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Though one prominent Chinese house church leader was released recently, eight leaders from Zion Church remain imprisoned. Angela Lu Fulton talks to family members of those behind bars.
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Warn thy trillionaires, writes Myles Werntz.
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A 1962 CT editorial calling gambling a "moral crime" is relevant again as gambling is on the rise.
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From international editor Angela Lu Fulton: I was thrilled to hear this past Sunday that China had released pastor Jin "Ezra" Mingri of China’s Zion Church. CT had covered the arrest of Jin and other Zion Church pastors and members in October as well as the effort to free them. Having covered China for many years, I don’t often hear this kind of good news and see advocacy and international pressure actually working. As Jin’s family and friends said, it’s a miracle.
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Yet the celebration was tempered by the fact that eight other families weren’t able to welcome their loved ones home, weren’t able to throw their arms around a beloved wife, husband, father, or mother. They can’t breathe a sigh of relief that the separation and the waiting and the praying are over. For today’s story, I spoke with three spouses of detained church leaders, each with children under the age of 10, who are grappling with complex emotions of joy, sorrow, anger, and gratitude, all the while trusting in the God who is above all things.
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Today in Christian History
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July 17, 180: Seven men and five women who had been captured carrying "the sacred books, and the letters of Paul" are tried before Roman proconsul Saturninus. Since none would renounce their Christian faith, all 12 were beheaded (see issue 27: Persecution in the Early Church).
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Join CT by 7/21 and save 30% on a year of trusted journalism, daily insights, thoughtful commentary, and more—all designed to help you think faithfully in a complex world.
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This piece was adapted from Russell Moore’s newsletter. Subscribe here. Mitch McConnell is still alive, but our knowing that was subject to a weekslong filibuster. At least for the moment, the aging…
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When Ed Shaw, a pastor at an evangelical church in Bristol, England, met a man at a conference several years ago who was struggling with questions about his sexuality, he…
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Every time Bryan Sands got into his Dodge Grand Caravan, he prayed to God with a few requests: "Keep me accident-free, ticket-free, and grant me good conversations." So he certainly…
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My grandfather’s claim to fame was that he worked at the dry cleaners that cleaned the uniforms of the Baltimore Orioles. It was a modest job, but it enabled him…
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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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