This edition is sponsored by The Pour Over
Today’s Briefing
Christ comes to make all things new, even West Michigan’s most polluted watershed.
Plans for the next General Assembly of the World Evangelical Alliance have caused an uproar in South Korea.
Netflix’s Mary is a violent “celebration of her as the mother of God.”
Russell Moore’s favorite books of the year.
Behind the Story
From editor Sara Kyoungah White: One day not long after moving to the house I now live in, I came across a little creek while on a family bike ride. I thought immediately of Annie Dillard’s Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, one of my favorite books. I was excited at the prospect of making daily “pilgrimages” to our neighborhood creek, just like Annie.
But I quickly realized that my interactions with this creek would be different. A bit of research revealed it was the heart of the most polluted watershed in West Michigan, and even touching the water was a biohazard. I learned the sad history behind my neighborhood and city. I learned that the pollution of waterways isn’t rare or unique to us but that it’s a widespread epidemic. And I eventually heard about a local group called Plaster Creek Stewards, based out of Calvin University, that was attempting to sow hope amid the despair.
Dillard’s Tinker Creek is portrayed in her book as a place where she could go and be alone with nature. But in my time beside Plaster Creek, I’ve learned that loving creation—with all its wounds—is not something we can do alone. My hope is that reading about Plaster Creek will spark a faith-filled curiosity about other local creeks and watersheds.
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In Other News
- The Global Methodists have finalized the Book of Doctrines and Discipline and made it available online. CT reported on the founding of the new denomination earlier this year.
- A Black Baptist church in Louisiana is reopening after an arson attack.
- In the Netherlands, the Christians for Israel office was vandalized.
- Archaeologists in Istanbul have discovered mosaics and stone inlays in the rooms beneath an ancient church that was destroyed by Crusaders in the 1200s.
Want to be part of the next generation of global missions? Discover how indigenous missionaries with Reaching Souls International are transforming communities through the Gospel—inspiring over 1 million decisions for…
Today in Christian History
December 5, 220 (traditional date): Clement of Alexandria, the first early church theologian to show an extensive knowledge of pagan and Christian writings (in his refutations of pagan criticisms), dies.
in case you missed it
The Supreme Court convenes Wednesday to hear oral arguments in United States v. Skrmetti, the first meaningful transgender-issue case to reach the highest court in our land. In question is the…
Ever since I was a child, I have wanted to write a book. When I told my brother last year that I was finally publishing one, he said, “You’ve wanted…
In the days since the 2024 election, Latino evangelicals across the United States have been left grappling with uncertainty about what immigration policy will look like under the incoming administration.…
President Joe Biden announced on Sunday his decision to provide his troubled son, Hunter Biden, with a full and unconditional pardon—after he and his administration spent years telling Americans this would…
in the magazine
As this issue hits your mailboxes after the US election and as you prepare for the holidays, it can be easy to feel lost in darkness. In this issue, you’ll read of the piercing light of Christ that illuminates the darkness of drug addiction at home and abroad, as Angela Fulton in Vietnam and Maria Baer in Portland report about Christian rehab centers. Also, Carrie McKean explores the complicated path of estrangement and Brad East explains the doctrine of providence. Elissa Yukiko Weichbrodt shows us how art surprises, delights, and retools our imagination for the Incarnation, while Jeremy Treat reminds us of an ancient African bishop’s teachings about Immanuel. Finally, may you be surprised by the nearness of the “Winter Child,” whom poet Malcolm Guite guides us enticingly toward. Happy Advent and Merry Christmas.
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