History

Evangelism and All That Jazz

In 1966, CT reported on church activities but also on LSD, The Beatles, and the war in Vietnam.

An image of the Beatles and a CT magazine.
Christianity Today December 26, 2025
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Images: Getty

CT started 1966 with a review of one church’s attempt to jazz up evangelism

Protestants have tinkered with jazz in worship for years. Now some see it as an evangelistic wedge. … [Presbyterian] pastor Bryant Kirkland said the [Duke] Ellington concerts were “an attempt to establish contact with people normally outside the church” and “churchgoers who are not ministered to by the usual presentations.”

Ellington hoped his concerts would “help to bring people into the fold.” One of his favorite words is “communication,” and he contends that informal words and jazz music can put across spiritual truths to many people when “good English would fly by them like a kite.”

So in New York he permitted publicity, an RCA recording, and a CBS-TV taping for broadcast January 16. … The choirs chanted the books of the Old Testament (nearly inaudible to concert-goers) while tenor sax man Paul Gonsalves screwed up his face with a hard rock solo in his famous Newport Jazz Festival idiom. After a screech solo by trumpeter “Cat” Anderson, Ellington quipped, “That’s as high as we go.” …

The whole bit was more of a maybe than a yes.

Many Protestants had turned against the idea of evangelism and personal confessions of faith in Christ. CT reported the development with concern, surveying the positions of a wide variety of church leaders, starting with Methodists:

Evangelism is the lifeline of Christianity. Since apostolic times it has been hard, controversial work. And it has always produced opposition outside the Church.

Today, however, there is a struggle over evangelism within the Church. Methodists were informed at a recent evangelism conference that revival services are now ill advised, in fact unchristian. The speaker, the Rev. Dr. Edmund Perry, a religious historian at Methodist-rooted Northwestern University, told the Miami Herald’s Adon Taft, “I abhor the notion of individual salvation.”

Traditional methods for proclaiming the good news of the gospel seemed to be fading fast in the late 1960s. CT reported that “there are fewer tent meetings and sawdust trails” and “altar calls in evangelical churches are probably hitting a new low this year.” But other new approaches were emerging

Traditional evangelistic methods based on hit-or-miss, take-it-or-leave-it proclamation of the Gospel are seen to be giving way to more specialized, in-depth approaches. Evangelicals in North America and abroad are realizing anew that deeds are fully as important as words, that positive dialogue is more effective than legalistic argumentation, and that winning converts is not primarily the task of paid clergymen. …

At Daytona Beach, Florida, two Bob Jones University-trained folk singers roamed the sands with an inter-religious entertainment and evangelism team during Easter week. Many hundreds of the 75,000 vacationing college students were counseled, and some (including at least one Hebrew) professed initial commitment to Christ. At Fort Lauderdale, some 250 miles south, where thousands of other students were soaking in the sun, an Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship team set up an evangelistic effort.

In New York, Pentecostalist youth worker David Wilkerson planned to open a new training program for converts this week. His Teen Challenge organization, meanwhile, has begun holding Saturday night rallies at a theater on Manhattan’s Lower East Side.

In Colorado, evangelist Jack Wyrtzen conducted a three-day camp retreat attended by cadets of the Air Force Academy. A spokesman for Wyrtzen said “many cadets responded to the gospel invitation to receive Jesus Christ as their Lord and Saviour.”

The magazine published a special issue on evangelism and a second on the presentation of the gospel in the inner city—the first issue with a cover printed in color. CT profiled an urban church in Pittsburgh, talked to a Young Life leader reaching out to gang members, and caught up with a Christian college training social workers.  

At Philadelphia College of Bible, a new prong has been added to the long-established ministry to the city. In the new social-work undergraduate curriculum, the college is acknowledging and dealing with today’s inner-city crises.

Concern in this area is not new at the college. It saw extreme inner-city conditions in the second decade of this century, when it began. Since then, through days of prosperity and days of depression, it has consistently ministered to the poor, even before the word “poverty” was rediscovered. This ministry was carried on through the practical-work departments of the two Bible institutes that later merged to form the present college, and it is continuing through the present Department of Christian Service. The “new prong”—the Department of Social Work—will augment the general thrust by training workers for urban areas. …

Christian social agencies very much need born-again workers, especially those who go on to graduate school and qualify to become administrators. State laws more and more are requiring executives to have the master’s degree in social work. Lack of administrators with this level of training often jeopardizes the start or continuation of new agencies and services.

Throughout the year, CT reminded readers that every Christian was called to evangelize, with evangelism being “The Order of the Day.” 

The Church has ever been under orders to evangelize. Are the orders less urgent in this time of apocalyptic siftings and transitions? We claim to see in our domestic and international upheavals, in our plunge toward the abyss of unbelief, an inexorable movement toward the great denouement of the human story; it would thus be tragic if we were to soften the thrust of evangelism in this fateful hour.

Choruses of despair sound from all sides. And why not? One need not be a prophet to discern the signs of the times. …

But why, as evangelicals, should we be surprised at all this? … This is no time to be beguiled by unbelieving scholars who disown God’s Word and dishonor his Son; it is rather a time for men to match the mission of evangelism. In a day of incredible unbelief, those who still believe must fill a vast vacuum.

One sign of the times was the increasing popularity of psychedelic drugs. CT reported on “The LSD Cult.”  

A new cult is making its appearance across North America. The rationale, if it is to be taken seriously, is the bizarre theory of what its proponents call “expanding consciousness.” Principal promotion comes from the attention currently being given to lysergic acid diethylamide, better known as LSD, and other drugs that, taken internally, produce outlandish mental images.

High priest of the LSD cult is ex-Roman Catholic Timothy Leary, 45-year-old psychologist who in 1963 was fired from Harvard University for using students in LSD experiments. He then went on to become the world’s leading exponent of “mind-opening substances.”

“We regard him with the same special love and respect as was reserved by the early Christians for Jesus, by the Moslems for Mohammed, or the Buddhists for Gautama,” said Arthur Kleps in testimony last month before a United States Senate subcommittee. Kleps is identified as director of the “Neo-American Church,” which is supposed to have 500 members and churches in the Northeast, Florida, and California and is spreading.

CT noted the growth of the anti-war movement in the US. Unlike in previous military conflicts, the pacifists weren’t led by Christians

Some have supposed that the protest marches about the war in South Viet Nam were chiefly an evidence of Christian opposition to war. This, however, is a really erroneous judgment. A great many of those who are protesters against the war are openly atheistic, and some are frankly Communists. For example, the leadership of the protest at Berkeley, California, is now known to be admittedly Communist, with no reference to the Christian faith whatever.

CT asked a retired general to explain the US military tactics and make the case that American evangelicals should support the bombing of North Vietnam

The United States is faced with the alternatives of defeating the aggressor by military effort or of failing to do so. The latter would entail national humiliation, loss of prestige and influence in the world, and desertion of the South Vietnamese, who have every right to expect our full support and will be lost without it. It is probable that all of Southeast Asia would then fall to Communist military control. The worst effect, however, would very likely be the effect on the American people. This weakening of the moral fiber would bode ill for the future.

Wars are fought by men with weapons that can destroy life and property. Victory comes when one side destroys the other’s weapons and men faster than it loses its own, thus assuring the ultimate total destruction of its enemy’s forces if the conflict is continued. The greater the applied superiority, the quicker and cheaper the victory.

The prime minister of South Africa was assassinated in 1966. CT reported on his Christian faith and racist policies.

The son of a Dutch Reformed missionary who worshipped regularly at a Reformed church in Rondebosch, a suburb of the parliamentary city of Cape Town … [Hendrik] Verwoerd himself first achieved prominence as editor of Die Transvaler, organ of the then-minority Nationalists, as he backed Hitler to a degree and opposed South Africa’s participation in World War II. …

The succeeding years made Verwoerd a symbol of political success through racism. … In an August 26 cover story, Time characterized Verwoerd as “one of the ablest white leaders that Africa has ever produced. He has a photographic memory, an analytical mind and an endless capacity for work. He is a brilliant diplomat and an inventive politician.”

The full results of such abilities invested in the anachronistic cause of racial separation will only be known at the end of the current worldwide racial revolution.

The Roman Catholic Church entered a period of reform in the late 1960s, following the conclusion of Vatican II. CT editors noted that the church had not changed its position on the authority of the pope but that some Catholics were having “born again” experiences.

From scores of sources around the world reports filter in of priests, nuns, and laymen who have experienced the same kind of religious experience as their counterparts of Reformation and pre-Reformation days. Unlike the Reformers, who were forced out of the church, these modern disciples remain within the fold. Yet they have come to know Jesus Christ in an intimacy that sometimes surpasses the devotion of many Protestants. The reality of their experience we cannot question; the depth of their commitment and the open expression of joy in their newfound faith are good to behold. …

In the midst of change and renewal, evangelicals should reach out with heart and hand to those who, though they are in the church of Rome, are our spiritual brothers and sisters in Christ.

CT reported on Protestant leaders, including an Episcopal bishop who was “full of surprises.” That fall, he demanded the church try him for heresy

The Episcopal House of Bishops attempted to head off heresy proceedings against Resigned Bishop James A. Pike last month by adopting, 103 to 36, a statement denouncing Pike’s conduct and doctrinal statements. The attempt failed, for though Pike’s accusers seemed satisfied, the statement was so abhorrent to Pike that he moved to put trial machinery in motion “to clear my name” …

The committee’s 1200-word statement, which was adopted by the house, rejected Pike’s “irresponsible” utterances, and said “his writing and speaking on profound realities with which Christian faith and worship are concerned are too often marred by caricatures of precious symbols and at the worst, by cheap vulgarizations of great expressions of faith” …

Pike charged that “this House is not interested in theology, but only public relations.” When he raised a theological point he was ruled out of order.

CT also encouraged readers to pay attention to a British pop band named The Beatles. The founding editor of the Methodist Good News magazine reported his experience listening to “the Fab Four”:

The real contribution of the Beatles and of other popular singers to theological dialogue is their songs. Listen to the words. Listen and you will learn how lots of people look at life.

As the father of five children, I have become, perforce, a student of popular music. At latest count, five radios are to be found from the basement to the attic of our parsonage. At almost any time of the day or night, “pop” music (or so they call it) pours from one if not all of these radios.

For a long time I tried to shut my ears to the caterwauling and the frenetic beat, beat, beat. But after a while my middle-aged eardrums capitulated, and I began to listen. What I heard caused me to listen seriously. For the “go-go” music that blares from millions of radios proclaims a popular philosophy of life—and sometimes a theology as well.

Evangelical Christians need to be listening, painful as this suggestion may seem, because pop music reveals what many, many people are thinking; what sort of values they admire; what idols are worshiped by the pagans in our midst. Pop music gives us an important clue to where the action really is—or should be—in our apologetics these days.

Books

Why The Body Matters

Three books on ministry and church life to read this month.

Three book covers.
Christianity Today December 26, 2025
Illustration by Christianity Today

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

Justin Whitmel Earley, The Body Teaches the Soul: Ten Essential Habits to Form a Healthy and Holy Life (Zondervan, 2025)

When I was in high school, I was taught that the key to spiritual vitality was having a “quiet time,” which meant getting alone with God to read Scripture and pray. I am thankful for this practice, which is still foundational for my life with God. But as I’ve grown older, I’ve also felt the limitations of this approach. Prioritizing contemplation, I’ve often failed to appreciate the significance of my body. Prioritizing personal devotion, I’ve often undervalued the importance of the body of Christ.

Justin Whitmel Earley argues that rather than idolizing or ignoring our physical bodies, we should seek to image God through them. His title is a nod to Bessel van der Kolk’s popular book on trauma, The Body Keeps the Score. Like van der Kolk, Earley frames recovery as a matter of both training and healing. We can “garden” our bodies to lead our souls in the right direction, and this is a matter of attention as much as action. As he puts it, “To live with close attention to your body is to live with close attention to your soul.” To this end, Earley combines biblical reflection with scientific research to prescribe ten domains of bodily attention.

Beginning with breath, he discusses what it means to integrate the brain and shows how exercise can lead to “antifragility” (where stress makes us stronger). Along the way, he gently reorients dysfunctional habits related to food, sex, rest, and technology. But Earley’s book is no endorsement of wellness culture or our endless quest self-optimization; my favorite chapters were about reckoning with illness and remembering death. Sickness and death are unavoidable reminders of a broken world, but also of the Christian hope—“the redemption of our bodies” (Rom. 8:23).

Carmen Imes, Becoming God’s Family: Why the Church Still Matters (IVP Academic, 2025)

If Earley writes to convince readers that the Christian life is “a habit project” rather than a “head project,” Carmen Joy Imes shows that it is also a group project. In her book, she layers a powerful, cumulative case that God’s plan has never been simply to save solitary souls but to gather together a new family “from every nation, tribe, people and language” (Rev. 7:9). Extending the project of two earlier books (Being God’s Image and Bearing God’s Name), she offers a fresh retelling of the biblical narrative, cast in familial terms: family trauma (the exile), family reunion (the coming of Christ), and the family business (making disciples).

Imes is clear-eyed, deftly naming the failures of God’s family, from the mistreatment of Hagar by Abraham and Sarah to the misguided project of Christian nationalism. And yet, she writes with a hope rooted in the gospel, which allows us to glimpse God’s glory “at work in ordinary gatherings made up of all sorts of people.” Imes challenges Christians to find their home in the household of God, where God’s people gather to wait for God to do what only God can do.

Andrew Louth, The Origins of the Christian Mystical Tradition: From Plato to Denys (Oxford University Press, 1980)

Andrew Louth’s book is older and does heavier theological lifting, the sort we might expect from an early church scholar. Nevertheless, Louth’s historical excavation underwrites the arguments of Imes and Earley in significant ways. Tradition is a complicated term, yet there is a reason why Louth’s book is found on theologian Sarah Coakley’s shortlist of essential works of recent theology.

Louth shows how early church fathers wrestled with and resisted the development of a solitary and elitist spirituality, where “God and soul” are the only things that matter. To be sure, these Platonic streams exert a powerful gravity on Christian mysticism, one that lingers to the present day.

Louth concludes that the Fathers undermine “any tendency towards seeing mysticism as an elite, individualist quest for ‘peak’ experiences.” The spiritual (mystical) life is irreducibly embedded in the community of the church, and nourished by bodily practices that orient everyday experiences, not extraordinary ones.

We should keep getting alone with God, as Jesus did (Luke 5:16); but life with God includes so much more than “quiet times.” Spiritual vitality can never be purely “spiritual” or a solitary pursuit. It is something that can only occur as disciples pay attention to their bodies and find their place together in the body of Christ.

Justin Ariel Bailey is a professor of theology at Dordt University. He is the author of Interpreting Your World: Five Lenses for Engaging Theology and Culture.

Church Life

Hark! The Boisterous Carolers Sing

I grew up singing traditional English Christmas hymns. Then I went caroling with my church in India.

Indian drummers.
Christianity Today December 24, 2025
Edits by CT / Source Images: Rajesh Mishra, Unsplash

Last year, my husband and I went Christmas caroling with our church in Bhopal, a city in central India, one Sunday night. We brought along a mini djembe (an African drum) and an egg shaker, thinking we could add a fun percussive element to the singing.

We caught up with the crowd just as they were entering a church member’s home. The group of 30, predominantly teens and young adults, began singing their lungs out and clapping to the thumping of a bass drum.

“Sum sum sum sum sumbhavichallo, sumbhavichallo; Bethlehem goshalaya athu sumbhavichallo,”the carolers belted out with gusto. These Malayalam lyrics declared the miraculous joy of Jesus’ birth: It hap-hap-hap-hap-happened! It happened! In Bethlehem’s cowshed it happened!

More instruments joined in, including my husband with his djembe. Together, as if they could read one another’s minds, the percussionists progressively increased the tempo of the song.

Soon, the carolers broke out in dance. But instead of a gentle choral sway or synchronized choreography, people moved their bodies so spontaneously that I felt like I was in an unrestrained Bollywood-style celebration, like what takes place at local temple parades or Indian festivals like Holi and Diwali.

I had never seen Christians in India dance with such unbridled passion and energy before. “Is it acceptable for churchgoers to dance this way?” I thought to myself, feeling self-conscious and awkward as I attempted to move my body as enthusiastically as my fellow carolers.

There were other challenges: I am not fluent in Malayalam and could not pick up the words of the song and what they meant. The song’s exuberantly upbeat tempo didn’t help either.

Some of my discomfort around my Bhopal church’s caroling tradition probably stemmed from growing up in an Anglican church in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The carols I sang then were all in English, with two- or four-part harmonies and specific stringed instruments accompanying the vocals. We might have lit a candle or clapped a little, but aside from the person dressed as Santa Claus, no one would dance at church.

Glorifying God at Christmastime can feel formulaic: We go to church, sing a few Christmas songs together, listen to a sermon, wish each other “Merry Christmas!” and head home. But glorifying God isn’t always a comfortable or respectable experience. It can be heartfelt and spontaneous, even if it might feel confusing or bewildering at times.

I wonder what the heavenly hosts sounded like when they praised God and said, “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests,” after an angel declared to a group of terrified shepherds that a Savior had been born (Luke 2:8–14).

In my imagination, they probably sounded like an orchestra singing something Handelian. But maybe the angelic company was not as restrained in its praises to God as I had envisioned. They probably worshiped God as loudly as my church friends in Bhopal did. Perhaps they also danced as vigorously as David, the shepherd-king from Bethlehem (2 Sam. 6:14).

Caroling in India—a tradition called “carol rounds”—is a hallmark of the Christmas season. Usually, the singing and dancing begins after sunset and lasts from anywhere from 4 to 12 hours. The carol rounds may also be held over several days or weeks, and sometimes until the New Year.

Church congregations and Christian communities usually create a meticulous itinerary of homes to visit, ensuring that no church member is missed out and that hosts have enough time to prepare their homes to welcome guests.

The carolers often sing songs in the local or tribal languages of their communities. These songs are usually decided beforehand so lyrics can be printed out, and vocals are accompanied by whatever instruments people know how to play.

Only 2 percent of the Indian population identify as Christian, and amid the constant threat of persecution, church leaders also often have to ensure the carolers’ personal safety. In some Indian states, this may include securing permission from village leaders and government officials to go on carol rounds, making safe travel arrangements from one house to the next, and requesting a police escort if necessary.

After singing a few carols at a church member’s home, the family usually offers the carolers something warm to drink, a seasonal snack, or a cash offering for the church.

No one needs to have professional qualifications or skills to be part of the carol rounds. You just show up, ready to sing or dance in ways that extol God—even if people around you feel embarrassed or do not understand why.

As my caroling experience in Bhopal demonstrated, we do not need to construct an elaborate song repertoire to glorify God. All we need is to be willing to express what uncontainable joy in the Lord looks and sounds like. In doing so, we bring to life that vivid, sensorially delightful image proclaimed in Revelation 5: “To him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb be praise and honor and glory and power, for ever and ever!” (v. 13)

Several Indian Christmas carols reflect this powerful, and freeing, perspective on giving God glory. Take the Malayalam carol “Sumbhavichallo” (“It Happened”), which my church sang in Bhopal. The song’s composer, congregant K. S. Samkutty, wanted to communicate the incredulous news of Jesus’ birth in a humble stable through a dynamic, energetic tune. The lyrics’ catchy repetition, coupled with a rhythmic South Indian folk beat, makes this song a popular choice for collective rejoicing in my church. 

Another Indian Christmas carol, “Jishu Gadi Aja Nenju”(“The Lord Jesus is Born”), was originally written in Kui, a language spoken by the Pano and Kandha tribes in the southeastern Indian state of Odisha. My pastor friend Kishore Digal translated it into English last month, as he had fond memories of singing and dancing to the song as a child.

Set to the thumping, rat-a-tat beats of several dalgus (tribal drums), the song urges believers to awaken from spiritual slumber and be jubilant in praising God:

Let us all be joyful today
Today the Lord Jesus is born
We will worship him today …
Rise-up! Rise-up, oh heavy sleepers!
The Light has come that we may see it.
By the sun beams of Jesus,
Follow the path of holiness.
For he has come as the light of the world
And chased the darkness away.

When our worship practices become too familiar or staid—especially at Christmas—we may fail to realize the magnitude of what it means for the son of God to come into this world as a helpless, crying infant. We lose out on understanding the full breadth of emotions and expressions that arise when we fully give ourselves over to glorifying God, whether in private or in public spaces like our churches or neighborhoods.

Songs like “Sumbhavichallo”and “Jishu Gadi Aja Nenju”call us to break out of our spiritual lethargy. They encourage us to participate communally in celebrating Christmas with our brothers and sisters in Christ, just as the heavenly host broke out in praise to God for Jesus’ birth in the Book of Luke. Even if the lyrics and instruments used feel unfamiliar or strange, these songs’ messages are clear: Come and rejoice, for our Savior is here.

The carol rounds that many Indian Christians often participate in are a way to embody the good news of Jesus’ incarnation. We glorify God not only through the words we sing but also through our bodies and our cultures. In doing so, we confess our gratitude and devotion to him and acknowledge his lordship over us. We respond in awe at how he has interrupted the darkness and complacency of our world with Jesus, our Immanuel, just as Mary proclaimed in the Magnificat (Luke 1:46–55).

Glorifying God can look and sound messy. It can be boisterous and disorienting. And it is perfectly okay. I can’t wait to join my church in its carol rounds this year. It’s time I let loose and danced to “Sumbhavichallo.”

Ann Harikeerthan is a writer living in Bhopal, India.

Culture

“Christian First, and Santa Next”

Even while wearing the red suit, pastors point people to Jesus.

A man wearing a Santa suit.
Christianity Today December 24, 2025
Edits by CT / Source Image: brazzo, Getty

Like many men who retire in their 60s, Bill Beachy grew out his beard, which was fading to white. He spent more time with his grandkids.

One day, his daughter snapped a picture of Beachy—reading glasses slid down his nose, inspecting a toy he was working on—and joked that her dad was turning into Santa.

That’s how Beachy, longtime Methodist pastor and professor at Asbury Theological Seminary, decided to become a professional Santa Claus. For the past ten years, Beachy has worked as many as 15 gigs each holiday season, posing with hundreds of kids and hearing their Christmas wish lists.

Graying pastors can make good Santas. They’re comfortable one-on-one or before a crowd, they’re tender toward kids, and they want to serve their communities. They also love Christmas.

“It’s a lot of fun to see the delight in the children and provide a safe space for them,” he said.

Evangelicals may see an inherent tension in pastors who portray Santa. Many forgo the myth of a man coming down the chimney to bring presents, and view the modern Santa figure as distracting from celebrations of Jesus’ birth.

But men of the cloth who don the red suit see the Santa gig as an extension of their ministry. They offer hope and encouragement to children and intentionally look for chances to point families to the true meaning of Christmas.

In addition to offering spiritual care, pastor Santas develop their own personas—drawing on the wonder of kids and anchoring their characters in the Christian tradition of Saint Nicholas.

In 2012, “Reverend Santa” Steve Lantz, an actor, sports chaplain, and ordained pastor in the Presbyterian Church in America, was hired to play a Santa in a holiday commercial for The Home Depot. Though he was in his 40s at the time, Lantz grew out his beard and realized that at 6’2″ and more than 300 pounds, he looked the part. In 2023, he decided to grow out his beard again and don the red suit.

“I didn’t realize that Santa is a niche market and once you’re in, you’re in,” he said.

Lantz now works several high-profile gigs each season, including holiday festivals at the Miami zoo and Ritz-Carlton hotel in Key Biscayne, Florida. He is also a member, with more than 20 other pastors, of the International Brotherhood of Real Bearded Santas and the Tampa-based Palm Tree Santas, where he’s one of a trio of pastors who participate.

Cameron Reeder first dressed as Santa in 2018, when he was a pastor at World Harvest Outreach in Hartselle, Alabama. He had a white beard, so a friend paid him to play Santa for his kids.

“That was the moment that it became a sideline and later a passion for me,” said Reeder, now 64 and retired from the pastorate.

Reeder enjoys the fellowship that working as Santa brings. He’s part of Cotton State Santas, a group of about 320 Santas working in Alabama. He knows of two other pastors in the group. And the work as Santa has become a family affair too. His wife joins him as Mrs. Claus, and his grandchildren accompany him as elves. 

During his first year working as Santa, Lantz went viral. As he posed for photos at an event at the Ritz-Carlton hotel, a little girl expressed reluctance to sit on his lap. Lantz took the rebuff in stride and assured the girl that she was under no obligation to sit on anyone’s lap. 

The girl’s mother filmed the interaction, and the 19-second clip of Lantz has more than 294,000 likes on TikTok and led to appearances on Good Morning America and other news programs. 

Lantz said the good news of the gospel is that you are not good enough but Jesus is. In his brief interactions with children, he tries to give them a version of that message. 

“I tell them I put them on the nice list not because of who they are but because of who I am [as Santa]. I tell them, ‘Keep making good decisions. I am proud of you.’” 

He also looks for opportunities to tell visitors about the real Saint Nicholas and his deeds of mercy toward the poor. 

He thinks of his work as Santa as a “Trojan horse” for sharing the gospel. He wears a star-of-Bethlehem brooch on the white trim of his hat, and when anyone asks about it, he’s happy to share with them about the first Christmas and the role of the star in pointing the shepherds toward Bethlehem. 

But he has faced detractors too. When the video of his interaction with a child went viral, he was profiled by The Christian Post and Fox News. Reading the comments on those pieces stung, as readers criticized his choice to portray Santa. But people he knows personally have no criticisms. 

“The only thing I ever hear from people I know is support,” he said.

Lantz’s work highlights the tension many Christians feel as they decide whether to invite Santa into their Christmas celebrations and consider to what extent his presence there eclipses the real meaning of the holiday.

“On the one hand, the replacement of Jesus Christ at Christmas by Santa Claus is a sacrilege,” wrote theologian William Lane Craig in a 2015 blog post about whether Christians should let their children believe in Santa. “Santa Claus is obviously a sort of God-surrogate: an all-seeing person endowed with miraculous powers, who’s making a list and checking it twice in order to find out if you’ve been naughty or nice.” 

Craig argues that while lying to children is wrong, parents can teach their children about the historical Saint Nicholas and explain that we pretend the man in the red suit is really Santa Claus.

Cameron Reeder’s red Santa outfit is fancier than the cheap suit he first used, and it now includes a belt buckle with the Nativity scene. If parents do not object, he happily tells children about Saint Nicholas and his gift giving and points to Jesus as “the center of the holiday,” he said. 

For Beachy, secular settings call for a silent witness to the welcome of Jesus in the Incarnation. He does not talk about the real meaning of Christmas there, but when he works an event at or for a church—like the two community-outreach events he will work this season hosted by churches—he’s happy to tell children to ask their parents to read them the Christmas story in Luke 2.

When Beachy works with under-resourced families, he tries to spend extra time with those children.

And in those settings, children sometimes unburden their hearts to the man in red. Reeder said children have “no secrets” with Santa, and he sometimes hears about deteriorating marriages or the death of a loved one.

“For requests like getting mom and dad back together, I will often ask the parent if it is okay to pray with the child,” Reeder said. “I explain that some things are beyond Santa, but God hears us when we pray to him. And he has the answers to life’s toughest questions.” 

Every Santa will encounter children who are skeptical. Lantz said if a family brings several children and the older children do not want to go along with the Santa act, he’ll pull them aside for a little jolly straight talk. 

“I will tell them, ‘Don’t worry about it. I know I’m not real. You know I’m not real. Just don’t tell your little sibling that I’m not real,’” Lantz said. 

Reeder said he uses those opportunities to tell children about Christmas’ true meaning.

Beachy said he sometimes encounters Santa skeptics, and he invites them to pull on his beard. Even if they remain unconvinced, he tells them that “regardless, I love them and believe they are special, and I will definitely visit them on Christmas Eve,” he said.

And when children inevitably ask for a new pet for Christmas, Beachy said he lets them down gently, telling them it’s too cold in the sleigh for animals.

Each season he receives more requests for appearances at events, parades, and photography sessions. One year he was Santa at a local event benefiting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, where his grandson had received treatment.

But Reeder, whose Santa name is “Santa Cam,” said his clients should know what to expect from him. 

“I am a Christian first and Santa next. So if you get me for a Santa, you are likely to get a touch of the gospel message with me.”

Culture

How Pro-life Groups Help When a Baby’s Life Is Short

Christian groups offer comfort and practical support for expectant families grappling with life-limiting illness.

A newborn baby in the NICU
Christianity Today December 24, 2025
Mayte Torres / Getty

Six years later, Copeland’s stocking is still hung every Christmas.

And every year around this time, his parents, Matt and Taylor Walker, and their other children think about him and his brief life.

Copeland died less than an hour after he was born on December 22, 2019.

“We still look back at those 55 minutes joyfully, and we also still look back at that 55 minutes as a sorrowful experience,” Matt said.

Doctors diagnosed Copeland with Trisomy 18 while he was still in Taylor’s womb. His parents knew before he was born that their time with him would likely be short. While Matt has thought countless times since then about how he might have spent that treasured time differently, he has never once regretted having those minutes.

“There are so many God moments in that, even in the midst of sorrow,” Matt said. 

Had they chosen to abort when they learned the diagnosis, they would have had no time with their son outside the womb.

“We had a choice, and we chose to honor Copeland’s life and to honor God through that,” Taylor said. “And it’s been a tremendous experience for us because of that.”

Before the overturning of Roe v. Wade in 2022, many Americans chose to abort when discovering a pregnancy with a life-limiting diagnosis. A 2015 study of cases between 2005 and 2014 found that 94 percent of people whose unborn child had Trisomy 13, Trisomy 18, or Down syndrome chose to abort.

“A lot of times in those situations, the doctors suggest to abort,” said Amy Ford, founder of Embrace Grace, based in Fort Worth, Texas, and the author of Help Her Be Brave. “They will say things like, ‘It might be easier for you to not have to carry this baby full-term because the baby may not make it full-term.’”

Some state laws are making abortions harder to obtain in these situations. According to the Guttmacher Institute, a pro-choice organization that tracks reproductive rights in the US, 41 states now have some form of abortion ban with limited exceptions. 

According to Guttmacher, 28 of the 41 states that restrict abortion do not allow any exceptions for fatal fetal abnormalities, with four other states allowing exceptions up to 20, 24, or 28 weeks gestation. 

As abortion options diminish, Christian support groups are finding new opportunities to come alongside parents facing difficult times ahead.

Embrace Grace focuses on supporting single and pregnant young women with unplanned pregnancies by connecting them with a church community. The organization trains people to lead support groups and now has a network of more than 1,100 at churches in all 50 states. In 2023, they ministered to 3,880 expecting mothers and fathers, and that number rose to around 5,400 by 2025. 

They also have a campaign that gives “Love Boxes” to expectant mothers. Each box includes encouraging messages; personal stories from other moms; and resources that connect women to local Embrace Grace support groups, where they can receive emotional, spiritual, and practical care.

“Every Love Box represents a moment when a woman is reminded that she is not alone,” Ford said, noting that 150,000 of them have been distributed since 2012. “These boxes are often the first step toward a mom choosing life and discovering a community that will walk with her.”

Ford said that for many, finding out a life-limiting or life-altering diagnosis on top of dealing with the challenges of an unplanned pregnancy can be overwhelming. She believes this is an opportunity for Christians to offer hope.

“We are trying to walk with them and letting them see the bigger picture—that, with God, they have the strength to walk through it and they don’t have to walk through it alone—that we’re in this with them.”

While Embrace Grace’s ministry is for any woman dealing with an unexpected pregnancy, some expectant mothers they care for do receive a diagnosis of a fatal fetal abnormality. Ford is grateful she can point people to other organizations like Abel Speaks, a Texas-based organization that offers life-affirming support for parents walking through a life-limiting pregnancy diagnosis from all parts of the US. 

This support can take the form of counseling, medical connections, or recommendations for a photographer to capture images from their time with their child or on how to plan a celebration of life.

“While we don’t track our work through a political lens, we can say that awareness of our organization has steadily grown in recent years, and as a result, more families are finding their way to us,” said Abel Speaks director of operations Kimberly Bradley. 

The organization has helped close to 700 families since it started in 2018. As of December 10, it had already served 128 families this year.

“Each story is deeply personal, and we are honored to meet families right where they are—providing care, resources, and community in the midst of such a difficult journey,” Bradley said.

Taylor Walker remembers how helpless she felt in the hours and days after learning Copeland’s life would be short.

“There was no one in our community or the church community, our friends group—nobody that had experience with this,” she said. 

So she got on Instagram and typed “Trisomy 18” in the search bar. 

That’s how she found Abel Speaks.

“I was just thrilled when I got off that first call with Kelly, the founder,” Taylor said. “It gave me a new sense of hope and peace that we would be okay.”

After Copeland died, the Walkers made a point of keeping his memory alive with traditions such as the Christmas stocking they hang each year. They also became mentors with Abel Speaks so they could help other parents. They are now directors of family care for the organization.

Through the joy and pain they experienced in 55 minutes with Copeland, they’re able to support others.

“We know there are a lot of questions, but having walked this journey and having learned from others as well who have walked that journey, we just want to support them and love on them the best that we can,” Matt said. 

Taylor naturally has a heart for mothers going through what she did.

“It’s so much at first, but I do try to instill that courage in them to know that the life that they’re carrying still has so much meaning and the child was meant for them regardless of any diagnosis,” she said. 

The Walkers said it meant a lot for them to know that other Christians from their church and from Abel Speaks were praying for them, and to have believers point them back to the reason Jesus died—to offer the hope of eternity with him and their loved ones. 

“I remember a few specific conversations in the midst of our deep grief; our pastor was so good to remind us of God’s goodness and the faithfulness through his Son,” Taylor said. “I know that our faith when we were newly grieving was strong enough to hold and stand firm, but I also know the support of our community in that time has made a huge impact in the way we now grieve. 

“I don’t feel like I need to hide it. I feel safe and confident to share my grief with the community, friends, and family and ask for prayers when I am struggling.”

That perspective during trials offers a bigger picture of hope that they share with others.

“It doesn’t make the grief or the loss disappear, but it does shape how they walk through it,” Taylor said.

She said the perspective is in line with Romans 8, where Paul talks about how present sufferings can’t be compared to the glory that will be revealed (v. 18). 

“It’s about having a community that gently reminds you that you’re not alone and that there’s a greater story of redemption and hope even in the midst of heartache.”

For those who are grieving around the holiday season, as they have for the past six years, the Walkers encourage families to continue to speak their child’s name. 

“We know the emptiness that comes when you are gathering around as a family, and you feel like your little one has been ‘forgotten,’” Taylor said.  “We have found that including them in special ways, like lighting a candle in their honor, can be a great way to help family or friends think of them with you.”

In addition to continuing to hang Copeland’s stocking, the Walkers also put up a small tree each year with ornaments they’ve been given or bought specifically for Copeland.

“Our kids love to decorate that one, and it’s always a sweet way to remember him with our living children,” Taylor said. “Copeland’s birthday is on the 22nd, and while it does make the season a little more heavy, it is also a sweet reminder of Jesus’ birth and the gift of his life.“ 

Because of Jesus, they have an eternal hope.

“Matt and I know that we will see Copeland again.”

Culture

What Rosalia’s ‘LUX’ Reveals About Religion Today

Young women score higher in “spirituality” than young men, but they’re leaving the church in droves. That comes through in recent releases like this one. 

An image from a performance by Rosalia.

Rosalia performing songs from her newest album, "LUX."

Christianity Today December 23, 2025
Copyright © Sony Music Entertainment Canada Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Critics love Lux, the fourth album from Spanish pop artist Rosalía. When the record was released this fall, The New York Times called her singing (in 13 languages!) an act of “practiced mastery,” and Pitchfork raved about the “operatic lament for a new generation, an exquisite oratorio for the messy heart.” As 2025 comes to a close, Lux is appearing on lots of best-of lists.

Lux is exciting, at times breathtaking and surprising. It’s also spiritual. It “harkens back to an older tradition of Christian art,” wrote The Atlantics music critic: “the symphony written for the glory of God.”

The album is filled with religious imagery, with allusions to female saints and sages across cultures and religions. “Berghain,” its first single, references Hildegard von Bingen’s experience of receiving a vision from heaven:

Die Flamme dringt in mein Gehirn ein
Wie ein Blei-Teddybär
Ich bewahre viele Dinge in meinem Herzen auf
Deshalb ist mein Herz so schwer
(The flame penetrates my brain.
Like a lead teddy bear
I keep many things in my heart.
That’s why my heart is so heavy.)

In Jeanne, Rosalía sings from the perspective of Joan of Arc on the eve of her martyrdom:

Je dis adieu
Je m’en remets
À mon Dieu
À ses vœux
(I say goodbye.
I entrust myself
To my God,
To his vows.)

She sings of non-Christian “saints” too: Buddhist nun Vimala, the Sufi mystic Rābiʿah al-ʿAdawīyah and Daoist master Sun Bu’er, as well as the Old Testament’s Miriam.

Religious imagery is nothing new for Rosalía. Crowned with stars on the cover of her second album, El Mal Querer, she looks very much like the Virgin Mary. Some of her song titles include the words liturgia (“liturgy”), lamento (“lament”), and éxtasis (“ecstasy”).

This time, though, the pop artist is making music on another plane. Like The Letters of Saint Catherine of Siena, Lux blurs, if not erases, the line between human and divine love. Often, the listener cannot be sure whether Rosalía is speaking to a lover or to God:

Sei l’uragano più bello
Che io abbia mai visto …
Fai tremare la terra
E si innalzi al tuo fianco
(You are the most beautiful hurricane
That I have ever seen. …
You make the earth tremble,
And it rises by your side.)

She sings these words in “Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti,” a song inspired by the friendship between Clare of Assisi and Francis of Assisi.

Rosalía’s dominating performance—when the album was released, she became the first artist to secure five No. 1 debuts across Billboard charts—is the latest in a recent series of high-brow artistic works to openly, even favorably, explore Christianity.

In 2019, Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s Fleabag season 2 followed the titular character as she fell in love with a Catholic priest who, despite loving her back, chose God (and his vows of celibacy) over her. Two years later, Sally Rooney’s novel Beautiful World, Where Are You depicted two friends mourning the “misery and degradation” of late capitalism and finding something more than inspiration in the person of Jesus. “I am fascinated and touched by the ‘personality’ of Jesus,” writes Alice to her friend Eileen. “He seems to me to embody a kind of moral beauty, and my admiration for that beauty even makes me want to say that I ‘love’ him.”

Lux, too, is suffused with longing for God. In “La Yugular,” Rosalía chants,

Y un continente no cabe en Él
Pero Él cabe en mi pecho
Y mi pecho ocupa su amor
Y en su amor me quiero perder
(A continent can’t fit in Him,
But He fits in my chest,
And my chest occupies His love,
And in His love I want to lose myself.)

On “Sauvignon Blanc,” she seems to embody Matthew 6:21, expressing her desire to throw away earthly riches in order to attain God.

Perhaps these literary and musical shifts aren’t surprising. After all, religion is trending. The Pew Research Center reports that “Americans’ views about religion in public life are shifting” and a “growing share of the public takes a positive view of religion’s role in society.” Even in places known for their rampant secularism, like Silicon Valley, Christianity has seen a resurgence of interest, and church attendance is up.

Across the country, young people seem especially curious. Confidence in their government and economy is low as prices and temperatures rise. In unstable times, people search for a foundation, and Gen Z isn’t exempt. Many are returning to faith in God—or at least they want to talk about God. This is not the “spiritual but not religious” faith of the elder millennial. What we are seeing is a heightened interest in religion in its most ritualistic forms and, specifically, in the God of Christianity.

Yet although Rosalía believes in God, she is not a Christian. Lux, though worshipful at times,is not a worship album. Though Fleabag’s priest chooses Christ in the end, Fleabag herself does not. And Rooney’s Alice hesitates at Christianity’s call to repent and surrender, writing, “I have that resistance in me, that hard little kernel of something, which I fear would not let me prostrate myself before God even if I believed in him.” In all these works, young women yearn for connection with God (or at least with his ministers) and teeter on the verge of transformation. Ultimately, for one reason or another, they don’t take the plunge.

Perhaps there’s a correlation between these artistic depictions and recent surveys of young women showing that, although they score higher in “spirituality” and “attachment to God” than their male counterparts, they are nevertheless leaving the church in droves. Many of these young women cite sexism and dissonance between church teachings and their political views as their main reasons for leaving. Gen Z women are more likely to identify as pro-choice, queer, and nonbinary, making the issues of abortion and LGBTQ rights feel particularly personal.

Some of the dissonance these young women feel is no doubt the result of sinful behavior from Christians—ranging from discriminatory and hypocritical to downright evil. Some of this dissonance comes from the fact that the historic Christian sexual ethic and pro-life stance are no longer givens in Western society, stereotyped as needlessly judgmental and constraining.

Meanwhile, among Gen Z men, there’s been a surge in church attendance. For the first time in a long time, young men’s church attendance outstrips young women’s. The uptick has been reported by some Christian publications as a revival.

It is good that these young men are coming to church. It means that they, like Rosalía and the characters in Waller-Bridge’s and Rooney’s works, see something within Jesus that gives them hope. However, if reports showing a correlation between grievance culture, Christian nationalism, and Gen Z men’s renewed interest in church are true, then the revival is not uniformly encouraging.  

If young men are converting to Christianity because of a desire to protect conservative, Western values, they are missing the point. So are the young women who express a keen interest in Jesus but balk at the restrictions of discipleship.

Both of these groups have some legitimate reasons for their mixed motivations toward Christianity. But true discipleship requires a willingness to surrender all our beliefs, desires, and identities to the “sharp compassion” of our “wounded surgeon”—that gentle, lowly, and altogether holy one we call Jesus. To every generation, he gives a call to death, in order that we may have life.

It’s still rare for young people to come to church, whether in buildings or in literature. What we must offer while they’re here is the call to discipleship. As Rosalía so poignantly sings in “Sauvignon Blanc,” “Mi luz / La prenderé / Con el Rolls-Royce / Que quemaré / Sé que mi paz / Yo me ganaré / Cuando no quede na’ / Nada que perder” (“My light, / I’ll turn it on / with the Rolls-Royce / that I’ll burn. / I know that my peace / I will earn / when there’s no— / nothing left to lose”).

Christina Gonzalez Ho is the cofounder of Estuaries. Joshua Bocanegra  serves with that ministry, which is dedicated to discipling community leaders in a way that is rigorous, Spirit-filled, and holistically healthy.

Books

My Top 5 Books on Christianity in East Asia

Insights on navigating shame-honor cultural dynamics and persecution in the region.

Five book covers.
Christianity Today December 23, 2025
Illustration by Christianity Today

The following books were selected by Kazusa Okaya, a PhD candidate at Durham University and a researcher at the Kyoritsu Christian Institute at Tokyo Christian University.

Christianity first entered East Asia as early as the seventh century, when Nestorian missionaries arrived in China’s Tang dynasty. A second, more sustained wave of missionaries arrived in the 16th century, led by Jesuit missionaries such as Matteo Ricci in China and Francis Xavier in Japan. Catholicism spread to Korea from China in the 18th century, while Presbyterian and Anglican missionaries arrived in other parts of the region one century later.

Today, East Asia displays a striking diversity in its church-state relationships. On one end of the spectrum is South Korea, where roughly 30 percent of the population is Christian and believers often have a strong influence in society, culture, and politics. On the other end is North Korea, which is consistently ranked among the most dangerous places to be a believer.

China remains something of a religious black box, as rapidly growing underground churches coexist with strict state control and persecution. Japan presents yet another contrast as one of the most secular nations in Asia, where Christians account for less than 1 percent of the population.

The five books I recommend below serve as a sampler of Christianity in East Asia from an evangelical perspective. They span several genres, from a missionary memoir and a collection of sermons by persecuted pastors to a historical survey of the faith, an exploration of theological ethics, and an overview of missiology in the region.

Utterly Amazed by Miriam Davis

Missionary memoirs often spotlight the triumphant and the miraculous while skimming over hardship, leaving readers feeling inadequate in comparison or admiring missionaries’ achievements more than the God they serve.

English missionary Miriam Davis’s memoir, which charts her 42-year-long ministry in Japan, avoids those pitfalls. Besides being filled with practical wisdom on cross-cultural ministry, Davis writes with honesty about her struggles and disappointments. She recounts an unofficial engagement to a Japanese Christian that ended painfully under the weight of cultural and familial pressures. She also describes her experience of burnout and the long road to recovery, along with the unsettling sense of not being herself as she returned to ministry feeling less capable than before.

Davis is now an assistant curate at an Anglican church in the UK, but her memoir is an invaluable read for anyone considering overseas missions in East Asia. It also holds relevance for churches and supporters of long-term missionaries. Many missionaries find it difficult to be fully honest with their supporters, fearing that disclosures about loneliness, relational struggles, or exhaustion might put their financial support at risk. Davis’s openness offers a different model, one in which vulnerability is regarded not as weakness but as a place where we can find what she calls God’s “treasures in darkness.”

Asian Church History: Arise Asian Church by Bong Rin Ro

Korean American missiologist Bong Rin Ro is a towering figure in East Asian theological education. He was one of the first missionaries of Asian descent commissioned by missions organization OMF and the first general secretary of the evangelical Asian Theological Association.

Bong’s 2024 publication, available as a free e-book, devotes nearly half its pages to East Asia. This is not a conventionally academic tome; what sets it apart is its unapologetically evangelical and missional lens. Reading it feels less like consulting a detached historian and more like attending a class led by a seasoned missionary, one who recounts the unfolding story of Asian Christianity with passion and conviction.

The book offers details that often fall outside formal academic histories, like snapshots of evangelical denominations, mission organizations, and conferences led by Asian Christians. A substantial, supplementary 258-page volume includes a useful timeline of denominational and missionary movements organized by country.

Still, the book has its limitations. Its evangelical commitments sometimes lead to historical or theological oversimplifications, especially in its quick dismissal of nonevangelical traditions under the broad label of “liberal theology” and the near absence of discussions on decolonial or postcolonial missiology. Despite these caveats, the book remains an accessible and spirited introduction to East Asian Christianity.

Asian Christian Ethics: Evangelical Perspectives edited by Aldrin M. Peñamora and Bernard K. Wong

This volume—a sequel to Asian Christian Theology: Evangelical Perspectives—pursues the same aim as its predecessor: to sketch a framework for Christian ethics from an Asian evangelical viewpoint. It is a helpful resource for missionaries, ministers, and laypeople who are interested in how to live Christianly amid complex multicultural and multireligious norms.

Five of the book’s fifteen chapters are written by scholars from East Asia. They include must-read chapters on filial piety and its grounding in Confucian moral thought. Two authors in the book, Hong Kong theologian Bernard Wong and Korean theologian ShinHyung Seong, address this issue directly, albeit from different perspectives.

Wong urges Asian Christians to move beyond an idealized traditional family structure, which is often patriarchal, to a Christ-centered model that places Jesus as the true head of the household. Seong compares Confucian ethics with scriptural paradigms and contends that Christianity can transform the Confucian notion of filial piety.

Theologian Agnes Chiu, who teaches at China Evangelical Seminary North America, also applies this East Asian emphasis on family relationships in her chapter on political engagement and public theology. Chiu argues that the church can provide supportive networks for public engagement by becoming a surrogate family for believers who are often ostracized by becoming Christians in China.

Ministering in Honor-Shame Cultures by Jayson Georges and Mark D. Baker

The thread of shame and honor runs widely through many East Asian cultures, shaping everything from family dynamics to public behavior. This concept can feel especially difficult to grasp for Western missionaries who are formed in more individualistic cultures and may overlook the relationship between sin and shame.

Georges and Baker’s book illuminates how shame, a concept that appears frequently in Scripture in relation to sin, is tied to identity and not merely to action. Consequently, an Asian understanding of shame offers a valuable lens for understanding the pervasive nature of sin as estrangement from God.

The book has received criticism for its novel approach to the atonement. Some readers also worry that framing the gospel in culturally specific ways may imply that there are multiple gospels: an honor-shame version for the East versus a guilt-forgiveness version for the West. But the authors’ intent is to present the gospel in a way that reveals its beauty through different cultures, like how a diamond refracts light from different angles.

The book’s greatest strength lies in its third section, which brims with thoughtful guidance on spirituality, relationships, evangelism, conversion, ethics, and community within shame-honor contexts. Readers who disagree with some of the book’s theological emphases will still find it helpful in understanding how shame and honor function in East Asian identity and community formation.

Faith in the Wilderness: Words of Exhortation from the Chinese Church edited by Hannah Nation and Simon Liu

This book is unlike any devotional most readers have encountered. It contains a series of sermons written by persecuted Chinese Christians, opening a rare window into the church’s struggles and its spiritual imagination through sermons preached by leaders who minister under constant pressure.

I find it fascinating to encounter these pastors’ varying perspectives on being a Christian witness in the political arena. One sermon boldly denounces preachers who fail to confront falsehood and hypocrisy among government officials, calling out such leaders as prophets who do not speak truth. Another sermon articulates a deeply rooted pilgrim theology, warning Christians not to place their hopes in any political program.

Admittedly, an overemphasis on pilgrimage-related imagery may risk sliding into a kind of Gnosticism—a form of escapism that ignores social suffering. But these pastors turn the pilgrim metaphor into a much-needed corrective for the church, especially against forms of Christianity that tie earthly prosperity or political power to the advancement of the gospel.

These sermons will both encourage and unsettle readers far beyond China’s borders. They invite Christians everywhere to reconsider what faithful witness looks like in their own contexts, and they serve as a powerful reminder to pray for and stand alongside members of the body of Christ who live under persecution.

Check out other top 5 books on Christianity in South Asia and Southeast Asia.

News

Kenyan Pastors Champion Reconciliation at Christmas

One Christian father hopes the church can help his family reconcile before he dies.

Wafula celebrating his 91st birthday with his daughter and grandchildren in December 2024.

Wafula celebrating his 91st birthday with his daughter and grandchildren in December 2024.

Christianity Today December 23, 2025
Image courtesy of Lydia Nekesa

Ninety-two-year-old Julius Wafula lives in an old, rusty-iron-roofed mud house in Bungoma County, Kenya. Nearby, amid avocado trees and banana plantations, a new seven-bedroom house that he built for his children and grandchildren stands empty.

Before his wife, Mary, died in 2018, Wafula’s children visited often out of love for her. Now they rarely come. Sibling quarrels and broken relationships with their father have split them apart.

Wafula has felt increasingly lonely and isolated since his wife’s death. He regrets being drunk and violent when his 12 children were growing up, and he recognizes that his neglect as a father drove a deep-seated wedge between him and his children.

After Mary’s death, Wafula encountered Jesus when his old friend and now pastor visited him and explained the gospel. Wafula then committed his life to God. He stopped drinking and smoking and got baptized. But his efforts to reconcile with his children have failed, as they remain divided over who should take care of him and over their religious beliefs. Three of his children converted to Islam, and others attend different Christian churches.

This Christmas, Wafula hopes the infighting will end. He’s asked his pastor, Matthias Wanjala, to mediate a family gathering to help them resolve their differences.

Kenyans often celebrate major family events—anniversaries, weddings, and graduations—during the Christmas season. Among Christians, the holiday also serves as a time for dedicated reconciliation gatherings. When attempts to mend conflicts fail, church leaders step in to heal families and communities.

Wanjala leads the local Pentecostal Evangelistic Fellowship of Africa church and has been helping families reconcile for more than 30 years. He sees Christmas as a time to make amends because the birth of Jesus brings renewal. As the year ends, he said, Christians can welcome Christ into their lives and start the New Year clean.

“Christmas should have a purpose in our lives, and there is nothing more pleasing to God than seeing a family celebrating the sacrifice of forgiveness,” Wanjala said.

The grandfatherly pastor, who is in his early 90s, was born in Bungoma and knows most of the families who live there. Whenever there is an irreconcilable conflict, he visits them at home to learn more and sets a date for mediation. Wanjala calls each family member personally, inviting the person to the meeting. Because people in the community respect him as a pastor, they nearly always say yes.

At these meetings, Wanjala brings along three or four associate pastors to pray, read the Bible, and teach the aggrieved parties about forgiveness. He closes their time together by encouraging the family to admit their mistakes, repent, and ask for forgiveness from each other.

Wanjala hopes to pass on this practice to younger pastors. “I am aging but will love to see my junior pastors continue [family ministry] with [the same] spirit,” he said.

Pastor Anthony Juma of Full Gospel Church in Kitale town said family feuds don’t just hurt the family—they also hurt the church. When a churchgoing family fights, some family members may stop attending church or may suffer in their spiritual lives because of the conflict.

“When families fall apart, the Devil takes advantage,” Juma said. “As a pastor, I have the trust of the society to ensure I bring [the family] together.”

Churches extend the practice of reconciliation to community conflicts too. Phanice Mulamula, a pastor at Glory Tabernacle in Kakamega, organizes a special reconciliation meeting every year during Christmas. The church invites widows, orphans, and the elderly, regardless of their religion, to the event and supplies them with food and clothing while guest speakers teach from Bible passages about reconciliation, such as Ephesians 4:32.

“We emphasize love and forgiveness because we are the body of Christ,” Mulamula said. “Let nobody cross to the New Year with old grudges, hatred, and disunity.”

During these meetings, church members stand up to share their testimonies, confess their wrongdoing, and ask others for forgiveness. The congregation then enters a time of cheering, hugging, and dancing. The meeting ends with a special meal and take-home Christmas packages filled with rice, bread, chicken, clothes, shoes, blankets, cooking oil, sugar, and money for those in need.

“This is the true spirit of Christmas: when families reconcile and the poor [are] remembered,” Mulamula said.

In the six years since Glory Tabernacle began holding Christmas reconciliation services, several nonbelievers have participated in it. So have members of other churches.

Jacinta Muthoni, who is a Christian but not a member of Glory Tabernacle, has attended the reconciliation services for three years now. Her neighbors had let their animals destroy crops on her farms or let their children cut down her fruit trees, which resulted in bitter quarrels and demands for compensation among them. After hearing about Jesus’ message of forgiveness, Muthoni asked her neighbors to come to the church and sought to make amends with them.

“It gives me the opportunity to forgive all those who wronged me as I also ask for forgiveness from those I wronged,” she said.

Christmas also provides a time for bridging generational divides. Sometimes children flee home over forced marriages or arguments with parents. When youth who live far from home return to visit their parents, pastors can mediate conflicts face-to-face.

Pastor Rose Zadock of Holy Peace Fire in Kakamega helps reconcile these divides. She said a common cause of conflict comes from parents arguing with children about romantic relationships. When teens sneak out to visit their boyfriends or girlfriends, some parents react in a heavy-handed way. Zadock said it drives teenagers from church when they feel accused of sexual immorality or bad friendships. She helps parents respond less harshly and teaches teenagers how to pursue romantic relationships without falling into sexual sin.

Kenyan elders often initiate reconciliation. Bringing younger people, especially Gen Zers, to reconciliation meetings can be difficult, Zadock said. They can become defensive when corrected and don’t always respect the authority of parents and church leaders.

“The Gen Zs … look at parents as illiterate or primitive,” she said. “But we keep on talking to them through the power of the Holy Spirit.”

When families are home for Christmas, Zadock sets up face-to-face meetings for them. She and her husband, bishop Zadock Lubira, pray. Then they let the parents explain their concerns and allow the children to respond. After listening to both sides, she and her husband offer biblical teaching and ask everyone to hold hands in a circle and pray. Zadock said these mediations usually succeed, though reconciliations over conflicts that involved police take more meetings.

For Wafula, bridging these generational divides with his children, who range from 30 to 68 years old, is foremost on his mind this Christmas. All 12 of them have accepted Wafula and his pastor’s invitation to meet at Wafula’s home on December 23 and stay at the new house through the holiday.

Wafula plans to ask his children to forgive him and each other. He has dedicated one cow, two goats, and several chickens for the Christmas feast, hoping to celebrate a joyous family reunion like the father of the Prodigal Son did in Luke 15:11–32.

“I don’t want to die before my children come together and forgive each other,” Wafula said.

Ideas

A Rhythm of Silence and Solitude

Contributor

Our culture rewards the sharpest take, but two spiritual practices can help Christians show up better in the public sphere.

A glowing manger in snow.
Christianity Today December 23, 2025
Illustration by Christianity Today / Source Images: Unsplash

Silent night, holy night.

Austrian priest Joseph Mohr wrote these words in 1816, starting off my favorite—and one of the most ubiquitous—Christmas hymns.

Some of my affection for the song stems from purely pragmatic reasons: It is easy enough to strum on my acoustic guitar. At some point in my life, I realized aspects of the song were too simplistic and the night of Jesus’ birth was likely not so silent. But I always appreciated how the simple melody seems to float gently above the chaos of Christmas shopping lists and year-end deadlines.

Despite its shortcomings, the hymn points to a kind of tranquility many of us long for in the world. Silence feels foreign in modern American life. It has become rare, suspect even. Every moment seems filled with questions, commentary, content, and outrage. Social media offers an opportunity to scroll endlessly, speak constantly, and react reflexively—all of which is more pronounced in our politics than in any other sphere of life.

In our national conversations, the refusal to rage can be interpreted as a kind of naiveté. The attention economy rewards the sharpest take, the quickest response, and the most performative certainty. A quiet spirit is easily mistaken for disengagement, cowardice, or complicity. But the Christian tradition shows that silence and its close cousin solitude are not necessarily means of withdrawing from public life. Instead, they can be critical spiritual practices that help us resist chaos, recenter our thoughts, and became more faithful witnesses to the watching world.  

All is calm, all is bright.

The first Christmas took place in a land under political occupation, among a people subject to state surveillance, and in a social environment accustomed to imperial violence. Caesar ruled from afar. Herod schemed in the community. And yet it was in full view of these realities, not in a denial of them, that Mary sang the words of the Magnificat: the proud being scattered, the powerful brought low, the humble lifted up.

Mary’s song highlights what I love about the calm of Christmas: the stillness that comes from knowing where authority truly resides despite a noticeable lack of calm. More than 2,000 years later, her words still ring true today. Christians are calm not because the world is stable. We are calm because God has entered history without shouting, coercing, or dominating and still achieved the victory (John 16:33).

Round yon virgin, mother and child.

When the eternal king arrived on earth, he came through a humble young mother, quietly and vulnerably. He did not announce himself through a press release or demand anything through mass mobilization. He came in power but still as a child, dependent, exposed, and entrusted to a family.

If my years in politics have taught me anything, it’s that Christian political engagement must begin from a similar heart posture. If God chose to enter the world through weakness, then how much more should believers resist the temptation to seek popularity above fruitfulness or to devolve into fleshly fights with those who disagree.

But the discernment to know that—or to know how to live our lives more generally—is not cultivated amid spectacles. It’s formed in stillness. Like Elijah, we often find God is not in the wind or fire but in the “sound of sheer silence” (1 Kings 19:12, NRSVue).

I’m not saying silence and solitude show us what to think. But they do shape how we think and, perhaps more importantly, how to speak with words ordered toward truth and love. Without these practices, we risk mistaking constant commentary for courage and noise for relevance. Over time, that erosion costs us—not because we spoke too boldly but because we spoke too quickly and listened too little in return.

Holy infant so tender and mild.

So much of what our Lord would teach through his life and preaching is also revealed in the Christ child. The tenderness of the babe lying in the manger does not make him any less King of Glory; it reveals his discerning intentionality.

Jesus spoke when speech was necessary, such as when the scribes and Pharisees required public rebuke. Other times, he refused to be baited into a spectacle and remained silent (Matt. 27:11–14). He often sought solitude and withdrew into desolate spaces to pray. He resisted the tempter’s demand to turn stones into bread and the pressures of the crowd in Nazareth to prove himself through a sign.

The systems of our world suggest to us the opposite: Respond now. Condemn now. Signal now. But imitating Christ requires speaking from depth rather than impulse.

Sleep in heavenly peace.

In the biblical imagination, peace is not merely the absence of conflict but the presence of order, right relationship, and rightly ordered loves. Godly peace is achieved through trust in the Lord, with the awareness that his purposes do not depend on our power. 

From the first night in Bethlehem to the night before his arrest, God incarnate slept. Surely his sleep did not diminish his calling or jeopardize his victory, and our own moments away from the noise won’t either.

The meaning of “Silent Night” is not that the world will finally become calm because it is Christmastime but that the God who gives us the hope of peace has entered our chaotic world without being overwhelmed by it. On that night, heaven drew near, and that same nearness is what steadies us now. If Christ could enter history quietly and still overturn it completely, then surely his people can learn to engage public life without shouting, posturing, or surrendering their souls to the noise.

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

News

New Hispanic Churches See Growth Despite Political Turmoil

Fresh Lifeway research shows Latino pastors are reaching new people and helping members navigate anxiety about immigration enforcement.

A Hispanic congregation at church.
Christianity Today December 23, 2025
Tom Ramalho / Unplash

Latino evangelicals in the US are reaching the unchurched and drawing in converts despite funding shortfalls, widespread community fear, and other challenges caused by the federal government’s immigration crackdown.

Lifeway Research said in a new study—which surveyed leaders at 292 new Hispanic church plants, campus sites, and other ministries—that the average new Hispanic congregation almost tripled in size (from 31 to 85) within eight years of its founding and saw 10 conversions its first year before reaching 15 per year down the line. 

Most protestant churches in the US reached fewer new people in the past year. It’s common for church plants to focus more on outreach as they aim to grow and embed themselves in their communities. But new Hispanic congregations have been “particularly evangelistic in their approach” and have continued to be that way as their congregations mature, said Scott McConnell, executive director of Lifeway Research.

At the same time, the study—funded by Exponential, eight denominations, Biola University, and Wheaton College —showed burgeoning Hispanic churches are grappling with President Donald Trump’s aggressive deportation campaign.

Half of the leaders surveyed said they “have had to address pain and fear” in their congregation caused by government practices in the past year. About a third (35%) said attendance declined because undocumented members were afraid to leave their homes. Meanwhile, a similar amount (34%) noted church finances have taken a hit because undocumented members have not been able to work.

Latino leaders who were not included in the study have also witnessed significant declines in church attendance this year. Undocumented congregants worry they can be picked up anywhere, including in church, where detention and other immigration enforcement is now possible. Some worship leaders were detained and other ministry leaders have been deported.

One pastor who leads a 400-member congregation in Maryland told Gabriel Salguero, president of the National Latino Evangelical Coalition, that only 40 people are showing up regularly for Sunday service at his church. The rest are watching online.

“The group that is part of the … revitalization of the church is the one who’s now feeling under siege,” said Salguero, also the pastor of The Gathering Place, an Assemblies of God church in Orlando.

Leaders surveyed by Lifeway also noted more members have needed “tangible help” in the last year. More than a quarter said members have been discouraged by a disrespectful cultural tone toward Hispanics. Separately, 38% reported they’re seeing greater interest among unchurched Hispanics who are looking for hope.

Nearly two-thirds of Hispanic Protestants supported Trump during last year’s presidential election. Voters were driven by economic dissatisfaction and resonated with the president’s approach to other cultural issues, such as sexuality, abortion, and parental rights. Recent polling, however, shows a majority of Latinos in the country—including Protestants—disapprove of the president’s performance in the White House, with immigration emerging as a key concern.

“Many who voted for the president have said, ‘We did not vote for this; we support the deportation of violent criminals, but this is not what we asked for,’” Salguero said.

Some findings from the Lifeway report mirrored a similar study published by the research firm six years ago. Most lead pastors of new Hispanic churches (77%) are still first-generation immigrants, as are nearly two-thirds of their flock. The majority of congregants (56%) in these ministries had either never attended church, didn’t go for many years, or were migrating from Catholic churches. Nearly half (46%) of the congregations surveyed are Southern Baptists and approximately half are located in the South, where the Latino population has grown. About a fifth (21%—the next highest percentage) are affiliated with the Assemblies of God.

A lot of Hispanic churches are already multiethnic, drawing congregants from Mexican, Puerto Rican, and other Latino backgrounds. Most of the leaders surveyed say their ministries have sought to reach all Hispanic people, but a portion (29%) note they are also aiming to reach other ethnic groups.

New congregations hold outreach Bible studies and keep up with door-to-door evangelism after the launch of their ministries, though slightly fewer do so compared to the previous survey. A majority also put together “fun social events” and service projects to reach new people. Most hold their services in Spanish, while some offer bilingual services or separate services in different languages.

Samuel Rodriguez, pastor of New Season Church in Sacramento and the president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership, said “it is inevitable” for Hispanic congregations to diversify by the second and third generations. By then, Rodriguez said, kids tend to lose touch with the Spanish vernacular, which eventually leads churches to launch an English service. Over time, the English service can become larger than the Spanish service, he said, drawing in different audiences.  

The missional mindset has always been prominent in Hispanic evangelical churches. Growing up, Alvin Padilla, a professor of New Testament at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, said the Sunday evening services he saw were often evangelistic in nature. Saturday mornings would also be devoted to visiting individuals or families, and pastors would routinely encourage congregants to bring friends to church. This study bears that the sense of urgency to reach new people has remained, he said.

Church planters surveyed said it’s important for partners to understand cultural differences in Hispanic communities, prioritize relationships over programs, and offer better financial support. Most pastors and leaders launching ministries are bivocational and have worked another full-time job to sustain their families. Some (29%) did not receive any financial compensation from their churches in the first five years, while others have used their work salary for church needs.

In addition to practical help, leaders say more collaboration with established churches, networks, and patience in the church-planting process would help them and their ministries.

The entire Lifeway report can be found here.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube