Religious Liberty The Double Standard Is the Point "A barista fired for answering faith questions. An NBA player waived within hours of citing Scripture. A Christian fired for a cross necklace and Bible at his desk. These are not isolated incidents. This is a pattern — and a person of conviction should understand it." By Editor • 3 min read
Current Events Canada Is One Vote Away From Criminalizing Biblical Speech The same Romans passage that convicted a Finnish grandmother just got named by Canadian legislators as too dangerous to protect. Senate votes April 14. By Editor • 4 min read
Faith & Spiritual Warfare The Bible on Trial A Finnish grandmother wrote a church pamphlet citing Romans 1. Twenty-two years later, her country's highest court convicted her of a crime. On Good Friday, that timeline deserves more than a headline. By Editor • 4 min read
Current Events The Cost of Conviction Jaden Ivey said what millions of Christians believe. The NBA showed you exactly what that costs. By Editor • 4 min read
Law, Liberty & Self‑Governance When Confession Becomes a Firing Offense: What the Alaska Airlines Case Reveals About “Inclusive” Workplaces Alaska Airlines fired two flight attendants for respectful, faith-shaped questions about the Equality Act—revealing how corporate “inclusion” punishes biblical dissent and threatens conscience in the modern workplace. By Editor • 5 min read
Law, Liberty & Self‑Governance Texas Judges and the Battle for Conscience Texas now protects judges who refuse to perform same-sex weddings on religious grounds, raising sharp questions about conscience, freedom, and who can serve in public life. By Editor • 3 min read