Posts in News
Your Pastor Now Accepts Bitcoin: Why That Should Worry You

(ANALYSIS) This is not about rejecting technology. This is about resisting moral drift. It’s about remembering that not every innovation is an acceptable invitation. The church should be discerning enough to see that just because crypto is legal doesn’t make it righteous. If God’s messengers hope to offer moral clarity, they can’t do so while pocketing digital currencies that may be soaked in sin.

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Sri Lanka’s New Mass Grave Reveals Failure Of ‘Peace’ Through Violence

(ANALYSIS) To this day, there are no national memorials for the victims. Instead, triumphalist military monuments, many of them built in Tamil-majority areas, celebrate a victory in a war whose collateral damage amounted to war crimes and crimes against humanity.

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How Trump’s Executive Orders Threaten Faith-Based Institutions’ Public Witness

(ANALYSIS) This is not a moment for faith-based institutions to retreat or sanitize their convictions. It is a moment to reclaim their voice and affirm their rightful in shaping a public life capacious enough to hold true difference, including sacred difference. Religious freedom — grounded in conscience, practice and institutional distinctiveness — must remain a cornerstone of our shared civic life.

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Carlo Acutis And Pier Giorgio Frassati To Be Canonized Together

The canonizations of the two young saints — one from the early 20th century, the other the first 21st-century saint — have been greatly anticipated due to the great devotion among the faithful.

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💒 5 Takeaways From Dallas: SBC Seeks Same-Sex Marriage Reversal And More 🔌

At its annual meeting in the Dallas, the nation’s largest Protestant nomination tackled social issues such as same-sex marriage, online porn and sports betting.

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As Israel Attacks Iran, Jews Around The World Open Their Psalmbooks

As the evening crowd arrived for services Thursday evening at Young Israel of Century City, Benny Factor watched for updates on his phone, which was leaned against a tissue box on the table in front of him. The chyron of an Israeli TV channel he was streaming told the story: “Happening now,” it said in Hebrew: “A wave of attacks has begun in Iran.”

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Historic Nashville Church Languishes Amid Lawsuits

For nearly 100 years, the Central Church of Christ preached the Gospel and welcomed the vulnerable. Now, the one-time downtown anchor — founded by A.M. Burton, great-grandfather of Grammy-winning singer Amy Grant — faces an uncertain future. Former members attribute the changes to Shawn Mathis, who became the Central church’s third elder in 2017.

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Sanctuaries Of Identity: African Christians Thrive Amid Growing Diaspora Challenges

As African migration — driven largely by economic hardship and the search for better opportunities — continues to grow, churches are becoming more than just places of worship. In fact, churches have evolved into spiritual lifelines and vital community hubs that help preserve cultural identity, reinforce moral values and provide a sense of belonging far from home.

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Blades Over The Burial Mound: The Fight To Save A Sacred Northern Ireland Site

For the first time in centuries, public access to the Knock has been denied. Although the hill is widely acknowledged to be used publicly, it’s technically private land. After a group went to the summit for a winter solstice ceremony last year — honoring what many believe to be the hill’s ancient role in sun worship — they received a letter from the landowner warning they were trespassing. 

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Why Islam Grew (And Christianity Didn’t) Around The World In Just A Decade

Between 2010 and 2020, global religious affiliation shifted significantly, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis. While Christianity remains the world’s largest religion, its growth lagged behind overall population growth. Christians increased by 122 million to 2.3 billion, but their share of the global population fell. At the same time, Islam saw a global surge.

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Knitting Faiths Together: Using Art And Yarn To Grow Dialogue Between Religions

Exploring interfaith dialogue using knitting is the surprising theme of a new touring event taking place around the United Kingdom. It all started when Canadian actor and artist Kirk Dunn developed a passion for knitting. The result is an interfaith look at society, how faith can bring people together for a unique show and the “commonalities and conflicts between the three Abrahamic faiths.”

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Israel’s Political Battle Over The Drafting Of Yeshiva Students

Many Jews are outraged that while the war in Gaza has been raging since Oct. 7, 2023 and they have suffered many casualties and interruptions to their civilian life in response to repeated reserve duty call-ups, their able-bodied ultra-Orthodox fellow citizens have not shared the defense burden. The IDF faces shortages, needing approximately 12,000 new recruits, including 7,000 combat soldiers.

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Truett McConnell Trustees Call For Investigation, Place President On Leave

Truett McConnell University President Emir Caner has been placed on administrative leave following a special called meeting of TMU trustees on June 6. The school, affiliated with Georgia Baptists, has been embroiled in controversy following allegations of sexual abuse against a former professor. A growing number of alumni and others associated with the university had been calling for trustees to take action.

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How Trump Is Putting Hundreds Of Sacred Sites At Risk

The Trump administration has rolled back federal project review deadlines, putting Indigenous nations at risk of losing their voice in the development of infrastructure on their homelands. Meanwhile, the Trump administration is cutting funding for the national THPO program by 94%, leaving many Indigenous nations with limited resources to maintain their historic preservation efforts.

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Do Popes Run A Secret Network Of ‘Spies’?

(ANALYSIS) Leo’s elevation broke the longstanding rule of thumb that no American, as a citizen of a superpower, could or even should become pope. But that did not trouble the College of Cardinals in May, and leading up to his election Cardinal Robert Prevost felt free to critique current American policies.


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Christians Care For Cambodian Orphans In ‘Jesus Village’

A “Jesus Village” for children in crisis 50 miles west of Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia, will span about 15 acres and house 240 orphans in 12 houses. Cambodia Christian Ministries has already accepted 65 children, assuming legal responsibility for their care from the Cambodian government.

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