Plus: Homeownership Won’t Save You
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Christianity Today
CT Daily Briefing

This edition is sponsored by The Tract League


Today’s Briefing

Two Uber drivers from opposite ends of the United States found faith while behind the wheel.

Russell Moore on the hospitalization of Senator Mitch McConnell and the spiritual reason why elderly leaders cling to power.

Affordability issues in the US need serious answers, but Christians who can’t buy a home shouldn’t despair.

UK evangelicals worry a new draft bill banning conversion therapy could silence conversations about sexuality.

Behind the Story

From senior news writer Cody Benjamin: I’ve taken plenty of Ubers. I’m sure you have, too. But speaking with two drivers for today’s story on rideshare ministry really emphasized the unique opportunities that arise while riding or driving with strangers. In retrospect, it’s always been fairly easy to share personal stories—about my job, my hometown, my marriage, my family—when riding in the backseat of an Uber, especially if the driver is intentional about chatting.

Maybe there’s something oddly safe and secure about talking with someone you probably won’t ever see again? Maybe we feel comfortable being ourselves with an Uber driver for the same reasons some people ask personal questions to an AI chatbot or Google; they know right away that they’re unlikely to be judged. Except pastoral Uber drivers are even better, because they’re human!

I especially want to applaud Bryan Sands, our story’s literal Uber pastor, for also viewing his passengers as human, not just customers. His passion for people rang loud and clear when we talked, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he got back on the road someday—not to provoke or even just transport the people calling him for rides but to listen to them, maybe even counsel them, in the name of Jesus.


Paid Content

Christ calls us to go and make disciples of all nations around the world. The Tract League is working to fulfill this call in India by equipping students at The Bible Institute and Seminary with the resources they need to learn about Christ, study the Bible, and share the news of Salvation with their friends and neighbors. 

Led by Indian Christians who understand the culture, the growing ministry provides free training, lodging, and meals to passionate students from around India and neighboring countries who otherwise cannot afford a traditional school program. Students learn 1-1 witnessing, leading to thousands of conversions and 2000 baptisms in a Hindu-dominant society.

Learn more about The Tract League’s important work in India and consider donating to help support new students in their call to spread the gospel.

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In Other News

  • Archaeologists unearthed the remains of a 1,600-year-old building believed to be the oldest-known Christian church in Oderzo, Italy.
  • The FBI said a man banned from a New York church now is charged with cyberstalking, after years of sending threatening emails to the church’s pastor and two female church members.
  • Cuba’s religious persecution toward Protestants and Catholics in the country has escalated to arbitrary detentions, surveillance, and interrogations according to a new report by persecution watchdog group Christian Solidarity Worldwide.

Today in Christian History

July 16, 1769: Spanish Franciscan friar Father Junipero Serra founds the San Diego de Alcala mission in California, the first permanent Spanish settlement on the west coast of America (see issue 35: Christopher Columbus).

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IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

In April, nearly 1,000 youth gathered in a packed church hall in Ziro, a town in the mountains of India’s Arunachal Pradesh State, which borders China. As electrifying worship music…

"Alcohol use disorder," to use the formal term, has always existed in America. It’s often hidden among the housed and visible among those on the streets—or half visible, as it…

We walked down stories of stairs into the earth. Our whispers echoed off the walls. At last, there it was: a wooden dock crouching over an underground pool of dazzling…

Since his pancreatic cancer diagnosis last December, former Nebraska senator and college president Ben Sasse has been proclaiming his steadfast faith in Jesus: to The New York Times, on 60…


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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