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In Case You Missed It: Blogs We Updated This Week

New info on the Dearborn Arab festival, the Hagia Sophia, and the American missionary sentenced in North Korea.

Christianity Today May 3, 2013

It was a relatively slow news week on the religion beat, so in addition to reporting the fresh news we had plenty of time to follow up on stories we previously reported.

CT tweets the updates; but in case you’re not one of our 112,000 Twitter followers (and really, why aren’t you?), here’s what you missed this week:

Update on Save Saeed: Letter Says Iran Release Depends on Abedini Renouncing Faith

Update: After 215 days in prison, the Iranian-born U.S. pastor Saeed Abedini was placed in solitary confinement.

How Not To Evangelize Muslims: Stick A Pig’s Head On A Pole

Update: After an evangelism fail at the nation’s largest Arab American festival, organizers move to an access-controlled site.

Pastors: Alabama Immigration Law Will Crimp Outreach

Update: Bishops are heralding the Supreme Court’s decision not to review a lower court’s ruling on key section’s of Alabama’s immigration law.

Christian Crackdown Moves Sudan Closer To ‘100 Percent’ Muslim

Update: As deportations increase, Christians lose hope that Sudan will guarantee their religious freedom.

North Korea Puts American Missionary on Trial

Update: Missionary and tour leader Kenneth Bae received a 15-year sentence.

Turkey Converts Church of Hagia Sophia from Museum to Mosque

Update: The Turkish parliament now is considering an application to re-convert the smaller church’s Istanbul namesake as well.

New ‘Election Weapon’ of Malaysian Islamists: Christian Candidates

Update: Churches are encouraging attendees to make it to the polls–even though election day is a Sunday.

Our Latest

Justices Debate Christian Therapist’s Challenge to ‘Conversion Therapy’ Ban

Colorado evangelical Kaley Chiles calls the law a violation of her free speech.

Wire Story

Tony Evans Will No Longer Pastor Dallas Megachurch After Restoration

Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship announced that its pastor of 48 years won’t return to leadership. The church expects son Jonathan Evans to succeed him.

You Don’t Have to Be Radical

Most Christians aren’t monks, missionaries, or martyrs. We’re unimpressive and unsatisfactory—yet saved by God’s scandalous grace.

From a Village of Bandits to a Village of the Gospel

Stuartpuram in India’s Andhra Pradesh was once known for its armed robbers. Then the gospel changed them.

Four Truths About God for Children Who Can’t Sleep

And for the grownups—that’s all of us—who never outgrow their need for his presence around the clock.

Preservation Grants Help Black Churches Hold On to Their History

Over a hundred congregations have received up to a half-million dollars to repair deteriorating buildings and restore their place in their communities.

News

Two Years After October 7, Christians See Fruit amid the Suffering

Churches in Israel and Egypt provide food, aid, and a listening ear to those scarred by war.

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