On the heels of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi\'s Sept. 22 announcement pardoning numerous journalists detained in the country, the international community is concerned to hear no news of Bishoy Boulos, a convert to Christianity who has been detained since his illegal arrest in Dec. 2013.
A senior at a Catholic high school was sent home for the week after his online petition to bring a same-sex date to homecoming attracted negative publicity for the school.
After a car bomb went off in his city last month, a pastor is faced again with the choice to flee the encroaching reach of ISIS in Syria, but he doesn\'t want to leave 32 newly baptized believers.
After three years in prison, Gao Zhisheng is still not safe—he remains under house arrest and predicts that the government will kidnap and torture him again soon.
Presidential hopeful Ben Carson recently affirmed the five-member group Veritas as it announced it will travel with Sandi Patty\'s \"Forever Grateful: the Farewell Tour.\"
A Texas police chief has written a one-sentence reply to the Freedom from Religion Foundation\'s demand that he remove decals bearing the words \"In God We Trust\" from patrol vehicles.
Doctors in Canada have been told they will be compelled, by law, to practice active euthanasia -- even when end-of-life care may be ill-defined -- and are being provided kits that can cause a coma and stop a human from breathing in order to comply with the law.
In this first book-length critical study of the writings of Joy Davidman, C.S. Lewis scholar and Montreat College professor Don W. King offers readers an evaluation of Davidman in terms of herself, rather than as many know her—the wife of C.S. Lewis. The review includes an analysis of 45 love poems ...
Intrusive God, Disruptive Gospel: Encountering the Divine in the Book of Acts by Matthew L. Skinner, a New Testament professor at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minn., addresses the challenges and even the commotion caused by the Gospel message as delivered in the book of Acts.
In a raid on two Boko Haram camps on Tuesday, the Nigerian army liberated 241 women and children and arrested dozens of the terrorist group leaders, as well as a high-ranking commander named Bulama Modu.