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Secularism
- How the Gaucho Stole Easter in UruguayMore than 100 years ago, Latin America’s most secular country abolished Christian holidays. Local church leaders have struggled to reclaim them since.Franco Iacomini|español
- The Fault in Our NormsHow do you decide what should be normal in a secularized, fragmented society?Bonnie Kristian|
- My Students Are Reading John Mark Comer, and Now I Know WhyThe popular pastor’s latest works inhabit a fruitful tension between inheriting church tradition and rebuilding it for today’s world.Brad East|
- One Year, Seven Transformations, and the Emergence of a ‘WEIRDER’ WorldAmerican independence was one of many revolutions sparked in 1776. How can we live faithfully in the new order they created?Paul Gutacker|
- Dutch Election: Right-Wing Surge Sinks Once-Dominant Christian PartiesTrump-like figure Geert Wilders campaigns on traditional identity and anti-Muslim rhetoric, dividing believers as society secularizes further.Cornelis Hulsman |
- As Evangelicalism Grows in Catholic Latin America, So Does SecularismA Colombian scholar assesses the state of the movement roughly 150 years after Protestant missionaries first arrived.Interview by Geethanjali Tupps|españolPortuguês
- I Studied Christianity with the Hope of Debunking ItA decade later, I became a Christian.Julie Hannah|
- I Do Belong; Help My UnbelongingMaking disciples in a secular age requires retrieving an old catechetical pattern: belonging, believing, behaving.Curtis Freeman|
- Christianity Has Anchored Free Societies. What Happens as They Deconvert?Philosopher John Gray predicts we’re headed for an age of all-consuming moral warfare.Bonnie Kristian|
- ‘All the Light We Cannot See’ Reminds Me to Look for GodThe novel and Netflix show explore scriptural themes of light and dark—and the cosmic reign of Christ.Benjamin Vrbicek|
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