Michele Chabin reports that Israeli postal workers are refusing to deliver Hebrew-language New Testaments. Mark Silk asks an interesting question:

Let's suppose that thousands of American postal workers similarly refuse
to deliver English copies of the Koran mailed by a Muslim organization
to hundreds of thousands of American households in hopes of making
converts. Whose religious liberty rights should prevail--the senders of
the material exercising their own Islamic Great Commission? Or the
postal workers who contend that participating in such an exercise would
violate their religious beliefs?

Steve Thorngate

The Century managing editor is also a church musician and songwriter.

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