CT Daily Briefing – 05-14-2025

May 13, 2025
CT Daily Briefing

This edition is sponsored by Dwell Audio Bible App


Today’s Briefing

CT reports from inside the crowded hospital full of Congo’s rape victims, where one Christian surgeon helps women and children recover. Plus, a prayer for the victims of sexual violence

Reformed Baptist ministry G3 removed president Josh Buice and canceled its conference after his church confronted him about trolling Christians using anonymous social media accounts.

Republican senator Rand Paul talks to CT about due process rights. 

Blood and voodoo: a review of the hit horror film Sinners

Are you a fox or a hedgehog? Or both?

Behind the Story

Several years after Christian doctor Denis Mukwege won the Nobel Peace Prize, Mindy Belz traveled to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to report on his medical practice and ministry to victims of sexual violence. Mindy writes: 

Bukavu is a city without running water, even in hotels—by night a young woman brought a tall thermos of hot water to my room for bathing. That’s just one of the challenges facing Dr. Mukwege and Panzi Hospital. I jumped at the chance to spend time with him and his staff because for years I’ve wondered what keeps him going. Why does a doctor of world renown, with millions of dollars in humanitarian prize money, keep showing up in scrubs to treat women the world scarcely notices?

For Dr. Mukwege, I learned, the reason is the women themselves. They look like victims of war, but they also hold a God-given power. Rape in war is systematic. Soldiers destroy communities and take territory by destroying those who hold them together. When women overcome the brutality—with medical care and healing together in the wards at Panzi—they get back their dignity and their power to restore communities, even amid war.

Mukwege knows something other world leaders should learn. Upholding the most vulnerable is a way to win battles. The women “are a blessing for me,” Mukwege said at the end of a long day. To lose hope for them? “Then I just finish and leave. I’m not ready to do that.”


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In Other News


Today in Christian History

May 14, 1572: Gregory XIII, who reformed the Julian calendar into the calendar used today and celebrated the killing of French Huguenots (Protestants) with a Te Deum (a Latin hymn), is named pope (see issue 71: Huguenots and the Wars of Religion).


in case you missed it

In Ray, the Academy Award–winning biopic about Ray Charles, the audience walks with the singer through the gut-wrenching realization that he’s going blind at the age of seven.  His mother breaks the news…

In 2023, I helped lead a civil rights tour with the Asian American Christian Collaborative. Our trip took us to the Manzanar War Relocation Center—one of ten former incarceration sites…

He’d been simply and peacefully living his life in the Donbas region of Ukraine. Then Russia’s war machine invaded the wide-open fields neighboring his village in the early days of…

American chaplain Karl Ahlgren had just finished speaking at a Ukrainian church in the eastern city of Kramatorsk on Palm Sunday when he heard the news. Two Russian ballistic missiles…


in the magazine

It’s easy to live in a state of panic, anxiety, and fear, from the pinging of our phones to politics and the state of the church. In this issue, we acknowledge panic and point to Christian ways through it. Russell Moore brings us to the place of panic in Caesarea Philippi with Jesus and Peter. Laura M. Fabrycky writes about American inclinations toward hero-making. Mindy Belz reports on the restorative work of Dr. Denis Mukwege for rape victims in Congo. We’re also thrilled to give you a first look at the Global Flourishing Study, a multiyear research project about what makes a flourishing life across the globe. While panic may be profitable or natural, we have a sure and steady anchor for our souls in Jesus.

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