Wednesday, February 25, 2026

byFaith Magazine - Tim Keller On the Importance of Reading Church History

Tim Keller On the Importance of Reading Church History
By Matthew Capone
Whether a critic or a fan, one cannot fully understand Keller’s impact without reckoning with the enormous foundation he laid in quiet study.
READ NOW

Ecclesiastes and Life Under the Sun
By Stanley D. Gale

Ecclesiastes reminds us that biblical wisdom carries the truth of God and meets us in the trenches of life.

READ NOW
Sweet Hope: How A Baker Disciples Trafficking Survivors
By Amy Barham

Katie Moessner wanted to serve the Lord on the other side of the world. God wanted to use her baking skills to help women in her Nashville community.

READ NOW

I’m Not Okay, But God Is Good
By Haley Isbell 

We are not healed by pretending. We are not sustained by cheer. We are sustained by truth.

READ NOW

General Assembly Site Selection: The Process and Criteria
By Andy Jones

How does the PCA pick the location of General Assembly? Here's how it works.

READ NOW
AROUND THE WEB
Sabbath Is More Than Self-Care

The Sabbath is more than self-care. And that’s good news.
Ben Sasse on Life, Cancer, and the Gospel

Before entering public office, Ben Sasse served as the Director of White Horse Inn and Executive Editor of Modern Reformation at Sola Media. 
At MTW we love the church. It’s at the heart of everything we do. We believe the Great Commission is fulfilled as churches send missionaries to make disciples and to plant and strengthen local churches.
Reformed Presbyterians Excommunicate White Supremacist Minister

One of the oldest denominations in the United States has deposed and excommunicated a 42-year-old minister for his white supremacist views.
 
https://twitter.com/PCAByFaith/
https://www.facebook.com/pcabyfaith/
https://byfaithonline.com/
https://www.instagram.com/byfaith_magazine/

RNS Weekly Digest: From Diwali parties to daily puja: Hindu campus houses push for deeper faith practice

From Diwali parties to daily puja: Hindu campus houses push for deeper faith practice

With more than 20 South Asian cultural and religious organizations on the campus of University of Illinois, where 25% of the student population is Asian, Connecticut native Rishabh Bhandari felt spoilt for choice as an eager freshman. 

Yet despite the widespread popularity of large-scale Diwali and Holi events, Bhandari said he felt there was a lack of focus on Hindu practices.

“There was no, like, place where I could just go and either pray or have some place where we can do puja (rituals) or anything for those big holidays. So it kind of just became like you go to parties, rather than any religious aspect,” said the aerospace engineering major.

This sentiment — that Hindu holidays and teachings were being watered down in college life — led to the 2018 formation of the on-campus Hindu student center Vivekananda House on Iowa State’s campus. Since then, seven more U.S. college campuses have opened a Vivekananda House — University of Texas in Austin, Carnegie Mellon, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Virginia Tech, Purdue, Texas A&M and Worcester Polytechnic Institute.

Vivekananda Houses, named after the prolific guru Swami Vivekananda and modeled after successful religious campus organizations like the Jewish Hillel, offer a living and community space to young Hindus, including a home temple on the ground floor. Sometimes it’s the only accessible Hindu temple space anywhere near campus, said Bhandari. 

 Religion & Politics

A carnival float depicting U.S. President Donald Trump is seen during the Rosemonday Carnival Parade in Duesseldorf, Germany, Monday, Feb. 16, 2026 (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)

In Opinion
And finally, Lawns light up for Ramadan as Muslim families give holy month the Christmas treatment

Every Christmas season as her neighbors draped their house and grounds with festive lights, Jasmina Husic’s children asked the same question: “Mama and baba, why don’t we decorate for Christmas?” she said.

The mother of five, who lives in Kennesaw, Georgia, would explain that they can appreciate Christmas, but that it’s not a Muslim holiday. That didn’t seem to satisfy their curiosity. So a couple of years ago during Ramadan, she tried something different — Husic bought crescent string lights and inflatables to decorate her yard with her kids. 

“And they were so excited,” said Husic. “Now they realize, ‘Oh, it’s Ramadan, because we have inflatables and our house has decorations everywhere.’ It helps them to be proud that they are different.” 

Big-box retailers such as Target and Party City have been embracing Ramadan in recent years with indoor holiday supplies, from wall decorations to children’s books. Many Muslim Americans have enthusiastically embraced the stores’ nod to representation in return. 
Support our responsible reporting on religion
  • Forward this newsletter to a friend
  • Make a tax-deductible donation to our nonprofit newsroom here
  • Or mail us a check: Religion News Foundation PO Box 1808 Columbia, MO 65205
  • Email membership@religionnews.com with a news tip or a comment
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
Website
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram
Email
LinkedIn
YouTube
Copyright © 2026 RNS, All rights reserved.