Peter denied Jesus beside a fire and wept bitterly. On the shore of Galilee, the risen Lord built another fire and gave him back his calling. This is what grace does after real failure.
Päivi Räsänen spent nearly seven years fighting a hate speech case over a church booklet she wrote in 2004. Now she is appealing to Europe's top human rights court.
Ruth went out to glean and just happened to land in the field of Boaz. Scripture calls it hap. Faith calls it the hand of God working through one tired woman's ordinary obedience.
Mid Vermont Christian School refused to play a girls basketball game against a team with a male athlete. The state expelled it from sports. A federal court called that hostility toward religion, and now the bill has come due.
Joe and Serena Wailes say a Colorado school district put their daughter in bed with a boy on an overnight trip and kept them in the dark. Now the 10th Circuit will decide whether parents get a say at all.
The story of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego is not just an ancient miracle. It is a living promise that God walks with His children through every furnace they will ever face.
Governor Greg Abbott and the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board told a Dallas-area institution calling itself Texas American Muslim University to stop offering degrees immediately. It never had legal authorization to operate.
When Hagar was abandoned and invisible to the world, God met her by name. The story of El Roi teaches us that no wilderness is too barren for the eyes of the Lord to find us there.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar have instructed legal counsel to sue The New York Times after a Nicholas Kristof article Israel called one of the most hideous and distorted lies ever published against the State of Israel.
The House Judiciary Subcommittee held Part II of its Sharia-Free America hearing, featuring testimony from Amy Mek on political Islam, the Muslim Brotherhood, and the constitutional requirement of one rule of law.