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Responses to our January/February issue.

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The Hidden Cost of Tax Exemption

For years I have wondered if it is a good witness to nonbelievers the way churches claim entitlement to the 501(c)(3) status. When your church features a full-service health club, gym, and white-tablecloth restaurant on its campus, along with six-figure salaries for its leadership staff, the notion of “nonprofit” defies all logic. If Jesus paid taxes, who are we to presume that we should be above the law when it comes to paying taxes?

Kurt Kelley Indianapolis, IN

What about the many ministries that can’t be so easily divorced from the local church, like the youth group that keeps kids off the street or the disability support group that provides a place of respite for exhausted parents? Without churches providing these and countless other services, many of the needs of local communities would become the responsibility of government, which would cost far more than the potential tax receipts to be gained from most churches.

Stephen Wilburn Telford, PA

The New Face of Medical Missions

I want to highlight that African nationals are also being educated as nurses and lay health care workers, standing in the gap to provide health care for many. For example, as a WHO [World Health Organization] collaborative center, the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Nursing is partnering with Kamuzu College of Nursing at the University of Malawi, educating nurse researchers, developing a peer group intervention to utilize rural health workers for HIV prevention, and culturally adapting prenatal care strategies to address Malawi’s critical shortage of health care professionals. Though these are not faith-based initiatives, those being educated may have a personal mission to provide compassionate, quality health care in their homeland.

Marlene Sefton, RN, PhD, APRN, Clinical Assistant Professor, University of Illinois at Chicago College of Nursing Chicago, IL

God Will Not Speak to You Through Skywriting

Let’s hear it for Jen Wilkin’s word about God’s will and the many ways people seek to hear or see what it is. Wilkin is right that we already know what God wishes for us. (Check “God’s will” in a concordance and you will have quite enough to do.) Maybe we should hear Peter: “His divine power has given us everything we need for a godly life through our knowledge of him who called us” (2 Pet. 1:3).

Knute Larson, Pastoral Coach Sawyer, MI

I totally agree with the heart of this article, that God’s will for our lives is clearly spelled out in Scripture. However, I was disappointed that our highest calling of all was omitted: “Above all, love each other deeply” (1 Pet. 4:8). In any shortlist of God’s will for our lives, this must be at the top!

Stephen Dorsey Oakland, NJ

What If I’m Not the Submissive Type?

I have often wondered why there are not more messages on a man’s role in marriage to be like Christ with the church. This can make a wife’s submission to her husband a joy rather than a duty.

John Reese Camp Hill, PA

Baby Bust

Were we really doing so well if we were depending on having babies for church growth? Maybe this is a wake-up call for us to go into the world and preach the gospel.

Bethany DuVal (Facebook)

I was married young but had the average two children and said, like the culture, I’m done! It wasn’t until I was in my mid 20s and started asking some questions like, were we done having children? Why? After seeing all over the Bible that children were seen as a gift, blessing, and inheritance, we stepped out in faith and asked God to give us the faith and provision we needed to have as many as he would provide. After surrendering the hardest part of my life to God, my life and my womb, I saw with each baby how the church viewed fruitfulness, and I wish I could say it was pretty. I cannot tell you how many times I was scolded, derided, and even mocked for being pregnant again. I wish I could say that through the joy, pain, and sacrifices of bearing nine children, which I’ve laid down my life to disciple, the church as a whole has supported me, but I can’t. In so many ways the church has followed the culture instead of leading it, particularly in regard to family, roles, and children.

Valerie Hubbard Clyde, NC

When Your Prayer Request Goes Viral

I am a bereaved parent who deeply grieves for their precious child. Articles like this make the grief and faith journey worse for many. This article is similar to the emotional, well-produced church videos that show miraculous recoveries. Unfortunately, from segments of the Christian community, I get the sense that medical advancements are secondary to prayer. Pray for medical researchers, pioneering surgeons, people that fundraise, and the lives lost during clinical trials so the public doesn’t get the sense that God picks survivors based on prayer emojis or the number of likes.

Jennifer Swenson North Oaks, MN

Also in this issue

Our cover story this month features the work of Kyung-Chik Han, a South Korean pastor who worked tirelessly mobilizing churches to meet overwhelming needs in the midst of the Korean War. This issue went to press before the scope of the COVID-19 epidemic in that country was fully known and well before the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a global pandemic. Nevertheless, Asbury University historian David Swartz offers us a provocative reminder that many of our most important institutions—crucial in good times and bad—stand on the shoulders of unsung giants. And it’s not unthinkable that the strength of any institution that endures tumult today is owed, in large measure, to the success of its overlooked heroes.

Cover Story

World Vision’s Forgotten Founder

News

Is It Appropriate to Have the Easter Bunny in Church?

News

Why Gideons International Is Scaling Back Bible Printing

News

Gleanings: April 2020

News

How Christian Colleges Have Been Revising Student Handbooks Since Obergefell

News

They’re Not From the US. But They’re Ministering to the Nation’s Soldiers

Love in the Desert of Lent

The Moral Order of the World Points to God

Fighting Anxiety With the Old Testament

God’s Mercies Aren’t So New

Medium Matters

Our April Issue: Behind the Scenes

Editorial

April Fools

Testimony

I Was Warned to Keep My Distance from ‘Infidels.’ Then One Prayed for My Family.

Let Bible Reading Get Back to Basics

The ‘Over There’ Era of Missions Is Over

Review

God Likes You. He Really Likes You!

Review

Youth Ministry Needs Less Fun and More Joy

Five Books That Capture the Blessings of Getting Older

New & Noteworthy Fiction

Before Christ Rose, He Was Dead

View issue

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Sarah Jakes Roberts Evolves T. D. Jakes’s Women’s Conference

At a record-setting event this fall, 40,000 followers listened to her preach about spiritual breakthrough and surrender.

Being Human

Walking the Camino de Santiago with Barrett Harkins

The missionary to pilgrims shares wisdom from the trail.

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The Evangelical Voters Who Changed Their Minds

Amid a hyperpartisan electorate, a minority plan to vote differently than they did in 2016 and 2020.

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Meet the Evangelical Expats Staying in Lebanon

Shout to the Lord in a Foreign Language

Worshiping God with words we don’t understand may seem strange. But I consider it a spiritual practice.

Jesus Is Still Right About Persecution

Nine truths believers need to understand to pray well for the suffering body of Christ.

The Bulletin

Electioneering

The Bulletin discusses the final presidential campaign push, churches in the age of screens, and the UN’s work in Gaza.

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