Jesus was political and so are we ~ how christians vote matters

An Ecumenical Ministry in the Parish of St Patrick's Catholic Church In San Diego USA

米国サンディエゴの聖パトリックカトリック教会教区におけるエキュメニカル宣教

Our Mission: to see the baptized who live in SoNoGo worship in SoNoGo

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Project Hail Mary can teach us about sacrificial friendship

Global Anglicans upset with the communion’s liberal shift stopped short of choosing a rival to the Archbishop of Canterbury during a gathering in Abuja, Nigeria.

What an astronaut and an alien in the new movie Project Hail Mary can teach us about sacrificial friendship

Viewing the church as the literal body of Christ should change how we view racial division, accessibility, and commitment in our churches.

A new book explores how to fix a broken Congress.

Three letters written by C. S. Lewis discuss the "solemn fun" of nearing the end of life.

Behind the Story

From senior editorial project manager Mia Staub: A few coworkers and I decided to read a book together over the holidays. We chose Andy Weir’s Project Hail Mary, partly because of the upcoming film adaptation. 

I finished the book about an hour before walking into the screening. I was fresh off the emotional, tense read, eager to see how the filmmakers would bring the story to life. One of the hardest parts of watching a film adapted from a beloved book is constantly comparing the characters, the design, and the plot to its source material and the way you pictured it in your own head. 

I had so many questions going in: How would they portray onscreen the internal dialogue which makes up a large portion of the book? How engaging could the film make the complex astrophysics and biology from the book? Would the world building (galaxy building?) be as described in the book, or would the visual-effects artists take creative liberties? Would the ending be the same?

The two-and-a-half-hour run time flew by, and I was thoroughly entertained. The cinematography and visual effects are beautiful. But I will admit it was hard for me to fully review the movie knowing what was going to happen. I am looking forward to hearing the takes of my friends who have not read the book and know nothing!


Let’s Make Jesus Known

For 70 years, Christianity Today has lifted high the name of Jesus—and together, we’ve come so far. Through the One Kingdom Campaign, our partners have fueled in-depth journalism and global reporting that help believers see Christ at work around the world. Read the 2026 Impact Report.

But the work isn’t finished. In a moment of challenge and opportunity, the Church needs faithful, Christ-centered witness more than ever. Your generosity helps believers see Christ clearly and follow him faithfully across generations and nations. Make a gift to lift Christ high and strengthen the Church today. Give Now.

Ford CEO gifts Pope Leo XIV custom Chicago-inspired car

Pope Leo tackles topic of domestic abuse on International Women’s Day

Responding to a woman writing to the Vatican magazine Piazza San Pietro, Pope Leo decried violence against women and emphasized that educating young people in respect is the key to preventing it.


NBC poll: Pope Leo XIV held in highest esteem among public personalities

A March NBC poll found that American voters hold Pope Leo XIV in highest esteem among other public personalities.


Pope Leo expresses sorrow over death of Maronite priest in Israeli bombing

Father Pierre El Raii, a Maronite parish priest, was a revered leader among Christians in the area.

Ford CEO gifts Pope Leo XIV custom Chicago-inspired car

The car’s license plates read “DA POPE” and “LEO XIV.”
Archbishop Coakley extends ‘warmest welcome’ to new papal nuncio

The president of the U.S. bishops’ conference also said he offers prayerful support to Archbishop Gabriele Giordano Caccia.

‘A lie from the pit of hell’

‘A lie from the pit of hell’: Episcopal leaders push back on rumors of fatal decline
Religion News Service: More than 850 Episcopal Church leaders gathered in Charlotte to talk about the future of the church and what the denomination still has to offer.

 

The massacre that never ends*
The Christian Century: The brief Biblical account of Herod’s slaughter of innocents raises the question of what faith demands when politics fails to stop the killing.

 

In order to maintain aging monasteries, Spanish nuns are becoming entrepreneurs
Religion Unplugged: Faced with increasing costs, several monasteries in Spain are reinventing themselves to generate income to help maintain their historic buildings and support the resident nuns.

 

How God got so great*
The New Yorker: What monotheism means is surprisingly hard to pin down, but there’s a reason it swept the world.

 

How to use the classroom as a place to confront antisemitism without deepening divisions
Religion News Service: Confronting antisemitism requires more than denunciation.

Cardinal Louis Raphael Sako and Bishop Emanuel Shaleta Resign

Pope Leo XIV has accepted the resignations of both the patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church and a bishop arrested last week on charges of financial crimes.

Monday, March 9, 2026

Religious influencers repackage Christianity for an always-online generation

Deportations surge, aid collapses and faith groups in Latin America struggle to respond
Religion News Service: “There simply isn’t enough capacity even for the local community. It’s much harder with a population that has been abandoned in places that are extremely difficult,” said Karen Perez, the country director for Jesuit Refugee Service in Mexico.

 

Religious influencers repackage Christianity for an always-online generation*
The Washington Post: At a time when Americans are fleeing institutional religion, people seem to want deeper, specific reasons why they could practice one way or another — if at all.

 

How the sanctuary movement offers lessons for fighting ICE: ‘An impact that spans decades’
The Guardian: With its roots in religious doctrine, the modern move to house, clothe and protect immigrants started in the 1980s.

 

My teenager is exploring her spirituality. I support her leap of faith, even as a non-religious parent
The Guardian: My daughter is dipping her toes into sacred waters, seeing what it feels like to surrender and finding a sense of meaning to life that is bigger than herself, Jackie Bailey writes.

 

The Deepak Chopra-Jeffrey Epstein friendship tells of a spirituality industry in crisis
Religion News Service: Chopra’s friendship with Epstein is dismaying, in part for what it says about the spiritual and wellness culture he exemplifies.

‘Mother of Migrants’ brings hope to the vulnerable

Pope Leo says parishes should reflect a Church that ‘cares for her children’

The pontiff encouraged a Rome parish facing poverty and social challenges to show its closeness to those wounded and searching for hope.
Pope Leo XIV warns of wider Middle East conflict

At his Sunday Angelus, the pope voiced alarm over violence and fear spreading from Iran across the region.

Ireland group calls for inquiry into deaths of 108 babies born alive after abortion

Here is a roundup of recent pro-life and abortion-related news.

Bangladesh’s ‘Mother of Migrants’ brings hope to the vulnerable

Sister Zita Rema of the Salesian Sisters of Mary Immaculate has spent decades of tireless service to the poor, the displaced, and the forgotten.

Large family with 13-year-old in seminary and a baby named Leo touches pope’s heart

When their 13-year-old son entered the minor seminary, his parents had no idea that one day the whole family would meet Pope Leo XIV, an encounter that was a special blessing for them all.

Legalized assisted suicide is gaining momentum

Legalized assisted suicide is gaining momentum. Are evangelicals on the sidelines?

A teenage school-shooting survivor found help recovering from trauma with faith—and EMDR, an increasingly popular therapy.  

In Texas, international student ministries are helping students struggling with post-graduation job uncertainties due to recent H-1B visa changes

A letter from Christianity Today president Nicole Martin on helping the church think clearly.

Behind the Story

From senior staff writer Emily Belz: Today’s story about EMDR was brewing for a while in my mind. In covering the Annunciation Catholic School shooting late last year, I kept hearing families bring up going to eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy to deal with the trauma. For other stories over the years, I’ve heard Christian counselors bring it up. Then I started noticing friends talking about it. That puts an automatic flag in my mind for a potential story, especially since it was not a topic CT had covered before. 

Also making it story-worthy is some amount of tension over it: A biblical counseling organization (generally speaking, a more conservative subset of Christian counselors) put out a statement critical of EMDR in 2021, calling it "Christ-less." Christian counselors in general support it.

My goal wasn’t to focus on EMDR when I first spoke to Ellie Wyse, who lived through a school shooting in 2019, but she brought up how much it had helped her. News in general tends to be bad, but I wanted to highlight something good that came out of a horrible news event.


Today in Christian History

March 9, 1831: Evangelist Charles Finney concludes a six-month series of meetings in Rochester, New York. The meetings, which have been called "the world’s greatest single revival campaign," led to the closing of the town’s theater and taverns, a two-thirds drop in crime, and a reported 100,000 conversions (see issue 20: Charles Finney).

 

Sunday, March 8, 2026

El Paso Diocese declares bankruptcy

El Paso Diocese declares bankruptcy amid abuse filings, 'very limited' financial resources

Bishop Mark Seitz said nearly 20 lawsuits against the diocese led him to file for Chapter 11 reorganization.
Maryland high school seniors arrive home safely after being stuck in Middle East during hostilities

A group of high school seniors and their teacher chaperones spoke with EWTN News about being stuck in the Middle East during the beginning of hostilities there last week.

Luxembourg includes ‘freedom to abort’ in its constitution, following France's lead

Although abortion has been legal in the country since 1978, by a large majority vote in the legislature the small European nation has inserted the "freedom to abort" in the constitution.


University of Dallas panel explores American exceptionalism through a Catholic lens

The speakers encouraged the college students to get married, have children, stay off the internet (unless it enables them to telework and stay near their extended families), and be political.
Sister of slain bishop reflects on traveling exhibit honoring the 19 Algerian martyrs

An exhibit honoring the 19 Algerian martyrs is making stops at major cities around the globe. The postulator for the martyrs’ cause and the sister of one of them tells EWTN News what they stood for.

St. Luke's Episcopal Church 03.01.2026

  

We call this SoNoGo - South Park-North Park-Golden Hill & Our Mission: to see the baptized who live in SoNoGo worship in SoNoGo

St. Luke's Episcopal Church

The Episcopal Church

St. Luke's North Park is a Christian community praising God and seeking justice and healing in this dynamic neighborhood of San Diego since 1923.  We strive to create spaces for God’s grace to form life-changing relationships with Christ and each other across lines of prejudice and privilege. In the past three decades, God has led us to a new blessing: to serve as one of the primary congregations and cultural centers for South Sudanese Americans in the city, and more recently, for former Congolese refugees. Worshiping with our diverse community is a joyous experience that includes singing in Arabic and Swahili, and individuals from around the globe and the U.S., united by our found “home” at St. Luke’s and in Christ.  Our infant, toddler, children, and youth ministries are full and thriving, thanks be to God! We are proud partners with RefugeeNet, a non-profit dedicated to the well-being of refugee families. We’re also grateful to host sixteen twelve-step support meetings on campus each week. St. Luke's North Park is a Christian community seeking justice and healing in San Diego's North Park neighborhood. We dream to be a place where all people can enter into uncomfortable and brave spaces with others different than themselves -- different races, ethnicities, classes, creeds, sexual orientations, and gender identities -- and find their perspectives and hearts transformed. We follow a God who loves each of us especially for who we are and desires that every single human among us has all she or he needs to thrive in this world. Until that day comes, we will work alongside God's powerful Spirit to do justice in this hurting world and help all people find a loving and dignified home.

San Diego Japanese Christian Church 03.08.2026

 

 We call this SoNoGo - South Park-North Park-Golden Hill & Our Mission: to see the baptized who live in SoNoGo worship in SoNoGo

San Diego Japanese Christian Church

OMS Holiness Church of North America

San Diego Japanese Christian Church (SDJCC) is here to share the good news that a dynamic relationship with Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord is the key to abundant living in today’s world. Our church was founded as an outreach to Japanese speaking farmers in San Diego County over 80 years ago. SDJCC now has English and Japanese speaking ministries. It’s easy to miss, tucked away at the elbow of 19th and E streets just above Interstate 5: the Japanese American Christian Church in Golden Hill. You’d most likely drive past this humble place of worship on the way up Broadway without noticing it, but if you happened to be on a stroll down E Street looking at the nice old houses, you’d stumble upon it after the bigger homes give way to a series of California bungalows. It’s there before E turns right into 19th. Across the street from the church, a chain-link fence lines the sidewalk above the 5 where the homeless set up camp on a regular basis before they are swept out and relocated only to return again when the police shift their attention elsewhere. Historically, the church itself is a product of a relocation of a different sort. As my City College colleague, historian Susan Hasegawa informed me, it was originally founded as the Japanese Holiness Church by Christian Nikkei (immigrants and their descendents) in 1930 and located on Newton Avenue. Sponsored by the Oriental Mission Society, the church focused its efforts on outreach to Issei (first generation immigrant) farmers.