Christianity Today International formally announced veteran journalist and author Marvin Olasky has been appointed as editor-in-chief of its flagship magazine, succeeding Russell Moore, who will transition to the role of editor-at-large and columnist. The appointment was made official this week by Christianity Today Interim President Thomas Addington, who said he was “thrilled” to see Olasky join Moore and the rest of the editorial team in leading the publication into its 70th anniversary...| The Roys Report
The Christian sex ethic says sexual relations should occur only in marriage, but that’s not the way most Americans and many Christians act. Pornography is almost rampant, and not just outside the church. Christine Emba, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and the author of Rethinking Sex, told Russell Moore on his podcast Read more... The post What Porn Does to Us appeared first on Christianity Today.| Christianity Today
(Opinion) The conflict entrepreneurs are at it again. This time the skirmish is between dissident right activist Megan Basham and one of her favorite targets: Christianity Today magazine. If, for the past few days, you have been going to work, raising a family, attending church, or doing other things that sane people do, and you’ve therefore missed this tempest in a teapot, here are some basic facts: Canon Press, the publishing arm of Pastor Douglas Wilson’s ministry, made an unsolicited...| The Roys Report
Christianity Today (CT) magazine has rejected a $10 million buy-out offer from Canon Press, a publishing company founded by prominent Christian nationalist pastor Doug Wilson. News of the offer was posted online Sept. 29 by Daily Wire reporter Megan Basham, who claimed that many Christians lament that CT “has been captured by worldly ideology.” Basham suggested Canon Press would restore the magazine to the “intended purpose” of its founder, the Rev. Billy Graham.| The Roys Report
We want meaning and resolution—and the kind of monster we can defeat.| Christianity Today
From Russell Moore: The latest cultural shift to a highly visual, quick attention platform is discipling us in ways we need to question.| Christianity Today