An HBCU Pastor in Alabama has gone viral for using the phrase "No Diddy" while preaching to students about abstinence.
(RNS) — A preacher who was an antidote to the spirit of fear and hate in our world and politics today. (RNS) — Bill Pannell, who died on Friday (Oct. 11) at 95 years old, touched the lives ...
A MAGA-inflected spectacle in Washington last week cast Kamala Harris as demonic, and Trump an avatar of biblical justice.
But getting people ready was the whole point of what was happening in Eau Claire, an event cast as an old-fashioned tent revival ... introduced a Polish Canadian preacher named Artur Pawlowski ...
But they’re missing a key demographic: Black folks, particularly in Chicago. In 1980, an estimated 88,000 Black Chicaogans worked in manufacturing, the highest number of Black residents working ...
It was already happening. Two days after the five candidates for governor announced their campaigns, on May 7, a Black preacher in Belzoni (50 miles south of the barn) greeted a white man who’d ...
For some time now, going back to the immediate aftermath of the pandemic, if not earlier, I’ve been hearing anecdotes about young men showing up at churches in unexpected numbers. Unexpected ...
The General Superintendent, Deeper Life Christian Life Ministry, Pastor William Kumuyi, has declared that preachers should stop the act of sucking out their members under the guise of sowing seed.
Photo illustration by Pablo Delcan and Danielle Del Plato Supported by By Ava Kofman Ava Kofman reviewed campaign finance reports and sermons and ... to have a spiritual revival, a Great Awakening ...
Black holes are points in space that are so dense they create deep gravity sinks. Beyond a certain region, not even light can escape the powerful tug of a black hole's gravity. And anything that v ...
Dan Povenmire and Jeff “Swampy” Marsh, creators and executive producers of “Phineas and Ferb.” (Disney/Michael Kirchoff) Disney Scheduled to join Povenmire and Marsh on the Comic-Con stage ...
and Rust Belt states have been among those hit hardest by manufacturing’s decline. But they’re missing a key demographic: Black folks, particularly in Chicago.