Source: The New York Times by Ross Douthat WHEN the long, grim history of Christianity’s disappearance from the Middle East is written, Ted Cruz’s performance last week at a conference organized to highlight the persecution of his co-religionists will merit at most a footnote. But sometimes a footnote can help illuminate a tragedy’s unhappy whole. For decades, the Middle East’s increasingly beleaguered Christian communities have suffered from a fatal invisibility in the Western world. And their plight has been particularly invisible in the United States, which as a majority-Christian superpower might have been expected to provide particular support. There are…
Trending
- The Greek Orthodox Church in 2050: Will it Prevail in America? — Does Anyone Really Care?
- Church of Greece Plans Digital Bank, Wants Diaspora Deposits
- Biennial Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese Convention 2025
- Metropolis of Germany issued warning against individuals outside the canonical Orthodox Church
- Developments in Albania and Estonia & other news
- Unification of the Communities of Saints Constantine and Helen in Chicopee and Holy Trinity in Holyoke, MA
- Metropolis of Chicago Pioneers New Digital Registry to Better Support Clergy and Laity
- The Orthodox Pilgrim