Clergy protest against use of mugshots for police target practice

Christian Today report- The revelation that a Florida police department was using mugshots of real people for target practice has caused widespread outrage and sparked a protest by clergy on social media.

It was discovered last month that North Miami Beach’s police department used pictures of black men at its gun range. National Guard sergeant Valerie Deant was shocked to find one of them in a rubbish bin – with her brother’s face on it.

The city council has now banned the practice following protests which included the display of poster-sized photos of Police Chief Scott Dennis riddled with bullet holes. Dennis told the Miami Herald that he felt “very, very badly” about the practice.

“I sincerely apologised for what my department has done,” he said. “This was a training program that had been going on long before I was here and when I found out about it, I ceased it.”

However, the revelations that the mugshots – all of black men – were used at all has played into allegations that police have been careless toward black lives, following the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson and the death of Eric Garner in New York. There have been widespread street protest over the issue.

Then a closed Facebook group for Lutheran clergy shared the idea of sending in their own photos for target practice. The Twitter protest adopted the hasthag ‘UseMeInstead’ and features a number of ministers in clerical collars.

The Facebook statement said: “Although we acknowledge the need for a police force that is trained in the use of their firearms, we feel that, if pictures of human targets are used for target practice, great care should be taken in not allowing the selection of these targets to allow for the dehumanisation of those most vulnerable to police violence.

“Our faith teaches us that all human life is sacred. And when human life is devalued, Jesus teaches us to put ourselves in the place of those whose humanity is denied, just as he did.

“To the members of the North Miami Beach Police: If you must use pictures of real humans for your target practice, we request that you use ours. We’re sending pictures of ourselves, in our clergy uniforms, to use.”

While the protests have proved popular, some activists have also drawn criticism because most of those taking part are white, and black clergy have largely chosen not to participate.

Source: Christian Today

Archbishop of York urges Cameron to reverse decision over granting visas regarding young girl’s funeral

Christian Today report-  The Archbishop of York has urged David Cameron to reverse a decision not to grant visas to the Zimbabwean family of a young girl killed in December.

The Home Office has refused visas for the grandparents and aunt of five-year-old Andrea Gada, who was fatally hit by a car near her home in Eastbourne. The family claim that it is because they are “too poor” and are therefore considered an illegal immigration risk. They say the government’s decision is “unbearable”.

In a letter to the Prime Minister, Dr John Sentamu urges Cameron to reconsider. “Having read about the situation, I feel sure that you will understand the need, in this instance, to intervene to ensure that the [grandparents] are able to attend this tragic funeral,” he writes.

The Gadas are Seventh Day Adventists, and have said that having their family present at the funeral is important “both for cultural and religious reasons”.

“Losing a child is one of the hardest things a person can experience, and at this time myself and my husband are both longing for the support of our family,” Andrea’s mother, Charity Gada, said on the Change.org petition.

“Having our family together at this time is incredibly important to us, and an important part of our culture… At the heart of it, all I really wants is to have my mother at my side whilst I grieve the loss of my child.”

Andrea’s Zimbabwean relatives have offered to wear electronic tags and report to local police stations, and Stephen Lloyd MP pledged to personally guarantee that they leave the UK after the funeral.

The Prime Minister had previously promised to “look into the case” at Lloyd’s request, but the Gadas appeal was rejected two weeks ago.

More than 95,000 people have signed the petition, which calls on Cameron and Home Secretary Theresa May to ensure that Andrea has “a proper farewell”. Andrea’s parents are due to present it to Downing Street today.

“My family are street sellers from Zimbabwe. They pose no risk to the country, they simply want to support us and grieve the loss of our beautiful girl,” Charity Gada said.

“Andrea was a wonderful little girl and she deserves a proper farewell.”

Source: Christian Today

Alabama’s only gay legislator threatens to expose her her peers’ extramarital affairs

Christian Today report- An Alabama congresswoman is threatening to reveal other legislators’ extramarital affairs to lampoon their alleged commitments to “family values.”

Rep. Patricia Todd (D) Is the state’s only openly gay member of Congress, and said she is fed up with cheating legislators criticising gay marriage.

“I will not stand by and allow legislators to talk about ‘family values’ when they have affairs, and I know of many who are and have,” she wrote on Facebook over the weekend, according to the TimesDaily.

“I will call our elected officials who want to hide in the closet out.”

Alabama is in the middle of a war over their gay marriage ban, and a federal judge ruled Friday that the ban is unconstitutional. Many elected officials in the red state have spoken out in opposition to the ruling, but Rep. Todd said that the naysayers should choose their words carefully.

“If certain people come out and start espousing this rhetoric about family values, then I will say, ‘Let’s talk about family values, because here’s what I heard,'” she wrote.

“I don’t have direct knowledge, because obviously I’m not the other person involved in the affair. But one thing you would never hear about me is that I ever cheated on a partner or had an affair,” said Todd.

The belief in marriage as a union between a man and a woman is often cited as a means of upholding biblical principles, but the congresswoman insisted that adulterers should not use that argument.

“One thing I’m pretty consistent on is I do not like hypocrites,” she said. “If you can explain your position and you hold yourself to the same standard you want to hold me to, then fine.

“But you cannot go out there and smear my community by condemning us and somehow making us feel less than, and expect me to be quiet.”

U.S. District Court Judge Callie Granade issued a two-week stay on her ruling, and the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has until February 9 to decide whether to continue the stay.

Source: Christian Today

Christian college President resigns and admits he can’t cope after son’s tragic death

Christian Today report-  During a board meeting this week, Dr Ergun Caner, president of Brewton-Parker College in Mount Vernon, Georgia, has announced his resignation due to his inability to cope after his son’s tragic death.

According to The Christian Post, his 15-year old son Braxton Caner committed suicide last July of 2014. Dr Caner immediately went back to work a week after his son’s death, but the work took its toll on his health.

“In July, my fifteen-year old son Braxton committed suicide. I was back to work a week later because, frankly, that’s all I knew to do. The subsequent result was my hospitalisation in November. A heart catheterisation, the removal of seven pints of fluid and all the tests in the world can’t resolve this one issue,” Dr Caner told the school’s board of trustees.

After six months of trying to cope, Dr Caner admitted that he is broken and he cannot get over his son’s death.

“Brewton-Parker College cannot become a healthy, growing and stable college under the leadership of a man who is broken. And I am admitting to you that I am broken. I can’t get over his death, and I am not sure I want to. I do know that I cannot muster the fight needed to be the leader of our college. My family and my heart need healing, and you deserve better,” said Caner.

“Therefore, I am resigning as President, so I can go back to Texas and heal with my wife and ten year old son, Drake. It is one thing to lead a college through a crisis, but this position demands a person’s full attention and full strength. At the moment, I have neither. When Braxton died, a part of me died as well,” he added.

The Christian Post reports that under his leadership, over 100 students were saved during a college activity. Dr Caner also managed to balance the school’s budget and get the Christian college out of debt.

After hearing his decision, the board of trustees immediately convened and gave their support to his decision.

“The Board of Trustees of Brewton-Parker College hereby express our thanks and appreciation for Dr Ergun Caner’s service; and … pray for God’s blessing and restoration for Dr Caner and his family as they move forward through a time of personal tragedy and healing; and for Dr Caner much success in his future endeavors,” said a statement released by the college.

Source: Christian Today

Nigerians want Rtd Gen Muhammadu Buhari

New York Times report-  KADUNA, Nigeria — Boisterous crowds packed the streets for the retired general, while young men climbed lampposts, walls and billboards to glimpse his gaunt face. Others danced on careening motorcycles, brandishing homemade brooms, symbols of his campaign.

With Nigeria’s presidential election only weeks away, Boko Haram’s unchecked rampaging here in the country’s north is helping to propel the 72-year-old general, Muhammadu Buhari, to the forefront.

After ruling Nigeria with an iron hand 30 years ago as the country’s military leader, Mr. Buhari is now a serious threat at the ballot box, analysts say, in large part because of Boko Haram’s blood-soaked successes.

“The state is collapsing and everybody is frightened,” Jibrin Ibrahim, a political scientist with the Center for Democracy and Development in Abuja, the Nigerian capital, said of Boko Haram.

“They are able to capture more and more territory, but also increase the level of atrocity,” he added. “A lot of people are frightened that these people can take over the whole country. So a lot of people are saying, ‘Give Buhari a chance.’ ”

A Buhari victory over President Goodluck Jonathan would be a rare upset for an incumbent in a country where petrodollars have long flowed and the presidency has great latitude to distribute them.

But oil prices have crashed; attacks on schools, markets and entire villages continue unabated; and Nigeria’s army has been thoroughly incapable of stopping Boko Haram, which now controls substantial portions of the northeast and regularly sends the country’s soldiers fleeing.

“We have to solve it; it’s the first problem of the country,” Mr. Buhari said tersely about the battle with Boko Haram during a long day of campaigning this week.

“This should have been an easy one,” added the former general, who is believed to have been a target of bombings in this city over the summer in which dozens were killed. “But it has been allowed to develop over five years.”

There is much at stake in Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, even as it falters — the currency has dropped sharply, questions are swirling about the ability to pay civil servants and the country’s oil-money reserves have withered. The campaign has become a vociferous, at times violent, joust between Buhari partisans in the mostly Muslim north and supporters of Mr. Jonathan in the largely Christian south.

Mr. Buhari’s tenure as Nigeria’s military ruler was brief: a 20-month stint in the 1980s, ended by another military coup. Yet it is remembered with trepidation by many Nigerians.

His self-proclaimed “war against indiscipline” was carried to “sadistic levels, glorying in the humiliation of a people,” wrote the Nobel laureate and writer Wole Soyinka. Mr. Buhari forced tardy civil servants, even older ones, to perform frog jumps, jailed journalists for critical articles, and expelled tens of thousands of immigrants from other West African countries, blaming them for the country’s problems.

The current president and his party, which has held power since military rule ended more than 15 years ago, have made this past a central part of Mr. Jonathan’s re-election strategy, hoping to fan old fears about the general.

Full-page newspaper ads suggest that Mr. Buhari is eager to introduce Shariah law all over the country, beyond the northern states where it already exists (in the campaign, Mr. Buhari has not said that).

Other ads remind readers of the retired general’s coup-prone past. (Historians say that even before Mr. Buhari came to power in a military coup at the end of 1983, he played an active role in the coups that marked Nigeria’s early years.)

But Mr. Buhari’s supporters are far more interested in the instability shaking the north, urging a total overhaul of the lackluster fight against the Islamists. Many of them turned out in this northern metropolis this week for a glimpse of the general, who has traded his medal-bedecked uniform for traditional robes and thick-framed spectacles.

Hadiza Bala Usman, the main campaigner for the return of more than 200 schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram last spring, was waiting for the general at the airport here. She helped start the group that pressed the government on the girls’ fate, demonstrating for weeks in a public square in Abuja. Nine months after their abduction, the girls remain missing.

“The resources meant for the military don’t go to the military; the bullets and boots don’t go to the soldiers,” Ms. Usman said. “And what is happening to security, you see it in all the sectors.”

“The support we’re giving” to Mr. Buhari “is for ending the insurgency,” she added. “And so no more children are abducted.”

A retired general in the crowd of supporters, Alhassan Usman, who is not related to Ms. Usman, agreed, expressing anger that Boko Haram had gained the upper hand over Nigeria’s soldiers.

“The issue is lack of discipline; the commander has eaten his money,” he said, arguing that officers take money meant for soldiers, who then see little reason to obey orders.

Mr. Buhari stood as ramrod straight as he had in the days when he rose in a coup against Nigeria’s fledgling, but corrupt, democracy. After taking power, he soon instituted what he called his attempt to straighten out a chaotic nation.

That tarnished past has been, if not forgotten, at least pushed aside by many in the tumultuous jumble of Nigerian history. Mr. Buhari is expected to do particularly well in the Muslim north, his home turf, on Election Day, as he did in an unsuccessful run four years ago.

Still, his campaign faces stiff obstacles. Tens of thousands of people in northern Nigeria have been displaced by relentless violence, and many of them will be unable to vote in the Feb. 14 election. Even if they can, Nigerian elections are prone to violence and fraud.

This week, the streets of Kaduna were packed three-deep with people, many waiting since early morning or trekking miles from nearby villages to see him. Partisans yelled as they climbed on the general’s vehicles, frenetically brushing windshields with the symbolic brooms.

Mr. Buhari spoke only briefly to the packed stands in a downtown stadium, vaguely promising greater security, prosperity and better education. But the words appeared not to be the point. It was his presence, and an implicit promise of austerity and military action, that the crowd seemed to want, after years of scandalous stories in the Nigerian news media about missing oil funds and high living by officials in Mr. Jonathan’s administration.

“The enthusiasm for Buhari is almost like a religion,” said Nasir el-Rufai, a former government minister running for governor of Kaduna State.

“Look at all these people,” he said, pointing at the crowds pressing up against his own car before the general arrived. “They are all waiting just to see Buhari.”

As military ruler, Mr. Buhari showed little respect for the democratic process, rising to power in a coup that swept aside a civilian government and promising to include the political participation of Nigerian citizens “at some point.”

His government also carried out a bizarre kidnapping plot targeting a former minister who had fled to London. It involved Israeli secret agents, giant packing crates and anesthetic drugs.

In an interview, Mr. Buhari said that the times had changed and that he had changed with them.

“I operated as a military head of state,” he said. “Now I want to operate as a partisan politician in a multiparty setup. It’s a fundamental difference. Whatever law is on the ground, I will make sure it is respected.”

Yet it is Mr. Buhari’s long military career, not the respect for civil liberties he has proclaimed later in life, that will ultimately swing voters wary of his past, analysts say.

“You’ve got the Boko Haram in the northeast, where they bomb churches and marketplaces, and slaughter children,” Mr. Buhari said.

But he also noted the security problems in the nation’s south, where militants at oil fields have created havoc for years. “No highway in the country is absolutely safe,” he said.

Though supporters insist he will knock out the Islamists “in a month,” as Mr. el-Rufai put it, the retired general is far more cautious. He spoke of a methodical approach, declining to say whether he would fire the country’s top military chiefs.

“We have to see the whole picture,” Mr. Buhari said. “We’ll ask them to brief us, one by one. Why haven’t they been performing?”

“Let them justify the use of funds,” he said. “What is the intelligence community doing?”

Referring to Boko Haram, he added, “Where do they get weapons?”

He focused on the individual failures in confronting Boko Haram — the misspent money, the lack of weaponry for the soldiers, their lack of motivation for the fight — rather than on an overall condemnation of the army.

His jaw muscles tightening, he said, “This is not the Nigerian Army I knew.”

Source: New York Times

7 Things Wives should stop doing

Today Christian report- As I started putting together the list of things, I remembered a good article I had previously read from Family Life, “15 Things Wives Should Stop Doing.” So I picked these seven things wives should stop doing from that list and added some of my own thoughts:

1. Don’t put others before your husband. If you don’t make your husband a top priority, your marriage will suffer. Wives, please remember to give your husband your freshest and best, not your leftovers. [Tweet This]

2. Don’t expect your husband to be your girlfriend. He converses differently. He thinks differently. He processes things differently. So don’t treat him like a girlfriend or be frustrated if he doesn’t respond to you as a girlfriend would.

3. Don’t dishonor your husband. You can dishonor your spouse by the way you talk about him in a negative light to others or by the way you talk to him as if he were a child or an idiot. Be careful not to question his judgment and abilities.

4. Never use sex to bargain with your husband. Your sexual relationship is not a game. It should not be used to get what you want. It should be a very important part of your relationship. It is not something that must be “earned” by your husband, but rather should be “freely” given in your marriage relationship.

5. Stop giving your husband your long-term to-do list. Keeping your “honey do” list short-term means keeping it manageable. If your husband feels like the list is never done, he may feel defeated and discouraged about helping you with the things that need to be done. Celebrate together the projects that you finish. If you don’t, it may also communicate that you’re never content with anything he has done or will do.

6. Don’t make your husband earn your respect. Just as a husband should unconditionally love his wife, a wife should unconditionally respect her husband. That does not mean that she should like everything he does or agree with him on everything. And it does not mean that she should not address inappropriate behavior or actions with him. But it does mean that no matter what he does or says, she should treat him with dignity and honor because he is her husband.

7. Do not expect your husband to be prince charming. News flash … no husband is the perfect prince charming of your dreams. If you keep expecting him to meet every dreamy expectation you have, you’re bound to be disappointed and he’s bound to feel wholly inadequate. Try to focus on the things that you do appreciate about him.

7 Things Husbands should stop doing

Today Christian report- As I looked at writing this post, I came across a good article posted by our friends at FamilyLife, “40 Things Husbands Should Stop Doing.” I picked these seven from the list and added some of my own thoughts:

1. Stop dishonoring your wife by criticizing her in front of your children or in public. You may think you’re being clever or funny, but it’s not helpful to your marriage or honorable to your wife to criticize her, especially in front of others. Your kids need to see you modeling how to be supportive and complimentary, not critical, of your wife.

2. Stop comparing your wife to other women. Saying something like, “Why can’t you be more like Karen?” is demeaning and devaluing to your wife. She is created with immeasurable value and worth. Cherish and honor your wife for who she is, not for what she does or doesn’t do.

3. When your wife tells you about a problem she’s having, don’t immediately try to solve it. She may just need you to listen to her. It’s in our nature as men to want to fix things. So when my wife, Susan, tells me about something, instead of jumping in to fix it, I often ask her something like, “Do you want me just to listen or do you want my input on how to deal with it?”

4. Stop trying to control your wife. This one has been a struggle for me, especially in our early years in our marriage. I wanted Susan to be more like me … to think, behave and do things just like me. But when I saw her becoming more like me, I didn’t always like it. So I’ve learned to let go of the reigns and let Susan be the woman, wife and mother God created her to be.

5. Stop being passive when it comes to disciplining and training your kids. Parenting is a team effort and is not just mom’s job. Be actively involved with your wife in disciplining your children and in training them up to walk in truth and love.

6. Don’t be alone with any woman who is not your wife or related to you. I’ve always had a personal policy not to travel with, have lunch or meet with any other woman alone. To do otherwise would only invite temptation into my life.

7. Stop feeding your sexual desires from any source other than your wife. Whether it’s flirting with other woman or dabbling with pornography, avoid anything that could take your mind, heart or body away from your wife. Treat your sexual relationship with your spouse as something to be protected, not just enjoyed.

What are some other things you think husbands should stop doing? Sound off, graciously, in the comments section below.

Source: Today Christian

Islamic Religious Authorities In Nigeria Reportedly Detain 12 People Accused Of Holding A “Gay Wedding”

BuzzFeed reports – The force that enforces Sharia laws in the northern Nigerian city of Kano has detained 12 men accused of participating in a “gay wedding,” a law enforcement official told AFP on Tuesday.

Though Nigeria enacted sweeping federal legislation known as the Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Law early last year, the men appear to have been detained under the Sharia laws that are in force in Nigeria’s Muslim north. The men were brought in by the Hisbah, a kind of police force responsible for monitoring observation of the Sharia codes. The prescribed punishment for homosexuality is death, though the sentence is rarely enforced.

“We got information of the wedding four days earlier and our men stormed the venue while the wedding was about to start,” the head of the Hisbah, Aminu Daurawa, told AFP. “We have 12 men in custody, including the bride. We arrested them at the venue of a planned gay wedding.”

An 18-year-old named Faruk Maiduguri, who AFP said spoke to reporters at the Hisbah offices, said the group was just gathering to celebrate his birthday.

“It was my birthday party, not a gay wedding,” AFP quoted him saying. He also said they were targeted by the Hisbah because they “looked and acted feminine.”

While the Sharia prohibition on homosexuality was on the books in northern Nigeria before passage of the Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Law, there was a wave of arrests and riots in Muslim parts of the country targeting alleged LGBT people in the weeks following the law’s passage.

| Source : BuzzFeed US                                                                                                                             | The Christian Mail

Former Southern Baptist missionary sentenced to two years for fraud

Christian Today report- A former Southern Baptist missionary has been sentenced to two years in prison for fraud.

Brady Nurse, 38, worked as a logistics and business co-ordinator for the International Mission Board (IMB) of the Southern Baptist Convention.

He pleaded guilty to obtaining nearly $300,000 in mission funds by submitting fraudulent expense reports, according to Baptist Press.

Nurse admitted that he “routinely altered” amounts on documents and invoices, “submitted fraudulent, manufactured, and/or duplicated documentation” on expense reports, “falsely represented” quotes and estimates for service from vendors, altered documentation associated with household shipping charges and falsely obtained reimbursement for non-reimbursable expenses.

He resigned from the IMB in January 2014 but continued to seek reimbursement for “suspect shipping expenses” even after that.

IMB general counsel Derek Gaubatz said: “We are deeply grieved that one sent out to proclaim the free gift of the Gospel would violate the sacred trust placed in him by Southern Baptists.

“IMB believes it is appropriate that Mr Nurse face accountability for his actions and fully supports his prosecution under federal law. At the same time, IMB takes no joy in that prosecution. IMB is praying for Mr Nurse and his family that they would experience the mercy of God in a fresh way.”

Gaubatz said that while both IMB’s external auditors and the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability had confirmed that IMB has robust anti-fraud measures in place, “IMB would be seeking their input on any additional measures they would recommend”.

Nurse and his wife Andrea had served as IMB missionaries since March 2006. On his first pleading guilty in October 2014, IMB Executive Vice President Clyde Meador wrote to missionaries and staff saying: “It is one thing when someone sins and hurts himself, but when the individual takes advantage of the funds and the trust given to him by IMB, it seems much more damaging.”

He continued: “When family hurts us deeply, a best first reaction is bathing our reaction to the hurt in prayer. God alone can comfort, provide wisdom, and will guide your thoughts and words as you move forward in processing what has happened. Please join us in holding this brother up in prayer… By allowing the federal government access to the facts, we have acted in a biblical manner, and now there is a legal penalty to be paid. We know you will be praying with us for him and those he loves in the coming months and years.”

Source: Christian Today

Archbishop in Niger says ‘hearts and minds’ needs remoulding after Charlie Hebdo protests

Christian Today report- A Nigerien archbishop has said the Church doesn’t just need to rebuild the churches that were destroyed in the protests against French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo but “hearts and minds” must also be reconstructed.

The protests began in the city of Zinder on January 16, before spreading to several other cities the following day, including the capital, Niamey. At least 10 people were killed in the attacks and churches were set on fire, many completely destroyed. World Watch Monitor said 70 churches had been damaged, although the Nigerien police reported only 45.

“We now have to reconstruct hearts and minds deeply scarred by these events and renew the friendly ties we always had with the Muslim community,” Archbishop Michel Cartateguy of Niamey told Catholic News Service.

The protests were allegedly a response to the publication of the first Charlie Hebdo magazine after the attacks on its offices in Paris on January 7. The week after the shooting, the magazine’s cover featured a cartoon of Muhammad holding a sign saying “All is forgiven”.

The archbishop said he thought the publication of the cartoons was merely a pretext for the riots. He said members of the militant Islamist group Boko Haram, based in northern Nigeria, “certainly helped direct” the violence in neighbouring Niger.

Nigerian officials have also reported the connection to Boko Haram, particularly in Zinder.

“We’re still trying to understand the savagery which erupted here – but it’s certain it was well thought-out, prepared and organized,” Cartateguy said.

The archbishop praised the courage of Muslims who didn’t participate in the violence but rather protected Christians from the violence.

“We know some local Muslims, young included, showed courage and solidarity by sheltering Christians in their family homes. Some also stood in our church doorways saying the rioters would have to kill them as well,” he said.

President Mahamadou Issoufou condemned the violence in the majority-Muslim nation. “Those who pillage religious sites and profane them, those who persecute and kill their Christian compatriots or foreigners who live on our soil, have understood nothing of Islam,” he said.

Cartateguy told CNS that there was “still great fear” in Zindar and that his diocese was still sheltering around 100 lay Christians and clergy from the city.

Source: Christian Today