News

Abolitionist Bible to Go on Public Display

And other news briefs from Christians around the world.

On one of the first pages in the Bible, William Turpin kept a handwritten list of names and details of dozens of enslaved people he freed between 1807 and 1826.

On one of the first pages in the Bible, William Turpin kept a handwritten list of names and details of dozens of enslaved people he freed between 1807 and 1826.

South Carolina State Museum

A Bible containing a rare record of Christian opposition to slavery is going on display for the first time in the South Carolina State Museum in Columbia. The Bible once belonged to William Turpin, who with his business partner Thomas Wadsworth bought human beings in the late 1700s. The men then became convinced slavery was immoral and freed them. Turpin recorded the names of 31 people freed from their enslavement in his Bible.

CMA sees small split over women in ministry

At least eight congregations have left the Christian and Missionary Alliance (CMA) over women in ministry. In June, after several years of discussion, the denomination decided that women may be ordained and carry the title “pastor” at the discretion of local churches, while eldership, which includes the lead pastor, will remain exclusive to men. According to the CMA, the new position recognizes that people who are equally committed to the authority of Scripture interpret key passages about women in church roles differently. But some of those leaving say it is “a significant step toward egalitarianism.” The departing churches have not indicated whether they will form a new denomination.

Canada: Court won’t hear churches’ COVID-19 case

The Supreme Court of Canada declined to hear an argument by a group of British Columbia churches that COVID-19 restrictions violated their constitutional rights. A lower court ruled the pandemic restrictions may have violated Charter rights but were nonetheless permissible as the government had to balance those protections with the legal mandate of the provincial health department. The lower court also noted the restrictions were time-limited, setting-specific, and following the best available scientific advice. Similar legal challenges have been dismissed in other provinces as well.

Haiti: Church members die while attacking gangs

Seven evangelicals died in a confrontation with the gangs that have taken over most of Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince. Pastor Marcorel Zidor reportedly told members of his church that their faith would make them bulletproof. Church members marched with sticks and machetes and attacked the armed gangs. Haiti has been in crisis since its president was assassinated in 2021.

United Kingdom: “Wycliffe’s Oak” up for tree award

An old oak believed to have once shaded Reformer John Wycliffe as he preached in Surrey, England, was nominated for a conservation charity’s tree-of-the-year competition. The tree is about 800 years old, and its trunk measures nearly 24 feet around. Wycliffe is said to have preached under it in 1370. The Baptist Charles Spurgeon preached beneath it in 1872.

Switzerland: WEA criticized for meeting with Iranians

The World Evangelical Alliance (WEA) accepted a controversial invitation to an Iran-hosted forum on religion and human rights. The country ranks eighth on Open Doors’ persecution watch list, and some evangelicals sharply criticized the WEA for agreeing to meet with Iranians. Johnnie Moore, who previously served on the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, said the WEA is “becoming part of the problem,” and the head of Iran Alive Ministries said the organization was dangerously naïve. WEA’s secretary general Thomas Schirrmacher defended the meeting, however. He argued it is good for Christians to be seen as conversation partners by countries that usually regard them only as troublemakers. “They asked us to explain: What can evangelicals contribute to the good of society?” he said. “I would have a bad conscience if we did not use such opportunities to testify in the court of the world.” Iranian officials arrested 134 Christians last year, according to the best available records. Nearly 50 were tortured.

Rwanda: Bible price increases

The Bible Society of Rwanda has raised the price of Bibles by about 200 percent after seeing donations drop sharply. Antoine Kambanda, the Catholic cardinal who heads the multidenominational organization, said the Bible society had become too dependent on foreign funds, relying on Christians outside of the country to cover about 85 percent of publication expenses. “It is high time Rwandans begin to contribute to that work of publishing the Scriptures,” he said. The organization now sells Bibles for around 8,000 Rwandan francs (the equivalent of about $7 USD).

China: Church growth stagnant, study finds

The growth of Christianity has stalled in China, according to a new Pew Research Center study of Chinese academic and government surveys. Depending on the wording of the survey question, between 2 and 3 percent of adults said they are Christian. That correlates to about 18 million Protestants. While churches are seeing new converts, many Christians also leave the faith. In a four-year period, researchers found that roughly one-quarter of believers stopped identifying as Christian. The most recent data Pew evaluated is from 2018.

Japan: Missionaries get new title

A3, an evangelical organization that started in the 1960s with short-term missionaries teaching English in Japan, has decided it will no longer use the word missionary. Christians sent to work in cross-cultural contexts will now be called “missional partners.” A3, formerly known as Asian Access, has been led by Japanese Christians since 2022. They decided missionary seemed too Western. Other Christians who do cross-cultural ministry have also argued the word is not biblical and has lost its usefulness, even preventing people from answering a call to missions. Today, A3 sends people to 18 Asian countries, as well as the Middle East and Central America, to form learning cohorts that develop Christian leaders.

Also in this issue

Our cover story this month looks at the complexity of the immigration crisis through a different lens. Rather than focusing on politics or policy, “One Christian’s Quest to Change the Way We See Immigration” profiles one particular border ministry and its vision for a specific piece of land and the stories it tells. Also in this issue: new life for a Deadhead, Jesus’ take on thrift, insights from medieval Christian spirituality, and lessons in unheroic aid from the Good Samaritan.

Cover Story

One Christian’s Quest to Change the Way We See Immigration

Blessed Are the Thrifty?

Indian Church Draws Strength from Ostracism

American Evangelicals Divide over Ukraine

Trump-Era Controversies Had a Measurable Effect on Church Attendance

Why Prison Ministries Are Growing

Dying to Our Selfies

A Person by Any Other Pronoun

The Border Is a Complex Place. Jesus Is There.

Why I’m a ‘Bible Thumping Fundamentalist’

Excerpt

There Is an Edge to Living on the Edge

I Stumbled in the Steps of the Good Samaritan

Review

The Law Can’t Always ‘Love’ You

Testimony

I Was a Disenchanted Deadhead Who Found Christ on a Greyhound Bus

Our Divided Age Needs More Talk of Enemies

Paul’s View on Death Changed Mine

The Black Church Models a Different Conversation About ‘Gender Roles’

Mystics, Monastics, and the Moderns Who Need Them

Review

Secular Figures Are Giving Faith a Second Look

New & Noteworthy Books

View issue

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Post-Election Gloating and Meltdowns Reveal Our Hopes and Fears

Dealing with emotions across political differences is the next opportunity for the church to work through division.

The Russell Moore Show

Jesus in the Old Testament and the Reliability of Scripture

Nancy Guthrie says the Scriptures hold up to our scrutiny.

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Died: Tony Campolo, Champion of ‘Red Letter’ Christianity

The Baptist pastor and sociologist argued caring for the poor was an integral part of proclaiming the gospel.

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