Michael Gryboski has been a reporter with The Christian Post since 2011. He covers politics, church and ministries, court cases, and other issues. He has written extensively on issues like litigation over conservative congregations leaving The Episcopal Church, the longstanding debate within the United Methodist Church over homosexuality, court cases on various social issues, and the evangelical community.
He earned a Bachelor of Arts in History and Master’s in History at George Mason University. Inspired by his studies, Gryboski pens a regular column titled “This week in Christian history,” which briefly sums up the anniversaries of notable events in the long and diverse past of Christianity. He lives in Richmond, Virginia.
A Bible study instructor for a Pennsylvania church was arrested last week when a woman stepped forward claiming that the individual had sexually assaulted her when she was a child.
California has filed a lawsuit against a Catholic hospital that refused to perform an abortion on a woman who reportedly was experiencing a life-threatening medical emergency.
Pastor and former longshot Republican presidential hopeful Ryan Binkley has said the United States cannot be saved from its domestic problems with a “quick fix.”
President Jimmy Carter has turned 100, becoming the first former commander-in-chief to reach the triple digits and be the longest-lived former president in United States history.
The number of parents who are homeschooling their children continues to increase even after the end of COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns, according to a recently released report.
Pastor Rafael Cruz, the father of Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, urged Christians to be more politically involved, declaring that the popular phrase “God is in control” is a “cop-out.”
The Boise State University women’s volleyball team has refused to play a team that has a trans-identifying male player, accepting a forfeit loss instead.
The percentage of churches that provide support to those fighting opioid addiction has declined compared to what it was five years ago, according to a new poll of pastors from Lifeway Research.
A communications professor at a Christian university believes that there is an “exhausted majority” in the United States that wants unity and civility in political disagreements.