

This edition is sponsored by The Pour Over
Today’s Briefing
The Supreme Court considered its first major case on transgender medical procedures for minors, and evangelicals argued states have a responsibility to protect children’s bodies.
In The Rabbit Room’s Christmas Carol, Pete Peterson approaches the Dickens classic as “a deeply Christian story.”
Brazilian Christian music has exploded in popularity, but the country has been slow to produce original tunes.
A special series: how Christians in Asia grapple with the supernatural in shamanism.
Ghana’s Christian majority is torn about the possible election of the nation’s first Muslim president.
This week on The Bulletin, arguments about Joe Biden pardoning his son, martial law in South Korea, and a Tennessee transgender law.
Behind the Story
Let’s talk about books! We announced CT’s annual Book of the Year this week and gave awards to 30 excellent new titles. This year, we’re also inviting you behind the scenes for a conversation about these books with editor in chief Russell Moore and members of the CT staff.
You’ll get to hear from Book of the Year winner Gavin Ortlund, author of What It Means to Be Protestant, and Brad East, whose book Letters to a Future Saint won an Award of Merit. They will talk about the big ideas that animate their writing and answer questions from CT subscribers.
Join us on YouTube on Thursday, December 12, at 8 pm Eastern Time for a live Christianity Today Book Awards event.
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In Other News
- Tech billionaire Elon Musk now identifies as a cultural Christian (but also says some of Jesus’ ethical teachings need qualification).
- The Church of England’s national safeguarding team is taking ten weeks to examine whether priests should be disciplined for failing to report that evangelical John Smyth was violenting beating students.
- A decades-long dispute over a tower that was supposed to be part of the Christian theme park that went bankrupt with televangelist Jim Bakker’s scandal in 1987 has been settled in court.
- Half of Americans attend church around Christmas.
Your support builds futures. Partner with Food For The Poor today and help create sustainable solutions for families in need. We’ve all heard the saying, “Give a man a fish,…
Today in Christian History
December 6, 345 (traditional date): Nicholas, bishop of Myra, one of the most popular saints in the Greek and Latin churches—and Santa Claus’s namesake—dies.
in case you missed it
The streaming platforms are going biblical. Amazon has House of David, from one of the codirectors of Jesus Revolution, coming next year. Netflix released the multifaith docuseries Testament: The Story…
This piece was adapted from Russell Moore’s newsletter. Subscribe here. Every year at this time, I kick off the end of the year with my list of favorite books from the last…
In 2014, the World Evangelical Alliance (WEA) canceled its General Assembly due to “internal divisions among the evangelical community” in South Korea. This year, as the ministry geared up to…
I live by a creek, Plaster Creek, in a former oak grove in West Michigan. Every so often, I walk down a busy street in my part of Grand Rapids,…
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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