Religions Around The World

In the early morning hours, monks can be seen walking on their alms round in Kanchanaburi, Thailand
Showing humility and detachment from worldly goods, the monk walks slowly and only stops if he is called. Standing quietly, with his bowl open, the local Buddhists give him rice, or flowers, or an envelope containing money.  In return, the monks bless the local Buddhists and wish them a long and fruitful life.
Christians Celebrate Good Friday
Enacting the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in St. Mary's Church in Secunderabad, India. Only 2.3% of India's population is Christian. 
Ancient interior mosaic in the Church of the Holy Saviour in Chora
The Church of the Holy Saviour in Istanbul, Turkey is a medieval Byzantine Greek Orthodox church.
Dome of the Rock located in the Old City of Jerusalem
The site's great significance for Muslims derives from traditions connecting it to the creation of the world and to the belief that the Prophet Muhammad's Night Journey to heaven started from the rock at the center of the structure.
Holi Festival in Mathura, India
Holi is a Hindu festival that marks the end of winter. Also known as the “festival of colors”,  Holi is primarily observed in South Asia but has spread across the world in celebration of love and the changing of the seasons.
Jewish father and daughter pray at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem, Israel.
Known in Hebrew as the Western Wall, it is one of the holiest sites in the world. The description, "place of weeping", originated from the Jewish practice of mourning the destruction of the Temple and praying for its rebuilding at the site of the Western Wall.
People praying in Mengjia Longshan Temple in Taipei, Taiwan
The temple is dedicated to both Taoism and Buddhism.
People praying in the Grand Mosque in Ulu Cami
This is the most important mosque in Bursa, Turkey and a landmark of early Ottoman architecture built in 1399.
Savior Transfiguration Cathedral of the Savior Monastery of St. Euthymius
Located in Suzdal, Russia, this is a church rite of sanctification of apples and grapes in honor of the Feast of the Transfiguration of the Lord.
Fushimi Inari Shrine is located in Kyoto, Japan
It is famous for its thousands of vermilion torii gates, which straddle a network of trails behind its main buildings. Fushimi Inari is the most important Shinto shrine dedicated to Inari, the Shinto god of rice.
Ladles at the purification fountain in the Hakone Shrine
Located in Hakone, Japan, this shrine is a Japanese Shinto shrine.  At the purification fountain, ritual washings are performed by individuals when they visit a shrine. This ritual symbolizes the inner purity necessary for a truly human and spiritual life.
Hanging Gardens of Haifa are garden terraces around the Shrine of the Báb on Mount Carmel in Haifa, Israel
They are one of the most visited tourist attractions in Israel. The Shrine of the Báb is where the remains of the Báb, founder of the Bábí Faith and forerunner of Bahá'u'lláh in the Bahá'í Faith, have been buried; it is considered to be the second holiest place on Earth for Bahá'ís.
Pilgrims praying at the Pool of the Nectar of Immortality and Golden Temple
Located in Amritsar, India, the Golden Temple is one of the most revered spiritual sites of Sikhism. It is a place of worship for men and women from all walks of life and all religions to worship God equally. Over 100,000 people visit the shrine daily.
Entrance gateway of Sik Sik Yuen Wong Tai Sin Temple Kowloon
Located in Hong Kong, China, the temple is dedicated to Wong Tai Sin, or the Great Immortal Wong. The Taoist temple is famed for the many prayers answered: "What you request is what you get" via a practice called kau cim.
Christian women worship at a church in Bois Neus, Haiti.
Haiti's population is 94.8 percent Christian, primarily Catholic. This makes them one of the most heavily Christian countries in the world.

His arrest went viral. Now Rev. Michael Woolf is preaching what he calls ‘Sanctuary values.’

(RNS) — For most people, being slammed to the pavement by a group of police officers and violently handcuffed in front of a screaming crowd would be a traumatic experience. When that situation befell the Rev. Michael Woolf last November as he was protesting outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility near Chicago, he says the experience was, indeed, “extremely traumatic” — but it was also something else.

“I had a lot of clarity when that was happening,” Woolf, with a lingering Alabama twang, told Religion News Service in a recent interview.

According to Woolf, a pastor ordained in both the American Baptist Churches USA and Alliance of Baptists denominations, that clarity came from recognizing the significance of a white pastor with U.S. citizenship advocating for immigrant rights. In addition to immigration being an emphasis of his ministry for years, his doctoral dissertation was focused on the Sanctuary Movement, the 1980s-era faith-led effort where houses of worship defied the federal government by offering up their churches as living spaces to migrants from Central America.

To Woolf, the November protest outside of the ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois — one of several demonstrations by faith leaders at the site last year — was an extension of that Sanctuary legacy.

“People being willing to stand up for their neighbors, to stand up to the state with all its violence and all its capacity to inflict harm — that’s all Sanctuary values,” he said. “Those are Sanctuary ethics.”

In multiple interviews with RNS, Woolf explained his arrest has proven to be one of the most important moments of his life, in part because the months since have given the pastor of Lake Street Church in Evanston, Illinois, a unique opportunity to draw attention to what he calls “Sanctuary ethics.” When a photo of his arrest — with his face, framed by the knees of two policemen, straining toward the camera and a cross dangling from his clerical collar — was widely shared on social media, Woolf was inundated with inquiries from major television news outlets, radio shows and podcasts.

The ensuing media blitz made Woolf one of several faith leaders who have been elevated to national prominence for protesting ICE, with the photograph of his arrest eventually lauded by The Atlantic as one of the most important news photographs of 2025. But Woolf says he is particularly moved by the hundreds of supportive messages he has received from people inspired by the theology he embraces, one that centers immigrants, Muslim Americans and others targeted by a government he believes is distorting Christianity’s message.

“Whatever we withhold from vulnerable people because we’d like to be comfortable, is whatever we withhold from God,” he said. “So, for me, I meet God at these protests in Broadview.”

All the attention feels a world apart from his childhood in Alabama, where he grew up in a fundamentalist Baptist church. It was a community were Harry Potter was effectively banned, he said, and messages he heard on Sundays sometimes evoked a “blending of God and country” he now associates with Christian nationalism, which he condemns.

Even so, Woolf said he’s grateful for the way Scripture shaped his early years. Regular Bible reading remains a “constant” of his personal spiritual life, and Woolf argued the sacred text has remained a century-spanning seminal work because it “has things that challenge us, things that push us.”

“I feel like I’m sometimes the only mainline Protestant minister who’s read the Bible a couple times,” he joked.

Woolf’s family eventually moved to Tennessee, where he began attending a church in the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship — a denomination founded by a moderate faction of the Southern Baptist Convention that broke away in the early 1990s. Inspired by an active youth group, Woolf says he discerned a call to become a pastor at age 16.

“This is the only job I’ve ever wanted to do,” he said.

He went on to pursue a degree in religious studies at the University of Tennessee. There, he became fascinated with faith-led peace activists such as Daniel and Philip Berrigan, Catholic priests who protested the Vietnam War, as well as leaders of the Sanctuary Movement.

“That was part of my broadening horizon — about how faith and justice can talk together,” he said.

He carried that interest into his studies at Harvard Divinity School, which he was drawn to because of its emphasis on an interfaith student body. Woolf finally became ordained after completing his Masters of Divinity there in 2014 and promptly began working at First Baptist Church in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, a neighborhood of Boston.

But even as he finally embarked on his lifelong charge as a pastor, Woolf continued at HDS in a doctoral program, which eventually resulted in a book about whiteness in the Sanctuary Movement. The book — “Sanctuary and Subjectivity: Thinking Theologically about Whiteness and Sanctuary Movements” — interrogates the complexities of the effort, particularly power imbalances. Woolf stressed that while less-vulnerable Sanctuary congregations put themselves at risk to aid immigrants, they also ideally provided a platform for vulnerable populations to speak for themselves.

Even so, Woolf sees a clear lesson for white pastors like himself living in the U.S. amid Trump’s mass deportation campaign.

“I think the thing to take is that people with privilege have to use it,” he said. Those like himself, he explained, “have to be willing to put their safety” on the line and “lay it at the feet of this intense moral issue.”

“I consider everything at Broadview an extension of Sanctuary,” he said.

According to Ruth Braunstein, professor of sociology at Johns Hopkins University who studies faith in the public square, the visible presence of clergy such as Woolf at immigrant rights protests can strike a chord with a broad swath of Americans. She pointed to the viral photo of Woolf’s arrest, arguing that it not only made a statement about religious support for immigrants, but also functioned as a de facto rebuttal to the Trump administration’s tendency to invoke Christianity on social media while promoting mass deportation efforts.

“I think the image proved so powerful because it disrupted the administration’s persistent effort to frame nativism as a core Christian virtue,” Braunstein said in an email. “We know from reams of survey and other data that this is empirically false — that Christians hold widely varied views on immigration. But data is rarely as powerful as an image. In this case an image of a white Baptist pastor being forcefully arrested for resisting the administration’s nativist policies showed clearly that all Christians are not in agreement on this issue.”

The Rev. Hannah Kardon, a Chicago-area United Methodist pastor who was also arrested last year in a separate protest outside the Broadview ICE facility, agreed.

“I think the images of clergy getting arrested have been so meaningful to people because they are hungry to see leaders actually try and live their morals, and because it puts a lie to an administration that at every turn wraps itself in the name of Jesus while torturing His beloved children,” Kardon said in a text message.

Kardon said such images expose a dynamic she has seen emerge in local efforts to push back against DHS: that the coalition opposing the administration’s immigration policies is broad, and includes non-religious and religious alike.

It’s a sentiment that has long resonated with members of Woolf’s church in Evanston, a congregation he began leading in 2019 and which shares his interest in interfaith work, social justice activism and the Sanctuary Movement. Lake Street Church even identifies as a “Sanctuary church” and actively provides housing to an immigrant family. Roughly a month after Woolf’s arrest, the congregation garnered headlines when it erected an evocative Nativity scene depicting Mary and Jospeh in gas masks, baby Jesus in handcuffs and wrapped in a reflective blanket that resembled those used in detention centers, and Roman soldiers as ICE agents. The display sparked backlash from conservatives, with DHS officials decrying it as “offensive to Christians.” The baby Jesus was eventually taken.

In response, the church erected a new sign.

“Where are Mary, Joseph, and Jesus? We don’t know: They are being detained in a labyrinthian hellscape where their loves ones are unable to locate them,” the sign read.

Meanwhile, Woolf has helped lead trainings for other faith leaders hoping to push back against DHS. Last year, he spoke with clergy in Minneapolis, Charlotte, New Orleans and other cities to help “equip them with the strategies on what it looks like to resist, whether it’s detention centers or ICE tactics.” He has also helped denominational leaders craft public letters about immigration issues and says he has been inspired by the number of “moderate pastors” who appear to resonate with his views.

“That’s been really life-giving for me, because I think it has real results,” he said.

Activism, of course, can take a toll. Charges levied against Woolf related to his arrest were only recently dropped, but he’s quick to note that some of his fellow activists are still facing a legal battle. And Woolf has struggled to explain his arrest to his 8-year-old child, especially as footage and images of the moment remain memorialized on the internet. And he frets over which risks are worth taking.

But his family is no stranger to the public eye. In February, he published a book with his spouse, scholar and fellow Baptist pastor, the Rev. Anna Piela, on “Confronting Islamophobia in the Church.” The two have been actively promoting the book, which Woolf says is in keeping with a number of overlapping interests.

“White Christian nationalism, ICE enforcement, Islamophobia that is really rampant in our country right now — all these sorts of things are really linked,” he said. “What it means for me, in my life, is that it’s really important to show up and be in solidarity with people like the Muslim community.”

And Woolf has no intention of halting his efforts to advocate for immigrant rights, saying he remains focused on issues in the Chicago area. His sudden national prominence notwithstanding, Woolf said he is passionate about local grassroots activism, generally dismissing the idea of national faith leaders “parachuting” in to lead efforts to resist DHS. While dramatic moments like his arrest can make a splash, he pointed to “deeply unsexy” efforts to halt the construction of DHS detention facilities as the next frontier of immigrant rights advocacy.

“It doesn’t help if I show up in another locality,” he said. “What’s useful is if the pastor or rabbi or imam that everybody respects in that area suddenly becomes equipped — through funds, resourcing, toolkits, all these different things — to be able to show up to something like a city council meeting.”

For his part, Woolf said he’s also not exactly eager to get arrested again. But the experience left a lasting impact on him all the same — partly for the opportunity it provided him to preach a message, and partly for what it taught him about himself.

“Until you’re put in some of those scenarios, you’re not really sure if you have courage,” he said. “But I guess I found out I have some courage.”

Original Source:

https://religionnews.com/2026/03/30/his-arrest-went-viral-now-rev-michael-woolf-is-preaching-what-he-calls-sanctuary-values/