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The Myth of Tech Utopianism

What a book on feminism helped me realize about our digital age.

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The Russell Moore Show

Jonathan Haidt’s Newest Thoughts on Technology, Anxiety, and the War for Our Attention

As the digital world shifts at breakneck speed, Haidt offers new analysis on what he’s witnessing on the front lines.

Review

A Woman’s Mental Work Is Never Done

Sociologist Allison Daminger’s new book on the cognitive labor of family life is insightful but incomplete.

Public Theology Project

A Different Kind of Darwinism Is Winning

In a world conditioned by evolutionary advantage, Christians are called to welcome those who seem naturally selected for failure.

Faith-Based Education Is Having a Moment

I’m excited to see churches—particularly Black congregations—step boldly into teaching.

Don’t Pay Attention. Give It.

Attention isn’t a resource to maximize for productivity. It’s a gift that helps us love God and neighbor.

The Bulletin

An Alleged Drug Boat Strike, the Annunciation Catholic School Shooting, and the Rise of Violence in America

The Bulletin discusses the attack on an alleged Venezuelan drug boat and the recent school shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church in the context of politics of violence.

The National Guard Debate Needs a Dose of Honesty

Criticizing federal overreach while remaining silent about local failures does not serve the cause of justice.

A Generation Seeking Transcendence

A letter from Mission Advancement in our September/October issue.

Why Fans Trust Forrest Frank

The enormously popular Christian artist says he experienced miraculous healing. His parasocial friends say “amen.”

The Magazine

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The Christian story shows us that grace often comes from where we least expect. In this issue, we look at the corners of God’s kingdom and chronicle in often-overlooked people, places, and things the possibility of God’s redemptive work. We introduce the Compassion Awards, which report on seven nonprofits doing good work in their communities. We look at the spirituality underneath gambling, the ways contemporary Christian music was instrumental in one historian’s conversion, and the steady witness of what may be Wendell Berry’s last novel. All these pieces remind us that there is no person or place too small for God’s gracious and cataclysmic reversal.

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Stories of Christian conversion

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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.

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