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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
3 w

It’s Here: Gen-Z Revival Hits Campuses This Fall
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It’s Here: Gen-Z Revival Hits Campuses This Fall

https://media.thegospelcoalition.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/13113259/Its-Here-Gen-Z.mp3 Listen to the author read her article. This fall, Campus Outreach Chicago expansion director Tony Dentman gave a pep talk to his four new staff members. “It’s going to be hard,” he told them. “We’re just throwing out a lot of seeds. For many of them, we’re never going to see fruit.” He was speaking from experience. Dentman has spent the last eight years working at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC). He’s never been able to get kids to come to a large weekly gathering. He was feeling good that about 100—out of UIC’s 33,000 students—were coming to small Bible studies. So nobody was more surprised than Dentman when 90 kids showed up to his first attempt at a larger gathering this fall—and 80 kept coming back each week. Before his staff even leaned fully into evangelism, young people began coming to Christ. With intentional evangelism efforts, momentum took off. Now more than 200 students are plugged into small group Bible studies, learning God’s Word and growing in their faith together. This level of spiritual engagement “is unheard of in our world,” he said. “Our staff is saying, ‘It feels like we’re cheating,’ because we’re doing the same thing, but there’s double or triple the amount of people showing up to everything.” Campus Outreach staff Andrew Martinez at the weekly meeting on his birthday / Courtesy of Tony Dentman Over the last couple of years, perhaps you’ve heard the stories of revival here and there—Asbury, the Salt Company, and various college ministries across the country. Statistics also sounded promising—from England to the United States, more young people report making a personal commitment to Jesus and attending church. The number of people with no religious affiliation, which had been increasing for decades, seemed to stall. To me, it felt like watching a pot of water heat up—there were isolated bubbles but not enough to really call it a boil. “Even this summer, I was at a church planting network event, and they gave the numbers from Barna about the men starting to turn to Jesus,” Dentman said. “And I’m like, ‘Man, I have no clue what y’all talking about. I guess it hasn’t made it north to Chicago.’” A few months later, so many students showed up to a Q&A session, and asked so many questions, that Dentman had to move them into the hallway so the next class could get into the room. While he was having a Bible study in the cafeteria last week, people walking by sat down. Conversions are common enough that his staff don’t always think to tell him about them. “I think the revival made it to Chicago,” Dentman says, laughing. “The spiritual hunger, the spiritual desire, is higher than we have ever seen it before.” There are still some quiet pockets. But at Dordt University in Iowa, the optional chapel services are packed out. In Durham, North Carolina, at the first Summit Church college event this fall, 70 students came to Christ. (“This is not normal,” college pastor Wes Smith said.) And at every one of Salt Company’s 40 ministries around the country, attendance is up an average 40 percent over last year. For context, their year-over-year growth since 1987 has been between 3 and 5 percent a year. So can we say the water is boiling? “A revival is an awakening of the Spirit of God through the ordinary means of grace that brings conversion to the unconverted, both in the church and in broader society,” said Mark Vance, lead pastor of Cornerstone Church, which founded the Salt Network. “I think the answer is yes.” Back to Basics “First day on campus: We ran out of our 500 flyers,” wrote Reformed University Fellowship campus pastor Derek Rishmawy in September. He’s at the University of California, Irvine. “Had clusters of students walking up already interested in exploring. Talked to the ex-Muslim TPUSA kid (not making this up) and gave him a copy of Reason for God.” Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA (TPUSA), was killed on September 10, about two weeks before classes started at UC Irvine. In the weeks afterward, church attendance swelled all over the country. Bible sales, which had been rising since the pandemic, shot up even further. So I wondered, Could Kirk’s death have been the last bit of heat needed to push revival into a full boil? Was it, as my colleague Brett McCracken put it, a turning point for this generation? Maybe, campus pastors told me. “Most of the younger people I talk to didn’t know who [Kirk] was before he died,” said Cru campus minister Shelby Abbott. “After he died, there were narratives attached to him, and which one you believed depended on which algorithm rabbit hole you went down. But no matter what you thought about him, his death was a spark that created openings for us to talk about Jesus.” The ability to have those conversations is another sign of the changing cultural zeitgeist, Abbott said. From apologist Wesley Huff’s conversations with Joe Rogan and Andrew Schulz to atheist Richard Dawkins declaring himself a “cultural Christian” to political scientist Charles Murray’s new book Taking Religion Seriously, “it’s much more normal to have a conversation about Jesus now,” Abbott said. Those conversations aren’t usually complicated. “I’ve been teaching the most foundational stuff in our sermons series the last few years,” Vance said. “We taught the Nicene Creed and the Sermon on the Mount. We’re teaching a very traditional view of marriage and sexuality. And we have incredible intellectual resources on this, because this is where the church has stood for thousands of years. People are rediscovering something that was already there.” In Chicago, students “aren’t asking the hard, controversial questions,” Dentman said. “They’re asking Sunday school questions: ‘How do I know the Bible is real? How is Christianity different? Was Jesus God? What happens to people who haven’t heard the gospel?’ They aren’t asking it from a heady space, but a heart space—they really want to understand the answer.” Vance calls it the opposite of the seeker movement, which sought to make the gospel message more interesting and creative to draw people in. “At Cornerstone, our sermon length is going up,” said Vance, whose church’s weekly Sunday attendance includes more than 1,000 college students. “We read creeds at baptism services. This fall we are teaching through the Ten Commandments. . . . We are doing things less creatively than we ever have.” Attendance and enthusiasm are up, both in the campus ministry and in the church. “I am wildly, wildly encouraged,” he said. Class of 2025 After Rishmawy tweeted about running out of flyers, RUF campus pastor Kevin Twit replied, “I’ve found a noticeable increase in seriousness of the freshmen this year and sounds like you are seeing this too.” So I wondered, Is it this year’s freshmen? Are they the ones driving this spike in spiritual interest? Maybe, campus pastors told me. We are doing things less creatively than we ever have. “There are definitely more freshmen involved across the board—in Bible studies, in larger gatherings, and in our leadership cohort,” said Smith, whose Summit College ministry has a presence on seven campuses in the area. But he began to see increased interest in Jesus already last year. “We had the most decisions for Christ we’ve ever seen last Easter,” he said. “This year that accelerated. We’ve seen a lot of decisions already in the first two months.” While the number of freshmen and sophomores is high, “it’s the juniors and seniors who are going on campus, making the relationships, and leading the Bible studies,” he said. “They’re definitely just as all-in. They’re the ones multiplying disciples.” The same thing is happening in Chicago, where a group of freshmen and sophomores, after a recent retreat, opened their Bibles on their own and practiced preaching to each other. Salt freshman kickoff in the Iowa State University Memorial Union in August / Courtesy of Salt “Dude, that’s the most ‘Christian’ thing we’ve ever experienced since we’ve been doing this ministry,” Dentman’s staff told him. But he can could the same thing about them, most of whom are recent college grads. “We have four new staff this fall, and they are hungrier than any staff I’ve seen before,” Dentman said. “They bring a deep love for Jesus and a contagious spiritual energy that’s shaping the ministry’s culture.” He gives them an hour each day for personal Bible reading and prayer, and they asked for more. For larger events, where students invite their non-Christian friends, he’s normally happy to play popular songs as long as they don’t contain swearing. Now his staff is playing loud worship music. In the last two weeks, they’ve led 10 students to Christ. The new staff are still young in their faith and growing in their knowledge of scripture, Dentman said. “But they want to make an impact in the world, and they’re understanding how they can do it. They’re learning God’s Word and putting all the pieces of the puzzle together. Our young staff has me fired up more than anything.” Notably, three of the four are men, he said. “We have more males on staff than we’ve ever had before.” Men Dentman is also seeing more men among his students. “For the first time this fall, we had more men at our large group meeting than women,” he said. That aligns with what the larger studies are reporting. Historically, women have always been more religious than men. Now, in the United Kingdom, men are slightly more likely to attend church than women. In the United States, Gen-Z men and women are about equally likely to say religion is important to them, that they pray daily, and that they believe in God with absolute certainty. And young men are more likely than young women to affiliate with a religion and attend church. Salt upperclassmen advertising their Bible studies to freshmen at Iowa State in August / Courtesy of Salt In many of those studies, the narrowing of the gender gap isn’t because men are coming in greater numbers but because women are leaving religion. So I wondered, Is that happening here? No, campus pastors told me. “It’s less that women are not showing up, and more that men are showing up a lot more than in the past,” Smith said. “Our ministry is still mostly women—as is the college campus—but we are seeing a much higher spiritual interest in guys than previously.” At Iowa State, where 55 percent of undergraduates are male, Salt’s gender breakdown has historically been about 47 percent guys, 53 percent girls, Vance said. From the numbers he sees now, he thinks it’s “at least 50/50.” “The girls have continued to come at the same rates,” he said. “It’s the guys who are driving the number growth. For us, that’s happening nationally.” Secular Culture Overreach If you ask the kids themselves why a revival seems to be bubbling up, they don’t point to Kirk, enthusiastic freshmen, or eager males. “I asked a group of freshman guys why they thought we were seeing a bigger response to the gospel,” Smith said. “Some of them grew up in the church, and some had become Christians in the last couple of weeks.” But they all had the same answer. Summit College students praying at Church at the Dome service in September, where 160 students were baptized / Courtesy of Summit College “What their generation is being offered by the culture is not really fulfilling,” he said. “Christianity seems to them a legitimate opportunity that they have not tried—one that’s speaking with a lot more certainty about truth. In the culture with a lot of confusion and chaos, Christianity is pretty clear on ‘This is who you are. This is what sin is. This is how you have relationship with God.’” Gen Z—the generation of transgenderism and AI deepfakes—wants to know what’s real, he said. “Five years ago, we felt like we had to be really careful about what we said,” he said. “Everyone was afraid of getting canceled. But it doesn’t feel like there are as many land mines now. The students want you to be honest. They want you to speak the truth about what you think Scripture says about different things.” Secular culture has finally pushed past common sense for most people, Vance said. “When you tell people the sky is purple, and everybody knows it’s blue, at some point people cannot keep acting like it’s purple,” he said. “There is an inherent insanity to unbelief. It’s rebelling against the created order. I’ve listened to the strong left-wing arguments about gender and sexuality and family. The people are highly articulate and smart, but the ideas literally don’t work. You can swim against the created order for a little while, in isolated cases. But it cannot and does not work in mass.” If you’re old enough, this might remind you of another season when college kids in the United States, disillusioned by a sexual revolution and the collapse of truth, started coming to Jesus in record numbers. ‘It’s Crazy’ In the late 1960s, on the tail of political polarization, destructive riots, and a pandemic, young people began asking questions: What is true? How do you find meaning in life? Is this life all there is? “The Jesus Movement was the clearest experience I’ve ever had of a mass miracle,” said Renewal Ministries president Ray Ortlund. “It was the sudden and improbable conversion of thousands of non-churchy, politically and culturally radicalized, sexually adventurous, crazy California kids suddenly running toward Jesus—not because people told them to, but because they were too happy about Jesus not to.” Back then, “young people were aching for forgiveness, for community, for a clean feeling––after a while, being degraded gets tiring,” he said. It’s impossible to estimate how many people were changed by the Jesus Movement—likely tens or hundreds of thousands. Small group Bible study at the UIC Chicago chapter of Campus Outreach / Courtesy of Tony Dentman Gen Z isn’t anywhere close to that yet. But the Salt Network churches are on track to baptize more than 2,700 new believers this year, double the number from 2023. “We printed nearly 4,000 Bible reading plans—the full New Testament in four months plus extra reading and Bible memory verses,” Vance said. “All of those handouts are gone. We sold 1,700 Bible memory wristband packets. We have been starting Salt Company meetings by quoting the verses, and the whole room just yells the memory verse from the week out. It’s crazy.” At a new Summit church plant near the University of North Carolina Wilmington, 300 people showed up on the first day. In their college ministry, “non-Christians are coming around and getting involved,” Smith said. One girl, who called herself a pagan, came to Christ, he said. “She said she’d been so lonely. Another guy, who was a Mormon, became a Christian and is now thinking about doing the summer ministry project. It’s crazy stuff.” Dentman used the same word to describe it: “It’s crazy,” he said, laughing. “We’re losing track. Some of the staff don’t even say anything about a conversion now, because it’s becoming normal. I’m like, ‘No, I’ve been slaving here for seven years. I need to know when people come to Christ—that’s what I’m living for!’” In Eugene, Oregon, the University of Oregon Salt Company had nearly 600 students at the kickoff event a few weeks ago. “We packed out the largest auditorium on campus,” said Generations church pastor Solomon Rexius. “People were sitting in the aisles. I’ve lived in Eugene most of my life, and to my recollection the largest campus gathering I ever remembered was around 300. So it’s pretty amazing. People are very open to the gospel and the ways of Jesus. The harvest is plentiful!” At University Reformed Church, six minutes from Michigan State University, pastor Jason Helopoulos is experiencing something similar: “For this generation, I can’t give them enough of the Word.” One of his favorite parts of Sunday is after the second service, when a group of college students will approach him. “They’ll form a half circle, and they’re just firing questions,” he said. “What does the Bible say about this? What about that?” It’s happening at the University of Iowa too. “We’re definitely seeing it,” Veritas pastor Mark Arant said. “Numbers are up in our weekly gatherings, retreats, and student leadership applications. We’re even seeing it in older community people as well—especially those in their 30s and 40s.” How to Steward a Revival We know from history that revivals don’t last forever. So how can we steward the spiritual awakening around us? “Young people should be given a long leash to try dangerous things when it comes to revival,” Abbott said. “I’ve seen people adopt the ‘dude with sign’ model, writing ‘Jesus is better than sex’ or ‘A relationship with God is better than a high-paying career’ on cardboard and holding it up in a busy place. Or prove-me-wrong tables. Is it going to be effective? I don’t know. But students should feel the liberty to try that kind of stuff.” (When Bucknell University students gathered to protest the Vietnam War in 1970, Tim Keller and friends sat near the edge of the crowd with signs that read, “The resurrection of Jesus is intellectually credible and existentially satisfying.”) Sometimes, older people are quick to advise against ineffective-sounding ideas—this is especially a temptation for a generation of helicopter parents, Abbott said. Summit College 2025 Winter Conference / Courtesy of Summit College “When I was at James Madison University, one of the students came up with a door-holding ministry,” he said. “They stood at the entrances to academic buildings and opened doors for people and said, ‘Have a good day.’ I was like, ‘This is the dumbest thing ever. This is not sharing the gospel.’ But then we’d hear of conversations people would get into. Someone would ask, ‘Why are you doing this?’ and they’d say, ‘I’m part of Cru and we care about the community here at JMU.’ And they’d get to share the gospel. What I thought was a waste of time ended up being pretty awesome.” Campus pastors and youth leaders are also going to need support. “We were only planning to take 50 students to the annual Campus Outreach conference, because we can’t afford a bus and half my staff aren’t old enough to drive vans,” Dentman said. “That was the plan in August. But we have so much spiritual momentum now that when we sat down to identify the students we wanted to take, we ended up with 150 or maybe even 200. So we’re praying for money for a bus.” He is also ordering more Bible studies and paying out more staff reimbursements than he’d planned on. “It’s a little overwhelming but it’s super exciting,” he said. “Man, normally I’m chasing students—I text them 100 times and call them, and then they run away from me when I’m on campus. Today we had a Bible study in the middle of the cafeteria, and people are just coming up and sitting down. They’re just interested. And they’re showing up to churches for the first time. At a partner-church retreat last weekend, the college students were so engaged the pastor had to say, ‘Does anyone who is not a college student have a question?’” Many of the campus ministries that are seeing a lot of activity—from Campus Outreach to Salt to Summit—are closely connected to, and operate under the authority of, the local church. For those churches, this is a great time to lean into partnerships with your campus ministry, Dentman said. It’s also the perfect time for a church located near a campus to start a college ministry, even if it’s just holding a Bible study on campus or offering rides to church on Sunday. “We’re literally running into staffing issues trying to get students to church,” Dentman said. “We’re making trips back and forth, picking people up. We can’t get as many students to church as want to go.” This has changed the way he reads Luke 10:2, when Jesus tells the disciples, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.” “I always interpreted that as, ‘Man, look at all these broken people. There are so many of them out there. We need workers to get in here to help these people,’” he said. “I was always thinking of ministry as planting and cultivating. But this year completely switches that for me. God is doing so much work. He already saved a lot of people through the cross. We just need people go out there and harvest all the crops!” “We have to give credit where credit is due,” said Vance. “The Holy Spirit of God is at work.”
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Living In Faith
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Messianic Momentum of the Davidic King
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Messianic Momentum of the Davidic King

The New Testament makes it clear that Jesus Christ is the messianic son of David whose coming was foretold in the Old Testament. Not only would he secure the salvation of his people through his death and resurrection, but he’d also establish “the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ” (Rev. 11:15). In so doing, he fulfills the promise the Lord made to David in 2 Samuel 7: the Lord will establish the dominion of his future son forever. As important as it is to understand how the New Testament uses the Old, we also must examine how the Old Testament uses the Old. Christ’s coming doesn’t fulfill only 2 Samuel 7 but also a tradition of interpretation of the Davidic promise that can be traced throughout the Old Testament. The New Testament authors built on the Old Testament promises, revealing that Jesus is the promised one. By studying how Old Testament writers developed in their understanding of the Davidic promises and then how the New Testament writers claimed their fulfillment in Jesus, we can better appreciate Jesus as the ideal King and the God-man. Davidic Covenant in 2 Samuel 7 Second Samuel 7:1–16 begins with David sharing his desire to build a temple for the Lord. He acknowledges how improper it is that he lives in a grand palace while the Lord remains in a tent (vv. 1–3). The Lord replies that he has always dwelled in a tent since the exodus and never requested more. In fact, he’s the One who revealed the tabernacle’s design; thus, he’s content to be in a tent (vv. 4–7). The Lord continues by describing the redemptive accomplishments he’s done for David so that he can be a king over Israel (vv. 7–11). Then, in a surprising turn of events, the Lord informs David that, instead of David building a “house” for the Lord, the Lord will build a “house” for him. Whereas David uses “house” literally, referring to an actual house (i.e., temple), the Lord uses it figuratively, referring to a household (i.e., a household of kings)—a perpetual line of kings (vv. 11–13). One son specifically is isolated who will eventually build the temple for the Lord’s habitation. Though that son may commit iniquity, the Lord will remain steadfast to his promise and will establish David’s throne forever (vv. 14–16). 1 Chronicles Interpretation of 2 Samuel 7 There’s little doubt that the preexilic and exilic readers of 2 Samuel 7 would have identified this future son of David as Solomon. The covenant promise is then repeated and reinterpreted by the postexilic community in 1 Chronicles 17. Though several differences exist, we’ll point out three for our purposes. The first is that the son of David “commits iniquity” in 2 Samuel 7:14. In 1 Chronicles 17, however, that description is removed. This suggests that, by the postexilic era, the expected son would be without sin. We see the same interpretative tradition when we compare Psalms 89 and 132. Both psalms are poetic commentaries on the Davidic covenant. However, where the Davidic sons in Psalm 89:30–32 will violate God’s laws, the sons in Psalm 132:12 will “keep [God’s] covenant and . . . testimonies that [God] shall teach them.” An ideal king. The growing expectation, therefore, is that a faithful Davidic son would come who fulfills the covenant stipulations perfectly (Deut. 17:17–20), unlike the historical kings of Israel. Solomon, therefore, was only a shadowy copy of the true son of David yet to come. Solomon, therefore, was only a shadowy copy of the true son of David yet to come. The second difference is to whom the kingdom belongs. In 2 Samuel 7:16, God says about David’s son, “Your house and your kingdom shall be made sure forever before me,” where “your” refers to David (author’s translation). But in 1 Chronicles 17:14, God says, “I will confirm him in my house and in my kingdom forever,” where “my” refers to God himself. Still, earlier in 1 Chronicles, God also says the house and kingdom belong to David’s son (1 Chr. 17:11–12). Therefore, by the postexilic era, the expectation is that the house/kingdom would belong both to God and to David’s messianic son. We aren’t told how both are true, but we’re given the impression the two statements are bringing the Lord and the Davidic Messiah into a closer relationship. While the Old Testament presents these two parties as distinct, it hints at a growing connection between them, culminating in their unity in the New Testament. They’re even given identical descriptions in the Psalms, for example. The Lord God in Psalm 111 is described using similar images and vocabulary as the Davidic king in Psalm 112, displaying a proto-union of God and man. The third difference is in 2 Samuel 7:1: “The LORD had given him rest from all his surrounding enemies.” In 1 Chronicles 17:1, David isn’t given any rest. The trauma of the exile reshaped messianic expectations. Not only did Israel break the covenant, but their kings were particularly egregious. This is one of many explanations for the exile. However, the promise of a king is still a good thing. What they truly need is an ideal king. This messianic son would be more than a godly man—he’d be God himself. Finally, he’d bring more than mere “rest,” but rather the true “Sabbath” (Heb. 4:9) and the final defeat of all God’s enemies (Rev. 16:14–16). As Israel transitioned from the preexilic to the postexilic era, a subtle anticipation developed of the rise of a divine son of David who would definitively accomplish the works of God and establish the Lord’s kingdom forever. Union of God and Man The apostle Peter’s Pentecost sermon affirms Jesus as the eschatological messianic son in Acts 2:36: “Let all the house of Israel therefore know for certain that God has made him both Lord [Yahweh] and Christ [Messiah], this Jesus whom you crucified.” The Lord’s Christ is Christ the Lord. The messianic son of David is the ontological Son of God. Jesus himself said as much when he quoted Psalm 110:1 in Mark 12:36. The Lord’s Christ is Christ the Lord. The messianic son of David is the ontological Son of God. It isn’t clear how much insight the Old Testament readers would have had regarding the precise identity of the Davidic son. What is clear, however, is that an interpretive trajectory existed in the Old Testament that laid down a messianic momentum, leading to the logical conclusion the New Testament writers made regarding Jesus as both Lord (God) and Christ (son of David). We should rejoice in the witness of the Scriptures, that the New Testament claim of Jesus isn’t a forced interpretation of the Old Testament messianic tradition but rather a celebrative eschatological conclusion. There’s life for God’s people because many years ago was born “in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord [Messiah-Yahweh]” (Luke 2:11).
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Rescued Together: Kenneth Mbugua on Ephesians 2:1–10
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Rescued Together: Kenneth Mbugua on Ephesians 2:1–10

In this plenary message from TGC25, Kenneth Mbugua preaches on Ephesians 2:1–10 about the boasting inherent to human nature, what it reveals about our lives, and how the outworking of our new nature in Christ leads to boasting only in him.
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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
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JD FOSTER: Five Essential Lessons From Shutdown
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JD FOSTER: Five Essential Lessons From Shutdown

stronger hand wins
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Science Explorer
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Science history: Chemists discover buckyballs — the most perfect molecules in existence — Nov. 14, 1985
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Science history: Chemists discover buckyballs — the most perfect molecules in existence — Nov. 14, 1985

Over a feverish 10-day period, scientists synthesized and described a new class of carbon molecules, called buckminster fullerenes, after the iconic 20th-century inventor.
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YubNub News
YubNub News
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Sonder–Marriott Breach Left Guests Stranded—What Went Wrong
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Sonder–Marriott Breach Left Guests Stranded—What Went Wrong

The exterior of a Marriott hotel in Austin, Texas, on Feb. 14, 2023. Brandon Bell/Getty ImagesThe abrupt collapse of the partnership between Sonder Holdings Inc. and Marriott International has…
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2 New Malaria Treatments Show Promise as Drug Resistance Grows
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2 New Malaria Treatments Show Promise as Drug Resistance Grows

This October 2024 image provided by Novartis shows GanLum, a new anti-malaria treatment, at a manufacturing facility in Slovenia. Novartis via APNEW YORK—Researchers on Wednesday reported two promising…
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YubNub News
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Ohtani Is Unanimous MVP for 4th Time in Winning NL Honor as Judge Edges Raleigh for 3rd AL Accolade
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Ohtani Is Unanimous MVP for 4th Time in Winning NL Honor as Judge Edges Raleigh for 3rd AL Accolade

Los Angeles Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani watches his home run against the Toronto Blue Jays during the seventh inning in Game 3 of baseball's World Series in Los Angeles, on Oct. 27, 2025. AP Photo/Brynn Anderson,…
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YubNub News
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Trump’s Granddaughter Makes LPGA Debut
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Trump’s Granddaughter Makes LPGA Debut

Kai Trump tees off on the thirteenth hole during the first round of The ANNIKA golf tournament at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Florida, on Nov 13, 2025. Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn ImagesKai Trump, the…
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Trump Admin Rolls Back Biden-Era Restrictions on Alaska Oil and Gas Drilling
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Trump Admin Rolls Back Biden-Era Restrictions on Alaska Oil and Gas Drilling

Fish Creek runs through the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska on July 8, 2004. David W. Houseknecht/U.S. Geological Survey via APThe Trump administration said Nov. 13 that it has finalized a rule rescinding…
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