For many writers, putting hundreds or thousands of words on the page is not the most difficult part of writing. It is rather the ideation phase, the task of coming up with what we call the pitch, the angle, or the take and then determining whether the idea we’ve gotten is worth anything: if it holds together, if it tells the truth, if it might possibly edify the church.
On some blessed occasions, the idea may simply appear, like Gabriel to Mary, an unlooked-for mental gift. Perhaps more often, ideation can be a slog. It recalls less the first chapter of Luke than that of Ecclesiastes: “Is there anything of which one can say, ‘Look! This is something new’?” (v. 10)
However they came about, the 15 articles below (presented in order of publication), are ideas-driven pieces that stuck with CT editors this year. They present fresh insights alongside timeless truths and bring surprising perspectives to both familiar and novel debates. We hope you find them as intriguing, delightful, and thought-provoking as we did.
Justin Giboney
Migrants, border states, and sanctuary cities alike are suffering because of our leaders’ spiteful rivalries.
Greg Harris
As a pastor, I’ve wrestled with the theological implications of my child’s disability.
Jessica Hooten Wilson
Ethan Hawke has made a movie as scandalous as one of the writer’s short stories.
Mia Staub
Using terms like trauma, abuse, and toxic too flippantly has consequences for our relationships.
Russell Moore
Christians who wave away the former president’s sexual immorality may be the most anti-Trump constituency of all.
Sophia Lee
This isn’t a female problem, but a human one.
S. Joshua Swamidass
Fifty years ago, the Lausanne Covenant’s solution to rampant division in evangelical ranks wasn’t uniformity.
Jared Stacy
Christians today can learn from WWII-era theologian K.H. Miskotte about resisting without resorting to political violence.
Bonnie Kristian
We don’t fix things anymore—relationships, democracies, or socks. That’s a problem.
Marvin Olasky
The pro-life movement has forgotten its roots. We need to get back to basics.
Kate Lucky
Christians like to talk up pop culture’s resonance with our faith. But what matters more is our own conformity to Christ.
Christina Gonzalez Ho
Why Kendrick Lamar’s question matters.
Myles Werntz
Candidates say they’ll revive a gloried past or birth a better future. But Christians especially should know that isn’t how time works.
Brad East
Too many of our worship services are digitally indistinguishable from secular spaces. Church can and should be different.
Carrie McKean
My community is the kind you see in articles hyping the threat of political violence. Reality is more mundane—and hopeful.
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