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This edition is sponsored by Gloo |
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Karen Swallow Prior writes about her experience with infertility and finds that like parenthood, childlessness can be a calling. |
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A South Indian missionary initiated a new Bible translation for millions of Hadoti speakers in northwest India.
The fourth Sunday of Lent this weekend is traditionally called Laetare Sunday, based on the sung command "Rejoice!," and it sits halfway between Ash Wednesday and Easter. |
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From CT contributor Karen Swallow Prior: I’ve written a handful of times over the years about my infertility and childlessness. But when Christianity Today asked me to write a longer reflection on the subject for their March/April print issue, I realized that it had been a while since I’d done so, and that I’d never written a feature-length article on this subject. I eagerly said yes and spent a few weeks last fall writing, revising, editing—and praying over my words. |
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I felt the Lord’s grace over my writing, and then when I saw the illustrations in progress, I felt that grace once again. It is a gift as a writer to work with a team—editor, proofreaders, artists, publication. It’s kind of like making a child—it’s a team effort, and there are a lot of ways things can go wrong—and a lot of ways in which God’s grace hovers over and in and through it all, no matter the outcome. |
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Have you ever worried that technology doesn’t help humans thrive? This doesn’t have to be the case. When tech tools are built with flourishing in mind, technology can be a force for good — and Gloo is building platforms meant to support human flourishing. |
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By integrating Christian values into tech development, Gloo is ensuring that AI serves people well, rather than replacing them. We were all created for human connection, and technology can help us find it instead of isolating us further. From ministry and organizational leaders to parents and students, Gloo has a variety of values-aligned solutions to serve you. Discover how Gloo is creating high tech with a higher purpose. |
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Today in Christian History |
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March 16, 1072: Adalbert, Archbishop of Bremen-Hamburg, dies. He energetically promoted missionary activities in Scandanavia, Iceland, Greenland, and the Orkneys, but he seems to have been largely unsuccessful. |
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Church conversations about masculinity are rooted in biblical truth but can sound different among Black Christians who have to contend with false ideological and religious movements, such as the Nation…
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This piece was adapted from CT’s books newsletter. Subscribe here. Sarah Isgur, Last Branch Standing: A Potentially Surprising, Occasionally Witty Journey Inside Today’s Supreme Court (Crown, 2026) With a purported 6–3…
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Roughly 80 years ago, Christian novelist Jan Karon, creator of the beloved 15-volume Mitford Years series, stood in front of a mirror and told herself she would be a writer.…
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Forty-year-old Moisés Pérez Padrón, who has lived in Cuba his whole life, says he’s never seen a worse crisis than the one the country is currently facing. "The streets are…
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In this issue of Christianity Today and in this season of the Christian year, we explore the bookends of life: birth and death. You’ll read Karen Swallow Prior’s essay on childlessness and Kara Bettis Carvalho’s overview of reproductive technologies. Haleluya Hadero reports on artificially intelligent griefbots, and Kristy Etheridge discusses physician-assisted suicide. There is much work to be done to promote life. We talk with Fleming Rutledge about the Crucifixion, knowing that while suffering lasts for a season, Jesus has triumphed over death through his death. This Lenten and Easter season, may these words be a companion as you consider how you might bring life in the spaces you inhabit. |
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