ChatGPT Announces New Erotica Feature
How ChatGPT’s new turn offers opportunities for the gospel.
Public Theology Project
The Church Better Start Taking Nazification Seriously
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Review
Most of Perpetua’s Life Is a Mystery. Not Her Love for Her Church.
But Sarah Ruden’s new biography of the martyr dismisses her Christian community as misogynist.
The Russell Moore Show
Mark Batterson on the Slow (then Fast) Work of a Long Obedience
What if the biggest changes in your life aren’t sudden at all—but have been building quietly for years?
Who Are the Ismaili Muslims?
The history of this small Shiite sect includes assassinations, persecution, and periods of adherence to pluralism.
A Pastor Stood Up to Persecution in India. Christianity Spread.
“It is very scary out there. … But the Holy Spirit reminds [me] that ‘for when I am weak, then I am strong.’”
You Can Be a Christian and a Patriot
Daniel Darling calls believers to their political duty, no matter the chaos.
Excerpt
The ‘Whole Counsel of God’ Requires Seeking Justice—and Naming Sin
An excerpt from Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around on family history, gospel music, and the great Christian legacy of the Civil Rights Movement.
The Russell Moore Show
Listener Question: How Can the Church Hold Itself Accountable without Tearing Itself Apart?
Russell takes a listener’s question about the Church body convicting each other in love without unnecessary division.
Being Human
How to Stay Human-Sized: Managing Anxiety, Reactivity, and Faith with Steve Cuss & Clarissa Moll
How to live with peace, presence, and purpose in a reactive world
Testimony
I Was the Enemy Jesus Told You to Love
As an extremist Muslim, I beat a Christian boy and left him to die. His faithful prayers for me led to my salvation.
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Everything Is Bigger in Texas, Including Its New Islamic Center
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Jihadists Persecute Christians in Nigeria. Is It Genocide?
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‘Every Adoptee’s Worst Nightmare’
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Top ACNA Leader Faces Sexual Harassment Allegations
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The Magazine
View archivesAs we enter the holiday season, we consider how the places to which we belong shape us—and how we can be the face of welcome in a broken world. In this issue, you’ll read about how a monastery on Patmos offers quiet in a world of noise and, from Ann Voskamp, how God’s will is a place to find home. Read about modern missions terminology in our roundtable feature and about an astrophysicist’s thoughts on the Incarnation. Be sure to linger over Andy Olsen’s reported feature “An American Deportation” as we consider Christian responses to immigration policies. May we practice hospitality wherever we find ourselves.
Testimony
Stories of Christian conversion
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Journalism Was My Religion. Then I Encountered Jesus Christ.
I wanted to be an eyewitness to Brazil’s history. Instead, God made me a witness to his work in the world.
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Was It Really God’s Perfect Plan to Amputate My Foot?
A tragic accident jump-started my relationship with God. It also made me question his goodness.
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I Was the Enemy Jesus Told You to Love
As an extremist Muslim, I beat a Christian boy and left him to die. His faithful prayers for me led to my salvation.
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I Found Jesus in Science Class
How God used a skeptical teacher to help me make my faith my own.
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Explosive Secrets Damaged Me. Surrendering to Jesus Saved Me.
A balcony view, a warehouse church, and the sweetness of the Word led me to the safe home of God’s love.
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Browse the Archives
Christianity Today magazine was born in 1956; enjoy a selection of our classics and cover stories.
The End Is Not the End
C. Everett Koop on death and dying.
Christianity and Scientific Concerns
Six evangelical scholars–including C. Everett Koop–in a panel discussion on technology and bioethics.
The Embattled Career of Dr. Koop
Despite political pressures, the surgeon general was out to fight disease, not people.
How Faith Works
The volcanic issue of “Lordship Salvation” is still emitting the smoke and fumes of controversy.
