Plus: Don’t Suffocate the Little Things
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CT Daily Briefing

This edition is sponsored by Aspen Group


Today’s Briefing

A lack of reporting and recurring angst makes Aging Out, an upcoming book by writer Lucy Schiller, a flawed evaluation of how Americans treat and react to the elderly

Former Nebraska senator and college president Ben Sasse talks about his terminal cancer, his strategy for living well with the time he has, and his hope in Christ. 

In an age of technological detachment, author Ian Bogost encourages readers to savor interests and little pleasures of life in his book The Small Stuff: How to Lead a More Gratifying Life. The sentiment rings empty without Creator-focused gratitude

Is God punishing you? A full view of Scripture reveals Jesus is for us and not against us, according to an excerpt from Jesus Will Meet You There: Finding Strength and Comfort in the Savior Who Understands.

Behind the Story

From contributor Haley Byrd Wilt: I first learned of Senator Ben Sasse in 2015, when I started following politics more closely. He was downright funny, sharing candid thoughts about a tumultuous—and often ridiculous—time in American life. "There are literally dumpster fires in my town tonight more popular than either Trump or Clinton," he wrote ahead of the 2016 presidential election. I think what set him apart then, rather than simply being honest compared to his peers, was that preserving a future in politics wasn’t his main goal. 

I was grateful to speak with him again in March as he was undergoing cancer treatment. He sounded like the same quick-minded senator I once interviewed in the Capitol as a reporter, though with markedly more jokes about morphine. I came away from the conversation encouraged to try to run my own race well and to keep my eyes on Christ.  


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In Other News


Today in Christian History

July 14, 1833: Anglican clergyman John Keble preaches his famous sermon on national apostasy, marking the beginning of the Oxford Movement in England. 

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IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

Nathan Glasper directs Calvin University’s gospel choir, an ensemble that started as a club at the institution 38 years ago. When the club started, the university didn’t see gospel music…

Doug Wilson is an Idaho pastor and author, a theocratic Christian nationalist—his terms—with a theatrical flair and a vulgar tongue. He founded his own denomination, which now includes Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, after…

One summer in college, I studied abroad in Paris to satisfy some philosophy and art history requirements for my degree. After our plane landed, my class went straight from arrivals…

Florence Mwendwa, 49, proudly showed off her walker as she took unsteady steps up a rocky path surrounded by tea farms in rural Kenya. Her husband, Ashford Mutwiri, helped her…


IN THE MAGAZINE

Cover image of the July/August 2026 issue

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.

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