
Christianity Today editor-in-chief Russell Moore told NBC Sunday that churches and families remain divided over Donald Trump. He also said he hopes another Republican candidate will step forward and "talk about the importance of character."
Christianity Today editor-in-chief Russell Moore told NBC Sunday that churches and families remain divided over Donald Trump. He also said he hopes another Republican candidate will step forward and "talk about the importance of character."
Christianity Today has named Russell Moore as its new editor-in-chief.
Former Southern Baptist Convention Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission President Russell Moore penned a column for Christianity Today over the weekend expressing his rage over the findings of the Guidepost Solutions investigation into sex abuse within the SBC.
On Thursday, lawyers for Georgia Baptist pastor Mike Stone filed paperwork to voluntarily withdraw a complaint filed in federal court against Russell Moore, the former head of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission. The complaint was dismissed without prejudice Friday by U.S. District Court Judge William Campbell.
Southern Baptist pastor Mike Stone has filed a defamation lawsuit against theologian Russell Moore. Stone is accusing Moore of trying to destroy his personal and professional reputation.
Russell Moore and Beth Moore met up at a Nashville church last week to speak on their decisions to leave the Southern Baptist Convention.
Theologian and author Russell Moore said Thursday he is feeling better after battling a case of "breakthrough" COVID-19 that also impacted his family.
Theologian Russell Moore recently asserted that knowing people who became seriously ill or died from COVID-19 may be causing some vaccine-hesitant individuals to change their minds.
Two Southern Baptist sources have confirmed with RNS that the Southern Baptist Convention leader who made racist and sexist remarks about author and speaker Trillia Newbell was Paige Patterson.
In a letter written more than a year before Russell Moore, the president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, resigned, Moore explained his troubles with the SBC’s leadership in bitterly frank terms. The root of the friction was the stands Moore had been taking on the SBC’s race and sexual abuse issues, which had raised hackles with a “small minority” that Moore does not name but can be identified as key conservatives and members of the denomination’s governing Executive Committee.