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Friday, April 10, 2026

Meet the Mississippi farmer who helped resettle 150 Ukrainian families

Meet the Mississippi farmer who helped resettle 150 Ukrainian families fleeing war. 

Two states just passed laws to block abortion pills, a new front in pro-life politics at a time when pills are the source of most abortions in the US. But will the laws work? 

Amid war, the Iranian church persists

Malcolm Gladwell talks to Russell Moore about radical forgiveness and the death penalty.

Harvest Prude reviews a new book on whether Christians are rude dinner guests

On The Bulletin: Trump threatens Iran, Artemis II returns, and Anthropic rolls out a new artificial intelligence technology. 

Join Russell Moore and Karen Swallow Prior on Wednesday, April 15, at 1:30 PM CDT for a deep dive into Karen’s latest CT article exploring how our experiences of infertility and childlessness shape our understanding of Christian identity. Members, register to attend. Not a member? Get 25% off your first year and event access.

Behind the Story

From CT contributor Hannah Herrera: In college, I attended a small church in Mississippi. I graduated a few months after the war in Ukraine started but remained on the church email chain—which is how I knew about Rodney Mast’s resettlement efforts with Ukrainian refugees.

I was captivated by how an ordinary man could make such a huge impact, and by the lovely randomness of a rural Mississippi church with a Russian translator. My journalist brain had always thought Mast would be a great subject for a feature—and after reading about the legal struggles Ukrainian refugees in the US are facing, I was curious how these communities are continuing to care for their Ukrainian friends. 

Through correspondence with Mast (sometimes from his tractor seat) and calls with Ukrainian mothers bouncing babies and chasing toddlers, through tears and translators, I became witness to a beautiful narrative of the resilience—and love—of the global family of God.

  • In response to anger about a Turning Point USA rally on campus, Baylor University will allow gay advocates to have a counterevent. 
  • A UK pastor was charged with manslaughter after a grandfather drowned during a home baptism.
  • Lecrae became the first Christian rapper to perform for NPR’s Tiny Desk series.
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    Today in Christian History

    April 10, 1829: English evangelist William Booth, founder and first general of the Salvation Army, is born in Nottingham. In 1865, Booth and his wife, Catherine, set out to reach the desperate poor and unchurched by conducting open-air meetings with lively music; preaching in theaters, bars, and jails; and creating large-scale plans to relieve poverty.

     

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