Michael Gryboski
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.
Latest
Israel pulls the plug on GOD TV, claims it is trying to evangelize Jews
Israel has decided to remove the U.S.-based evangelical Christian station GOD TV from the Israeli cable television provider HOT due to claims that it was trying to evangelize Jews.
Most US Christians uncomfortable with returning to church: survey
Nearly two-thirds of American Christians are uncomfortable with returning to in-person worship services over coronavirus concerns, according to a recent survey.
This week in Christian history: Charles Finney ordained; Crusaders take Antioch; Dorothy Day
This week in Church history: The ordination of Charles Finney, Catholic social activist Dorothy Day signs an anti-abortion statement, and the Crusaders take Antioch.
NY officials can’t impose greater restrictions on religious services than businesses, protests: judge
A federal judge has blocked New York officials from enforcing state restrictions on outdoor and indoor religious gatherings that are stricter than those imposed upon comparable secular entities.
DOJ is overseeing 500 investigations into riots, Antifa: AG Barr
The U.S. Department of Justice is overseeing around 500 investigations into violent riots that have occurred nationwide in the last few weeks, Attorney General William Barr has said.
PCUSA elects first Native leader for first-ever online General Assembly
The Presbyterian Church (USA) has elected its first ever Native American General Assembly co-moderator, as part of the first general assembly to be done exclusively online.
Nev. church fighting state limits on worship gatherings not imposed on casinos, gyms
A congregation in Nevada has filed a request for relief from state restrictions that limit in-person worship gatherings to 50 people while allowing casinos and other businesses to operate at 50% capacity.
Calif. bans travel to Idaho over laws banning boys in girls’ sports, sex on birth certificates
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra on Monday announced that state employees would soon be banned from taking publicly-funded trips to Idaho because of two recently passed laws that it deems as anti-transgender.
6 out of 10 Americans reject idea that 'human life is sacred,' survey finds
Around six in 10 Americans do not believe that human life is inherently “sacred,” though more than two-thirds believe human beings are “basically good,” new data suggests.
Al Mohler: Trump is 'huge embarrassment' but 'alternative is increasingly unthinkable'
Southern Baptist leader Albert Mohler Jr. said that while he considers President Donald Trump a “huge embarrassment,” he finds voting for any alternative “unthinkable.”