Anglican Leader Welby Says Donald Trump as President Would Be ‘Very Challenging’ for the UK

Christian Post Report – The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby (2L), Senior Rabbi Laura Janner-Klausner (C), Imam Shaykh Ibrahim Mogra (2R) and Sayeeda Warsi (R) react together at the close of a vigil outside Westminster Abbey in central London September 3, 2014. Religious leaders attended the vigil to unite against human rights violations in Iraq.

The Most Rev. Justin Welby, the leader of the Anglican Communion, has asserted that the potential presidency of Republican candidate Donald Trump would be “very challenging” and problematic.

Welby made the comments on ITV’s “Good Morning Britain” program, when he was asked about his thoughts on Trump’s suitability as the next president of the United States and leader of the free world.

“It would certainly be very challenging, wouldn’t it?” Welby said, with The Telegraph suggesting that he indicated possible doubts about Trump’s presidential campaign.

One major issue that Welby and Trump have struck different tones on concerns the ongoing refugee crisis. Welby has repeatedly called on the British government to welcome in more refugees fleeing war and persecution, and has reminded Anglicans that Jesus Christ was a refugee.

“As the archbishop has said, Jesus was a refugee, and there are refugees here who are desperate for sanctuary from war-torn places and the archbishop is completely torn about their situation and wants to make a difference,” a spokesman for Welby said in September, also revealing that the Anglican leader opened up the doors of Lambeth Palace in London, where he resides, to at least one or two refugee families.

Trump, on the other hand, has called for U.S. leaders to temporarily bar Muslims migrants from entering the country due to security concerns following the terror attacks in Paris back in November.

On Sunday, however, the Republican frontrunner attended a Presbyterian Church service in Iowa, where the pastor delivered a sermon about taking care of refugees.

Pamela Saturnia of Muscataine’s First Presbyterian Church called for healing and acceptance for “those who are the most unloved, the most discriminated against, the most forgotten in our community and in our world,” citing both “the Syrian refugees” and “the Mexican migrants.”

After the service, Trump admitted that the message may have been aimed at him.

“I don’t know if that was aimed at me … perhaps,” the billionaire businessman said.

Trump’s controversial suggestion that the U.S. should temporarily bar Muslim migrants from moving to America until the government can vet those seeking entry, caused quite a stir in the U.K., leading MPs to debate whether the Republican candidate should be barred from traveling to the U.K.

British Prime Minister David Cameron called Trump’s suggestions “divisive, stupid, and wrong,” though he stopped short from calling for a ban.

“I think if he came to our country, he would unite us all against him,” Cameron has said.

Source : Christian Post

Zika Virus ‘Spreading Explosively,’ Latin America Discusses Relaxing Abortion Bans

Christian Post Report – Geovane Silva holds his son Gustavo Henrique, who has microcephaly, at the Oswaldo Cruz Hospital in Recife, Brazil.

A discussion on relaxing abortion bans in Latin America has been reignited as officials at the World Health Organization rang the alarm Thursday on the Zika virus “spreading explosively” across the Americas with possible links to microcephaly.

Microcephaly, a disease that causes babies to be born with abnormally small brains has hit a number of Latin American countries, The Christian Post reported Monday, where Zika, now suspected to be spread by the common mosquito, is raging.

“A causal relationship between Zika virus infection and birth malformations and neurological syndromes has not yet been established, but is strongly suspected,” World Health Organization chief Dr. Margaret Chan said at a press conference where she said the level of alarm over the virus has become “extremely high.”

“The possible links, only recently suspected, have rapidly changed the risk profile of Zika, from a mild threat to one of alarming proportions,” she added.

Chan set an emergency meeting for next Monday to discuss if the outbreak qualifies as an international public health emergency.

The disease has been sparking panic across Latin America. Several countries grappling with the virus, which has no known cure and comes with no symptoms 80 percent of the time, have warned women not to get pregnant.

Brazil has not yet issued any warning against pregnancy but about 3,500 cases of microcephaly have been reported so far, says the BBC, and in one city alone Health officials say as many as 100,000 people could have been infected.

In Colombia, which has the second-highest Zika infection rate after Brazil, according to The Guardian at least 890 pregnant women are infected with the virus, and government officials have called on women to delay pregnancy for six to eight months.

“I believe it’s a good way to communicate the risk, to tell people that there could be serious consequences,” Alejandro Gaviria, the country’s health minister, said this week. El Salvador has suggested women avoid getting pregnant for at least two years. Panama recommended that members of indigenous communities, hard hit by Zika, avoid getting pregnant, and in Jamaica where no cases have been reported, a similar call has been issued.

Margaret Chan, WHO                                              (Photo: REUTERS/Denis Balibouse)

Margaret Chan, the director general of the World Health Organization, and Bruce Aylward, the group’s assistant director-general for emergencies, in Geneva, Switzerland, on Thursday.

Some officials argue, however, that the advice to not get pregnant is “not realistic” because most of the Zika-ravaged Latin American countries are also Catholic and poor with limited access to birth control.

“This kind of recommendation that women should avoid pregnancy is not realistic,” Beatriz Galli, a Brazil-based policy advisor for the abortion advocacy organization Ipas, told Wired. “How can they put all the burden of this situation on the women?”

Abortion is also illegal in Brazil, except in cases of rape and certain medical conditions.

Judge Jesseir Coelho de Alcantara, who is sympathetic to the plight of the Zika infected women, noted that he would authorize abortions for women who provide medical evidence that their babies have the disease.

The Brazil Without Abortion Movement, which is a coalition of conservative Christian organizations, has criticized the judge’s pronouncement as “unacceptable.”

Dr. Jim Barkovich, who teaches radiology at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine, told the GlobalPost that basing the decision to abort a pregnancy on a microcephaly diagnosis itself may not be enough.

He said microcephaly impacts 2 to 3 percent of babies which can stem from a variety of causes and result in a number of outcomes. Some babies infected with the disease may die before they are born, while others go on to live healthy, productive lives.

Barkovich added that doctors are able to examine a microcephalic baby’s brain to determine if it is severely damaged or not developing properly.

“If it’s a very badly destroyed brain, then I would think it’s a lot easier on the family to terminate a pregnancy than it is to have a baby come out that’s going to die within the first year anyhow,” he argued.

Source : Christian Post

Kong Hee Praises Amazing Growth of Christian Megachurches in South Korea

Christian Post Report – Thousands of Christians pray during an anti-North Korea rally marking Memorial Day in Seoul June 6, 2011.

City Harvest Church Pastor Kong Hee has praised the major growth of Christian megachurches in South Korea, noting that the key to such continued success is prayer.

“One of the greatest revivals in the last 100 years was, and still is, in Korea. Just imagine — at one time, six of the 10 largest churches in the world can be found in the city of Seoul. Until today, Yoido Full Gospel Church remains the largest congregation in the world with 830,000 members,” Kong said on his Facebook page.

“They have been consistently baptizing 1,000 new converts every month! If you ask any Korean church what is the key to their success, the answer is unanimous — PRAYER!” he added.

The Houston Chronicle has also noted in past reports thateven  America’s large megachurches cannot compete with the numbers international churches pull in, with the Pentecostal Yoido Church enjoying the support of close to 830,000 members in Seoul.

The CIA Factbook notes that Christianity has been growing rapidly in Korea, and now Christians make up the largest share of the religious population in the country, including 31. 6 percent of the total population.

Kong, whose CHC congregation is one of the largest in Singapore, said that whenever he goes to Seoul, one of the main highlights for him is joining other Christians in early morning prayer:

“There is something powerful when we pray early in the morning. When David was feeling spiritually dry, he said, ‘Early will I seek You; my soul thirsts for You’ (Psalms 63:1). This is how Isaiah described the moving of the Holy Spirit in his life: ‘He awakens Me morning by morning, He awakens My ear to hear’ (Isaiah 50:4). Even for our Lord Jesus Christ, ‘in the morning, having risen a long while before daylight, He went out and departed to a solitary place; and there He prayed,’ (Mark 1:35).”

The pastor added that early morning prayer allows people to worship God with an “undivided heart.”

“We are softer and more pliable in His hands to confess and repent from our sins. We can meditate in the Word, listen to His voice and obey Him. Most of the great men and women of God in the Bible and Church history were early risers who broke through in the spiritual realm through early morning prayer,” he said.

Websites that track congregation numbers for international megachurches, such as the Leadership Network, also point out that several of the largest churches in Asia are all based in South Korea, with Yoido at the top.

Kong, meanwhile, continues to face a long-standing court case in Singapore, where late last year he and five other CHC members were convicted and sentenced to jail for the misuse of close to $35-million in church donations.

Kong has denied all wrongdoing and has appealed against his eight-year prison sentence, though the prosecution has also appealed, asking that the convicted be given harsher punishments.

Source : Christian Post

16 Dead in Boko Haram Suicide Bombings in Chibok

Christian Post Report – Parents of the Chibok girls cry during their meeting with Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari at the presidential villa in Abuja, Nigeria, January 14, 2016.

Terror group Boko Haram has yet again hit the Nigerian town of Chibok, where in 2014 it kidnapped over 200 Christian schoolgirls, this time killing 16 people in suicide bombings.

The Associated Press reported on Thursday that the death toll from Wednesday’s attack continues to rise, and so far 15 civilians and a soldier are reported to have died.

Pogu Bitrus, head of the Chibok Development Association, revealed that six male and female suicide bombers carried out the attack on a weekly vegetable market in Chibok, starting when one of the men blew himself up at a military checkpoint. Another woman who was about to be searched also blew herself up, and the others followed around the market.

Dr. Idrissa Danladi told AP that there are a number of wounded people with severe burns who are “battling for their lives” in Chibok’s small hospital, which he said is overwhelmed following the attack.

“People are trying to help with donations, but there’s a shortage of blood,” Danladi explained.

Town elder Ayuba Chibok told the AFP news agency that the death toll could continue going up.

“The situation is now tense and there’s so much confusion. It will take some time before we can be able to have a clearer picture of the casualties,” the man said.

Earlier in January, President Muhammadu Buhari’s government launched a new investigation into the kidnapping of the 219 schoolgirls from Chibok in April 2014, which was a story that made international news headlines at the time.

While Boko Haram, which has been waging a near six year insurgency on Nigeria, has kidnapped thousands of other women and children, there has been high pressure on Buhari to deliver on promises to find the kidnapped Chibok girls in particular, and bring them home to their families.

“I assure you that I go to bed and wake up every day with the Chibok girls on my mind,” the president said following a meeting earlier this month with members of the Bring Back Our Girls movement.

“Securing the Chibok girls is my responsibility. The service chiefs and heads of our security agencies will tell you that in spite of the dire financial straits that we found the country in, I continue to do my best to support their efforts in that regard,” he added, according to Reuters.

The BBOG movement has made it its mission to keep the memory of the girls alive, and keep urging the government to do everything it can to free them from captivity.

Pastor Ade Oyesile, the executive director of the Christian Association of Nigerian-Americans, which continues to campaign for the release of the Chibok girls, told The Christian Post in a previous interview that frustration over the lack of progress in freeing them cuts across all of Nigeria.

“In Africa and Nigeria in particular, we have a communal culture where we are our brother’s
keeper. Children are essentially seen as belonging to the community not just to their biological parents,” Oyesile told CP.

“The president, if you follow events, has severally expressed his frustration of inability to locate and free those girls, just as the parents and everyone else. A lot of progress has no doubt been made in curtailing Boko Haram, and everyone would be happier when the girls are freed.”

Source : Christian Post

Christ Wants Fixer-Uppers!

Christian Post Report – Christians should never feel as though they are not “good enough” for God, because God is looking for imperfect people to follow His path, motivational speaker and author Jefferson Bethke says in his latest YouTube video.

Bethke, who is known for publishing inspiring, popular YouTube videos about the Christian faith, discusses the feeling of imperfection and unworthiness in his latest video, Are You Too Messed Up For Jesus? which has received over 16,000 hits since being posted to YouTube on Monday.

Source : Christian Post

A radio interview airing Monday

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Periodically, I get asked to do radio interviews about books I have written.

Towards the end of last year, I was asked to do an interview on  The Black Swan Effect: A Response to Gender Hierarchy in the Church with Dr. William P. Campbell of Beyond Words Radio. Dr. Campbell was a brilliant interviewer, and I greatly enjoyed my time talking with him.

Dr. William P Campbell

The program will air on Monday, February 1, 2016 at 10 AM EST (after the news), on WHKP.com. It will then air over the next two weeks on stations in Asheville and Greenville, and on satellite networks around the world. Podcasts are easy to listen to or download (after Monday morning) at Beyond WordsRadio.org, ScriptureAwakening.com, and OnePlace.com.

They are praying that this message will give our listeners a fresh perspective on the topic of women in the church.

Amen!

Check it out!!

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Source linK

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PC(USA) Banning Georgia Congregation From Leaving the Denomination?

Christian Post Report – A worship service held at Central Presbyterian Church of Athens, Georgia.

A congregation in Georgia that voted overwhelmingly to leave the Presbyterian Church (USA) is being prevented from disaffiliating from the Mainline Protestant denomination, according to one church leader.

Central Presbyterian Church in Athens voted Sunday to leave the PCUSA for a more conservative denomination with the final tally being 159 in favor and 36 opposed.

The PCUSA’s Northeast Georgia Presbytery, which Central Presbyterian Church belonged to, does not recognize the validity of the congregational vote, however.

Jeffrey Dorfman, treasurer for Central Presbyterian Church, told The Christian Post that presbytery officials not only “don’t care about our vote” but also “did everything in their power (and things far beyond their power) to try to block the vote.”

Central Presbyterian Church(Photo: Central Presbyterian)Central Presbyterian Church of Athens, Georgia.

“They are now trying to remove our pastor for allowing a vote on dismissal with property while moderating the congregational meeting we held this past Sunday,” asserted Dorfman.

“Thus, I do not expect an easy road in getting presbytery to approve dismissal with our property. We certainly hope to avoid legal action and believe Christians should settle our differences outside of the legal system.”

A particular issue regarding Central Presbyterian Church’s effort to disaffiliate from PCUSA is the denomination’s “trust clause” on church property.

Found in the PCUSA Book of Order G-4.0203, the “trust clause” states: “All property held by or for a particular church … is held in trust nevertheless for the use and benefit of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).”

The provision notes that this property includes not only for “a particular church” but also “a presbytery, a synod, the General Assembly, or the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) …”

The “trust clause” is connected to a dismissal process often labeled “gracious dismissal,” in which a departing congregation must pay a certain sum to its former presbytery to keep its property.

Amounts vary between congregations, due to estimated market value of the church property and percentage of members of said congregation who voted against dismissal.

“By our reading of the PCUSA gracious dismissal policy and guidelines, they should negotiate with us over dismissal with our property,” said Dorfman.

“But they are so far insistent that a ‘true church’ exists in the 36 people who voted to stay and that we will not be allowed to be dismissed with our property.”

As part of the vote, a majority of Central Presbyterian Church’s congregation sought affiliation with the Evangelical Covenant Order of Presbyterians, a conservative church formed in 2012.

Dorfman told CP that they seek affiliation with ECO because they agree with “a number of features of that denomination.”

“First, they ordain women. Second, they essentially have the same theology that PCUSA had 15 to 20 years ago, so we can continue to believe and worship as we have always done. Under ECO, we own our property with no trust clause,” explained Dorfman.

“We like that ECO actually defines the essential tenets of our faith, that they are squarely in the mainstream of traditional reformed theology, and that they still believe in studying and following the Bible (as opposed to doing whatever you think is politically correct or might get you a few more members).”

The Christian Post reached out to officials with the Northeast Georgia Presbytery, but they did not return comment by press time.

Source : Christian Post

DeVon Franklin, Meagan Good Talk Love, Sex and Marriage in New Book, ‘The Wait’ (Interview)

Christian Post Report – DeVon Franklin and Meagan Good are releasing their first book together, The Wait, on February 2, 2016.

Meagan Good never thought she would get married.

After witnessing dysfunctional relationships and questioning if there was really someone who she could spend eternity with, the 34-year-old award-winning actress decided to focus on God. Meanwhile, her future husband, DeVon Franklin, the former Sony Pictures executive who now heads Franklin Entertainment, believed that falling in love would hold him back from career aspirations.

Yet, when each of them chose to take a vow of celibacy and put God in charge of their love lives, they were brought together as husband and wife. For some, this may sound like a fairytale, but it’s the true story outlined in the couple’s first book, The Wait: A Powerful Practice for Finding the Love of Your Life and the Life You Love.

In the book, the Hollywood couple writes about more than just their love story, but they advise people about the benefits of celibacy, offer dating advice, and give practical tips that help people focus on faith that can transform relationships.

During an interview with The Christian Post, the couple who married in the summer of 2012 spoke about their views on dating, love, and keeping God at the center of it all. For the actress who was once afraid of marriage, honoring God by waiting to have sex before her wedding night helped eliminate those fears.

“I’ve seen so many marriages around me deteriorate. The short term thought was a great one but the long term one was very scary to me,” Good revealed to CP. “I think the difference is with implementing The Wait, the foundation that we have is so solid that it makes me feel so much safer and gives me so much more confidence — not just in our marriage but in what God is doing in us and through us. He honors our marriage because we took the time to honor Him with our foundation.”

Franklin admits that before finding his wife, he suffered from fears that many Christian men he has encountered can relate to. The 37-year-old preacher and film producer who worked on movies such as “The Karate Kid and “Heaven Is for Real,” didn’t believe his career and love life could coexist.

“For a long time, as a Christian man, that was something that I had a challenge with. I was like, ‘look, I want to do all of this stuff in the world, I want to move forward with my career.’ And at the time I perceived that being open to love would slow me down,” he told CP. “Once I was open to the love that God was trying to bring me, it not only helped me find peace through dating and ultimately getting married to Meagan, but it also showed me that love actually helped me become better. It made me better at my career.”

When it comes to Christian men and dating, Franklin refuses to broadly generalize issues with matters of the heart. While Franklin remained celibate for 10 years before getting married to Good, other men may have struggles waiting for their bride.

Good, however, believes that it’s up to women to set their boundaries and determine the physical pace of any potential relationship.

“As women, a lot of times we have to set the pace for what we want. A lot of times some guys will go with whatever we’re proposing,” she said. “A lot of times if we say to that guy ‘hey, this is what I want to do, this is what I think we should do, are you willing to do it with me?’ It may be the same guy that was physical in his last relationship, but because you asked him and because it really is in his heart, you created a space for him to really follow through with that.”

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Source : Christian Post

Perry Noble Tells Pastors Endorsing Political Candidates to ‘Shut Up, Preach the Gospel’

Christian Post Report – Pastor Perry Noble talks to congregants of NewSpring Church about sin and freedom, Anderson, South Carolina, January 24, 2016.

A tweet by South Carolina-based NewSpring Church Pastor Perry Noble is causing a dust-up among believers. Posted Monday afternoon, Noble’s Twitter message chided pastors who engage in political endorsements, indicating that their time is better spent spreading the Gospel.

“Dear pastors, please SHUT UP about endorsing a political candidate!!! Preach the GOSPEL!! Jesus is the ONLY hope of the world,” Noble exclaimed in a tweet shared with his 153,000 followers.”

In a statement shared exclusively with The Christian Post Wednesday, Noble elaborates, “I believe Jesus Christ is the hope of the world. I also believe that the United States matters and we, as Americans, have been given an incredible privilege of participating in the election of the person who leads our country.

“I strongly believe that my beliefs as an Evangelical Christian should determine how I vote, because I do not believe in the privatization of my walk with the Lord. However, should the person I choose to vote for lose, then I believe it is my responsibility to pray for that person daily, not that they will fail, but they will succeed. As a Christian, if I allow politics to consume my mind more than the teachings of Jesus — then I will cease to be a follower of Jesus and merely become an activist that brands myself with a fish or a cross.”

Noble’s Twitter post is sparking debate, garnering 397 likes and 125 retweets (as of the publication of this article), and setting off a daisy chain of responses — both for and against the remark.

“Wash your hands clean if you will, but I will be involved in this nation,” writes @pastorkenrp, who identifies on Twitter as the pastor of a church in Washington state. “This mentality by pastors is why we are going to pot.”

To that, @bmartin2011 replied, “‘Christians’ taking their eyes off Jesus and putting them on political parties is why ‘we are going to pot.'” The commenter goes on to say, “Pastors should be more involved w/leading ppl to Jesus than w/politics. You don’t think God is in control?”

Perry Noble is no stranger to making controversial comments, or wading into hot-button issues. In early January, The Christian Post reported on the megachurch pastor’s blog announcement that he purchased a lottery ticket for the $1.6 billion Powerball jackpot, the largest in U.S. history, fanning the flames of the hotly-debated question of whether Christians should gamble and play the lottery.

Unlike some spiritual leaders, Noble doesn’t frown upon gambling and sees it no differently than investing in the stock market.

“I know, I know — spare me the ‘gambling’ lectures,” the pastor wrote in a blog post on his website earlier this month. “I remember when the lottery came to SC, Christians lost their mind and began railing about how the anti-Christ was on his way!”

“Do you have money in the stock market?” Noble asked. “If so then guess what — you are gambling, you are putting your money into something hoping it will go up.”

He added, “If this [gambling] turns out to be sinful and wrong one day then I promise to tell God ‘I’m sorry.’ And, if you think this action will send me to Hell, then I’ll most likely see you there.”

Email me: [email protected]
Follow me on Twitter: @kevindonporter

Source : Christian Post