Falleció Samuel Escobar, propulsor de la teología de la ‘misión integral’
El teólogo peruano no temía debatir con marxistas ni desafiar a la Iglesia.
Died: John Huffman, Pastor Who Told Richard Nixon to Confess
The Presbyterian minister and CT board member committed to serve the Lord and “let the chips fall where they may.”
Confronting Evils
In 1974, CT saw trouble in the White House, Chile, and Cyprus, and in the American fascination with exorcists.
Died: Samuel Escobar, Who Saw Evangelism and Social Action as Inseparable
The Peruvian theologian wasn’t afraid to debate Marxists or challenge the church.
Troubling Moral Issues in 1973
CT condemned the Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade and questioned the seriousness of Watergate.
The Evangelicalism of Jimmy Carter
The former president, who turns 100 on Tuesday, was elected while serving as a Southern Baptist deacon. But he was never fully welcomed by white evangelicals as one of our own.
Our Perennial Political Temptation
Reckoning with a half-century of American evangelicals’ pursuit of a “seat at the table.”
First Woman Steps into Leadership of Evangelical Theological Society
Wheaton professor Karen Jobes becomes president a decade after a study found “hostile and unwelcoming” atmosphere.
Died: Letha Dawson Scanzoni, Who Argued Feminism Is Biblical
The author of All We’re Meant to Be faced serious backlash over egalitarian reading of Scripture and her support for LGBTQ affirmation.
Without Henrietta Mears, Evangelicalism as We Know It Probably Wouldn’t Exist
Meet the woman who mentored the leaders and fostered the institutions that fueled its 20th-century transformation.