Israel Is Blessed With Life-Saving Ambulances By John Hagee Ministries

At the 33rd annual ‘Night To Honor Israel’ event, held Sunday at the Cornerstone Church, in San Antonio, Texas, John Hagee Ministries demonstrated its continued devotion to Israel by sponsoring their seventh and eighth ambulances in seven years.
The first six John Hagee Ministries ambulances have treated over 30,000 patients in the six first years that they have been operational. The newest ambulances will join a fleet of the more than 1,000 Magen David Adom (MDA) ambulances currently in operation in Israel.

John Hagee Ministries support of MDA, Israel’s national EMS, ambulance and blood service, is part of a partnership with Heart to Heart, a program devoted to saving lives in Israel through support of MDA’s services.

“We are gathered to stand up and speak for Israel at a time of great crisis. [These] two state-of-the-art ambulances will help the injured, both military or civilian, who need to be transported to a hospital,” said Hagee.

Pastor Hagee presented a gift of $250,000 to Heart to Heart director Jonathan Feldstein. Out of a total sum of close to $3 million distributed Sunday night, Heart to Heart received the second largest donation out of 26 Israeli organizations. In 2013, John Hagee Ministries also gave a similar sum to various Israeli organizations.

Heart to Heart’s mission is to ensure that the Israeli people have the emergency medical response equipment that they need to enable them to face the numerous dangers currently threatening the country… Read More

Source and Original Content by BCN

South Sudanese Bishops Call For Peace Through Dialogue

The bishops in South Sudan are calling for an immediate end to violence in their country, saying it should be replaced with “dialogue and compromise.”

As chair of the U.S. bishops’ international justice and peace committee, Bishop Richard Pates of Des Moines wrote to Donald Booth, U.S. Special Envoy for Sudan and South Sudan, on behalf of the South Sudanese bishops on Oct. 22.

The South Sudanese bishops “call on their political leaders to stop the fighting immediately and replace it with dialogue and compromise, and urge their leaders to trust their people and give them the chance to determine their own future with the help of traditional leaders, faith communities and civil society actors,” Bishop Pates said.

Bishop Pates also thanked Booth for meeting with him in person last month to discuss these issues, calling their session “informative and productive” and urged him to continue putting pressure on both the South Sudanese government and the opposition to end the fighting.

He noted that the South Sudanese bishops “do not offer specific political solutions to the national crisis, but they do offer guidance” as well-respected citizens of their country.

Continued support from the Intergovernmental Authority on Development – a group of African nations assisting in peace negotiation – and emergency aid from the international community continue to be necessary to “prevent a backward slide into greater poverty” especially as the country enters the dry season when fighting is likely to ramp up.

“The bishops are forthright in their condemnation of all parties and individuals who persist in prosecuting the war at the cost of thousands of deaths and hundreds of thousands of people forced from their homes,” Bishop Pates wrote.

South Sudan became an independent country in 2011, breaking from the Republic of Sudan eight years after the 2005 conclusion of a 20-year-long civil war. Violence in the new country broke out in mid-December 2013, intensifying a power struggle between forces loyal to president Salva Kiir and those allied behind former vice president Riek Machar.

Violence has continued in the country despite a peace accord signed May 9, 2014.

Thousands of people have been killed and 1.4 million have been displaced by the violence. Almost 5 million people are in severe need of humanitarian assistance, The Independent reports.

The UN estimates that there are some 11,000 child soldiers serving in both the government and rebel armies.

Last March, Pope Francis wrote to Archbishop Paulino Lukudu Loro of Juba, encouraging him and all parties involved in the conflict to “tirelessly seek peaceful solutions, enabling the common good to prevail over personal interests.”

Source and Original Content by CNA

Priest Commits Suicide Following Abuse Confession

The Diocese of Trieste has announced “with a spirit full of sorrow and dismay” that one of its priests, who had recently admitted to sexual abuse of a minor female, committed suicide on Tuesday.

Archbishop Giampaolo Crepaldi of Trieste learned Oct. 23 “of a grave matter many years ago that involved a 13 year old girl” and Fr. Maks Suard, according to an Oct. 28 statement from the diocese.

Fr. Suard, 48, was a priest of the Slovenian community of the Trieste diocese, and was parish priest of the small church of Santa Croce, in the territory of the Carso Triestino. He had served as a parish priest in several parishes of the San Dorligo area since his ordination in 1995; he was involved in the Boy Scout movement, and also worked as a teacher of religion in local schools.

On Oct. 25, Archbishop Crepaldi met with Fr. Suard, and on that occasion “the priest had admitted his responsibilities” and consented to the canonical procedure which would have to be taken.

In accord with St. John Paul II’s 2001 motu proprio Sacramentorum sanctitatis tutela, abuse cases – which are among the “delicta graviora”, or “more grave crimes” – must be forwarded to and investigated by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The policy sped up and made more effective the Vatican’s handling of such cases, which had been previously been handled by the Congregation for Clergy.

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith can choose either to take over the case or authorize a diocesan trial, in which case the outcome must be forwarded to the congregation.

After Archbishop Crepaldi had explained to Fr. Suard that he had to undergo the procedure, the priest “with humility and serenity of spirit, asked for two days during which he could prepare a resignation letter and a written statement in order to ask forgiveness from God, the Church, and the girl for the evil committed,” the diocese stated.

The archbishop agreed, and arranged to meet with Fr. Suard the afternoon of Oct. 28, at which time he would officially notify the priest of his suspension and of the beginning of the canonical procedure.

Archbishop Crepaldi “had informed Fr. Suard that he was going to arrive at around 4 pm,” and he got to the parish priest’s house around 4.30 pm. He found the rectory door locked, and received no answer to his repeated phone calls to Fr. Suard… Read More

Source and Original Content by CNA

Churches Standby Community Following Fatal Shooting

In the aftermath of the fatal shooting at Marysville-Pilchuck High School, churches are opening their doors to support the grieving community. Hillside Church and AC3 are among those providing a “safe and welcoming space” for students, families and neighbors, according to Christian Today.

Before killing himself, Jaylen Fryberg shot and ultimately murdered three fellow students.

The Grove Church is also offering a place for people to mourn. Its doors are open from 7:30am to 9pm throughout this week and offering breakfast, lunch and snacks free of charge.

“We stand together united and our doors will be open,” the church posted on its Facebook page. “It’s a place to come and find support, prayer, counseling, or just hang out and be with others… let’s Let Love Win.”

Gia Soriano is among those killed in the shooting.

“We are devastated by this senseless tragedy,” her family said in a statement. “Gia is our beautiful daughter and words cannot express how much we will miss her.”

Source and Original Content by Christian Headlines

Within a Few Hours Of Pre-Order Launch Google Nexus 6 Goes Out of Stock

The Google Nexus 6 went up for pre-orders in the US on Wednesday, and all variants and colours were listed as sold out within a few hours.

The Google Play page notes, “We are out of inventory. Please check back soon”, and provides no details about when the company will have inventory again.

Google had unveiled the Motorola-made 6-inch phablet earlier this month, alongside the Nexus 9 tablet.

A factory unlocked Google Nexus 6 with 32GB storage on Google Play costs $649 (approximately Rs. 40,000) and the 64GB variant costs $699 (approximately Rs. 43,000). The device will also be available separately via carriers in the US like AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, US Cellular, and Verizon, each of which will announce their own pricing.

In the meanwhile, over in Europe, the Nexus 6 was reportedly set to go up for pre-orders starting November 3, but a Dutch website reports pre-orders will be delayed to November 18. The report also notes that the 32GB Nexus 6 is expected to be priced at EUR 569 (approximately Rs. 44,000), and 64GB at EUR 649 (approximately Rs. 50,000).

On the specifications front, the Google Nexus 6 comes with a 5.96-inch QHD (1440×2560 pixels) display with a 493ppi pixel density; a 2.7GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 805 processor; 3GB of RAM; 32GB and 64GB internal storage options; a 13-megapixel rear camera; a 2-megapixel front camera; a 3220mAh battery, and Android 5.0 Lollipop

Source and Original Content by ndtv.com

Nearly $9 Billion in Facebook Stock Is Owned By WhatsApp Founders

WhatsApp founders Jan Koum and Brian Acton received 116 million shares of Facebook stock currently worth nearly $9 billion (roughly Rs. 55,300 crores) when they sold their unprofitable messaging service to the social networking leader earlier this month.

The breakdown of the big winners in Facebook’s $22 billion acquisition emerged Wednesday in a regulatory filing.

Koum, a Ukraine immigrant who was once living on welfare, reaped the biggest jackpot with 76.4 million Facebook shares now worth $5.8 billion (roughly Rs. 35,600 crores). That makes him Facebook’s fourth largest stockholder behind company CEO Mark Zuckerberg and two mutual funds, Fidelity Management and Vanguard.

Acton, who worked with Koum when they were both Yahoo Inc. engineers, owns 39.7 million Facebook shares worth $3 billion (roughly Rs. 18,400 crores).

More than 45 other WhatsApp current and former employees also received Facebook stock. Wednesday’s filing didn’t specify how many shares most of the other employees received.

Besides the Facebook stock, Koum and Acton also were paid a large chunk of the $4.6 billion in cash that was included in the WhatsApp acquisition. The amount of cash that the WhatsApp founders received hasn’t been disclosed.

Both Koum, 38, and Acton, 42, rank among the 200 richest people in the U.S., according to Forbes’ rankings.

Koum remains WhatsApp’s CEO and also sits on Facebook’s board of directors. He is being paid an annual salary of just $1, but will receive an additional 24.9 million shares of Facebook stock that will vest during the next four years. That restricted stock is currently worth about $1.9 billion.

Although WhatsApp ranks among the world’s most popular messaging apps, it hasn’t turned a profit yet. The service lost $232.5 million on revenue of just $15 million during the first six months of this year, according to documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. WhatsApp’s revenue primarily comes from an annual subscription fee of 99 cents that kicks in after one year of free service.

Zuckerberg hasn’t spelled out how WhatsApp will make money yet, a sign that Facebook intends to subsidize the service while it tries to expand its reach beyond its current 500 million users.

Some investors are worried about Facebook’s rising costs to pay for the development of new services and employees picked up in acquisitions. Facebook expects its expenses to rise by as much as 75 percent next year, a rate that might outpace its revenue growth. That prospect rattled investors, causing Facebook’s stock to shed $4.91, or 6 percent, to at $75.86 Wednesday.

Source and Original Content by ndtv.com

Houston Pastors Breathe Sigh Of Relief As City Withdraws Subpoenas

Houston’s mayor says the city has withdrawn subpoenas seeking speeches and other information from five pastors who publicly opposed an ordinance banning discrimination of gay and transgender residents.

Mayor Annise Parker said Wednesday that the subpoenas weren’t intended to infringe on anyone’s religious freedoms, but rather to help the city defend itself against a lawsuit challenging the ordinance that the City Council approved in May.

The pastors, dubbed “the Houston five,” said the subpoenas violated their First Amendment rights.

A spokesman for the mayor’s office recently revealed that as many as 1,000 Bibles were sent to Parker as an act of protest.

Steve Riggle, pastor of Grace Community Church in Houston and one of the “Houston five,” called attempts to subpoena pastors’ speeches and sermons “ridiculous” in a recent radio interview with Glenn Beck.

“This is more dangerous to the republic of Texas than Ebola is,” Beck said of the situation.

An attorney for ordinance opponents says the mayor is taking a step in the right direction, but that voters should be allowed to vote on the ordinance.

City attorneys originally subpoenaed the pastors, seeking speeches, presentations or sermons related to efforts to repeal the ordinance. The city withdrew its request for the sermons Oct. 17.

Source and Original Content by BCNN 1

Mexican Church Reacts To Missing Students Case

The Archdiocese of Mexico City called for a “reconstruction of the country” in response to the disappearance of 43 trainee teachers in an act that authorities allege was authored by a mayor and his wife and carried out by police working alongside an organised crime network.

“The evil that Mexico suffers is a true decomposition of the social fabric, an evil from which no sector of the country escapes,” read an October 27 editorial in the archdiocesan publication Desde la Fe.

“The seriousness of the crisis demands a deep replanting of our morals, our laws and the social and political organisation of our homeland.”

The trainee teachers went missing on September 26 in Iguala, 120 miles south of Mexico City. Classmates and authorities said the students went to collect money for a trip to the capital, but were pulled over, shot at by police, detained and turned over to a criminal group known as Guerrero Unidos.

Mexican Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam said the attack was ordered by Iguala Mayor Jose Luis Abarca and his wife, Maria de los Angeles Pineda, in order to prevent the students from protesting an event organised by Pineda.

The disappearance of so many students has stirred outrage in Mexico and forced the federal government to again address the issue of crime, which continues plaguing parts of the country despite President Enrique Pena Nieto staying silent on the issue as he focused on economic development instead… Read More

Source and Original Content by Catholic Herald

“Life Has No Meaning”, Nigerian Bishop Facing Boko Haram

Bishop Oliver Doeme, who heads the Nigerian diocese which has suffered the most from Boko Haram, has lamented his government’s failure to effectively counter the militants, saying human life is being devalued.

“We use to think that salt is the cheapest commodity in the market, well, life is cheaper now especially in the Northeastern part of Nigeria,” Bishop Doeme of Maiduguri wrote in a report delivered recently to his fellow bishops and to Aid to the Church in Need, which is helping him to rebuild Church infrastructure and to care for the thousands of displaced persons in his diocese.

Maiduguri is the capital of Borno State, which is the center of activity for the radical Islamist group whos name means “Western education is sinful.” It launched an uprising in 2009, the same year Bishop Doeme was transferred to Maiduguri.

Bishop Doeme’s diocese covers much of the territory of Borno State, as well as the states of Adamawa and Yobe. In May 2013, Nigeria’s president declared a state of emergency in those three states because of Boko Haram’s violence… Read More

Source and Original Content by CNA

Mars Hill Pastor Confesses Sinful Behaviour, Asks Forgiveness

The former pastor of Mars Hill Church’s Shoreline congregation has issued a heartfelt apology for his conduct over several years.Now Mars Hill’s director of schools, Steve Tompkins has written an open letter saying: “I am deeply sorry that so many people have experienced profound hurt over the years at Mars Hill. It breaks my heart that many continue to live with deep emotional and spiritual wounds, even long after leaving the church.

“I also realise that in my role as an elder, including as Lead Pastor at Shoreline, I share responsibility and complicity in some of the ways you have been hurt, disappointed, and sinned against at Mars Hill.”

Mars Hill has been in turmoil during the last few months as revelations emerged about the behaviour of its founding pastor, Mark Driscoll, eventually leading to his resignation.

Tompkins wrote that “what has been happening at Mars Hill is the work of Jesus in our midst”, adding that “the root of the problem is not satanic opposition or attack, nor is it social media or vocal online critics, nor is it the members or attenders of the church (past or present). Nor is it elders, deacons, staff and leaders who have called for change from within.”

In fact, he said, “the root of the problem has been the leadership of the church who have been blindly committed to maintaining the status quo as if we simply need to push through what has so frequently been referred to as a ‘difficult season…Read More

Source and Original Content by Christian Post