Easter is usually a time of vibrancy and life. For many of us, Easter includes dressing up in bright pastels, gathering with family and friends, and maybe even hunting for colored eggs. Those traditions seem wholly inappropriate given our current situation.
There are plenty of no-fun news stories going around about how long this coronavirus shutdown might last and too many heartbreaking articles about lives lost to the infection. Thankfully, though, there is good news out there.
Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry took to Instagram Thursday to host a live worship session with a host of Christian artists.
As Christians around the world celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, you too can celebrate the Messiah's Resurrection from the city where it happened. The service can be watched on the CBN News Channel and the CBN Family App on Easter morning.
On Good Friday, President Donald Trump participated in an Easter Blessing with Bishop Harry Jackson in the Oval Office in the White House.
In an exclusive interview with CBN News on Good Friday, Vice President Mike Pence says for the small number of pastors who are thinking of holding church services this Easter during the coronavirus pandemic, he has a direct biblical message.
Members of a church in Greenville, MS, were fined $500 each for sitting in their own cars in the church parking lot while listening to their pastor's sermon broadcast over the radio Wednesday evening.
Operation Blessing is hard at work around the US and the world, delivering aid to help fight the coronavirus pandemic. Here are some highlights from what's been happening in the month of April - a huge "thank you" to Operation Blessing donors and CBN partners for making this possible:
“From the foundation of this nation, to this pandemic,” Sen. Tim Scott told Faithwire, “the one place we’ve always turned when the chips were down, when everything was going to be counted, we turned to the Lord, the author and the finisher of our faith.”
A new wave of locusts is threatening Africa with devastation and starvation, even as the COVID-19 pandemic undermines efforts to fight the locust plague.