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Internet
- Americans’ Return to Church Has PlateauedTwo years in, more congregations are open without COVID-19 precautions, but Americans aren’t more likely to show up.Kate Shellnutt|
- Who Is My Neighbor? For Christians in the Balkans, the Answer Might be Troll Farms.Amid memes targeting Americans, social media ministries witness to the truth.Jayson Casper|
- Can China’s New Regulations Really Stop Evangelism on the Internet?While some church leaders are concerned that online religion restrictions may scare off Christians, others hope Chinese believers will continue to sow the digital mission field.Sean Cheng|简体中文繁體中文
- Venture Capitalists See Profit in PrayerReligion apps attract more than $175 million in investment.Daniel Silliman|
- Chinese Christian Media Ministries Face Bitter Winter of CensorshipAs China’s government bans unapproved religious services, sermons, education, training, and videos online—even link sharing—starting in March, I turn to Psalm 90.Jerry An|简体中文한국어Indonesian繁體中文
- Visitors to Those in Prison Are Getting Screened OutVideo calls can supplement but should never supplant visits with incarcerated people.Ted Olsen|
- Why We Put Christ Above ClicksThe marketplace rewards scorn. CT has always sought a better way.Timothy Dalrymple|
- How the Umbrella Movement Spurred Hong Kong’s Digital WitnessFaced with political division and government oversight, the church began to develop richer and wider-reaching online public theology.Calida Chu|
- Don’t Quit Twitter Yet. You Might Have a Moral Duty to Stay.As leaders, how do we avoid the faults of online life without shirking our public responsibility?Tish Harrison Warren|
- Viral JesusEpisode 4|42minThe Listening ChannelJustin Khoe turned his passion for YouTube into a way for people outside the church to feel valued and heard.Heather Thompson Day|
