The United States has amassed the largest force since the war in Iraq. Iran threatens an all-out response to any attack, even ...
Funerals for the thousands of protesters killed last month reveal a shift toward a celebration of life and eternity, in defiance of a regime that brutally clings to power.
As the world clamors for Greenland’s rare earth minerals and energy potential, will its people be able to choose their own path?
It’s strengthening to know that there’s no limit to God’s healing power right here and now.
If children couldn’t come to the library, the library had to go to them,” says the head of the nonprofit Alif Laila Book Bus ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
Georgia and several other Republican states consider ending their income taxes, aiming to help their economies and fend off Democrats on affordability issues.
President Trump’s economic calculus is in flux after a Supreme Court ruling, as some global leaders say his new tariffs ...
Four years on, Russia has now been engaged in war in Ukraine longer than the Soviet Union fought in World War II, and the ...
The U.S. Supreme Court ruling on global tariffs, and the views of the Founding Fathers, highlight the value of elected representatives engaging in lawmaking processes that involve “cool and deliberate ...
Taking down a drug cartel leader is a win for a country. But the swift violence that often follows is a public reminder that peace might not be imminent.
During visits to the now-ruined and occupied Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, a Monitor reporter fell in love with its roses, for ...
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