This edition is sponsored by Gold Wealth Management |
President Donald Trump issued a bold inaugural speech promising America’s coming “golden age” that begins with swift changes to immigration, energy and climate policy, and trade.
Anabaptism is 500 years old, and its distinctive witness is still changing lives.
Canadian Christians were startled by a formal proposal the government consider taking tax-exempt status away from churches.
How a book club taught Russell Moore about living and dying.
The Bulletin covers Trump’s inauguration day from Washington.
A review of a new history of Puritans’ conquest of America’s first people. |
From news editor Daniel Silliman: The topic of taxing churches comes up semi-regularly now, in both the US and Canada. That feels new to me, like maybe it’s a sign of increased cultural hostility or what some people have taken to calling the “negative world,” where the broader culture is predisposed against Christianity.
But it turns out it’s not new. I went digging around an online collection of historic newspapers and found debates on the topic going back to 1783. In the British House of Commons, Sir Richard Hill said he thought the idea was pretty outrageous, especially when no one was talking about taxing theaters. That was almost exactly the argument I heard when I first reported on this topic in 2020. Except the scholar I spoke to said museums, not theaters.
So my assumption was wrong. The world hasn’t changed as much as I would have guessed, based on my experience and, just, general sense of things. That’s one of the gifts of journalism, history, and digitized newspaper archives: getting corrected. Gently (hopefully!) but corrected nonetheless. |
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Today in Christian History |
January 21, 1621: Pilgrims leave the Mayflower and gather on shore at Plymouth, Massachusetts, for their first religious service in America. |
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Around Washington, DC, you can see signs of the upcoming presidential transition. Security fencing went up around the Capitol building for the inauguration ceremony. Road closures rimmed the National Mall.…
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Cultural sentiments can change in unexpected ways. People are complicated, and the direction of our discourse is often unpredictable. After losing the presidential election, Democratic Party leaders are learning—or should…
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Prophet or activist? Pastor or social reformer? In the six decades since his death, the testimony and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. has been so extensively documented and analyzed that…
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Over the past few years, our society has continued its trend toward increased political polarization, as the share of people swinging to the far left and right increases. In fact,…
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This first issue of 2025 exemplifies how reading creates community, grows empathy, gives words to the unnamable, and reminds us that our identities and relationships proceed from the Word of God and the Word made flesh. In this issue, you’ll read about the importance of a book club from Russell Moore and a meditation on the bookends of a life by Jen Wilkin. Mark Meynell writes about the present-day impact of a C. S. Lewis sermon in Ukraine, and Emily Belz reports on how churches care for endangered languages in New York City. Poet Malcolm Guite regales us with literary depth. And we hope you’ll pick up a copy of one of our CT Book Award winners or finalists. Happy reading! |
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