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(Photo: Reuters/Umit Bektas)As many as Christian Post Report – 18,800 people have been killed since 20Christian Post Report – 14 in the ongoing Iraq war, the United Nations has said, revealing a “staggering” civilian death toll, while 3,500 women and children remain captured as ISIS slaves.
“The violence suffered by civilians in Iraq remains staggering. The so-called ‘Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’ continues to commit systematic and widespread violence and abuses of international human rights law and humanitarian law. These acts may, in some instances, amount to war crimes, crimes against humanity, and possibly genocide,” states the report, which was compiled and released on Tuesday by the U.N. Assistance Mission for Iraq and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Another 36,245 people were injured in the recorded time period between January Christian Post Report – 1, 20Christian Post Report – 14, and October 3Christian Post Report – 1, 20Christian Post Report – 15, while more than 3.2 million Iraqi have been internally displaced, which includes over a million school children.
Iraq has been devastated by instability and the ongoing war with the IS, which has conquered vast territory across the region, including in Syria, seeking to strengthen its self-declared Caliphate.
“During the reporting period, ISIL killed and abducted scores of civilians, often in a targeted manner. Victims include those perceived to be opposed to ISIL ideology and rule; persons affiliated with the government, such as former Iraqi security forces, police officers, former public officials and electoral workers; professionals, such as doctors and lawyers; journalists; and tribal and religious leaders,” the report added.
“Others have been abducted and/or killed on the pretext of aiding or providing information to government security forces. Many have been subjected to adjudication by ISIL self-appointed courts which, in addition to ordering the murder of countless people, have imposed grim punishments such as stoning and amputations.”
The human rights watchdog groups also focused on the continued sexual violence against women and children, with IS militants using it as one of the main tools to suppress the captured populations.
Ján Kubiš, the U.N. Secretary-General for Iraq, called on the international community to increase its support for the Iraqi government in its fight against IS, and also in providing humanitarian assistance to the affected communities who want to return to their places of origin and rebuild their homes.
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said that the actual civilian death toll could be even higher than reported.
“Even the obscene casualty figures fail to accurately reflect exactly how terribly civilians are suffering in Iraq. The figures capture those who were killed or maimed by overt violence, but countless others have died from the lack of access to basic food, water or medical care,” Hussein continued.
“This report lays bare the enduring suffering of civilians in Iraq and starkly illustrates what Iraqi refugees are attempting to escape when they flee to Europe and other regions. This is the horror they face in their homelands.”
Thousands of Iraqi Christians have been caught up the violence over the past couple of years, being specifically targeted by the Islamic radicals, and driven out of their ancestral homelands.
Robert P. George, chairman of the U.S.Commission on International Religious Freedom, and many others have raised awareness for the “untold misery and suffering on defenseless religious and ethnic communities” that IS continues to carry out in full-force, both in Iraq and Syria.
BBC News analyst Ahmed Maher pointed out that IS’ invasion in 20Christian Post Report – 14 increased the civilian death toll dramatically in Iraq, noting that the monthly average death rate between 20Christian Post Report – 10 and 20Christian Post Report – 13 was 400 deaths, which also included domestic violence and crimes.
“The latest figure will also certainly be much higher than the U..N reports, because there are many no-go areas for activists and journalists,” he added.
“IS militants brag about killing anyone who they perceive as ‘non-believers’ of their extremist Islamist ideology. Followers of other religions have also been singled out — with Yazidis and Christians taking the brunt of summary executions and murders.”
Source : Christian Post
(Photo: Markus Bollen, Michael Hammers Studios Gmbh)Christian Post Report – The Golgotha Crucifix atop the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.
A recently released report by Israel’s National Insurance Institute shows that 1.7 million Israelis live below the poverty line, including 23 percent of the country’s seniors and 13.7 percent of working families, up from 7 percent in 1999.
(Photo: International Fellowship of Christians and Jews)In Israel, Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein (left) meets with Nalya and Lev Slobidker, immigrants from the former Soviet Union and recipients of aid from a food program of the Eckstein-led International Fellowship of Christians and Jews.Those are the numbers that push Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein — founder and president of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (The Fellowship) — onto airplanes and then onto stages at packed auditoriums around the world, in order to raise awareness and funds. Though he made aliyah 13 years ago, Eckstein spends half the year away from his Jerusalem home on the road promoting The Fellowship’s mission.
The Fellowship is the largest private charitable foundation in Israel, and receives 99 percent of its annual $137 million in donations from Christians — mostly from North America. Funds raised by The Fellowship are distributed to Jews and others in need, whether they are Jews and other communities in Israel lacking adequate food, shelter, and security; Diaspora Jews needing financial assistance to move to Israel; Israeli soldiers finding it hard to make it on an IDF stipend; or elderly Holocaust survivors and other Jews in the former Soviet Union.
By far the most enthusiastic donors to The Fellowship are evangelical Christians like Janet Willett, who are responsible for the approximately 7,200 donations that stream daily into The Fellowship’s Chicago office. The average gift: $76.
Thirty years ago, Willett saw an advertisement and sent in her first check.
“I have such a love for the Jewish people and Israel,” says the Arlington, Wash., grandmother. “And it’s just grown over the years.”
So have her gifts, which started small and now are typically a few hundred dollars at a time.
“The two things I can do is pray for Israel’s protection and help financially,” she says. Willett also dreams of visiting Israel herself someday. But circumstances, including a husband who survived a stroke, have prevented that — so far.
“Now I’m just happy I can help others get there, and feed, clothe, and protect them. I take ‘never again’ very seriously,” she says, using the Holocaust-prevention mantra. “When others are turning against it, you will see we evangelicals are increasingly supportive of Israel. It just pulls on our hearts.”
George Mamo, The Fellowship’s executive vice president, points out that a typical donor is a church-going woman in her 60s or 70s. Most of them connect to The Fellowship through TV or radio ads, or receive a solicitation in the mail. Others hear Eckstein during his visits to evangelical communities, where he also makes the case for support of Israel and the Jewish people.
“I’m teaching the Jewish roots of the Christian faith,” Eckstein says. “We’re cultivating the love for Israel and the Jewish people, which connects to their reading of the bible.”
Indeed, one of The Fellowship’s strongest arguments to support Jews and Israel comes from Genesis 12:3, which reads, “And I will bless them that bless thee, and him that curseth thee will I curse; and in thee shall all the families of the Earth be blessed.”
“They see this people and this country as one: the nation of Israel,” says Eckstein.
“And they see the need here. It’s important to them that they can help, even if it means sacrificing to do it,” he adds, telling of a donor who reported switching her coffee allegiance from Starbucks to McDonald’s to finance her Fellowship gift.
But how does an Orthodox rabbi begin working with evangelical Christians? After ordination from Yeshiva University, Eckstein went on to serve as national co-director of interreligious affairs for the Anti-Defamation League. He then extended his commitment to strengthening relations between the two faiths by founding the Holyland Fellowship of Christians and Jews in 1983, later renaming it the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. An early focus: bringing groups of evangelicals to Israel, to show them the country and point out its citizens’ most pressing needs.
What the rabbi calls his “ministry” is all about building such bridges between Christians and Jews. Hence the name of his new authorized biography, The Bridge Builder: The Life and Continuing Legacy of Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, written by Zev Chafets.
Eckstein, now 64, has raised an astounding $1 billion since 1983. Where exactly does the money go? Fellowship poverty-relief programs for seniors take the biggest slice of the funding pie: 23.7 percent of it — almost $24 million a year — including support for 17 soup kitchens around Israel.
The rest of the biggest programs, in order of expenditure, include strengthening security for Israelis; support for needy families (including Jews, Muslims, Druze, Bedouin, and Christians); job training to eliminate poverty; relief for mostly elderly Jews in the former Soviet Union; helping people make aliyah; and grants to injured terror victims as well as the families of those killed.
“Where the government doesn’t go, we step in,” says Eckstein.
For 82-year-old Clara Pevzner and 15,000 other needy seniors in 50 communities across Israel, The Fellowship’s help comes mostly in the form of food they could otherwise not afford, and often rent, heat, dental care, and medicine. In Pevzner’s case, the aid also includes major appliances.
The Moscow native made aliyah in 1991 with her two children after her husband died. She was receiving a monthly Fellowship food basket when the delivery person discovered that, in Pevzner’s modest apartment outside Haifa, neither the oven/stove nor the washing machine worked.
So The Fellowship brought her new ones.
“I was so down when I couldn’t cook or wash clothes,” Pevzner said through a translator. “But after I received the new appliances, I felt much more motivated to go on.”
The number of seniors receiving help from The Fellowship, including many immigrants from the former Soviet Union and Ethiopia, is expected to grow by another 25 percent in the next year. Some of the most independent elderly aid recipients receive vouchers to grocery stores, others get deliveries of food they can cook themselves, and those with greater disabilities are given seven meals each week to heat up.
The Fellowship also makes increasing use of volunteer power, especially when it comes to delivering food — and companionship — to Israel’s elderly. Each Monday, Yanka Ityel, who was born in Holland, visits an 82-year-old woman from South Africa, sharing a cup of tea or leafing through old photo albums together.
“She is such a kind person, so sweet,” says Ityel. “I truly enjoy our time together and I know it’s a relief to her daughter knowing her mother has company and someone to keep an eye on her.”
Amid the large number of Fellowship aid recipients, what Eckstein says he is proudest of is the organization making its impact one interpersonal relationship at a time, something he illustrates with the story of a trip he took with supporters to the former Soviet Union.
“We were visiting an old Jewish man with a swollen gangrenous leg who told us it would take $500 for an operation to correct it, money he clearly did not have. At that point, one of the Jewish guys pulled $250 out of his pocket and said, ‘You’re halfway there.’ And one of the Christian guys pulled out of his pocket another $250 and said, ‘You’re there,'” recalls Eckstein.
“And that,” Eckstein says with a smile, “says it all.”
Article originally posted at JNS.org.
Source : Christian Post
(Photo: YouTube/”Shameless”)Christian Post Report – A screengrab from the official trailer for Showtime original series “Shameless” season 6.
The Showtime television drama “Shameless” is receiving criticism for airing an episode “#AbortionRules” that involves the character Fiona Gallagher attempting to convince her sister to have an abortion.
The #AbortionRules episode, the second in the comedy-drama’s sixth season, follows the complicated plot of Gallagher, who finds out that she is unexpectedly pregnant. As she deals with her own pregnancy, she continues to try to convince her sister, Debbie, whose pregnancy was planned, to have an abortion, as she feels Debbie became pregnant for the wrong reasons.
Viewers have taken to social media to criticize the latest “Shameless” episode, with some calling the show’s controversial topic “immoral” and “obscene.”
“Shameless is a fantastic name for a show that would title an episode #AbortionRules. Other possible names ‘abhorrent, immoral and obscene,'” WNJC radio host and outspoken Christian Carmine Sabia shared on Twitter.
Hakim Ramalla, a self-described “conservative,” added on Twitter: “Not surprising that the filth #Shameless is promoting the hashtag #AbortionRules — abortion kills, folks.”
The ABC television drama “Scandal” has also received criticism for its recent portrayal of abortion.
The show’s season finale that premiered in November 2015 depicts main character Olivia Pope, played by Kerry Washington, undergoing an abortion procedure as the Christmas song “Silent Night” is played in the background.
Critics denounced the episode as being a promotion for the Planned Parenthood abortion provider, which had been in recent media headlines for a series of undercover videos released by the Center for Medical Progress that show Planned Parenthood executives discussing the sell of aborted babies’ tissue, organs and limbs for profit.
The Media Research Center, a conservative content analysis group, said in a statement at the time that the “Scandal” finale was “pretty much an hour-long advertisement for Planned Parenthood.”
“In the most disturbing scene, the main character has an abortion to ‘Silent Night’ (a hymn celebrating the birth of Jesus) playing in the background. … This is Hollywood’s moral depravity on full display,” the statement added.
The topic of abortion has been addressed in a host of other contemporary television series, including the Netflix original series “House of Cards,” in which character Claire Underwood admits to having three abortions, and “Orange is the New Black,” in which character Tiffany Doggett struggles with the ramifications of having six abortions.
Source : Christian Post
Christian Post Report – Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu touches the stones of the Western Wall, Judaism’s holiest prayer site, in Jerusalem’s Old City, March 18, 2015. Netanyahu won a come-from-behind victory in Israel’s election after tacking hard to the right in the final days of campaigning, including abandoning a commitment to negotiate a Palestinian state.
Israeli leaders have promised to implement a “zero tolerance” policy toward religious discrimination after Jewish extremists vandalized a Christian church in Jerusalem on Sunday.
Both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Minister of Internal Security Gilad Erdan condemned the attack on Jerusalem’s Dormition Abbey, warning that those who carried out the hateful act will face the full brunt of the law.
“We will not allow anyone to upend the dual-existence between the religions in the State of Israel,” Erdan said in a statement on Sunday, according to Israel National News.
“We will act with zero tolerance toward anyone who attacks the democratic foundations of the State of Israel and its freedom of religion and will act to apprehend those who committed this deplorable act,” Erdan added.
The Dormition Abbey, located in Jerusalem’s Old City on Mount Zion, was vandalized with over 10 anti-Christian slogans scrawled sometime between Saturday and Sunday and written in felt-tipped pen.
Some of the offensive phrases included “Death to the heathen Christians the enemies of Israel” and “The revenge of the people of Israel is yet to come.”
While police are continuing to search for the perpetrators, they believe the act was carried out by Jewish extremist groups.
The phrases were written in Hebrew in several different types of handwriting, leading police to believe multiple people carried out the hateful crime.
This is the second time the Old City church has been attacked in the past year, and church leaders have called on police to do more to catch the perpetrators.
“The inscriptions are not only against Jesus the Messiah, but also call to slaughter the Christians and send them to Hell! How long will these acts of vandalism continue?” the church told YNet News in an interview.
The American Jewish Committee also condemned the attack, with Rabbi David Rosen, the AJC’s director of International Interreligious Affairs, saying in a statement that “Once again, we are compelled to condemn vandalism of Christian holy sites in Israel, mindful that such acts of hatred not only threaten Christians, but also are a reprehensible affront to our Jewish heritage and contravene Israel’s enduring commitment to respect for other religious faiths.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement on Sunday that “this act (of vandalism) is worthy of all condemnation.”
“There is no room for such acts. Israel is a place where there is freedom of religion, and the only place in the Middle East where the Christian population has grown. The police department is acting to find those responsible for the act,” he added, i24 News reported.
The Abbey of the Dormition has been attacked multiple times in the past, including an arson attempt in May 2014 and damage to the church’s crucifixes and statues in December 2014.
Source : Christian Post
A 15-year-old boy in Pakistan cut off his own hand after the cleric of a mosque accused him of blasphemy. The boy’s family and villagers praised him for the act of “proving” his faith.
The incident took place after the boy, identified as Mohammad Anwar, from Pakistan’s Okara district, attended a gathering at a mosque in Hujra Shah Muqeem area last week, according to Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper.
The cleric, identified as Shabbir Ahmed, asked the gathering if there was anyone who had stopped praying and believing in the Islamic prophet Muhammad. The boy couldn’t understand the question, and raised his hand by mistake.
The imam and others in the gathering accused him of committing blasphemy. The boy, who felt guilty, ran to his home, chopped off the hand that he had raised, placed the severed hand on a plate and presented it to the cleric.
“As soon as he raised his hand, the cleric termed him a blasphemer. The boy felt guilty and went to his house and cut off his hand to prove his faith,” a witness was quoted as saying.
The boy’s parents were reportedly proud of his act and didn’t want to take any action against the cleric. However, police have arrested the cleric, and chared him under Section 7 of the Anti-Terrorism Act and 324 of the Pakistan Penal Code.
“Such illiterate imams of mosques should not be allowed to deliver speeches. His arrest is under the National Action Plan that hate speeches inciting violence are no longer allowed in this country,” Nosher Ali, the head of the local police station, told Reuters.
Pakistan has draconian anti-blasphemy laws, and many Christians have been falsely accused of the “crime.”
The U.K.-based group Pakistan’s Centre for Legal Aid, Assistance and Settlement has said in its report that
allegations of blasphemy often “stem from the Muslim accuser’s desire to take revenge” and to “settle petty, personal disputes.”
The blasphemy laws are embedded in Sections 295 and 298 of the Pakistan Penal Code, and carry the death penalty. There is no provision to punish a false accuser or a false witness of blasphemy.
Last October, the Lahore High Court upheld the death penalty of Asia Bibi, a Christian mother who was convicted of blasphemy.
She was sentenced in 2010, a year after she was accused. She was harvesting berries with a group of Muslim women, who accused her of drinking from the same water bowl as them. Following an argument, the women told a local cleric that Bibi had blasphemed against Islam.
Source : Christian Post
(Photo: Reuters/Murad Sezer)Christian Post Report – Turkish army tanks take up position on the Turkish-Syrian border near the southeastern town of Suruc in Sanliurfa province September 29, 2014.
The Turkish army has bombed the Iraqi border village of Sharanish, home to many Christians, Chaldeans and Assyrians, under the supposed pretext of its ongoing war with the Kurdish PKK.
Fides News Agency reported Monday that the bombings took place over the weekend, creating panic and forcing many to flee to the city of Zakho in bitter cold conditions. Reports have not yet revealed the number of victims, but the Patriarchate of Babylon of the Chaldeans condemned the attack as “totally unjustified.”
“The attack was carried out under the pretext of the fight against the positions of the Kurdish PKK (Kurdistan Workers’ Party),” Patriarchate Louis Sako said.
He added that the Turkish government must “respect the lives and property of the population.”
AINA News also confirmed the attack on the Upper Sharanish village, noting that nearly 25 Assyrian families had to flee in panic. At the same time, it pointed out that the Muslim village of Lower Sharanish was not targeted.
Turkish ground forces and warplanes have been invading Iraq since September as part of a “short-term” operation to hunt down Kurdish rebels that Turkey accuses of carrying out bomb attacks in its territory.
Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said at the time that the campaign is aimed at clearing out rebel stronghold.
“Those mountains will be cleared of these terrorists. Whatever it takes, they will be cleared,” Davutoglu said.
The PKK rebels have been fighting Turkey, an American NATO ally, since the 1970s, in an effort to establish and independent Kurdish state.
A two-year ceasefire was broken back in July following an Islamic State suicide bombing attack near the Syrian border, which led to mutual recriminations between Kurdish fighters and Turkey.
The clashes between the two sides have led to over 40,000 deaths since 1984.
Fides pointed out that Christians have been directly caught in the crossfire on a number of occasions, and in the 1980s the same village of Sharanish was completely devastated due to a military campaign carried out by the Iraqi army against the Kurds.
The fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime allowed for a part of the original Christian population to return to the village, which was also a means to escape much of the anti-Christian violence that had gripped major cities such as Baghdad and Mosul.
Sharanish was also home to dozens of Christian families who fled the Nineveh plains in 2014 due to advancement of the Islamic State.
Back in November, Turkey’s military shot down a Russian Su-24 jet that it claimed was violating Turkish airspace, which casued a signficant political row with Russia. U.S. Ambassador to NATO Douglas Lute claimed at the time, however, that intelligence information backed Turkey’s explanation of the events.
Source : Christian Post
(Photo: Reuters/Edgar Su)Christian Post Report – City Harvest Church founder Kong Hee (R) and his wife Sun Ho, also known as Ho Yeow Sun, arrive at the State Courts in Singapore, October 21, 2015, where a verdict is expected to be delivered for their trial of misappropriating S million (.5 million) of church funds and falsifying the church’s accounts.
City Harvest Church lead Pastor Kong Hee and the five other members sentenced to prison for misusing millions of church funds have been dealt a new blow with news the prosecution has officially appealed that they be given harsher sentences.
Singapore’s Business Times reported on Monday that the prosecution has filed the Petition of Appeal, arguing that the sentences imposed on the six CHC accused members are “manifestly inadequate, in all the circumstances of the case.”
All six members were found guilty in playing a part in the misuse of close to $35-million in church donations, which went to the music career of singer and fellow CHC Pastor Sun Ho, who also happens to be Kong’s wife.
Despite maintaining their innocence throughout the trial, all of the accused received various prison sentences. Kong was handed an eight-year sentence punishment, the harshest of the six, while the others received sentences of between 21 months and six years in prison.
The case looks set to continue, however, as all six accused persons also filed their notices of appeal against both the convictions and sentences back in December.
Kong and Ho founded CHC in 1989, and led it over a period of growth in which it became one of the largest megachurches in Singapore.
The prosecution argued throughout the trial, which began in 2013, that the accused CHC members intentionally funneled the money into a shell company called Xtron, which in turn used the money to fund Ho’s music career.
The CHC lead pastor has argued, however, that the only way the church supported Ho was through the Crossover project, aimed at bringing her music to others around the world as a means to share the Gospel message.
Back in December, Kong said that he respects the court’s decision, but found points that are “erroneous and warrant appeal.”
“I will therefore be preparing to file an appeal against both my conviction and sentence. Earlier today, I was informed that the prosecution has also filed an appeal against the sentence imposed by the court,” the pastor said in a statement.
“My lawyers will also address the prosecution’s appeal at the appropriate time. I sincerely need your prayers during this process for a favorable outcome. The road ahead is long and arduous, but God’s grace is sufficient for me,” he added.
Source : Christian Post
(Photo: Reuters/Mathieu Belanger)Christian Post Report – Canadian singer Celine Dion and her husband Rene Angelil pose after receiving the Order of Canada from Canada’s Governor General David Johnston at the Citadelle in Quebec City, July 26, 2013.
Celine Dion, arguably one of the best recording artists of our time, is receiving a flood of support from her supporters and celebrity colleagues after the deaths of both her husband and brother.
“René Angélil, 73, passed away this morning at his home in Las Vegas after a long and courageous battle against cancer,” a representative of Dion’s family said. “The family requests that their privacy be respected at the moment.”
Dion’s husband died on Jan. 14 after battling throat cancer and just days later, on Jan. 16, Dion’s website announced that her brother, Daniel, 59, also died after losing his battle to brain, tongue and throat cancer.
Reuters/FileCanadian singer Celine DionEven though the “My Heart Will Go On” singer has not spoken publicly, her peers in mainstream entertainment have sent Dion messages on Twitter vowing to pray for her and her family.
“My heart, thoughts and prayers go out to Celine and her family on the passing of René. He fought a long hard battle,” Country star Reba McEntire tweeted.
LeAnn Rimes, another southern belle, wrote, “My heart and so many prayers go out to the sweet @celinedion She has the biggest heart that I’m sure is broken. R.I.P. Rene.”
Music stars were not the only one’s who reached out to Dion, health expert Dr. Oz also wrote to her, saying, “I’m so sorry for your loss, @celinedion! My thoughts and prayers are with you and your family.”
Gospel singer and former Destiny’s Child member Michelle Williams expressed her love for the Nevada resident and likewise offered prayers for her family.
Pop star Ariana Grande also tweeted, “my heart is just breaking for @celinedion. Sending all the love and prayers imaginable.”
As well as being her spouse, Angelil was also Dion’s manager for decades, molding her from a timid French-speaking Canadian songstress into one of the most popular singers in the pop world. The couple had three children, two of them being a set of twins.
For further updates on Dion visit www.celinedion.com.
Source : Christian Post

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(Facebook: Amy Boyle-Riddering)
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(Photo: Reuters/Joe Penney)An American missionary was among the dozens of civilians killed during an al Qaeda attack in the African nation of Burkina Faso over the weekend.
Michael Riddering, who was one of the 28 people killed by al Qaeda-linked militants in the Burkina Faso capital of Ouagadougou Friday night, was a father of four and director of an orphanage and women’s crisis center in the town of Yako, his mother-in-law, Carol Boyle, told The Associated Press.
Riddering, who traveled to the African nation in 20Christian Post Report – 1Christian Post Report – 1 along with his wife, Amy Boyle-Riddering, was in the capital city on Friday night to meet a group of people who were planning to volunteer at the orphanage and crisis center that he and his wife run.
Boyle explained that Riddering arrived early to the cafe where he was supposed to meet the group. When the attack began, Riddering was in the cafe with a local pastor. As shots were fired, Riddering and the pastor dispersed in different directions.
The pastor, who got ahold of Riddering’s phone, called Boyle-Riddering to tell her what had happened and where they were. Although the pastor survived, Riddering was not as fortunate. It wasn’t until another Christian missionary named Phillip Matheny found Riddering at the morgue the next morning that the family was told he had been killed.
Before selling their property and possessions so they could move to Burkina Faso to run the Les Ailes de Refuge orphanage in Yako in 20Christian Post Report – 1Christian Post Report – 1, Riddering worked as a manager for a yacht outfitting company in Florida, while his wife worked as a graphic designer.
“He was extremely well-loved and respected,” Boyle said. “He wasn’t a hypocrite, he wasn’t a two-face. He had his guiding light, and he followed it.”
The orphanage the Ridderings ran, which cared for 400 orphaned children, consisted of classrooms, a clinic, and a home for abused women. The orphanage was sponsored by the Christian missions organization Sheltering Wings, which sponsors a number of missions in West Africa.
“They were looking forward to continuing to work in Burkina Faso and raising their children together,” a statement from Sheltering Wings said. “Tragically and unexpectedly, Mike’s life was cut short. We grieve with Amy and her family, and all who knew Mike.”
John Anderson, a Sheltering Wings board member, told AP that Riddering was the kind of guy who would do the heavy lifting and dirty work that others shied away from.
“During the Ebola crisis, when it was hard to find people to do the digging, Mike would go out and join them so they could continue doing the work,” Anderson said. “And that’s backbreaking work. He never stopped moving and never stopped helping.”
According to CNN, the Ridderings adopted two of their children from Burkina Faso.
Sheltering Wings has set up an online donation fund that will support Boyle-Riddering and her children during this upsetting time in their lives.
“Heaven has gained a warrior! I know God has a purpose in all things but sometimes it is a complete mystery to me,” Boyle-Riddering posted on her FacebookSaturday. “My best friend, partner in crime and love of my life. The best husband ever. An amazing father to his children and a papa to everyone. My heart is so heavy and I am having trouble believing he is gone. Mike was an example in the way he lived and loved. God be glorified! Mike Riddering I will love you always! You left quite a legacy here. I can only imagine the adventures you are having now.”
Source : Christian Post

Christian Post Report – One of America’s greatest liabilities is crime, not only in the cost of property loss and damage but the lives impacted by lawless acts. The best solution for America’s crime problem can be seen when a criminal is transformed through faith in Jesus. In fact, it does quite often, usually under the radar.
Case in point: Hillary Jones of Marysville, California — about two hours north of San Francisco — used to steal. She used to be a heroin addict and was homeless.
Then she became pregnant. Determined to have an abortion, she contacted Planned Parenthood. First, she had to prove she was pregnant.
She told me, “as far as Planned Parenthood goes, if you don’t have money or insurance, they won’t see you. I needed the verification to get insurance for the abortion.”
So she knowingly went into A Woman’s Friend clinic, a pro-life center, assuming she could stop up her ears, not hear what they were saying — and walk out with a certificate proving her pregnancy. But once she saw her unborn son on the sonogram, she was sold on giving him life.
The kindness Hillary experienced at A Woman’s Friend changed her life in all ways. They really cared about her, and she knew it.
Read more at http://www.christianpost.com/news/america-youth-need-jesus-more-god-less-crime-154963/#4lcH3qKWrx1vgMdx.99
Source : Christian Post