aspects that contemporary evangelicalism seems to lack.

Last year, I interviewed seven Mandarin-speaking Christians from mainland China and Taiwan about their conversion to Orthodoxy. My interest in the subject arose out of personal curiosity after I conducted a research project on Chinese Christian communities in Britain four years ago, when I met with several Chinese Orthodox converts who came from evangelical backgrounds.

The seven interviewees with whom I spoke are highly educated, with most holding or pursuing doctorates in fields ranging from theology to physics and history, and are dispersed across Europe, Asia, and North America.

Although all of them first came to faith within evangelical traditions, their shift eastward arose not from any frustrations with evangelicalism but from a deeper intellectual and spiritual search shaped by their academic formation.

In their eyes, the path from Beijing’s bright praise songs to Byzantium’s ancient chants is not a wholesale rejection of evangelicalism but a search for spiritual ground that does not move.

Many of these Orthodox adherents long for historical depth. Because their theological imaginations had been shaped largely within modern evangelical frameworks, many discovered—often for the first time—the vast expanse of early Christian history that lies between the New Testament and the Reformation.

As they read the church fathers, learned about the early councils, and studied how the canon of Scripture was discerned, they asked whether their inherited evangelical structures had adequately preserved the breadth of the apostolic tradition.

Sarah Lin, a believer from Taiwan, encountered the Eastern Orthodox faith through a research project during her graduate studies in the United States. What began as academic curiosity gradually unsettled her spiritually.

As she read Byzantine texts on early prayer practices and monastic devotion, she felt surprised to discover how so many centuries of Christian life and thought had been rendered invisible within the Chinese-speaking church.

Lin also sensed a depth to prayer that she had never experienced before. Previously, she regarded prayer as a response to an “immediate spiritual feeling,” but she now understood that prayer could also be a “formative” experience that would shape her over time.

“Orthodoxy reordered my spiritual life—it taught me to pray before I feel ready and to be formed through habit, not just emotion,” she said.

Besides Lin, nearly every interviewee described a sense of hollowness in the fast-paced, event-driven, emotionally charged worship cultures they grew up in. In contrast, the spiritual disciplines Eastern Orthodoxy emphasizes, such as hesychasm (repeating short prayers), fasting, and liturgy, offered a framework for inner transformation that felt slow, grounded, and deeply embodied.

What these interviewees found compelling about Orthodoxy was not a mystical aesthetic but a different anthropology: the belief that the heart is shaped through habit, not spontaneity.

“In evangelicalism, devotion was often spontaneous or reactive,” Li said. “In Orthodoxy, it is habitual and formational. I do not wait to feel spiritual before I pray. Instead, I submit into prayer and am formed by it.”

Another reason some converts left evangelicalism is ecclesial fragmentation. Several people, particularly those who have lived in the West, spoke about the disorienting variety of doctrines, moral teachings, and worship styles within Protestantism.

For some interviewees, this raised questions about whether “Scripture alone” could sustain a coherent witness across time and cultures. In their view, Orthodoxy was attractive because of a perceived continuity that connected contemporary practice with the first millennium of the church.

Ephrem Yuan, a London-based PhD candidate, experienced his conversion to Orthodoxy in 2022 as a gradual, often reluctant transformation. Like Li, he did not grow up Christian. He became a believer in university, was formed in evangelical contexts, and later sought theological training outside China.

The Chinese evangelical church communities in which he was involved did not seem interested in preserving historic Christian traditions. Chinese theological education often jumped from the New Testament to Augustine to the Reformation, leaving out contributions from the Eastern Church and the seven ecumenical councils.

“This [history] is almost the entire backbone of the church’s first thousand years,” he said. “Yet it is missing from most Chinese Protestant understanding.”

In 2015, Yuan enrolled at Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology near Boston, where he spent four years studying the Greek language and Orthodox spirituality. Six years later, he founded an initiative dedicated to making patristic and Orthodox resources accessible to Chinese readers. He translated several texts that introduced the church fathers to Chinese believers, and created a YouTube channel for people interested in exploring the tradition.

Yuan’s goal, however, is not recruitment but theological literacy. He envisions a future where young Chinese Christians can read the works of Basil the Great or Gregory of Nazianzus with the same ease as they now read Tim Keller or John Stott.

“The early saints and church fathers give us a spiritual and theological world that is both ancient and alive,” he said. “Even if someone remains evangelical their whole life, they can still pray with the early church, think with the fathers, and worship with the saints across the centuries.”

Orthodox churches in the US have been filling up with new converts, especially conservative young men. But the interviewees I spoke with do not expect a mass movement toward the tradition among Chinese evangelicals, even as they notice rising interest in aspects of Orthodoxy from their peers.

Converting to Eastern Orthodoxy from evangelicalism within Chinese Christian communities comes with certain challenges. When friends learned of Li’s conversion, their reactions were mixed. Some were curious. Others quietly distanced themselves. A few interpreted the couple’s later miscarriages as divine discipline for “leaving the faith,” which revealed to him how deep misunderstandings between Christian traditions can run.

Li remains at peace with his decision to become an Orthodox believer. “People are looking for a faith that is not only true but solid: something that can stand when everything around them is changing,” he said.

A previous version of this piece was published on ChinaSource.

News

Archaeology in the City of David Yields New Treasures

Controversial excavation in Jerusalem reveals new links to the biblical record.

Givati Parking Lot excavations in the City of David in Jerusalem.

Givati Parking Lot excavations in the City of David in Jerusalem.

Christianity Today January 8, 2026
Oren Rozen / Wikimedia Commons / Edits by CT

My quest for the ark of the covenant was abruptly disrupted at 35,000 feet over the Atlantic Ocean. Three hours into our flight to Israel and several hundred miles south of Greenland, the pilot announced that we were turning back to the US because Israel had closed its air space. Israel’s attack on Iran had begun.

Unlike Indiana Jones, I was not searching for the ark as it might exist today. The ark disappeared from the pages of the Bible during the latter days of the kingdom of Judah. 

Instead of the ark’s departure from the Jerusalem temple, its arrival interested me. The arrival of the ark of the covenant designated Jerusalem as the Holy City of God. 

The City of David is archaeologists’ name for the most ancient area of Jerusalem, a narrow ridge that begins near the southern wall of the Temple Mount and descends to the Pool of Siloam near where the Kidron and Hinnom valleys intersect.

Nineteenth-century photos of a bare hillside give little hint that a forgotten ancient city is buried underneath. Archaeologists began working in this area in the late 1800s and are still there to the present day, all while settlements spread across the hillside. But it wasn’t until the 21st century that the City of David became an attraction for groups of pilgrims and tourists eager to see biblical discoveries. 

The organization driving the change is Rabbi Yehuda Maly’s City of David Foundation (often called Elad), “dedicated to revealing and preserving the birthplace of Jerusalem, transforming it into a premier national tourist center.” 

In Jerusalem, such a simple proclamation, like its archaeology, has many layers and can be deeply controversial. In Israel, some see archaeology as a weapon wielded in the same struggle that includes the war in Gaza and the bombing of Iran.

Spurring my quest was a January 2025 news release that prompted memory of a conversation with Rabbi Maly almost 25 years prior. As I recalled that conversation and reviewed the news release, there seemed to be an obvious omission.

In that interview, Rabbi Maly mentioned that Solomon came to the throne and was crowned king in an impromptu ceremony at the Gihon Spring. It seemed then like a non sequitur: a king crowned next to a waterspout and not in a palace or a temple? The incongruity stuck in the back of my brain, but then the penny dropped when the news release arrived.

After my in-flight trip cancellation, I reached Doron Spielman, former Elad vice president and spokesman, via Zoom to continue my sleuthing from a distance and, as researchers often do, discovered more than I initially sought. 

For many years, a portion of the City of David was a nondescript one-acre parking lot outside the Dung Gate that leads to the Western Wall.

As Spielman recounts in his book, When the Stones Speak, the City of David Foundation had a chance to buy the lot in the mid-1990s but couldn’t raise the money. When another opportunity came in 2000, the foundation quickly acquired it. 

The Givati Parking Lot opened to archaeologists in 2007, and the work continues today. I had signed up to be an excavation volunteer with archaeologist Yiftah Shalev for a week during my trip. Instead, Spielman was my excavation guide from afar, describing the unparalleled opportunity to dig deeply into the history of Jerusalem.

“Thirteen different civilizations,” he said. “One hundred feet down and we’re still not at the bottom. It’s like walking through the pages of a book as you’re walking down the staircase. Every floor is another 200 years.”

Over the past 17 years, archaeologists have announced many discoveries from the Givati dig, including gold coins and gold jewelry, among the smaller items. A gold ring has been found in each of the last two years. 

More precious than gold in the ancient world was ivory. In the ruins of a palatial home, destroyed when Babylonians burned Jerusalem in 586 BC, archaeologists recovered fragments of ivory in 2022 that had been inlaid in furnishings—the first time ivory has been found in modern Jerusalem, reflecting the days of Solomon (1 Kings 10; 2 Chron. 9). 

Jamie Fraser directs Jerusalem’s Albright Institute for Archaeological Research, the center for US archaeology in Israel. He toured Givati earlier this year.

He compared previous excavations in the City of David to a series of telephone booth–sized probes scattered across a football field. Suddenly, an opportunity opened to dig up half the field. “In order to find big-scale stuff, you need big-scale excavations,” he said.

Opening up the excavation site further has yielded even larger discoveries. In 2023, researchers were surprised to discover a massive moat, 30 feet deep and 100 feet wide, separating the lower city from the temple and the king’s palace on the acropolis. Though the Bible has no specific indication that such a moat existed, it appears to have been part of the biblical landscape for much of the first millennium BC, going back perhaps as early as the time of King David.

“What blew my mind was the sheer scale of this dig,” Fraser said. “It’s reshaping the way we understand the mechanics of ancient Jerusalem.”

Similarly, that January 2025 news release described remains of an eight-room cultic sanctuary found on the other side of the City of David, within 100 feet of the Gihon Spring. Spielman said this sanctum, as he called it, was actually discovered in an excavation 15 years ago that had started out to uncover the oldest city walls of Jerusalem, from 3,850 years old.

“This is the Middle Bronze II period, roughly the time of Abraham,” Spielman said, “which means when Abraham meets Melchizedek [Gen. 14:18], those are the walls that Abraham saw.”

Within these rooms—which seem to have gone out of use several centuries after the Israelites built the temple and installed the ark of the covenant, around the time of King Hezekiah—were found a small olive oil press and winepress that the Israelites apparently used for rituals. 

In another room, archaeologists found a masseba, a standing stone. Standing stones commonly mark sites of religious significance, such as with the stone Jacob erected following his dream at Bethel (28:18). Givati’s masseba is the only one standing in Jerusalem.

Two of the most important features of any ancient city were a water source and a temple or cultic installation. Now, in Jerusalem, they have been linked together. That suddenly puts flesh on the bones of the biblical story that started my quest.

The drama unfolds in 1 Kings 1. David is in his final days, and his son Adonijah convenes a banquet, anticipating his accession to the throne. The prophet Nathan takes the news to Bathsheba, knowing that Bathsheba’s and Solomon’s lives are in danger. She immediately goes to David, who confirms that Solomon should be king:

He said to them: “Take your lord’s servants with you and have Solomon my son mount my own mule and take him down to Gihon. There have Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet anoint him king over Israel. Blow the trumpet and shout, ‘Long live King Solomon!’” (vv. 33–34)

To fill in the rest of the story, we have to go back to 2 Samuel 6:16–17, when David, “leaping and dancing,” installed the ark of the covenant in his new capital city: “They brought the ark of the Lord and set it in its place inside the tent that David had pitched for it, and David sacrificed burnt offerings and fellowship offerings before the Lord.”

Archaeologist Scott Stripling, provost of The Bible Seminary in Katy, Texas, has visited the cultic center with Israeli archaeologist Eli Shukron, who directed the excavation. Stripling notes there is a podium in this cultic center with the exact dimensions of the ark of the covenant. He believes the biblical reference to the oil that anointed Solomon and the olive oil press found in the cultic center reinforces the connection to Solomon’s story.

Stripling has been excavating Tel Shiloh, where the ark paused for 300 years in its journey from Mount Sinai to Mount Zion. “We know what’s going on at Shiloh. We understand the temple history. But the little period of David’s tabernacle has eluded us until now,” he said.

Eventually, when Givati has yielded all its secrets, the City of David Foundation plans to erect a multistory visitors’ complex called the Kedem Center. The foundation has a controversial plan to build a cable car that would increase access to the Western Wall and City of David and would terminate on the center’s top floor. 

Doron Spielman said the City of David Foundation is still grappling with how best to open up the cramped quarters of the cultic installation to a flood of pilgrims.

“It’s one of the most important things we are doing,” he said. “That is the origin story of the Bible right there.” 

Scott Stripling noted, “The first verse of the New Testament is ‘This is the story of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham.’ If you have a place where David and Abraham come together, that’s really exciting.”

News

Displaced Ukrainian Pastor Ministers to the War’s Lost Teens

“Almost everybody has lost somebody, and quite a few people have lost very much.”

Pastor Alex Zaytsev, on the end of the couch in a red shirt, hosting his teen ministry.

Pastor Alex Zaytsev, on the end of the couch in a red shirt, hosting his teen ministry.

Christianity Today January 8, 2026
Image courtesy of Pastor Eugene Grinishin

Ukrainian American pastor Alex Zaytsev has witnessed Russia’s war machine wreak havoc and tear families apart. When the full-scale invasion began in 2022, he initially remained in his apartment in the eastern city of Avdiivka and opened his church building as a bomb shelter for locals.

Yet a month later, Russian attacks on his town intensified and Zaytsev fled 25 miles northwest to Pokrovsk, where he helped with evacuations and aid deliveries. Zaytsev was born in eastern Ukraine and grew up in Washington state before returning to Ukraine in 2016 to serve as a pastor and missionary with Church Without Walls.

As the war dragged on, Zaytsev encountered teenagers—bored and restless—roaming the streets. Schools and businesses had closed, and virtual classes were unpredictable. So Zaytsev launched a teen ministry in one of his denomination’s church plants in Pokrovsk. Each morning, he unlocked the church building and welcomed the teenagers inside.  

“My mission was to share the gospel with them,” Zaytsev told Christianity Today. “And I did this until it became too dangerous to stay in Pokrovsk.”

After Russian troops conquered Avdiivka in February 2024 and began advancing toward Pokrovsk six months later, Zaytsev moved again. This time he fled farther west to Ivano-Frankivsk, and he did not go alone—he brought along 20 teenagers seeking to escape the war’s frontlines. Another pastor joined him, and together they rented several apartments and a multilevel house for the group. Many had come from troubled backgrounds, and their parents had decided to stay behind or delay evacuation. 

Zaytsev said Ukrainians are tired of war. Moscow is bombing civilian centers on a near-daily basis, families are split up, and soldiers are dying. More than 14,000 Ukrainian civilians have died since the war began four years ago, and nearly 4 million people have been internally displaced.

“Almost everybody has lost somebody, and quite a few people have lost very much,” Zaytsev said.

After seeing Moscow’s troops attack his city, he questions any cease-fire plan that does not include solid security guarantees. “Will other countries help us if we get attacked again? That’s the primary question that a lot of people have,” he said.

After a flurry of US-led negotiations in recent months, a new cease-fire proposal offers some hope for weary Ukrainians.

President Donald Trump met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Florida last week to discuss Ukraine’s new 20-point plan to end the war with Russia. Zelensky said the two countries agree on most of the points, and Trump claimed a deal to end the war is “maybe very close.”

The plan allows Ukraine to maintain a peacekeeping force of 800,000 troops and join the European Union. It also includes explicit promises that Washington and its European allies would come to Ukraine’s aid in future conflicts. After his meeting with Trump, Zelensky said the president offered 15 years of security guarantees—short of the decades the Ukrainian president believes are necessary to prevent another war but a substantial improvement from prior US proposals.

The Trump administration’s original 28-point peace plan from last fall made major concessions to Russia and required Ukraine to reduce the size of its military, cede land, and agree not to join NATO. It offered only vague US defense assurances.

During talks with Ukrainian and European officials in mid-December, Washington agreed to provide Ukraine with “NATO-like” security guarantees—a hopeful sign for Ukrainians who have grown increasingly worried about the United States pulling its support. NATO’s Article 5 requires members to treat an attack against one of its countries as an attack against all and to respond with whatever measures are deemed necessary. Negotiators have not released details of the security protections, which still require congressional approval.

On Tuesday, Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff and his son-in-law Jared Kushner met with leaders from more than 30 European nations to discuss Ukraine’s long-term defense assurances. The UK and France agreed to establish military hubs and build protected weapons facilities in Ukraine when the war ends. In September, French President Emmanuel Macron said that 26 countries from the so-called “coalition of the willing” had committed to sending troops to Ukraine in the wake of a cease-fire.

Yet sticking points remain, including convincing the Kremlin to accept new Western-backed security guarantees and negotiating territorial concessions.

Russia wants to control five Ukrainian regions, including cities such as Pokrovsk that it has not been able to conquer despite multiple attempts over nearly two years. Kyiv says ceding any territory to Russia would violate its constitution, while European leaders argue that such a concession would reward Russia for its aggression.

Putin has shown little interest in ending the war and has repeatedly demanded that any negotiated cease-fire address the origins of the conflict—in essence, Russia’s maximalist demands from day one of its invasion. Moscow has increased its attacks on civilian centers and launched massive strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, leaving entire regions without power as temperatures dropped below freezing last month.

Zaytsev said most residents of Avdiivka will not return home even if peace talks are fruitful. The war destroyed much of the city, including a massive coke plant that helped fuel the local economy.

While 15 of the 20 teenagers who left with Zaytsev eventually reunited with their parents, five are still under Zaytsevhis care. Some come from troubled backgrounds, with alcoholic parents who struggled to care for them. All five teens came to faith in Christ through the Church Without Walls ministry.

In the meantime, Zaytsev is teaching the teenagers practical life skills like taking the garbage out before it stinks up the house, avoiding junk food combinations—such as energy drinks, chips, and gummy bears—on an empty stomach, showering regularly, using deodorant, and limiting themselves to a small (not big!) squirt of body spray. He has also taught them how to bargain-shop for coffee for church services, plan games for youth group gatherings, and manage conflict. The teens help prepare Communion, coffee, and cookies for the Sunday morning worship services.

The church Zaytsev planted in Ivano-Frankivsk 18 months ago grew quickly to about 40 people due to the influx of internally displaced people in the region. Two months ago, the 32-year-old pastor launched a second church plant there.

As world leaders continue negotiations and discuss funding to rebuild Ukraine, Zaytsev is laying the groundwork for healing and forgiveness among both teens and adults. He acknowledges that forgiveness may be difficult as long as Ukrainians are under constant attack, yet he reminds his congregants that it will be an important future step.

Zaytsev points them to the passages in Genesis that speak of Joseph forgiving his brothers for selling him into slavery. “This should be an example for us to strive for—that we also will have to forgive people who have caused us extreme pain,” he said.

Theology

Why Christians Ignore What the Bible Says About Immigrants

Columnist

Believers can disagree on migration policies—but the Word of God should shape how we minister to vulnerable people.

A photo of families and children walking along a US border.
Christianity Today January 7, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Image: Getty

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

Nothing can provoke anger quicker than mercy, when it’s directed to the wrong kind of people.

Marking the church’s Year of Jubilee, Pope Leo XIV invoked biblical language calling for kindness to migrants as human beings made in the image of God. There’s nothing the least bit controversial about this. It’s what the Bible says, what Christians have always believed, what official Catholic teaching makes explicit. The pope did not call for countries to stop enforcing their borders, nor did he give any specific policy proposals for how a nation should best balance security and mercy. He simply called on Christians to refuse harshness or mistreatment of vulnerable people.

Some people didn’t like this.

The blowback the pope received was not from fellow bishops or clergy or, as far as I know, from any large numbers of churchgoing Roman Catholics. Instead, political activists and social media conflict entrepreneurs blasted him, not so much for what he said as for the fact that he spoke to the issue at all.

Difficulty speaking to immigration is not a specifically Catholic problem—in fact, it may be more of a problem for other Christian groups. After all, every pope in recent years and many bishops have spoken consistently to this point. And, of course, the pope is the pope. He can’t be fired the way the pastor of a storefront Bible church in Aurora, Illinois, or Athens, Alabama, can. Some of these pastors are trying to figure out how to care for people in their communities who want to hear the gospel but are fearful of being arrested by immigration officials on their way to church.

This is not a simple matter of “Well, people who broke the law should be accountable.” Some of these people are following the right process—but may be unable to show up for court to adjudicate their cases for fear of being arrested in line. Some of them have broken no laws at all; they are Americans but have someone in their household, maybe a mother or a father, who is not. And some of them were doing everything right—filling out the right documents, working to provide for their families—when their asylum claims or refugee status was abruptly withdrawn.

One pastor said to me, “Most of my people want to know how best to pray for and to serve their neighbors here, but if I answer their questions from the pulpit, a small minority of the congregation is going to say that I’m ‘supporting illegals.’” One preacher, an immigration hawk who supports mass deportation, said he has the same problem when he tells people the church’s job is to minister to everybody, regardless of where they’re from or what they’ve done. Yet another minister confessed, “I don’t even know what my views on immigration or ICE are; I’m not trying to weigh in on that. I just want to remind people to love their neighbors, full stop. That’s Jesus. How is that controversial?”

Well, it turns out Jesus is very controversial—and always has been.

As a matter of fact, when it comes to the language of Jubilee, Jesus kept preaching until he reached the point where his hearers were outraged, for all the same reasons we see today.

In his hometown synagogue, Jesus turned to the scroll of Isaiah and read a passage that echoes directly the language of Jubilee from the Torah: “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor” (Luke 4:18–19, ESV throughout). This reading was not controversial—even when Jesus made the audacious claim “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing” (v. 21).

Luke recounts, “And all spoke well of him and marveled at the gracious words that were coming from his mouth” (v. 22).

Most of us would call it a day and leave the teaching at this level of abstraction. Jesus, though, knew the applause meant they didn’t really get what he was saying. They wanted Jubilee for the poor and the captive so far as it applied to them, struggling people in an impoverished backwater of an occupied Roman territory.

But Jesus kept talking and implied this mercy of God applied even to people they didn’t like. He referenced from the Bible that the great prophet Elijah was sent to care not for one of his own people but for a Canaanite widow outside the borders of Israel. Jesus then pointed out, even more harshly, that Elisha bypassed countless Israelites with leprosy to heal a foreigner—not just a foreigner but a Syrian, and not just a Syrian but a Syrian soldier.

Again, Jesus did not even apply these scriptural principles at this point. He simply pointed out what the Bible had said. But “when they heard these things, all in the synagogue were filled with wrath” (v. 28).

Jesus did not bumble into this crisis accidentally. He knew exactly what he was doing—and walked right toward it. Mercy destabilizes the moral bookkeeping of who is “deserving” of it. That’s true for all of us, and our responsibility is to keep hearing the Word of God until it reaches where we do not want it to go, where our passions rise up and say, “No, not that far.”

The Bible does not give a comprehensive public policy for migration or asylum. Christians of good faith can disagree on those things. But the Bible does give a comprehensive view on what we are to think of human beings, including migrants. The church has a mission to shape consciences around how we minister to scared and vulnerable people, regardless of whether we think they should have stayed somewhere else. And Jesus has already taken the question of “Who is my neighbor?” off the table (10:29).

What Jesus did with Jubilee is radically shocking. He took a year out of the calendar and announced it was pointing not to a date but to a person—to him. He is the kingdom. He is the deliverance. He is the Jubilee. What’s dangerous about this is not where it’s complicated (What counsel do I give someone who is illegally here but in danger back home and has nowhere else to go?). What’s dangerous is where it’s very, very clear—because it asks us whether our deepest loyalties are still capable of being interrupted by the Word of God.

The question is not whether the Bible is clear enough but whether we are still capable of being changed by it. That was controversial in Nazareth then. It’s controversial in Nairobi or Naples or Nashville now.

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

Books
Review

Apologetics Can Be a Balm—or Bludgeon

A new history of American apologetics from Daniel K. Williams offers careful detail, worthwhile lessons, and an ambitious, sprawling, rollicking narrative.

The book cover.
Christianity Today January 7, 2026
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Images: Getty, Oxford University Press

Is Christian faith reasonable? This question has haunted and delighted the Christian mind since Justin Martyr addressed it in the second century. Believing that the gospel constitutes the truest story about the world, Christians have still had to grapple with how our beliefs interact with outside claims to knowledge and experience of the world. 

This tension has led many Christians either to entirely reject or to subordinate themselves to the world’s learning, but it has also been fuel for Christian intellectual culture. And it’s not just a question for intellectuals, an esoteric or cerebral pastime. Everyday believers confront related questions too: Should we accept the scientific evidence for macroevolution, climate change, or vaccine efficacy? Should we attempt to predict the date of the rapture? Should we buy into conspiracism like QAnon?

This cluster of big questions animates Daniel K. Williams’s riveting new book, The Search for a Rational Faith: Reason and Belief in the History of American Christianity. Over the past decade, in books like God’s Own Party and The Election of the Evangelical, Williams (a CT contributor) has become one of our nation’s great historians of 20th-century faith and politics. 

In The Search for a Rational Faith, Williams turns his attention to new material: the history of ideas and, largely, prior centuries. He offers an intricate intellectual and cultural history of the enterprise that attempts to defend and promote the intellectual plausibility of Christian faith. (Today we call this enterprise apologetics, but in earlier eras it was known as natural theologyChristian philosophy, or, predominantly, Christian evidences.) Williams surveys apologetics in American Protestantism from the Puritans of the 1600s to Tim Keller in our time, covering a remarkable amount of historical ground in an ambitious, sprawling, rollicking narrative.

Historicization is particularly imperative for apologetics because it’s a discourse too often reduced to abstract ideas shorn of any messy human life—more like mathematics than preaching or conversation. Likely because of this, the history of apologetics has been an undertold story, even as an aspect of broader intellectual histories. 

That makes Williams’s contribution all the more impressive. This book will join classics by Avery Cardinal Dulles (A History of Apologetics) and Alister McGrath (Christian Apologetics) in examining not only apologetics’ content but also its historical drama amid different social contexts and cultural pressures.

Williams’s book chronicles three epochal shifts in Anglo-American Protestant apologetics. First is a movement away from the Calvinist suspicion of reason’s capacity in the domain of spiritual truths. 

Early Puritan Calvinism had its own internal scholasticism and intellectual flair, of course, but the Puritans’ ideas about sin made for a grim view of the capacity of human reason outside illumination by the Holy Spirit. This perspective precluded any hopefulness about unconverted people reasoning their way to knowledge of God. Conversion simply had to come first, and counterarguments to Christianity were dismissed as the moral corruption of the damned. 

American Christians’ wide embrace of a more optimistic Arminian rationalism in the 18th and 19th centuries, however, opened new space for rational arguments about faith. This theological perspective allowed that the human intellect, though insufficient and distorted by sin, could still reason its way to God and God’s basic truths. And if that were true, then empirical evidence could buttress the credibility of Christian belief and belief in the Bible. 

The result was a new flowering of apologetics aimed at providing robust evidence for faith. In America, this Arminian approach fit well with the emerging political scene and benefited from a culture in which Christianity was basically seen as plausible, even among doctrinal outliers such as the deists and Unitarians. This evidentialism became integral to American intellectual culture writ large, including US college curricula, and seemed to harmonize insights from science, logic, history, theology, and morality. In a particular achievement of the book, Williams shows how this widespread apologetics culture influenced the American founders and the cultural penumbra of 19th-century American education.

Then came thinkers like Immanuel Kant, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, and Charles Darwin—and the second major shift. The questions they raised about history, science, and knowledge itself proved deeply destabilizing for the centuries-long apologetics tradition. In Williams’s telling, biological evolution as such was not the primary challenge early on; that was readily finessed by many Christian intellectuals of the time. Far graver difficulty came from historical and religious pluralism and new views of the Bible and its authority in human life.

The third major transition, then, was the shattering of the apologetics tradition as it crashed upon the rock of 20th-century complexity. Mainline Protestants mostly lost faith in the older evidentialism, but at the same time they crafted alluring cases for Christianity grounded in experience, ethics, or civilization. (More recently, many of the erstwhile New Atheists who are newly Christian-curious have gravitated toward such pragmatic, instrumentalist arguments as well.) But eventually, Williams claims, mainliners relinquished even this, entering our own time with only a social-justice framework bereft of any notion of common human truth or rationality to which we can appeal. 

This is a somewhat misleading analysis. It’s not as if mainline Protestants have entirely abandoned attempts to compellingly present the Christian faith, though certainly they largely spurn the term apologetics, and their philosophical infrastructure is different. Social-justice traditions themselves can exercise a type of “apologetics of goodness,” the enticing beauty of the lived witness of the saints. In this case, the actual living out and practicing of the way of Jesus’ life and ministry are the embodied persuasion and enticement to Christian faith. 

Nevertheless, Williams ends the book seeing evangelicals as the last Protestants to take up apologetics as such in our time, viewing this effort as largely a successful project, especially in its cultural apologetics mode. Yet for all the book’s strengths, I’m left with the unresolved incongruity of, on the one hand, Williams’s claim that evangelicals are the lone (Protestant) defenders of a rational faith and, on the other, the reality that some sectors of evangelicalism seem mired in an anti-truth, anti-scientific, postmodern nihilism of power.

There are a few other limitations to consider, none of which should be taken as impugning a monumental accomplishment overall. The sidelining of Catholic and Orthodox apologetics (the former banished to a Siberian appendix) unfortunately reinforces long-standing patterns in American historical work of overlooking those traditions’ contributions to American life. Here the omission also misses an opportunity for thinking about the dynamics of intra-Christian apologetics. 

Admittedly, Williams has so much material on the Protestant world that the decision was justifiable. Still, I wish we could have gotten a better index of the popular reception of apologetics on the ground, how average Christians across traditions received and lived these arguments from the intellectual elite.    

My biggest concern about the book, however, is that despite serious progress compared to previous works, it needed to delve deeper into the shaping interplay between culture and ideas. For example, apologetics has historically been a very masculinized discourse, but Williams could have been insightful with more substantive attention to female apologists like Mary Astell, author of 1705’s The Christian Religion, as Professed by a Daughter of the Church of England, or Rebecca McLaughlin, a contemporary writer mentioned cursorily. The masculine style of Protestant apologetics deserves more exploration for both its peculiar allures and its blind spots. 

Similarly, neurodivergence would have been a helpful issue to explore. Apologetics has played a striking role in the autistic community, both as a project to sooth social frictions and as a catalyst of disenchantment when apologists overpromise and underdeliver.

Likewise, Williams mostly deals with intellectual titans—and does so superbly. But he gives precious little space to the pop apologetics of consumer culture, which has arguably been more influential for a century. On this level, apologetics functions less to convert unbelievers than to help believers bolster their own faith. This can be an authentic intellectual discipleship, but it can also be triumphalist, self-aggrandizing, and ultimately self-deceiving. Adding more on this type of material would have enhanced the book. 

The oversight reaches catastrophic proportions with Williams’s entire avoidance of the sheer devastation of the Ravi Zacharias case. This case is so important because it inescapably links apologetics to its social ramifications, dragging it out of its fortress of abstractions. That the best-known Christian pop apologist of the recent past was empowered by that very enterprise to take up serial sexual predation and heinous sexual sin provokes existential questions: about apologetics ensconced in Christian mass marketing and celebrity culture, about Christian conduits of trust and authority, about how views of truth get untethered from beauty and goodness, about how apologetics can be morally simplistic and tragically unloving, about how arguments are always borne by people, flawed people.

Even so, this book tables a rich intellectual feast. It has all the hallmarks of Williams’s previous, excellent work: textured attention to the intricacies of primary sources and sophisticated thinking about historical patterns. 

The Search for a Rational Faith offers vividly fresh horizons on Western intellectual giants like Isaac Newton, Robert Boyle, and John Locke for their contributions to Christian apologetics (even when they have eccentric doctrinal beliefs). It also provides some deep cuts on obscure but intellectually potent figures. The book will fascinate anyone interested in apologetics directly, as well as anyone interested in American religions, intellectual history, and higher education more broadly. 

There are also lessons for readers to glean. The role of doubt is crucial—and something with which so many of Williams’s figures struggle. His account explores doubt’s role in the mature faith of intellectually curious believers, a worthwhile contrast to some populist Christian cultures’ tendency to smother and expel doubt. There was (at least in certain forms and degrees) deconstruction way before deconstruction was cool, and Williams finds glimpses of intellectual anguish even in the faith of those most publicly zealous for the integrity and stability of their rational arguments for Christianity. 

That, however, leads to a countervailing challenge: the role of certainty. So much of the apologetics tradition has been lustful for rational certainty in a way that betrays an underlying anxiety. That is not the foundation of every search for a rational faith, but a search born of anxiety may fall into a kind of idolatry, wanting certainty of conceptual conviction more than the truth of God himself. 

At their best, apologetic arguments can be a balm, healing the wounds of anxiety, error, ignorance, and limited perception. But arguments can also be a bludgeon, wielded to domineer, ravage, and demonize. Out of the same mouth can come both blessing and cursing. “My brothers and sisters, this should not be” (James 3:10).

The Search for a Rational Faith could be an occasion for a renewal of apologetics and a celebration of what it has accomplished historically. But let it also be an occasion of reckoning with the hardest, most agonizing, and self-reflective questions about apologetics, as befits followers of the one who said the truth will set you free.

Daryn Henry is an assistant professor of religious studies at the University of Virginia and the author of A. B. Simpson and the Making of Modern Evangelicalism.

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