CT Daily Briefing – 11-14-2024

November 13, 2024
CT Daily Briefing

This edition is sponsored by The Pour Over


Today’s Briefing

Louisiana’s Ten Commandments requirement for classrooms has been blocked in federal court.

The Lord’s Prayer undermines our self-centeredness by redefining us.

The church can show society why raising children is a shared responsibility.

A first-of-its-kind kids book series teaches younger readers about the minor prophets

Advice for election aftermath: Put Scripture ahead of political drama and doomscrolling.

Where have all the ideals gone? Russell Moore talks to Atlantic editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg about his new book On Heroism.

Behind the Story

From theology editor Stefani McDade: I’ve never really read the Lord’s Prayer collectively, as Bible scholar Carmen Joy Imes recommends in her piece, “Yours, Mine, and ‘Our Father.’” Despite Jesus’ consistent use of the pronoun our—our Father, our daily bread, our trespasses—I’ve always read the prayer as addressing his followers as individuals. I think this is how most people read it today, which should come as no surprise for those shaped by societies that encourage independence and self-reliance.

This has made me think about how much more communal the Christian life is meant to be than we often regard it in modern times. Many of Jesus’ metaphors for the church—a body, a bride, and a household—emphasize the interdependence of God’s people.

I feel challenged to reexamine my own prayer life. How might I think differently about my fellow believers if I shift from appealing to God in the singular and start praying in the plural?


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In Other News


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Today in Christian History

November 14, 565: Roman Emperor Justinian dies at 82. During his reign, he reunited the Eastern and Western empires politically and religiously, erected several new basilicas in Constantinople, and created the Justinian Code, which greatly influenced the development of canon law in the Middle Ages.


in case you missed it

The voice from the pulpit rang out, echoing through the large Baptist sanctuary as the preacher claimed to speak on behalf of the Almighty. u0026ldquo;Look,u0026rdquo; he told the crowd, hisu0026hellip;

One of the most well-known stories in Scripture is also one of the most baffling. Nearly everyone in the Western world has heard the phrase u0026ldquo;the writing on the wall,u0026rdquo;u0026hellip;

Being fully seen and fully known can feel, in a word, terrifying. And yet, thatu0026rsquo;s exactly what our souls craveu0026mdash;and exactly what God designed for us to experience.u0026nbsp; From theu0026hellip;

Bible studies at Stanford University sometimes lead to an outbreak of datasets. Hadassah Betapudi and Elijah Kim met at a Christian fellowship at Stanford in 2022 and got to knowu0026hellip;


in the magazine

Cover of the September/October 2024 Issue

Our September/October issue explores themes in spiritual formation and uncovers what’s really discipling us. Bonnie Kristian argues that the biblical vision for the institutions that form us is renewal, not replacement—even when they fail us. Mike Cosper examines what fuels political fervor around Donald Trump and assesses the ways people have understood and misunderstood the movement. Harvest Prude reports on how partisan distrust has turned the electoral process into a minefield and how those on the frontlines—election officials and volunteers—are motivated by their faith as they work. Read about Christian renewal in intellectual spaces and the “yearners”—those who find themselves in the borderlands between faith and disbelief. And find out how God is moving among his kingdom in Europe, as well as what our advice columnists say about budget-conscious fellowship meals, a kid in Sunday school who hits, and a dating app dilemma.

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