Jump directly to the Content

Search Results

Algeria Forces Christians Out of the Country’s Largest Churches
The North African faithful are holding sit-ins and prayer rallies to protest a government campaign that’s shut down a third of Protestant congregations.
The Most Diverse Movement in History
Christianity has been a multicultural, multiracial, multiethnic movement since its inception.
español
Ethiopia’s Evangelical Prime Minister Wins Nobel Peace Prize
Recognized for stewarding a breakthrough peace agreement with Eritrea with a “revivalist” spirit, Abiy Ahmed also helped end a historic church schism among the Orthodox.
Quick To ListenEpisode 176|53min
What 1619 Means for Christian History
How Catholics and Reformers reacted to the transatlantic slave trade.
Is the World’s Next Missions Movement in Ethiopia?
Ethiopian churches no longer want to be on the receiving end of the Great Commission.
Quick To ListenEpisode 165|47min
African and West Indian Christians Are Changing the UK Church
How God is working through the Windrush generation and beyond.
As Violence Escalates in Burkina Faso, Family of Slain Missionary Keeps Serving
Mike Riddering died in the attack that brought about a new era of terrorism in the West African country. Now his relatives are working to bring about revival.
God Loves Protected Species. And the Poachers Who Kill Them.
A theocentric conservation effort looks out for both man and nature.
Real Raisings from the Dead or Fake News?
Falsified resurrection stories should not cause us to discount credible miracle accounts.
简体中文繁體中文
Olaudah Equiano’s Argument Against Slavery Was His Life Experience
The Igbo writer wrote honestly about the brutality of his experience—and of the Christian faith that sustained him.
Another Sunday Church Attack in Burkina Faso Kills Six
(UPDATED) This time, terrorists interrupted a Catholic Mass in Dablo and executed the priest and five worshipers.
Terrorists in Burkina Faso Execute Six at Pentecostal Church
(UPDATED) Assemblies of God pastor preferred to “die for his faith rather than leave the village” he served for decades.
21 Unremarkable Martyrs and Their Remarkable Gifts to the World
A writer goes in search of the young Coptic Christian men executed on film by ISIS.
Cinema of God: Muslims Memorialize Augustine
North African nations bring church father to the silver screen.
‘I Thought God Loved Only the Hutu’
Tutsi widows and orphans felt betrayed by the church during the genocide. Survivor Denise Uwimana made it her mission to help them heal.
Why a Compassionate Baptist Pastor Led a Revolution
John Chilembwe’s revolt against colonial Britain failed, but he is still hailed as a hero in Malawi.
Remembering Lamin Sanneh, the World’s Leading Expert on Christianity and Islam in Africa
Scholars explain how a convert “summoned from the margins” of The Gambia became a legend at Yale Divinity School for his curiosity, joy, and deep insights.
Presbyterian Hostages Freed in Cameroon, But Conflict Carries On
With students safely returned, the church continues to pray for peace.
Quick To ListenEpisode 136|33min
This ‘Religious War’ Isn't Religious
A deeper look into the brutalities against Christians and Muslims in the Central African Republic.
Our November Issue: Listening Carefully
Nigeria’s besieged Christians ask if they are forgotten.

Top Story July 3, 2024

There Is No President Who Is Righteous, No, Not One
There Is No President Who Is Righteous, No, Not One
A government built on the assumption of its leader’s good character is a government badly built.

Free Newsletters

Enter The Vault

Vault

Browse our Full Library of online archives, including past issues of CT magazine.

Access the Archives
close