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
LDS Church unveils plan to resume in-person worship services
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has announced a plan to gradually restart their in-person worship services, having previously suspended worship gatherings in March to help curb the spread of the coronavirus.
Over 60 cases of COVID-19, 4 deaths linked to rural Arkansas church: CDC
As churches nationwide consider plans to reopen, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a report showing how the coronavirus spread through a single Arkansas congregation earlier this year resulting in dozens of infections and as many as four deaths.
Pro-lifers slam FX documentary's claim Jane Roe was paid to be pro-life: 'She was sincere'
Pro-life activists, some of whom have known Norma McCorvey for many years, are rejecting a new documentary’s claim that the woman behind the landmark Supreme Court abortion case Roe v. Wade was paid later in life to promote anti-abortion views.
Os Guinness: US switching from biblical American Revolution values to secular French Revolution ones
The United States is gradually “switching” from a worldview influenced by a biblical American Revolution model to an anti-religious French Revolution model, according to author and social critic Os Guinness.
Ore. Supreme Court halts ruling that would've lifted restrictions on church gatherings
The Oregon Supreme Court granted an emergency motion Monday evening putting on hold a lower court’s injunction earlier in the day granting churches statewide preliminary relief to Gov. Kate Brown’s restrictions on mass gatherings and in-person worship.
What is the biggest lie young people believe about freedom? Theology professor answers
One of the biggest lies that young people are told in the United States is that freedom means that a person can do whatever they want, according to a professor of theology.
‘Now with Jesus’: Christian apologist Ravi Zacharias dies at 74
Ravi Zacharias, the prominent Christian apologetics author and speaker, died Tuesday at the age of 74 following a battle with a rare form of cancer.
Ill. churches hold worship services despite stay-at-home order
Several churches in the Chicago, Illinois, area held in-person worship services on Sunday, defying a statewide stay-at-home order prohibiting religious gatherings of more than 10 people.
Robert P. George criticizes Liberty University for dissolving philosophy department
Notable Catholic political philosopher Robert P. George is pleading with the prominent Virginia evangelical institution Liberty University to reconsider plans to dissolve its philosophy department.
This week in Christian history: First black Baptist minister ordained; Pentecostal preacher vanishes; Presbyterian missionary born
Here are just a few things that happened this week, May 17-23, in Church history. They include the first ordination of a black Baptist minister, the disappearance of a famous Pentecostal preacher, and the birth of a notable Presbyterian missionary.