Ex-Assistant Principal on Trial in Case of 6-Year-Old Shooter
Signs outside Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Va., on Jan. 25, 2023. Associated Press / Photo by Denise Lavoie, file Loading the Audio Player...
Signs outside Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Va., on Jan. 25, 2023. Associated Press / Photo by Denise Lavoie, file Loading the Audio Player...
A new procedure that reverses abortions is gaining momentum even as critics charge that it may be useless.
"Being a Christian in the face of racial hatred," writes Christine Hoover, "begins with Christ's church falling to its knees in lament and confession and asking for his Spirit to move us toward Him and toward one another."
Microchip implants for everyone -- it isn't just science fiction, it could soon be reality.
Terry Sharp of the International Mission Board sets forth practical ways Christ-followers and their churches can help refugees who arrive in the U.S. with little more than they can carry.
Scientists have successfully edited the DNA of human embryos for the first time ever. But a Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary bioethicist says the research in question was unethical for its destruction of embryos and raises moral questions about genetic engineering.
The first U.S. company has carried through on its promise to chip its employees. While the program was voluntary, some experts are concerned about possible coercion in the future.
First Indian Baptist Church, though based in the metro Phoenix area, seeks to nurture disciples among more than 20 tribal groups in Arizona.
Gabriel C. Stovall, pastor of a church in Atlanta's Old Fourth Ward, recounts dialogue and changes of heart he has experienced that stir him to remain in the Southern Baptist Convention.
A black minister's op-ed "renouncing [his] ordination in the Southern Baptist Convention" has drawn responses from a range of African Americans who say they will continue to cooperate with the convention as it pursues racial reconciliation.
The 50th anniversary of a historic statement that changed Catholic higher education in America represents both a cautionary tale and a chance to reflect on Catholic renewal, said Bishop James D. Conley of Lincoln, Nebraska.