Jesus was political and so are we ~ how christians vote matters

An Ecumenical Ministry in the Parish of St Patrick's Catholic Church In San Diego USA

米国サンディエゴの聖パトリックカトリック教会教区におけるエキュメニカル宣教

Our Mission: to see the baptized who live in SoNoGo worship in SoNoGo

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

A court in India recently ruled that Christians could hold prayer meetings in their homes

Prolific Christian romance author Janette Oke, who turned 91 last month, tells CT about creating relatable characters who rely on their faith amid hardships in her books, like When Calls the Heart.  

The Bulletin team with Yossi Klein Halevi analyzes the implications of war in Iran for the Middle East. 

Christians may be tempted to skip Sunday morning for a sermon podcast. But it is by going to church that we learn to be the church, writes Bonnie Kristian. 

A new book offers a first-rate history of American Christian politics, says Daniel K. Williams. But that’s different from a history of American Christianity.

A court in India recently ruled that Christians could hold prayer meetings in their homes. Yet Indian believers still fear crackdowns by Hindu nationalists and local police.

From senior copy editor Alex Wooten: When editing a CT article, I fact-check as much of the piece as time allows and Google has reliable answers for. Global articles, like India correspondent Vikram Mukka’s piece about Indian Christians, have some extra considerations. 

For starters, I had to find an online currency converter to verify the US dollar value of 1 crore or 10 million rupees. Rates can change, so it’s worth another check. Even if they were correct a week ago, a difference of a couple of rupees to the dollar multiplies into a large sum of money!

I also double-check other countries’ governmental or geographical titles. Does the top court of India call itself the Supreme Court in English? (Answer: yes.) Is Rajasthan a city or a state? (Answer: state.)

Some things can only be verified by the author. Vikram is the one recording the details of the Uttar Pradesh pastor’s arrest and looking through court documents about his case. But when he includes links to websites that can independently confirm background information, like how many arrests were made in a state, that makes my work much easier. We keep those links so you can see that we did our homework, and read more about the topic if you’d like.


Today in Christian History

March 3, 1547: At the Seventh Session of the Council of Trent, the Roman Catholic church defines its theology of the sacraments. Arguing that seven sacraments are necessary for salvation—Baptism, Confirmation, the Eucharist, Penance, Extreme Unction, Orders, and Matrimony—the council rejected the teaching of most Protestants that only two were required: Baptism and the Lord’s Supper.

 

This year, Lent feels overwhelming

By Candice Marie Benbow

In a new posthumous collection of her essays, friends of writer Rachel Held Evans reflect on her work. Theologian Candice Marie Benbow shares thoughts in this excerpt on feminism and allyship.

By Lindsay Pulido

Vocation may not be a single, fixed thing. The location and context of ministry can change, writes a teacher and United Methodist lay leader.

Q&A with Mayra Macedo-Nolan

In Southern California, the combined crises of wildfires and a federal immigration crackdown are known as fire and ICE. The executive director of a community coalition talks about the ongoing response her group has been part of and the sustainability of such work.

Q&A with Julian Davis Reid

A jazz musician and theologian reflects on the lessons that Black music can offer the church and the world.

By Allison Backous Troy

Exhausted by living with disability, a writer reflects on the watching and waiting that are part of the Lenten season — and her daily life.

By Lindsay Peyton

Partnering with local churches, the reVision Football Club in Houston has made high-quality soccer training available to players from marginalized neighborhoods. More than 40 have gone on to compete in college.

For immigrants in detention, spiritual care can be hard to find

Impulsive kings and random chance: Purim’s parallels to our political moment
Religion News Service: While Trump wages his war of choice on the thinnest of pretexts, the Jewish calendar is focusing on the vanity of human power and the amorality with which it is exercised.

 

Americans’ sympathies in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have shifted dramatically, new poll shows
The Associated Press: American sympathies in the Middle East have shifted dramatically toward Palestinians, according to new Gallup polling, after decades of overwhelming support for Israelis.

 

For immigrants in detention, spiritual care can be hard to find*
The New York Times: Some religious groups have sued for access, others have been denied entrance to detention facilities.

 

The common good is something we practice face-to-face*
The Christian Century: The incarnation pulls attention away from ideology and toward our neighbor.

 

Minneapolis united when federal immigration operations surged — reflecting a long tradition of mutual aid
The Conversation: Unlike charity or government assistance, mutual aid is decentralized, grassroots-led and not channeled through nonprofits or government agencies.

What does it mean to follow Jesus in a divided America?

U.S. drug czar Sara Carter visited the shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe

U.S. drug czar prays before image of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico

In Mexico for a meeting with security officials regarding combatting drug trafficking, U.S. drug czar Sara Carter visited the shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

Pope Leo XIV promulgates new statutes for Pontifical Academy for Life

The new statues introduce the new role of “supporters” who, while not academics, identify with the academy’s mission and “contribute to the advancement of its academic activities.”

Jeff Cavins, Father Mike Schmitz awarded Pillar Award by Museum of the Bible

Jeff Cavins and Father Mike Schmitz are the first Catholics to receive the Pillar Award for Narrative given by the Museum of the Bible.

How Czech Catholics are crowdfunding their priests’ salaries

As state contributions wind down toward a 2030 cutoff, the Archdiocese of Olomouc is turning to crowdfunding, investments, and parish co-responsibility to keep its priests paid.

Catholic Church in Spain creates department for relations with Islam

Spain’s growing Muslim population has led that country’s bishops’ conference to address concurrent pastoral challenges.

Monday, March 2, 2026

Iranian Christians hope and pray for a free Iran

Iranian Christians hope and pray for a free Iran after US and Israeli strikes killed supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose Islamic regime has long persecuted believers.

Looking at the history of Iran’s theocratic persecution provides spiritual and political lessons for life after the ayatollah, writes Mark Tooley.

A church in Guadalajara locked its doors and continued its worship service as cartel violence broke out in the wake of the killing of drug kingpin El Mencho.

When Houston Astros manager Joe Espada prays to God, he tries not to ask for baseball wins, reports Marvin Olasky. 

Historically, presidents have eschewed memorializing themselves. President Trump leans into it.

Many Christians condemn health-and-wealth preaching, writes Brad East, but they may not recognize a subtler kind of prosperity gospel.

Behind the Story

From CT contributor Franco Iacomini: When I first heard about the turmoil in Mexico following the killing of Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera Cervantes, all I could think about was the security of the Christians I had interviewed (albeit from afar, since I am based in Brazil) for previous CT reports. Like many other Latin American Christians, they know firsthand what it is like to live in regions where the power of criminal groups is real and, in some regions, prevails over the state.

The most intense clashes between the armed forces and the cartel members occurred on Sunday morning, right during church services. At Guadalajara’s Iglesia Bautista Gracia & Amor, the praise group continued singing after the service, and congregants prayed as they waited for news that they could return home. 

Many Mexican believers are relieved that the government has taken direct action against the cartels. Others fear that the conflicts will drag on as the Jalisco New Generation Cartel seeks revenge or other groups try to gain territory for their illicit activities.

In this situation, it would be easy to despair, but pastor Constantino Varas of the Gracia & Amor church sees an opportunity for the Mexican church to adopt a culture of prayer.


  • A Lutheran pastor was installed as the first female presiding bishop of the Kenya Evangelical Lutheran Church. 
  • A member of Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, has sued journalist Don Lemon and protestors who disrupted a worship service in January.  
  • A group of religious parents will receive $1.5 million in a settlement after Maryland schools did not let them opt their children out of lessons with LGBTQ characters in books.

Today in Christian History

March 2, 1791: Founder of Methodism John Wesley dies in London. Thanks to his organizational genius, we know exactly how many followers he had when he died: 71,668 British members, 294 preachers, 43,265 American members with 198 preachers and 19 missionaries.

The Transfiguration of Jesus explained by Pope Leo XIV

From Africa to Spain via Monaco: this is Leo XIV’s global travel schedule for 2026

ZENIT Staff

The schedule outlines three distinct journeys: a ten-day pilgrimage across four African nations, a one-day visit to Monaco, and a six-day trip to Spain that will culminate in the Canary Islands. Together, they form a carefully calibrated map of priorities that blends history, diplomacy, evangelization and social concern.

Heiner Wilmer takes the helm of the German Bishops’ Conference: he will present the controversial Synodal Conference to the Vatican

Joachin Meisner Hertz

During the same plenary assembly, the bishops approved the statutes of the future Synodal Conference, intended as a permanent body bringing together bishops and representatives of the Central Committee of German Catholics. The text has been sent to Rome for recognitio, the formal approval required for canonical validity.

A Barracks for the 21st Century: How the Vatican Plans to Rebuild the Home of the Swiss Guard

Valentina di Giorgio

The new barracks will stand as a rare example of contemporary architecture embedded within one of the world’s most historically dense environments

Notre Dame University Backs Away from a Contested Appointment

Tim Daniels

On February 26, the administration of University of Notre Dame confirmed that Professor Susan Ostermann will not assume the directorship of the Liu Institute for Asia and Asian Studies, a post she had been scheduled to take up in July 2026

Pope Leo XIV concludes his annual spiritual exercises with some impromptu words about Christ and Communion

ZENIT Staff

In a few unscripted minutes, the Pope managed to summarize the meaning of the week: a retreat grounded in Scripture, shaped by tradition, attentive to human frailty, and oriented toward hope. It was a conclusion that reflected the spirit of Lent itself—quiet, demanding, and ultimately centered on Christ

For the first time, a Pope will address the Spanish Parliament: it will be Leo XIV during his visit to Madrid in June 2026

Covadonga Asturias

According to converging confirmations from parliamentary and ecclesial sources, the Vatican and the Spanish Congress have agreed to convene a joint session of both chambers of the Cortes Generales so that the Pope may address deputies and senators gathered in the hemicycle

Brazilian bishop declares excommunication for Catholics who participate in “traditional” Masses

Enrique Villegas

On February 11, the Archdiocese of Maceió announced that the celebration of the traditional Latin Mass according to the Missal of St. Pius V would be permitted exclusively in a single location: the São Vicente de Paulo Chapel, and only once a week. Any celebration of that rite elsewhere — whether in another church, a private venue or even within a civil association — would, the note warned, constitute a “public act of schism” and would entail excommunication latae sententiae

One in three Mexican bishops will be replaced by Pope Leo XIV between 2026 and 2027

ZENIT Staff

The generational shift is also visible in the provenance of current appointments. As of the beginning of 2026, 52.5 percent of Mexico’s bishops and archbishops were appointed by Pope Francis, 27.6 percent by Benedict XVI, 17.2 percent by John Paul II, and just 2.6 percent by Leo XIV himself. That last figure is set to rise sharply

Israeli government announces new museum dedicated to the baptism of Jesus

ZENIT Staff

Known in Arabic as Al-Maghtas, meaning “the immersion,” Qasr el Yahud occupies a liminal geography both spiritually and historically. It stands at the threshold between desert and river, promise and fulfillment, and has long been embedded in Christian memory as a site of epiphany and renewal

USA: Bishops take a stand against Trump before the Supreme Court and argue in favor of birthright citizenship

ZENIT Staff

In a friend-of-the-court brief filed before the high court, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops argued that ending the automatic conferral of citizenship to children born on U.S. soil would be “immoral,” legally unfounded, and incompatible with core principles of Catholic social teaching

The Transfiguration of Jesus explained by Pope Leo XIV

ZENIT Staff

Address on the occasion of the Angelus prayer on Sunday, March 1, 2026

Historic: Doors of the Holy Sepulcher of Jerusalem Are Removed for Restoration

ZENIT Staff

While awaiting the return of the 12th century doors to their original position, an exceptional scene was witnessed: they were replaced by panels with photo reproductions of the original doors to maintain the illusion of their presence.

Preaching to the Pope and the Roman Curia: ZENIT Interviews the «Official» Preacher of the Papal Household

ZENIT Staff

At 54, the Capuchin friar is a theologian, biblical scholar, lecturer, and author of numerous books. He is also known for his profound and accessible catechesis, as well as his online podcasts, in which he explores Scripture with clarity.

German bishops ask Vatican to allow lay people to give homilies, despite rejection in 2023

ZENIT Staff

What is clear is that the debate is no longer simply about who speaks from the ambo. It has become a test case for the limits of synodality, the reach of episcopal conferences, and the extent to which sacramental theology itself is open to reinterpretation

Guinness World Record for The Chosen: it becomes the series translated into the most languages

ZENIT Staff

The new Guinness recognition surpasses a previous record set in September 2025, when the first season was available in 86 languages