Newly released research shows that most Americans and majorities of mainline Protestants and Catholics think abortion should be legal in all or most cases, as the country remains deeply divided on
A city in Georgia has voted to revoke a local ordinance that was recently used to punish a man who carried a sign that read God bless the homeless vets outside city hall as part of a legal settlement ...
Pastor Kenneth Sharpton Glasgow, the troubled younger half-brother of civil rights activist Al Sharpton and founder of felon voting rights advocacy organization, The Ordinary People Society in ...
A record number of 40-year-olds in America have never been married, and they are more likely to be men, African Americans and those who possess a level of education equivalent to a high school ...
A Baptist church in Texas is apologizing for comments about slavery made by a relative of the scandal-plagued Duggar family during a guest sermon in which he quoted a Bible verse about repentance
An abortion advocacy group reports that there were at least 25,000 fewer abortions conducted in the United States in the months following the U S Supreme Court s overturning of Roe v Wade, an updated ...
This issue of A Public Witness visits universities that are actually honoring those enslaved by their founders with major memorials in prominent locations on their campuses in order to provide a guide for Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Al Mohler, and others to think more seriously about what it means to give honor.
Bible-believing Christians and Christian nationalists are the most likely demographic to embrace conspiracy theories, including ones related to 9/11 and Discover the surprising correlation between Bible-believing Christians, Christian nationalists, and conspiracy theories. A new study reveals the impact of religious beliefs on embracing conspiracy thinking, raising thought-provoking questions about faith and critical thinking.
Daniel Kellan Mayfield, the former youth pastor at First Baptist Gowensville in Landrum, South Carolina, who was arrested last month for allegedly recording girls, many of whom were underage, inside ...
The quote, which was falsely attributed to Patrick Henry, originated in a 1956 edition of a magazine known for espousing antisemitic and white nationalist beliefs.