Overtly Christian language used by federal agencies and cabinet members in official holiday greetings has drawn criticism from civil liberties groups and renewed scrutiny of church-state boundaries.
Government officials have traditionally steered clear of such overtly religious language, as the Constitution prohibits the establishment of an official state religion.
When our children were younger, they were always bringing someone else home for dinner. Like the football team. All of ‘em. The good news is my wife (spoiler alert: she’s a saint) always had more food ...
Now I know that there are many more things in heaven and earth than I’ve dreamt of. I never expected to find a Baptist-inspired project that ...
I’ve struggled to find words that neatly capture this year in faith and religion reporting. Tragedy has loomed large this year, from Charlie Kirk’s assassination to the Michigan church shooting and ...
Joy is a gift beyond comprehension, like the birth that many millions of us celebrate this week. But as the angel told the ...
Teenage girls in Jewish day schools are consistently less confident than boys in political and historical discussions. That's ...
It wasn’t always this way. The alliance between evangelicals and the Republican Party is a defining force in American ...
Gibson argues that the government's calculation "is that there are enough American Catholics, especially white American Catholics, who support the Republican Party and Donald Trump, that it's ...
In a speech this week, U.S. Vice President JD Vance, America’s second Catholic vice president, laid out a distinctly ...
Turning Point USA paid OU over $20,000 to rent the Lloyd Noble Center for its October event as part of “The Turning Point ...
But they also criticize the media’s simplistic depictions, especially in stories about Christian nationalism and a movement ...