|
Gospel choirs are disappearing from Black churches, but they’re also finding life in other settings. |
|
Controversial pastor Doug Wilson, an outspoken Christian nationalist, has a household voting plan that could empower Democrats for decades, writes Bonnie Kristian. |
|
Readers respond to CT stories on Johnny Cash, vasectomies, and Ozempic. |
|
From worship correspondent Kelsey Kramer McGinnis: Since the 2020 pandemic, I’ve been interested in the ways lockdowns and gathering restrictions changed congregational worship—temporarily and permanently. The first article I wrote for Christianity Today five years ago was about corporate worship via screens. Since then, most American megachurches have bounced back, even surpassing pre-COVID-19 attendance numbers. But for many smaller churches, the pandemic brought the end of a long-standing ministry: the choir. |
|
Last year, I heard ethnomusicologist Monique Ingalls present her research on gospel choirs in the UK. Gospel choirs are thriving in Europe, and the contrast between the decline of church choir participation and the growing popularity of community gospel choirs outside the US interests me as both a musicologist and a reporter who covers worship practices. |
|
I reached out to Nathan Glasper, the director of the gospel choir at Calvin University, who told me that in his Grand Rapids church, none of the four choirs came back after COVID-19. However, he’s traveled twice to Poland over the past year to work with a community choir that is enthusiastic about learning the history and performance practices of gospel music. My conversation with Glasper shed light on the complicated story behind the decline of choir participation, and the ways choral gospel is being preserved in the academy and by community choirs. |
|
Are you considering a construction project for your church? Then this free resource is for you! |
|
Inside you’ll discover 11 essential steps for navigating church building projects well. You’ll also gain practical insight to help make the process smoother—so you can focus on what matters most: pointing people to Jesus. |
|
Because every step—from casting first vision to celebrating final occupancy— matters. |
|
Today in Christian History |
|
July 13, 1917: Three children in Fatima, Portugal, report seeing visions of the Virgin Mary. |
|
 |
|
|
|
Navigate complex times with clarity and conviction. Join CT for trustworthy reporting, informed analysis, and thoughtful commentary through a biblical lens.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This week, as Iranians thronged for the delayed funeral of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and their government resumed trading airstrikes with the United States, a fragile cease-fire between the two…
|
|
|
|
|
This piece was adapted from CT’s books newsletter. Subscribe here. Julia Higgins, Christ and His Bride: How Men and Women Tell the Story of the Gospel (B&H Books, 2026) "In the…
|
|
|
|
As this summer started, I slipped into spiritual sleepiness. For the last nine months of the school year, I’d served as editor for my college newspaper, vice president for a…
|
|
|
|
|
Centuries before the New Testament authors wrote their gospels, Homer laid down his own evangelium: Now royal Odysseus, who had borne the long war, spoke again: …"Your lord is now…
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
While the internet seems consumed with political debate, as Christians, we must practice acknowledging cultural fissures and fractures while also placing our ultimate hope in God alone. Christ’s work invites us to work toward repair. As America observes its 250th birthday this year, we both celebrate the American experiment in democracy and speak honestly about it; as Justin Giboney writes in "America 250," "We must be able to critique and appreciate with impartiality." In her essay on notable books, Jen Pollock Michel calls readers to consider how freedom for (not just freedom from) is necessary. Also, historian George Marsden looks back at 1976, the year of the evangelical, and Bonnie Kristian examines Charlie Kirk’s legacy. We hope you’ll spend some time with Angela Lu Fulton’s feature "The Cost of Training Up a Chinese Child," about Chinese Christians who have kept their faith preeminent, and Emily Belz’s reporting on an Anglican church’s support of families healing a year after a school shooting. Whether you find yourself naming fractures or repairing fissures, we hope this will lower the cultural temperature, showing that our faithful work matters but also that Christ promises to make all things new. |
|
Get the most recent headlines and stories from Christianity Today delivered to your inbox daily. |
|
Delivered free via email to subscribers daily. Sign up for this newsletter. |
|
You are currently subscribed as npy7hz0ktx@nie.podam.pl. Sign up for more newsletters like this. Manage your email preferences or unsubscribe. |
| | |