A King for Jesus: What the Religious Right Sees in Trump
Trump is not a Christian warrior; he is, however, a warrior for Christ.
Read MoreThis initiative aimed to take a fresh look at Christianity’s increasingly diverse expression in the United States. As the monochromatic paradigm of American Christianity fades, this initiative explored how people came together in new ways to express their beliefs, effect social justice, and find community in structures we may not yet recognize as “church.”
Trump is not a Christian warrior; he is, however, a warrior for Christ.
Read More74 percent of white evangelical Protestants believe that American culture has changed for the worse since 1950.
Read MoreToday we have the same fossilization of institutional religion, only this time it is us Protestants.
Read MoreAn interview with Rev. Cynthia Meyer, who was pushed out from her post in the United Methodist Church for coming out
Read MoreIt takes a certain kind of chutzpah for an entity that has long meddled in…
Read MoreIn this RD10Q, Julie Byrne follows the emerging movement of independent Catholics and the justice they inspire.
Read MoreIn a recent survey, 72 percent of white evangelicals said immorality wasn’t a detriment to being a good public servant.
Read MoreWomen hate Trump, while evangelicals are sticking behind him. But what about evangelical women?
Read MoreI am not arguing that Clinton is the obvious choice for Christian voters, just that Trump is obviously not.
Read MoreOne of the nation’s largest campus ministries has demanded that its LGBT-affirming staff quit by November 11th.
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