Earlier this year, videos of Fijian rugby players singing hymns from the Olympic Village in Paris began to circulate on social media. As their voices traveled through the commune, curious athletes took out their phones and shared the music and its messages with the rest of the world.
These enchanting expressions of faith prompted a CT story (you’ll find a link below) and also a reminder of the myriad ways the global body of Christ seeks to make him known. For some, it’s through opening a school for special-needs members in their community or helping spread a political vision and infrastructure to Christians in another country. For others, it’s teaching breathing exercises to traumatized refugees or trying to seek church unity with fellow believing citizens.
For all of us, however, these stories are opportunities to reflect on what it means to live out our faith. What does that look like in the Pacific?
“When I would walk through the village in the mornings or evenings, I would hear singing coming from the homes,” said Jerusha Matsen Neal, who spent three years on the Fijian island of Viti Levu. “You’d hear singing in four-part harmony, with children.”
Jayson Casper
With tens of thousands displaced from the northern border with Lebanon, believers balance their Palestinian and Israeli identities in pursuit of peace with all.
Jayson Casper
Director describes how Alliance school’s “Christian spirit” addresses social challenges to achieve academic inclusion of students with disabilities.
Interview by Isabel Ong
In a rapidly urbanizing China, some houses of worship are taking inspiration from the Bible while rethinking local architectural tradition.
Elia Maggang
Helping marine biodiversity flourish is a means of participating in God’s work, says an Indonesian theologian.
Franco Iacomini
Immigrants from South America are a growing force in churches on the other side of the Atlantic. But their electoral initiative is viewed with reservations.
David Román
A denomination known for its traditional way of life and pacifist convictions has spread out across the region.
Isabel Ong
Christian leaders in Singapore wrestle with a prophetic charge and diminishing cross-cultural evangelism.
Kelsey Kramer McGinnis
Viral videos show athletes singing in four-part harmony, a practice with deep Christian and indigenous roots in the Pacific island nation.
Surinder Kaur
While Hindus publicly confront mob violence against their community, Christians are apprehensive about speaking out.
Andy Olsen
As Haiti is uprooted by violence, church leaders treat gunshot wounds, give up homes for strangers, and rescue dignitaries.
Jayson Casper
Despite safety risks and strained resources, churches work hard to help Muslims unaccustomed to experiencing Christian love.
Franco Iacomini
Christian organizations are struggling to reach prisoners in a country where 1 in 56 people is in jail.
Andy Olsen
President William Ruto commissioned church leaders to meet with Haitian law enforcement, military representatives, and a gang leader to discuss Kenya’s security mission.
Sean Long
Their culture tells them the dragon is transcendent. Their Bibles tell them it’s evil. How should Chinese Christians approach this year’s zodiac animal?
Compiled by Surinder Kaur
From embracing Western styles to preserving cultural heritage, how female leaders in six states navigate competing perspectives on appropriate attire.
Franco Iacomini
The raised index finger of levitating surfer Gabriel Medina is the latest sign that sports success has made Brazilian evangelicals less marginalized and more confident.
Jayson Casper
Ngalakh combines baobab fruit and peanuts to end Easter in West African nation, reciprocated by the sharing of meat breaking Ramadan’s fast.
Moses Wasamu
Kirk Franklin and Maverick City Music are popular with Kenyan Christians, but some are increasingly wary of their influence.
Kelsey Kramer McGinnis
In a country known for loving Western praise music—Hillsong’s second-biggest market—a grassroots movement is singing new tunes.
Franco Iacomini
In the country’s most secular state, tiny congregations have made a big impact by their disaster response.
Thank you for reading stories by Christianity Today’s global team in 2024. We regularly translate our work into more than half a dozen languages. Learn more here.
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