REAP tried—and failed—to end religious exemptions to anti-discrimination laws
Last week, the Religious Exemption Accountability Project (REAP) announced it will end operations.
The Rise of the Nones is Real, but Exvangelicals are not the Cause
How many exvangelicals are there? As it turns out, the number of exvangelicals in the U.S. is relatively small. If an exvangelical is someone who was raised in an evangelical church and later rejected it,
Study finds next gen givers more likely to be hands-on and focus on local, grassroots initiatives
Millennial Christians and their generational peers are in the process of becoming stewards of the largest amount of wealth that has ever passed from one generation to the next. Roughly $124 trillion will shift from ...
After hovering near record lows for several years, percentage of U.S. adults who trust the church grew slightly in 2025.
While most Americans remain distrustful of the church, a growing number say they have confidence in the institution.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals applied the ministerial exception in the case.
World Vision has been protected against a discrimination claim by a decision of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
Docuseries highlights problems with today’s ‘investigative journalism’
On April 21, 1986, Geraldo Rivera hosted a two-hour television program. “The Secrets of Al Capone’s Vault” would open, on live television, a walled-off underground room once owned by the murderous gangster and thief. The ...
Chaplains who run into battle—literally or figuratively—with weapons of a different kind
Last week, the Army Chaplains Corps celebrated 250 years of ministering to U.S. soldiers. In 1776, Gen. George Washington himself requested that chaplains be added to the army to “meet soldiers’ religious and spiritual needs, ...
Also a pioneering leader in the pro-life movement, and in the Presbyterian Church in America
He never sought the spotlight, but his fingerprints are all over the Christian journalism world. Bob Case, co-founder of World Journalism Institute and quiet force behind WORLD Magazine’s survival, died recently.
The recipient of radical generosity as a kid, one man makes generosity a key part of his family and business
Micah Lacher didn’t grow up with money to spare. He watched his mother work hard to keep the family afloat and trust God to provide the things she couldn’t control—like a safe neighborhood and quality ...
Recent federal cuts to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, to USAID, to the Department of Education, and to other government agencies and NGO have caused much discussion and – in some quarters – great fear.