Himalayan Avalanche: Church Joins Pastor To Celebrate Brother’s Safe Return

A Richmond pastor and his family were able to rejoice yesterday as they received news that his brother and his new wife were safe after last week’s Himalayan tragedy.

At least 39 people died when a snowstorm hit the Thorong La pass in the Annapurna circuit, with many more still unaccounted for. The majority of victims confirmed so far were Nepali guides and porters.

Father of three Andy Kimmerling, 54, and his new wife Suzanne, were on their honeymoon and had not been heard of since Wednesday’s blizzard. His brother Bob, pastor of the Vineyard church in Richmond, told Christian Today of a “fraught” weekend. However, he was in church on Sunday morning when he took a call from his elder brother telling him the couple were safe.

“It was quite dramatic,” he said. “I’d kept the phone on – I wasn’t leading the service – when I fielded the call just before 11. I went out and it was quite a few minutes before I came back. My wife was waiting to hear and I gave her the thumbs up, then I spoke to the church and there was a cheer.”

He added: “The whole family was enormously relieved. They were not harmed; they had been trekking in the area and were out of contact.”

Kimmerling explained that the wider family had not yet met Suzanne, who comes from Denmark, and it had been difficult to liaise with her family. His brother’s grown-up daughters were widely scattered too. “There was a lot of complexity about it,” he said.

The couple are due back in the UK at the end of the week, when a family celebration is planned.

The situation in the Thorong La area is still confused, with the authorities having no clear idea as yet who was on the mountain when the storm hit and who might have turned back to find shelter. It is feared that many bodies may still be hidden under the snow and very difficult to find. Many survivors have frostbite and other injuries.

The weather is usually good on the mountain at this time of year, but the snowstorms are thought to have been caused by the tail end of a cyclone that hit the Indian coast a few days earlier.

A spokesman for the Foreign Office urged British nationals who had been travelling in the affected areas to get in touch with relatives by telephone or social media to confirm their whereabouts.

Source and Original Content by Christian Today

Young British Christian’s Conversion To Radical Jihad

A young man who converted from Christianity to Islam was rescued by his mother after becoming radicalised and joining the Islamic State (ISIS) in Syria, the BBC reports.

Interviewed on the BBC’s Inside Out programme, the 21-year-old’s mother – known only as Linda – said her son James converted to Islam three years ago. She was initially pleased with the decision, saying his newfound faith “gave him a strong moral compass”.

“He just started exploring, he went to talks, he went to the mosque. He had been Christian previously and somehow he decided to convert to Islam,” she explained. Later, she did the same.

After extensive research into the Islamic faith online, James became very devout. He secretly left his north London home for Syria, where he joined those fighting to create a caliphate. Linda describes it as a kind of “rebellion”.

“He felt quite upset about the oppression that’s going on there and, in his naive mind, he thought he could go out there and help. So he just went,” she said, adding: “I was very shocked, I was terrified.”

However, James was soon badly wounded in cross-fire after becoming involved with an extremist group linked to ISIS. He told his mother of his injury during a phone call and she decided to travel to Turkey in an attempt to bring him home.

She made her way to the border town of Adana, where she says “I didn’t really know where I was going or what I was doing,” but was miraculously reunited with her son.

“He just suddenly turned up. I was so relieved. I did actually manage to get my son back.”

However, she says the welcome her son has received back in the UK has not been as easy.

She says James was “traumatised” by his experiences, and “got quite a lot of hassle from secret services”. With no de-radicalisation counselling or support available, she’s now worried that others returning from extreme environments will not be turned from their radical thinking.

“I allowed my son to come back and accepted him with love,” Linda said.

“We’ve got to be careful with young people. Young people can make sudden decisions that are not good, and do dangerous things.

”I think at that stage, whatever the person’s doing, they need support.”

Scotland Yard has estimated that over 500 British people have travelled to Iraq and Syria to join IS.

Source and Original Content by Christian Post

Indianapolis Church Leaders Canvass For More Jobs Not Jail

Church leaders have a message for Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard: The city needs more jobs, not more jails.

Leaders from 17 faith denominations filled the Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Church this week to talk about redemption and second chances. Members of IndyCAN believe Marion County should not be overcrowding jails with low-level, non-violent offenders, those awaiting trials and detained illegal immigrants.

“Not everybody deserves to be there,” said Cynthia Torres, whose mother was deported. “They all need a second chance. Because, like my mother, she wasn’t charged with anything, but she was in there for three months until ICE took her.”

IndyCAN believes the $450 million slated to be spent on a proposed Criminal Justice Complex should be spent instead on jobs and re-entry programs. Their message is that jobs, not jails, end crime.

“We’re talking about building a half a billion dollar jail and hiring many more police officers, a model that has proven not to work to slow down crime,” said John Rowell, an ex-offender. “The only thing that we want, like myself, I just want an opportunity to prove that I’m not the person you think I am.”

The proposed Criminal Justice Complex would include facilities for the Marion County Sheriff’s Office, judges, prosecutors and public defenders, as well as increasing jail space by 1,000 beds.

IndyCAN volunteers are now taking their message door to door, hoping to meet with 10,000 potential voters.

“We have 127,000 ex-felons in Marion County,” Rowell said. “Five thousand return every year. We need to be focusing on how to get these people to work. Because many of the criminals aren’t the monsters we’re made out to be… Read More

Source and Original Content by BCNN 1

Bishop Says Ebola Crisis Has Made Liberians Feel God Has Forsaken Them

A Liberian bishop unable to attend the Synod of Bishops on the family has urged the Church to use its influence to help west African families deal with the enormous suffering caused by Ebola.

Bishop Anthony Fallah Borwah of Gbarnga told the American Catholic News Service that “whole families are being decimated”. He said it was the poor “who have been most harmed” by the Ebola outbreak that, since March, has killed more than 4,500 people. Bishop Borwah, who was set to represent the Liberian bishops’ conference at the synod before being restricted by travel bans on Ebola-affected countries, added that “it is the poor who are the Church’s priority”.

Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea are the countries mainly affected by the worst Ebola outbreak on record. Liberia’s official death count tops 2,400, according to the World Health Organisation.

“We are losing our humanity in the face of Ebola,” Bishop Borwah said, noting that “this disease makes impossible ordinary human kindnesses, such as putting your arm around someone who is crying”.

The Church in Liberia asks the international Church “to pay attention to what is happening here” and the “pain and hurt that the Ebola onslaught is causing families”, the bishop said.

Noting Pope Francis’s repeated emphasis on mercy and service to the poor, Bishop Borwah said that “serious effort from Church leaders to stand with us in our human misery” would help the people of affected west African countries.

“The influence of the Church can cause a lot to be done for the sick, who are poor,” he said.

“Material help is needed as well as prayers for those who are dying of disease and hunger,” he said.

The disease has placed “huge constraints on families”, the bishop said, noting that schools have been closed since early August, when a state of emergency was declared.

Markets, where in normal times trading takes place, are largely empty, and many offices have closed, leaving people unable to work, he said.

“To be able to feed one’s family is a very basic human need”, he said, and most Liberians are no longer able “even to put one meal on the table every day”.

Church leaders around the world could use their influence to lobby political and other leaders, he said, noting that of the countries that pledged money to a trust fund to fight Ebola set up by the United Nations in September, only Colombia has paid, giving $100,000.

As well as being “hungry and angry”, Liberians are “fast losing hope,” Bishop Borwah said.

Before the Ebola outbreak, the local Church was focused on healing the wounds caused by the civil year that ended 10 years ago, leaving Liberia in economic ruin and awash with weapons, he said.

“People are still recovering from many years of war and are very poor. And now, in our new tragic situation, these wounds that were healing have been opened and made more painful,” he said.

“During the war, you were still able to bury your dead. With Ebola, you can’t even be with your sick; you can’t say goodbye to your loved ones,” he said.

“The pain people are going through now, when they cannot do this, is beyond words,” he said. “We are a broken-hearted people.”

Because Ebola is spread through direct contact with infected bodily fluids, cultural traditions – including washing the bodies of the dead and greeting people affectionately – have been put on hold.

“Funerals, which have the benefit of bringing families together in mourning, no longer take place. This, also, is tearing families apart,” Bishop Borwah said.

Natural affection in all its forms has been halted, he said, noting that in churches around the country, “we wave to each other for the sign of peace”.

With Liberia’s national Catholic Ebola response team focusing largely on medical help and prevention programmes, the Diocese of Gbarnga is working on food distribution, he said. The price of rice and other basic foods has risen sharply as a result of the Ebola outbreak.

Aware of the need to have a holistic approach, the Church in Liberia has asked its justice and peace commission to monitor violations of human rights “that are particularly prevalent in times of crisis”, Bishop Borwah said.

“There is a lot of anger” among Liberians, mostly aimed at people in positions of leadership and power, as well as “a feeling that God has forsaken us again”, he said.

Noting there is much speculation on the sources of the virus, the bishop said that “serious research into the root causes of Ebola must be done” so that conspiracy theories can be set aside.

“The key to survival is to restore our humanity, our natural human kindness,” Bishop Borwah said.

“As a Church, we need to look at ways to do this, focusing on long-term solutions,” he said.

Source and Original Content by Catholic Herald

Iraq’s Christian Refugees To Face Hard winter

Despite efforts by northern Iraq’s Catholic bishops to ensure that Christians and other refugees can survive the winter, housing shortages and a significant lack of financial support pose serious threats.

“The Church is pretty much alone in caring for them; so far the Iraqi government has not done anything for them. The tents of the refugees are set up on parish properties,” said Karin Maria Fenbert, an official with the international pastoral charity Aid to the Church in Need.

Fenbert assessed the situation in Erbil. With the start of the school year, many of the refugees who had been sheltered in schools have left quickly in order to avoid tensions with local Christians, she explained.

“Moreover winter is not far away and many refugees are still living in tents that are not waterproof, some of which are set up on the bare ground,” Fenbert continued in an Oct. 14 statement.

More than 100,000 Iraqi Christian refugees have fled their homes in and near the northern city of Mosul following the seizure of territory by forces from the Islamic State group earlier this year. Many refugees have escaped to Iraqi Kurdistan. They are among the more than 30 percent of Iraqi Christians who are now refugees… Read More

Source and Original Content by CNA

Washington’s Oldest Black Church, Celebrates 125 Years of Service

Over 125 years, Tacoma’s oldest black church has nurtured souls, fed the needy and stood up against injustice, from its humble beginnings in a basement to its home in the heart of the Hilltop.

Allen African Methodist Episcopal Church will celebrate a milestone anniversary Sunday (Oct. 19) and a legacy of community involvement.

Over the decades, ministers and members spoke out and marched for civil rights and ending discrimination. In 1988, the congregation took a stand against drug dealing and gang violence by moving to an area surrounded by those problems.

Today, it runs a twice-weekly food pantry and gives out toys and clothes to families at Christmas. Next month, the congregation plans to open a thrift store near the church offering new and used clothing.

“I think Allen has done so much for Tacoma,” said Victoria Woodards, a Tacoma City Council member and a member of Allen A.M.E. Church. “Allen has always been a real advocate for change in the city and a supporter of the city.”

A four-day celebration for the 250-member congregation will culminate with two services Sunday.

At a rousing revival service Thursday evening, about 60 people sang and swayed with the choir’s music, raised their arms in worship and walked forward to be prayed for at the end of the nearly two-hour event.

The Rev. David Brown, the guest minister, congratulated the church on its longevity and said Tacoma is a better place because of Allen A.M.E. Church.

“125 years is a long time to do anything,” said Brown of Tacoma.

The Rev. Spencer Barrett, Allen A.M.E. Church’s pastor since 2009, said the anniversary is “a testimony to God’s goodness to this church and to the African American community in the Tacoma area.” It’s a recognition of “125 years of identifying injustices in our community and bringing them to light to the larger community,” he said in an interview.

Jim Walton, a former Tacoma city manager, described Allen A.M.E. Church as a “beacon.”

“I think of Allen A.M.E. as one of the bedrocks of our spiritual life in Tacoma over this time,” Walton said. “It has served as a rallying point for many of the African American pioneers who moved through this area.”

The church’s outreach includes:

• Allen’s food pantry has operated for more than 20 years, said Mary Barrett, who runs the pantry at the church and is married to Spencer Barrett. In 11 months through June, the pantry helped 6,203 households, including repeat visitors.

• Christmas House, a program providing needy families with toys and clothing in mid-December, also has been a community staple for more than 20 years. Last year, 390 families received help.

• Last Thanksgiving, the church gave out 139 baskets with turkeys and trimmings.

Allen A.M.E. Church also started Allen Renaissance, a separate community organization that planned to develop a community center to give middle school students increased access to new technology and performing arts facilities.

The project ran out of money, Mary Barrett said. What remains is the after school Computer Clubhouse of Tacoma, which includes a robotics program for students.

Kimberly Sales, who attends Allen A.M.E. with her husband and two children, said the church’s outreach follows Jesus’ words: “I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing.”

“When you have a love for Christ, it shows in everything you do,” said Sales, 52. “Everyone just embraces each other. They support each other. It’s a family… Read More

Source and Original Content by BCNN 1

Idaho Ministers Ordered To Marry Homosexual Couple Or Face Fines and Jail Time

Their belief in the biblical definition of marriage puts one Idaho couple center stage in America’s culture war over same-sex marriage.

Donald and Evelyn Knapp own a Hitching Post Wedding Chapel. They are also Christians and ordained ministers and have been marrying couples since 1989 in traditional marriage services without conflict until now.

The city of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho has a non-discrimination statute that includes sexual orientation and gender identity. Since the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals struck down Idaho’s constitutional marriage amendment defining marriage as a union of a man and woman, the statute is being enforced.

The Knapps were told by city officials if they didn’t perform same-sex weddings they would face fines and even jail time.

The city told the couple that the statute includes “public accomodations” and consider their business as one.

Friday, a same-sex couple asked to be married at the wedding chapel. When the Knapps, who themselves have been married 47 years, declined based on their religious belief – they immediately faced the fines and possibility of jail time.

Attorneys representing them say this is government coercion. They say just because the government recognizes same-sex marriages doesn’t mean citizens, even business owners, should be forced to do so… Read More

Source and Original Content by BCNN 1

Arizona, Alaska, Wyoming Embrace Same Sex Marriage

While the U.S. Supreme Court Friday rejected a request by Alaska and Wyoming to delay enforcement of same-sex marriage, a federal judge in Arizona ruled that the state’s ban on same-sex unions is unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court rejected a last-minute plea by Alaska, which had asked for more time to file more detailed appeals to use its sovereign power to define marriage, to block a federal court ruling striking down the state’s ban on gay marriage.

The state had said that broader legal questions needed to be resolved first to do justice to the people of Alaska.

Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell’s office said the state would resume issuing marriage licenses Monday even as it goes forward with a last-ditch legal appeal, according to Reuters.

In Arizona, U.S. District Judge John Sedwick ruled that the state’s restrictions on same-sex marriage were “unconstitutional by virtue of the fact that they deny same-sex couples the equal protection of the law.”

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer criticized the ruling.

“It is not only disappointing, but also deeply troubling, that unelected federal judges can dictate the laws of individual states, create rights based on their personal policy preferences, and supplant the will of the people in an area traditionally left to the states for more than 200 years,” Brewer said in a statement.

However, Arizona’s attorney general Tom Horne said there was no point in appealing the ruling, and gave the go-ahead for marriages to proceed.

In Wyoming, federal judge Scott Skavdahl struck down the state’s ban on same-sex marriage and put his own ruling on hold until Thursday or until state officials declare that they will not appeal, according to NBC.

The judge said while the voters or the legislature should decide issues such as defining marriage, the “ship has sailed.”

“Binding precedent of [higher courts striking down similar bans] mandate this result, and this court will adhere to its constitutional duties and abide by the rule of law,” CNN quoted Skavdahl as saying.

Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead said the ruling was against his personal beliefs but the state would not appeal because it would likely not succeed.

“While this is not the result I and others would have hoped, I recognize people have different points of view and I hope all citizens agree we are bound by the law,” he said in a statement.

Prior to Friday’s ruling, Mead had said in a debate that the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has already ruled that laws similar to Wyoming’s are unconstitutional.

Friday’s rulings could increase the number of states that allow gay marriage 32.

Federal judges in many states have struck down state amendments and laws banning same-sex marriage as unconstitutional since the U.S. Supreme Court last June squashed a key part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA.

Source and Original Content by Christian Post

God The Father: Ex-Mafia Boss Witnesses To Mob Members

Ex-Colombo Crime family captain and Christian motivational speaker Michael Franzese recently spoke with CP Voice regarding his new autobiographical film “God the Father,” and the possibility of preaching the Gospel to mobsters he had worked with.

“God the Father” represents a play on words from the American mafia classic “The Godfather.” During the film, Franzese tells his life story growing up in the mob which eventually lead to a top position in the organization’s Colombo family. It also discusses the turning point in his life when he accepted Jesus Christ and turned away from his old ways.

During the CP Voice segment, Franzese talked about what it was like when he made that decision to commit his life to Jesus, and if he ever tried to witness to other mob members

“I’ve been asked many times have I ever been able to witness to any of my former associates and on occasion I do. The opportunity is not always there and you’ve got to be careful in those circumstances,” said Franzese to CP. “It wouldn’t be wise for me to go to the social clubs that I used to live in and say, ‘hey guys, I want to share the gospel with you.’ I probably wouldn’t last 24 hours.”

He addressed what it was like to walk away from the mob life in more detail.

“There’s no blueprint for walking away from my life publicly like I did,” said Franzese. “For me, if you know the course that God navigated for me throughout these past 20 years, you would know that this had to be a God thing. I had no plan. I didn’t know how I was going to do it. Nobody said to me, ‘OK Mike, these are the steps you’ve got to follow.’ It was just my instinct, knowing my former life and working step-by-step with what God wanted me to do.”

His new film “God the Father” will be released in select theaters on Oct. 31, which ironically is the same day Franzese was initiated into La Cosa Nostra as a made man in 1975. The movie uses animation, re-enactments and actual news clips to illustrate Franzese’s ascent to the top of the mob ranks, his fall and his conversion to Christ.

During the 1980s he was considered one of the most powerful and richest gangsters throughout all of America. According to the federal report, Franzese made more money for a crime family than anyone since the infamous Al Capone.

Franzese elaborated a bit more about the film and during the CP Voice interview.

“I’m excited about [the film] because I’ve done a number of things on television, a lot of interviews [that are] mob related and I always speak about my faith but unfortunately that’s not what the producers want to communicate. But with this movie I consider it an extension of my ministry because I’ve been able to tell [my] whole story, from start to finish.”

“Everything is factual, and we’ve got different elements of this film to tell the story. Very, very powerfully, I uphold Jesus in this film. We don’t compromise in any way.”

Source and Original Content by Christian Post

Boko Haram Breaches Cease Fire Agreement

A wave of violence hours after Nigeria’s government announced a truce with Boko Haram raised doubt on Sunday about whether more than 200 schoolgirls kidnapped by the Islamist militants will really be released, deflating the new hopes of their parents.

Nigeria’s armed forces chief Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh announced the ceasefire on Friday to enable the release of the girls, who were abducted from the remote northeastern village of Chibok in April.

But Boko Haram has not confirmed the truce and there have been at least five attacks since – blamed by security sources on the insurgents – that have killed dozens. Talks were scheduled to continue in neighboring Chad on Monday.

“We were jubilating. We had every reason to be happy … but since then the ceasefire has been broken in quite a number of places already,” Lawan Abana, a parent of the one of the missing girls, told Reuters by telephone.

He added that there were doubts about the credentials of the reported Boko Haram negotiator Danladi Ahmadu, who was unheard of before. “Can we trust him that he can deliver on this promise of releasing the girls when he has not delivered on the promise of the ceasefire?” Abana said.

The government says the attacks may not have been Boko Haram but one of several criminal groups exploiting the chaos of its insurgency. Analysts point out that Boko Haram is anyway heavily factionalized, so what matters is whether the faction the government is talking to has control over the girls’ fate.

“Boko Haram is deeply fractured. The Nigerian government has had a … difficult time identifying a Boko Haram representative who could make compromises and guarantee the entire group will observe them,” risk consultancy Stratfor said in a note.

“It is quite possible that Abuja has reached an agreement with a legitimate representative of a specific cell … that holds the kidnapped schoolgirls captive,” it said on Saturday.

QUEST TO CARVE OUT ISLAMIC STATE

Boko Haram, whose name translates roughly as “Western education is sinful”, has massacred thousands in a battle to carve an Islamic state out of religiously mixed Nigeria.

Its only known method of conveying messages is via videotaped speeches by a man claiming to be Abubakar Shekau, its leader whom the military last year said it had killed.

Ahmed Salkida, a Nigerian journalist who was once close to Boko Haram and shared a jail cell with its founder Mohammed Yusuf in 2009, tweeted that whoever Ahmadu is, he is not a member of Boko Haram’s senior “Shura council” nor does “he speak for them, as far as I know”.

A swift release of the girls would bode well for the campaign of President Goodluck Jonathan for Feb. 2015 elections. Jonathan has faced relentless criticism for failing to protect civilians in the northeast or resolve the Chibok girls crisis.

Boko Haram is regarded as the worst threat to the future of Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy and oil producer.

Jonathan is expected to declare he is running for a second elected term soon, and the opposition is keen not to allow him to capitalize on efforts to free the girls.

“It’s interesting the timing comes as Jonathan is about to announce he wants to run for a second term. Is it by sheer coincidence?” the spokesman for the main All Progressives Congress, Lai Mohammed, said by telephone.

But Nigeria’s military has scored some successes against Boko Haram over the past two weeks, wresting back some territory near the northeast border with Cameroon.

Oby Ezekwesil, whose “Bring back our girls” campaign has highlighted daily protests in Abuja, told Reuters she was “cautiously optimistic” but “extremely anxious, not knowing what the details of this ceasefire really are.

“If it happens, it would be the best news in decades.”

Source and Original Content by BCNN1