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A US Evangelical Considers Pope Francis
The pope was tricky to categorize and at times theologically confusing. Yet I couldn’t help but admire him.
The Bible and the Tariffs Debate
Abraham Kuyper argued for tariffs with thin theological support. A later thinker, Frederick Nymeyer, mounted a vehement biblical critique.
Qualms & Proverbs
Who Gets Our Church After a Dating Breakup?
CT advice columnists also weigh in on outreach to a family leaving a church and a lost sense of ministry calling.
The Male Malaise
Rapid economic and social shifts have undermined traditional ideas of manhood. At the Cross we find a better vision—and more.
The Limits of Open Letters
American evangelicals love big statements—but we must first do the slow work of institution building and local discipleship.
The Raging Sea Is More Than a Symbol of Chaos
The Bible’s favorite metaphor to remind you that you’re not in control.
Nailing Down the Truth of Christ’s Crucifixion
Apologizing for what I got wrong reporting on an idiosyncratic view on how Jesus died.
The Bulletin
The Masculinity Crisis with John Eldredge
The Bulletin welcomes John Eldredge for a conversation about masculinity in far-right politics.
The Russell Moore Show
Jon Guerra on the American Gospel
Russell is joined by Jon Guerra to talk about the person and work of Jesus through music.
Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
The Joke’s on Us
We unpack the rise and fall of two central figures in the Satanic Panic—Mike Warnke and Lauren Stratford.
The Bulletin
Wrongful Deportation, Naval Academy Book Bans, and USAID Cuts to Sudan
The Bulletin discusses a deportation showdown, Pete Hegseth’s library cleanup, and USAID cuts in Sudan.
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The Magazine
View archivesEven amid scandals, cultural shifts, and declining institutional trust, we at Christianity Today recognize the beauty of Christ’s church. In this issue, you’ll read of the various biblical metaphors for the church, and of the faithfulness of Japanese pastors. You’ll hear how one British podcaster is rethinking apologetics, and Collin Hansen’s hope for evangelical institutions two years after Tim Keller’s death. You’ll be reminded of the power of the Resurrection, and how the church is both more fragile and much stronger than we think from editor in chief Russell Moore. This Lent and Easter season, may you take great courage in Jesus’ words in Matthew 16:18—“I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it.”
Testimony
Stories of Christian conversion
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The Lion, the Wizard, and the Great Physician
During childhood, my heart beat with joy in Narnia and Middle Earth. After meeting an invisible Doctor, I understood why.
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I Went to Prison for Murder. God’s Word Brought Freedom.
After enduring brutality as a child and inflicting it as a gang member, I sought healing and wholeness at the cross.
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I Was Sold into Slavery. Jesus Set Me Free.
In the Thai Muslim community where I lived, enslavement was all I knew. Then God spoke into the darkness.
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A Good Pair of Lungs
How burst pulmonary arteries opened my eyes to the gift of an ordinary life in Jesus.
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I Turned to New Age Psychedelics for Salvation. They Couldn’t Deliver.
Shrooms glittered on the surface—but hid a dark chasm underneath. That’s where Jesus found me.
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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.
