Bible App Tracks When and Where People are Reading the Story of Jesus’ birth

A new website created by LifeChurch.tv pastor Bobby Gruenewald allows users to see where and when people are reading the story of Jesus’ birth in the Bible.

The interactive map is the Christmas Story Tracker, and derives its data from the YouVersion Bible app. The tracker displays a star for each person reading Luke 2 on a global map.

YouVersion is a free app that allows Android, iOS, Blackberry, and other mobile users to download the Bible in over 1,000 versions and over 700 languages. Over 160 million people have downloaded the app on their smartphones and tablets since 2007.

The Christmas Story Tracker launched on December 1, and features two shepherds pointing at the North Star.

The site reads: “But the angel said to them, ‘Do not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. Today in the town of David a Saviour has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord,'” (Luke 2:10-11, NIV). The tracker also prompts visitors to continue reading the Christmas story in the book of Luke.

Nearly 4.4 million people in North and South America, Asia, Africa, Europe, and Australia have read Luke 2 using the YouVersion app since December 1.

In August, the app introduced a social networking feature which allows users to share and discuss scriptures with others in their network.

“We believe that it will move people that might be more casual Bible app users [and] … pull them into being daily users of the app,” Pastor Gruenewald told The Blaze.

The app limits friendships to 150 individuals in order to keep the focus of discussion on the Word.

“We certainly want scripture to be able to be shared in other environments, but if you want to explore scripture — that’s best done with people you know and trust,” Gruenewald explained.

Source and Original Content by CT

US Town Under Fire for Christmas Parade Theme

The small town of Piedmont, Alabama attracted the attention of the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF) for its Christmas parade theme.

Organizers of the parade selected “Keep Christ in Christmas” for the theme of the event which would host the championship-winning high school track team, the high school marching band, religious floats and Santa Claus.

Piedmont mayor Bill Baker said that the town has a church on every street corner and he never imagined that “Keep Christ in Christmas” would draw any criticism until he received a letter of complaint from the FFRF.

“It was a great theme,” he said. “I was totally shocked when I received the letter. It’s a small town. It’s a small Christmas parade. We didn’t think there would be any problems at all.”

According to the letter, the theme “alienates non-Christians and others in Piedmont who do not in fact have a ‘strong belief in prayers’ by turning them into political outsiders in their own community”.

The atheist organization urged the town to change the theme of the parade to be “more appropriate, more inclusive and constitutional.” The town did change the parade motto but baker says the parade’s content will remain the same.

“Nothing has really changed. We still have the same religious floats. We still have the churches. We still have the beauty queens. We’re still going to have this wonderful Christian parade regardless of if we have a theme or not,” Baker said.

“The town has rallied…It’s heartwarming to me to see the Christian response that has developed.”

Source and Original Content by Christian Headlines

“The Church should welcome Divorcees, Help Families of Homosexuals”, Pope Francis

Pope Francis urged tolerance and inclusion in an interview with an Argentine newspaper published on Sunday.

In the La Nación interview, the pontiff said that the Church must welcome divorced Catholics and support families of homosexuals, and that debate about the issues is a good thing.

The comments were the pope’s first since the end of the synod, or meeting of bishops, in October.

The bishops disagreed strongly regarding the treatment of divorced and remarried Catholics and homosexuals. One group called for acceptance of gay couples and for remarried Catholics to be able to take communion. More traditional church leaders criticised such changes.

Pope Francis said the synod did not discuss officiating gay marriages, but that the bishops should support “a family that has a homosexual son or daughter… (and consider) how can they raise him or her.”

Regarding remarried church members, he criticised the church’s prohibitions against them becoming godparents, or reading during Mass.

“It seems they are excommunicated de facto,” he insisted, suggesting that the church should “open the doors a little bit more.” Francis did not address the issue of remarried Catholics receiving communion, but asked “Why can’t they be godparents?”

Pope Francis has been deemed one of the most liberal popes, and has caused friction among the more conservative and tradition-minded church leaders. In October, US Cardinal Raymond said that the Catholic Church under Pope Francis is “a ship without a rudder”.

The Pope welcomed the criticism.

“Resistance is now evident,” he said. “And that is a good sign for me,” that there isn’t “hidden mumbling when there is disagreement… It’s healthy to get things out into the open.”

He revealed that the Vatican bureaucracy reorganiation will not be completed in 2015, and that he will travel to three Latin American countries and Africa next year in addition to already announced plans to visit Sri Lanka, the Philippines and the US.

Source and Original Content by CT

Church Attacks UK Benefit System

A Scottish archbishop says the UK’s benefits system is “not fit for purpose” and people who need help from the state face an “impenetrable bureaucratic jungle”.

Glasgow’s Archbishop Philip Tartaglia was speaking after the first meeting of the Scottish Leaders’ Group on Welfare Reform.

Members of the group heard what impact the UK government’s welfare changes had on people and the charities that help them.

Since the election in 2010 the coalition government has placed a cap on the amount of benefits people can receive and introduced the Spare Room Subsidy that means people on housing benefit with more bedrooms than they needed had their benefits cut.

The Archbishop of Glasgow said: “We heard first-hand accounts from people who have been failed by the system through no fault of their own.

“The mechanisms for claiming benefits are not fit for purpose. Money is there, set aside from taxation, but people face an impenetrable bureaucratic jungle to try to access payments.

“Changes have been made without sufficient training and the system is being depersonalised. The result is that people are being left in desperate situations without support.

“I would want to say to those in power in London, because it is there that these decisions still are made, that they need to look closely at the reality on the ground in places like Glasgow and see the failings in the structures. And I would ask them to do all they can to put things right.”

The government says it is aiming to make the benefit system fairer and more affordable, reduce poverty, worklessness and welfare dependency.

Source and Original Content by Premier Christian News

More than 100,000 Syrian Refugees to be taken in by Wealthy Nations

Wealthy nations have agreed to receive more Syrian refugees in the coming months after countries neighbouring conflict-torn Syria admitted they were struggling to cope with the numbers crossing their borders.

The UN refugee agency said on Tuesday that Western governments had heeded a call to take in more Syrian refugees from neighbouring countries and estimated that, in all, more than 100,000 places would be offered in the coming months.

UNHCR, which wants to resettle 130,000 Syrians outside the region by the end of 2016, said the figure includes 62,000 places that have already been pledged by countries such as Germany and Sweden.

The outcome was criticised by aid agency Oxfam, which said Western states could have done more.

Since anti-government protests in 2011 spiralled into civil war, more than 3.2 million Syrians have registered as refugees in the region, with neighbours such as Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey bearing the brunt of the emergency.

Faced with overwhelming numbers, Syria’s neighbours have started restricting access to people fleeing the conflict.

“Today 28 countries expressed their solidarity with the Syrian refugees but also with the five neighboring countries hosting that are hosting them – Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt – offering what we estimate will be more than 100,000 opportunities for resettlement and humanitarian admission,” UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres told reporters.

He was speaking at the end of a ministerial-level pledging conference in Geneva where senior officials from Syria’s neighbours detailed the financial toll hosting millions of Syrians was taking on their economies, appealing for more humanitarian aid and countries to accept more refugees.

Highlighting the struggles host communities face accommodating millions of Syrians – fewer jobs, lower wages, strained infrastructure, pressure on water, electricity, education and health services, Guterres said: “I have to say the world has a debt of gratitude to the neighbouring countries that it probably never be able to fully pay and fully express.”

With almost half Syria’s population either uprooted from their homes inside the country or refugees abroad, there will be a need for resettlement for years to come.

“We consider that one tenth of the Syrian refugees in the region should be resettled,” Guterres said.

These include the most vulnerable such as survivors of torture, people with acute medical needs and women left alone with several children to care for.

Since 2013, Germany has pledged to take in 30,000 Syrians, Australia 5,600, Sweden 1,200 and Norway 1,000.

But many aid agencies including Oxfam, Refugee Council and Save the Children say wealthy nations should agree to take at least 5 per cent of all Syrian refugees by the end of 2015.

“Governments meeting in Geneva today had the opportunity to transform the lives of some of Syria’s most vulnerable refugees – an opportunity they largely failed to take,” said Andy Baker, head of Oxfam’s response to the Syria crisis, in a statement.

“While it is encouraging to see increased commitments to provide resettlement or humanitarian admission to refugees by a number of countries … many of those desperately in need of a lifeline will have to remain in the region, amid worsening conditions.”

UNHCR said the places pledged on Tuesday come from resettlement and other humanitarian admission schemes, such as humanitarian visas, private sponsorship, family reunification, scholarships, medical evacuation and labour mobility programmes.

Source and Original Content by CT

‘A child is born, Jesus’, Stranger leaves Gold Coins and Note for Salvation Army

The Salvation Army Temple Corps Community Center in north Houston received two gold coins in one week from an anonymous benefactor.

The coins were dropped in Salvation Army red kettles outside of Sam’s Club and Walmart, along with notes celebrating Jesus’ birth.

The first coin, a 1985 Canadian $50 Maple Leaf, was discovered on December 1 at the Sam’s Club at 5310 South Rice Avenue. It was wrapped inside a $1 bill along with a note that read: “A child is born, Jesus! Merry Christmas!”

The second coin was found two days later at the Walmart at 1118 Silber Rd. It was also wrapped in a $1 bill, and accompanied by the same message, the Cleveland Advocate reported.

A Detroit-area Salvation Army location was surprised to find a gold coin worth over $1,000 in one of its red kettles this week.

An unknown person dropped a 1980 South African Krugerrand into the kettle outside of a Kroger grocery store in in St Clair Shores. Salvation Army spokeswoman Andrea Kenski said the coin is worth $1,200 – “enough to help feed 10 hungry people a year, or help provide coats to keep 48 children warm this winter season.”

Other gold coins have been spotted in red kettles across the country.

“St Clair Shores has now become part of a national mystery around anonymous donations of collectable gold coins,” Kenski told the Associated Press in an email. “A handful of locations across the country have repeatedly received these gold coins – each valued over $1,000 – in the same red kettle each year.”

The Red Kettle campaign is the oldest and largest fundraiser in the United States. Many are familiar with seeing a person in a Santa hat, or a complete Santa suit, ringing a bell in front of a red kettle during the holidays.

The Salvation Army reminded potential donors that they also accept donations through the web.

@Outside of donating to the kettles outside of stores, those interested in supporting The Salvation Army this Christmas season can also do so virtually,” a statement from the organisation read.

“We welcome groups and individuals to start their own online red kettle at OnlineRedKettle.org. “Here, you can set up your own virtual kettle and encourage your family, friends, and coworkers to donate to online.”

Source and Original Content by CT

Ownership Dispute over Ancient Hebrew Bibles

Ancient Hebrew Bibles, written between 700 and 1,000 years ago are the subject of a passionate ownership dispute between a Syrian rabbi and Israeli officials.

The Bibles were kept in synagogues in Damascus for hundreds of years, but were stolen 20 years ago by Israeli spies. Now, the National Library of Israel has asked an Israeli court to grant it official custodianship.

The disputed property is known as the Crowns of Damascus—nine books mostly written in Spain and Italy centuries ago. The pages are parchment, and the books are bound in leather.

In 1992, Syria allowed its Jewish population to leave the country, but did not allow them to take the Crowns of Damascus, according to the Associated Press.

The manuscripts were being guarded in the Syrian capital when Israel’s national intelligence agency – The Mossad – stole them between 1993 and 1995. The agency turned the documents over to the library for restoration and safekeeping, and their location was kept a secret for over a decade. Rabbi Avraham Hamra, a Syrian Jew who now lives in Israel, was identified as one of the people that helped organise the Mossad mission.

In 2000, the Crowns of Damascus were exhibited at the home of the Israeli president. A catalogue distributed at the exhibition allegedly contained a promise to Rabbi Hamra that because the Bibles are the “religious and spiritual treasure of the Syrian Jewish community,” the National Library of Israel would keep them “until the establishment of a Syrian Jewish heritage centre in Israel.”

The library denies promising the books to Hamra, and the rabbi has yet to build the Syrian Jewish heritage center.

On Monday, the library asked the Israeli Justice Ministry to establish a public, charitable trust for the manuscripts, overseen by a steering committee. The committee would include Syrian Jews who have immigrated to Israel, and the library’s proposal is supported by the Damascus Jewry Organisation in Israel.

Rabbi Hamra was invited to sit on the proposed steering committee but declined.

“It is not my property, but it is the property of my community,” he told the AP. Hamra is considering filing a lawsuit to block the custodianship.

Syrian officials have not released a statement regarding the dispute.

Source and Original Content by CT

Christmas Lights go on in Bethlehem accompanied with Prayers

Hundreds of people have joined in prayer as the Christmas lights in Bethlehem were switched on.

Tourists and locals gathered in Manger Square to ask God to bring peace to the region.

It’s after this summer’s war in Gaza that seen thousands killed.

The Christmas tree’s lights, in what’s thought to be the birth place of Jesus Christ, were turned on by Vera Baboon.

Before lighting up the 15-metre high tree she said: “The message of Bethlehem is specifically in this year that we have the solidarity, we urge all the people through our message, that we need that solidarity because we only need on this Christmas- justice.”

The event was attended by Palestinian Authority Prime Minister, Rami Hamdallah.

Lena from Bethlehem said Christmas is a special time for them: “We here in Bethlehem, we spread peace and hope for everyone, it’s a special place.

“I wish everyone can come and celebrate Christmas here.”

Nouen from Bethlehem said Christmas is very special to the Holy Land: “It has a very special flavour here in Palestine because it’s a land of peace.

“You see all the people from all the religions, either Muslims or Christians, live together happily in peace.”

Source and Original Content by Premier Christian News

Christmas Dropped from Christmas cards

A survey has showed that barely half of Britain’s councils now send Christmas cards which actually mention Christmas.

Only one of 200 local authorities asked, Banbridge in Northern Ireland, was sending a card which made reference to the birth of Christ.

The investigation by the Christian Institute for the Telegraph found a large number of councils were sending pictures of snow with the tag line of ‘season’s greetings’.

The Christian Institute said too many councils are now more concerned with “PC inflicted embarrassment” than celebrating Christmas.

More than a quarter of councils are not planning to send cards at all because of budget cuts.

Spelthorne in Surrey, North Warwickshire and Calderdale in West Yorkshire are sending cards which offer ‘blessings’ over the Christmas period.

The only card mentioning Christ, Banbridge, said: “As we celebrate the Birth of Christ may God’s Love be with you this Christmas season and evermore.”

Colin Hart, chief executive of the Christian Institute, told the Telegraph: “Well done to those public officials who have chosen to shun the saccharine sentiment of ‘Happy Holidays’ for Christmas cards that celebrate the coming of Jesus.

“The birth of Christ is a cause for deep joy not PC inflicted embarrassment.

“The Scrooge-like approach of some councils to take Christ out of Christmas is a denial of the wonderful truth of the Christmas story as well an affront to this country’s Christian heritage.

“This has all the hallmarks of another attempt by publicly funded bodies to airbrush Christianity out of public life.”

Source and Original Content by Premier Christian News

Jerusalem Nano Bible Company releases the World’s Smallest Bible

If you’ve ever struggled to fit your Bible into an already overflowing bag, you’re in luck. Measuring just 4.76mm each side, the world’s smallest Bible has been released.

The Jerusalem Nano Bible company has developed a tiny chip containing all 27 books of the New Testament, written in the original Greek.

Each printed letter has a width of about 0.18 microns, or 18 millionths of a metre, so you’ll need a fairly powerful microscope if you fancy using it during your quiet times.

Made from a silicon wafer, it has been designed to be embedded into jewellery and watches, so purchasers can carry the sacred text wherever they go.

“Our aim is to be able to mass produce it and cater to really every pocket. Because this application, the smallest Bible in the world…can be applied to infinite possibilities in the jewellery industry,” David Almog, of the Jerusalem Nano Bible company, said.

Russell Ellwanger of TowerJazz Semiconductor, which provided the technology for the product, added that its creation is “extremely significant.”

The company, which is planning to create a nano-sized Old Testament in the future, is currently waiting to be validated for the Guinness Book of Records. The previous record holder measures 2.8 x 3.1 x 1 cm.

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Source and Original Content by Christian Today