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After Keller’s Death, Redeemer Members Carry on His Small Church Vision
The New York pastor never wanted to build a megachurch.
After 140 Years, Alliance University Will Close
Formerly Nyack College, the school was in bad financial shape for several years. The loss of accreditation earlier this week forced a reckoning.
Alliance University’s Financial Woes Threaten Accreditation
The school formerly known as Nyack College has had money troubles for years. But school leadership is optimistic with rising enrollment.
The King’s College Shutters Classes, But Says It Is Not Closing
The New York City school is beginning layoffs of staff and faculty. It was in a financial crisis and lost its accreditation.
What Language Is This? Coptic Comes to Christmas
A new song highlights a growing interest outside the Egyptian church in reviving an ancient language of the Christian world.
Nursing Homes Still Haven’t Recovered from Pandemic Loneliness
Ministries double-down on efforts to build community in the wake of debilitating isolation.
Black Church to National Park Service: Give Us Stones of Remembrance
Black denominational leaders have formally asked for a national monument to the 1908 Springfield race riot, and a new national survey reveals more public lands Black clergy want memorialized.
Americans Forgot How Long Refugee Resettlement Takes
One year into the biggest US refugee wave since the Vietnam War, Christians are trying to buy Afghan immigrants more time.
New York City’s Largest Evangelical Church Plans Billion-Dollar Development
The Brooklyn congregation and its pastor A.R. Bernard hope the Jane Jacobs–inspired urban village will be a model for other cities.
Lawsuit Alleges Billionaire’s Christian Foundation Engaged in Self-Dealing
A former director of Bill Hwang’s investment firm, seeking millions in compensation, said Grace and Mercy was used as a financial “escape pod.”
The Pro-Life Movement Faces Blue State Backlash
As the national pro-life movement celebrated, activists opposing abortion in blue states watched years of setbacks happen in a few days. Still, they are finding different ways of winning.
Buffalo’s Black Christians Grieve the ‘Evil Among Us’
Angry but not shocked at racist violence, the victims' families at funerals this week have a prayer: Let these deaths not be in vain.
Billionaire Who Invested ‘According to the Word of God’ Charged with Multibillion-Dollar Fraud
Bill Hwang is at the center of what white-collar crime experts see as Wall Street’s biggest indictment since Bernie Madoff.
Ukrainian American Churches Deploy Praise as a Weapon
Evangelical Ukrainian churches in the home of the largest Ukrainian population in the United States wept and prayed Sunday. Having escaped persecution in the Soviet Union themselves, they already have testimonies of God’s faithfulness. 
The Big Quit Hits Homeless Ministries
They never stopped serving on the frontlines, but now short-staffed nonprofits are struggling to compete with flexible, virtual work that took off during the pandemic.
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