Hundreds of Christians filled the streets of downtown Brockville, Ont., to remember the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.
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Stories from people, congregations and ministries of the CRCNA, reported by The Banner's news editor and a team of regular correspondents and Church Worldwide news from the Religion Ï㽶ÊÓƵ Service. Send news tips to news@thebanner.org.
When parishioners at in Grand Rapids, Mich., have their coffee after Sunday services,
For over 40 years, reaching out and ministering to people who are hurting and broken
For the second year, members of , invited the community as they reenacted scenes of Good Friday,
What do fresh cookies and local produce have to do with refugee resettlement?
hosted its third annual EGG-Stravaganza on April 8,
., is located in a state that reports 2.5 million undocumented immigrants
As one body, if one member suffers, all suffer
On Palm Sunday, many members of the Coptic Orthodox Church of St. Mark awoke to the news that people dear to them had died or were wounded
As an extension of its well-known Christmas live nativity called Journey of Joy,
Every third week of each month, partners with ,
Boarding a bus early Saturday morning,
Church representatives from across southern Ontario gathered in March
When Matthew MacNeil presented on March 21 at the United Nations’ World Down Syndrome Day conference,
Some prominent academics, philosophers, and theologians of the Christian Reformed Church recently signed a statement
How does Indigenous Court incorporate principles of restorative justice?
Among Rolling Stone’s March 2017 list of is Ravyn Lenae
Two or three times each year, Christian Reformed churches send representatives to their classis,
The Wukari Peace Process, a striving toward calm and the cessation of violence between Muslim and Christian
Adults with intellectual disabilities played games, shared snacks, laughed together, and enjoyed fellowship
The Banner has seen many changes since its humble beginnings in 1866.
In Memoriam: Rev. John Zantingh
1933-2017From a very young age, John Zantingh wanted to be a minister.
In 1968, when counselor Nellie Harbers (now Jonkman) began working with a group of girls
Eight years have passed since , an organization