British missionary shot in Democratic Republic of Congo, now in a stable condition.

A British missionary who was shot by bandits in the Democratic Republic of Congo on Sunday night is in a stable condition in hospital.

Maud Kells, 75, from Cookstown, Northern Ireland, was shot twice and wounded in the shoulder by rebels who attacked her home in Mulita, a remote village in the north east of the country.

WEC International, the organisation with which she was working, said she was in a stable condition this morning and was able to speak and recognise people.

Kells has worked in the DRC since 1968, when she began working as a missionary nurse. She has since been involved in training Congolese nurses in five hospitals and 30 health centres. She received an OBE in the New Year’s honours list for her work.

Douglas Craig, the Scottish coordinator for WEC who has worked with Kells in the DRC, described her as a “dynamic, committed Christian lady”.

Colleagues with Kells at the hospital had told Craig that she was stable but in quite a lot of pain.

“It remains to be seen what impact this has had on her physically, certainly I don’t think she will let this stop her serving the Lord if she can,” he said.

“The area has been subject to instability for a number of years,” said Craig, “but she’s stayed on… she’s got that stickability through thick and thin.

“She’s one of these old fashioned ‘do everything’ missionaries – she turns her hand to everything that she can.”

As well as nursing, Kells has been involved with building medical facilities and a school, as well as Bible teaching.

Kells has witnessed numerous armed uprisings during her time in the DRC, and has been evacuated from her home more than once to escape violence.

Craig said this attack was unlikely to be targeting her for her missionary work or Christian faith but an act of lawlessness by armed rebels.

Kells spends half of the year in the DRC and the other half in Cookstown.
Source: Christian Today

Thousands rendered homeless as a result of Kashmir border clash

Thousands of Indians have fled from their homes as fighting between India and Pakistan spread along a 200-km (124 mile) stretch of the border in the disputed region of Kashmir.

Tension between the nuclear-armed rivals has risen since Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi called off peace talks in August and clashes along stretches of their border have been erupting intermittently since October.

At least 10 Indian and Pakistani soldiers and civilians have been killed in fighting over the past week.

About 6,000 civilians in Indian-controlled Kashmir fled from their homes late on Monday as fighting moved to civilian areas, said Shantmanu, the divisional commissioner of Jammu region. About 4,000 left after fighting began last week.
“We had a narrow escape and there is a war-like situation,” Sham Kumar, 54, from Sherpur village told Reuters. “Pakistani troops are using long-range weapons. It is the first time we have seen such intense shelling.”

The violence comes days before US Secretary of State John Kerry is due to visit India. President Barack Obama is also due to visit India later this month.

The United States has for years been trying to push the South Asian rivals to build better relations. Mistrust between India and Pakistan is a factor behind conflict in various parts of the region including Afghanistan.

Kumar said he left his village after a shell landed in a school about 3.5 km (two miles) from the border.

Indian and Pakistani forces again exchanged gunfire and mortar bombs across parts of their border on Tuesday, an Indian Border Security Force official said.

“The firing is going on and we are giving befitting reply to Pakistani shelling,” the official said.

Pakistani officials were not immediately available for comment.

The rivals, who have fought two wars over Muslim-majority Kashmir, blame each other for the upsurge in clashes since October.
Source: Christian Today

Site of Trial of Jesus believed to have been discovered by Archaeologists

Archaeologists have claimed that an excavated building in Jerusalem’s Old City could very well be the site of Jesus Christ’s trial by King Herod before He was crucified.

The Washington Post reported on Sunday that the discovery was made following a dig that started 15 years ago beneath an abandoned building close to the Tower of David Museum in Jerusalem.
The building had in past centuries been used as a prison by the Ottoman Empire, but according to Amit Re’em, the Jerusalem district archaeologist who led the excavation, it could also very well be the site where Christ was trialed by Herod the Great, as found in the New Testament.

Re’em said that the site “is a great part of the ancient puzzle of Jerusalem and shows the history of this city in a very unique and clear way.”

Yisca Harani, an expert on Christianity and pilgrimage to the Holy Land, said, “For those Christians who care about accuracy in regards to historical facts, this is very forceful.”

He added, “For others, however, those who come for the general mental exercise of being in Jerusalem, they don’t care as long as [their journey] ends in Golgotha — the site of the Crucifixion.”

The building has also produced a number of other significant archaeological discoveries, including symbols carved in walls by Jewish resistance fighters in 1940s, and basins believed to be from the era of the Crusades to the Middle East. An ancient underground sewage system also discovered there is thought to have underpinned the palace build by Herod, who ruled Judea under the Roman empire during Jesus’ time.

Christian leaders and historians have debated the exact site of Jesus’ trial, as some readings of the Bible suggest that Jesus was brought before Pilate in a “praetorium,” a Latin term for a general’s tent. Academics say this word could have described military barracks, or indeed the palace built by Herod.

The WP noted that most historians agree that Herod’s palace was built in the western side of Jerusalem, close to the Tower Museum.

Shimon Gibson, an archaeology professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, noted that the Gospel of John describes the trial as taking place near a gate and on a bumpy stone pavement, which is compatible with archaeological finds at the site.

“There is, of course, no inscription stating it happened here, but everything — archaeological, historical and Gospel accounts — all falls into place and makes sense,” Gibson said.

Catholic group the Legions of Christ claimed another notable discovery in late December, when it said that an uncovered first-century synagogue in the ancient town of Magdala could have been one of the places where Christ preached to the people.

“This is the first synagogue ever excavated where Jesus walked and preached,” Father Eamon Kelly said.

The town of Magdala is also believed to be the home of Mary Magdalene, known as one of Jesus’ female disciples. The ancient synagogue was unearthed after the Catholic group began excavations of plots of land planned to be used to build a pilgrims’ hotel, inter-faith chapel, a restaurant and a women’s shelter.
Source:Christian Post

Protesters march against Islam and immigration in Germany

Protesters marched in several German cities on Monday against higher levels of immigration and what they see as the growing influence of Islam, in defiance of an appeal from Chancellor Angela Merkel to spurn rallies she views as racist.

The rallies, organised by a new grassroots movement known as PEGIDA, or Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the West, have become an almost weekly event in the east German city of Dresden in recent months.

Some 18,000 people, the biggest number so far, turned out in Dresden on Monday but similar rallies in Berlin and the western city of Cologne were heavily outnumbered by counter-protesters who accuse PEGIDA of fanning racism and intolerance.

The PEGIDA protesters waved Germany’s black, red and gold flag and brandished posters bearing slogans such as “Against religious fanaticism and every kind of radicalism”.
One poster in Cologne called for “potatoes rather than doner kebabs”, a swipe at ethnic Turks who at around three million represent Germany’s largest immigrant community.

Germany has some of the world’s most liberal asylum rules, partly due to its Nazi past. The number of asylum seekers arriving in Germany, many from the Middle East, jumped to around 200,000 last year – four times as many as in 2012.

In her New Year address last week, Merkel urged Germans to shun the anti-Muslim protesters, saying their hearts were full of hatred.

“We need to … say that right-wing extremism, hostility towards foreigners and anti-Semitism should not be allowed any place in our society,” Merkel said on Monday in the eastern town of Neustrelitz.

In Cologne, home to a large Muslim population, there were 10 times as many counter-demonstrators as PEGIDA protesters. In similarly multi-ethnic Berlin, some 5,000 counter-demonstrators swamped around 400 anti-Muslim protesters, local police said.

“Germany is a country where refugees are welcome and the silent majority must not remain silent but rather go out onto the streets and show itself,” Justice Minister Heiko Maas said at the Berlin counter-demonstration.

Cologne Cathedral, one of Germany’s most famous landmarks, switched its lights off to protest against the anti-Muslim rallies. Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate turned off its floodlights in a similar gesture of solidarity.

PEGIDA has unsettled Germany’s political establishment and at first looked likely to help the Eurosceptic party Alternative for Germany (AfD). But the party, already suffering an internal power struggle, is split over how to deal with the movement.

Source:Christaintoday

Proposed change in CofE suicide funerals

The Church of England’s General Synod could vote to give people who kill themselves the same funeral service as those who die of natural causes.

A Sunday newspaper says the Church’s parliament is poised to approve a change in Canon Law which would allow people who have completed suicide to be given a full Christian funeral.

Currently clergy are forbidden from giving the same service in a bid to show the Church’s disapproval of suicide, but some vicars ignore or do not know about the rule.

The Mail on Sunday claims to have spoken to a senior member of the Synod who said: “The Church has always opposed suicide on the basis of the commandment Thou Shalt Not Kill, and that includes yourself.”

General Synod members will meet next month in London to discuss a possible change.

Under current Canon Law clergy should be modifying the funeral service if a person was of sound mind when they killed themselves.

Canon Michael Parsons from Gloucester is leading calls for reforms and told the newspaper many vicars were unaware of the law and were focused on comforting the family left behind.

He said a change in the Church would help it shed the impression that it is ‘hostile’ to people who take their own lives.

Vocal opponent of assisted suicide, former Government Minister Lord Tebbit, said: “The Church is in danger of getting into a muddle because we can take a merciful view of people who kill themselves while the balance of their mind is disturbed.

“But we are now looking at cases in which people who appear to be quite sane want to take their own lives. The Church should think again.”

Almost six thousand people completed suicide in the UK in 2012 according to The Samaritans.

 

Source : Premier Christian News

Libya: Kidnapped Christians could have been taken by IS

A priest in Libya has said he thinks a group with links to Islamic State could be responsible for the kidnapping of at least 13 Christians in the north of the country.

It had initially been thought 20 Egyptian believers were taken in the city of Sirte in the early hours of Saturday morning but state media has revised the number down.

Armed gunmen stormed a housing complex and separated the Muslims and let them go free before handcuffing and driving away with the Christians.

Fr. Philemon Attia, a priest of the Mar Girgis church in Beni Suef, said his nephew was among the men taken.

“One of our relatives who is still in Libya and lives in the same housing building called us today and told us about the abduction my nephew and twelve others,” he told International Christian Concern.

“At dawn some armed, masked men stormed the housing building and broke the doors of their rooms and abducted them at gunpoint.”

Fr. Philemon said he had been told a group with links to Islamic State may be behind the kidnappings.

IS has been persecuting tens of thousands of Christians as it takes over large parts of Iraq and Syria trying to create a caliphate that is ruled by strict Muslim law.

The priest said many of the Christians at the housing complex “stayed in their housing building for more than 25 days like captives and they couldn’t go out of their rooms because they heard that the area where they were living was controlled by the Islamic State group.

“They believed their lives would be in danger if they went out. Every time I called him he was asking me to pray for them,” he added.

The kidnappings come just five days after seven Coptic Christians were abducted at a check point as they tried to return to their home country of Egypt.

 

Source : Premier Christian News

Pope Francis announces 20 new Cardinals

Pope Francis has appointed 15 new cardinals from countries around the world.

Ethiopia, Myanmar, Tonga have all been given new cardinals by the Holy Father with the new intake coming from 14 countries on every continent.

The only English speaking clergyman to be promoted is from New Zealand.

Msgr. John Atcherley Dew, Archbishop of Wellington, will take up his place with the others on February 14 at a Consistory in the Vatican.

The Holy See says the new appointments shows the “inseparable bond between the Church of Rome and the particular Churches present in the world.”

The new cardinals are:

Mons. Dominique Mamberti , Titular Archbishop of Sagona, Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura.
Mons. Manuel José Macário do Nascimento Clemente , Patriarch of Lisbon (Portugal).
Mons. Berhaneyesus Demerew Souraphiel, CM, Archbishop of Addis Ababa (Ethiopia).
Msgr. John Atcherley Dew , Archbishop of Wellington (New Zealand).
Mons. Edoardo Menichelli , Archbishop of Ancona-Osimo (Italy).
Mons. Pierre Nguyen Van Nhon , Archbishop of Hanoi (Vietnam).
Msgr. Alberto Suárez Inda , Archbishop of Morelia (Mexico).
Mons. Charles Maung Bo, SDB, Archbishop of Yangon (Myanmar).
Msgr. Francis Xavier Kriengsak Kovithavanij , Archbishop of Bangkok (Thailand).
Mons. Francesco Montenegro , Archbishop of Agrigento (Italy).
Mons. Daniel Fernando Sturla Berhouet, SDB, Archbishop of Montevideo (Uruguay).
Mons. Ricardo Blázquez Pérez , Archbishop of Valladolid (Spain).
Mons. José Luis Lacunza Maestrojuan , OAR, Bishop David (Panama).
Mons. Arlindo Gomes Furtado , Bishop of Santiago de Cabo Verde (Cape Verde Archipelago).
Mons. Soane Patita Paini Mafi , Bishop of Tonga (Tonga Islands).

 

Pope Francis said: “We pray for the new Cardinals so, renewing their love for Christ, are witnesses of his Gospel in the city of Rome and the world, and with their experience more intensely pastoral support me in my apostolic service.”

His choice could cause controversy because of his focus on the Church around the world and outside of the traditional Western countries.

Austen Ivereigh is the Director of Catholic Voices and author of a biography on Pope Frances.

He told Premier it was an expect announcement.

“It was quite clear from last year’s set of appointments that he intended to increase the representation in the College of Cardinals from those places in the world that have many Catholics but haven’t traditionally had many cardinals.

“He is correcting the current imbalance which is in favour too much of Europe and the developed countries.

“He has gone for the radical option of increasing the representation of the poor.

“There’s a particular emphasis on Asia, this is one of Pope Francis’ great tasks as Pope, to open up Asia.

“I think this is a very Francis set of appointments.”

 

Content by Premier Christian News

Passion 2015 Conference

Christian Post reports – Over 20,000 university students and leaders from around the world converged in downtown Atlanta Friday evening to kick off the Passion 2015 conference, the first of three, 3-day gatherings hosted by Passion this year focused on making Jesus famous while benefitting local communities and impacting the world.

Attendees at this first Passion 2015 gathering represent twenty-two nations and over 1,000 different universities. The majority of conference participants are students and young professionals ages 18-25, along with pastors and church leaders attending with their groups. In addition, over 1,000 volunteers – referred to as “Door Holders” – are assisting with various logistical needs throughout the conference.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RYTF_74pczQ[/youtube]

The opening session featured a message from Louie Giglio, founder of the Passion movement and pastor of Passion City Church in Atlanta. He focused on Jesus Christ’s final word on the cross, “Tetelestai,” which means “It is finished” in the Greek language. In his dynamic style, Giglio expounded on the meaning of this word and explained the Biblical belief that when Jesus died, He died so all mankind could have eternal life.

“We’re beginning where Christ ended because His last word is our first,” said Giglio. “His last expression on earth makes possible all of our expressions on earth. We’re going to the end of His life to find the beginning of ours—the end of His word to find the beginning of our words.”

Giglio emphasized that the Gospel message is not simply one of forgiveness of sins, but also a call to surrender because of Christ’s finished work on the cross. “We live in a ‘me’ and ‘my’ generation, but we are the Jesus generation united for His fame,” he said. “We rally around the life and death of Jesus. We pray tonight that we will receive the Gospel and relinquish our lives in total surrender.”

Friday evening also included a time of worship through music led by members of The Passion Band including Chris Tomlin, Christy Nockels, Kristian Stanfill, and Brett Younker.

In addition to messages from Giglio this weekend, conference attendees will hear from several notable speakers including Francis Chan, John Piper, Christine Caine, and Judah Smith. Guests Lecrae, Matt Chandler, Carl Lentz, and Ben Stuart will also participate in this gathering.

The intersection of worship and justice is a familiar theme at Passion Conferences, and in recent years students have given over $7 million to provide awareness, prevention, rescue and restoration to fight modern-day slavery. Each year conference attendees are also asked to donate towels and socks – two of the most needed items at homeless shelters. “He [God] wants the people of this city to feel lifted by a gathering of this size,” said Brad Jones, Passion City Church’s Pastor of Community, during Friday’s session. Atlanta’s City of Refuge homeless ministry will receive the items donated during this gathering.  … Read More 

Christians Needs to Stop Asking ‘What If’ and Start Asking ‘What Now’ about Gay Marriage

Like a tsunami, so-called gay marriage has swept aside just about every obstacle in its path, creating a very different cultural landscape than even seemed possible a few decades ago—or even a few years ago! According to David Von Drehle in Time magazine, the swift embrace of same-sex marriage is nothing short of a “seismic shift” of American culture, one “as rapid and unpredictable as any turn in public opinion.”
And that, folks, might still be an understatement.
In 1996, just 27 percent of Americans supported so-called same-sex “marriage.” It was the same year that President Bill Clinton signed the bi-partisan Defense of Marriage Act, which defined, for the federal government, marriage as only between a man and woman.
In 2013 however, the Supreme Court struck down part of DOMA and public approval for same-sex marriage had jumped to 53 percent, including 73 percent of 18-29 year-olds. Today, 19 states and the District of Columbia have legalized same-sex marriage, with federal and state courts are constantly striking down state laws banning same-sex marriage it seems every day.
This big change is a big deal. It was the eminent sociologist David Popenoe who said that no civilization ever survived after its family life deteriorated. But if you don’t believe him, listen to G.K. Chesterton, and I quote: “This triangle of truisms, of father, mother and child, cannot be destroyed; it can only destroy those civilizations which disregard it.”
What does this mean for America, and for the church? A lot of people are understandably pessimistic. Recently a pastor looked me in the eye and said, “John, it’s all over; we’ve lost.”
And I thought, “Well, wait a minute—is a loss on a political and cultural level the loss of the Kingdom of God? What’s this ‘it’ that’s over, and who are the ‘we’ who have lost?
Look, even if same-sex marriage becomes the law of the land tomorrow, and it just may, we Christians still have to wake up, go to church, run our businesses and ministries, schools and churches. This is not a time to throw up our hands and retreat. Given all of this cultural change, of course, the question has changed, from “What if?” to “What now?” So what we need is some kind of framework in which to move forward.
And that’s why Christian apologist Sean McDowell and I are releasing what we think is a very important new book, called “Same-Sex Marriage: A Thoughtful Approach to God’s Design for Marriage.” It takes a very careful look at the new cultural landscape and helps all of us to move forward—not in fear, but in faith.
First, we wanted to help Christians understand the issue biblically, but not just using a proof-text from Leviticus or Romans.
Our model is Jesus, who when asked specifically about the Mosaic law on marriage, went back to the very beginning—to Genesis. Jesus thought that God’s created intent was even more important than the law itself. We’ve got to understand this design—especially with the recent spate of so-called “Christian” books attempting to justify same-sex marriage.
But Sean and I also look at the issue culturally. Same-sex marriage isn’t the start of the problem; it’s the fruit of a long-going sexual revolution.
The ground that has shifted is not just moral ground; it’s worldview ground. We’re not just seeing a moral slide toward more and more sexual immorality; we’ve undergone a complete shift in the way we understand the human person.
Our book will help you understand this shift; but just thinking alone isn’t enough. So in the second half of the book, we describe what we can do, practically and immediately when this issue comes our way. It’s kind of a “how now shall we live” on this issue, and we’ll talk about it more tomorrow on BreakPoint. So please tune in. And come to BreakPoint.org to order your copy of our new book, “Same-Sex Marriage: A Thoughtful Approach to God’s Design for Marriage.”
(This commentary originally aired July 24, 2014)

 

BreakPoint is a Christian worldview ministry that seeks to build and resource a movement of Christians committed to living and defending Christian worldview in all areas of life. Begun by Chuck Colson in 1991 as a daily radio broadcast, BreakPoint provides a Christian perspective on today’s news and trends via radio, interactive media, and print. Today BreakPoint commentaries, co-hosted by Eric Metaxas and John Stonestreet, air daily on more than 1,200 outlets with an estimated weekly listening audience of eight million people. Feel free to contact us at BreakPoint.org where you can read and search answers to common questions.

John Stonestreet, the host of The Point, a daily national radio program, provides thought-provoking commentaries on current events and life issues from a biblical worldview. John holds degrees from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (IL) and Bryan College (TN), and is the co-author of Making Sense of Your World: A Biblical Worldview.

 

Original Content by Christian News Headlines

Billy Graham Named One of World’s Most Admired Men for 58th Time

Billy Graham was named the number four “Most Admired Man” in the world in 2014, according to a U.S. polling agency Gallup.
The Christian Post reports this is the 58th time Graham was made the Top 10 list.
According to the poll, two percent of poll participants named him as their first or second choice when asked, “What man that you have heard or read about, living today in any part of the world do you admire most.”
The poll included results from 805 adults.
This year, Graham shares the spot with former President George W. Bush.
Graham has never been ranked the number one most admired man in the world. He, however, was ranked second every year from 1969 to 1974. He has had the most appearances on the list than any other person living or dead.
Barack Obama topped the list. He has ranked number one for the past seven years. Pope Francis was second on the list.
Ben Carson and Stephen Hawking shared the number five spot.
Original content by Christian News Headlines