U.S, Other Nations Show Support for France

Christian Headlines report – Landmarks across the United States were lit to look like France’s flag on Friday night after terrorist attacks in Paris took the lives of 127 people and injured many others.

The Blaze reports that people across social media in the U.S. took and posted photos of various buildings across the country which stood in solidarity with the people of France by being lit to represent France’s flag in blue, white, and red.

City Hall in San Francisco, the Kettler Capitals Iceplex in Washington D.C., and the Omni Hotel in Dallas were a few of the buildings that were lit to represent the French flag last night.

In addition, the Eiffel Tower replica in Las Vegas was kept dark in honor of those who were killed in the attacks.

World leaders have condemned the attacks which were reportedly carried out by the Islamic State, and France’s president, Francois Hollande, has called the attacks “an act of war.”

World Religious Leaders Condemn Paris Attack

Religion News Service report – World religious leaders and institutions – from Pope Francis to the leaders of Al Azhar University in Egypt – condemned the series of attacks overnight in Paris which left more than 120 people dead.
“We are shocked by this new manifestation of maddening, terrorist violence and hatred which we condemn in the most radical way together with the pope and all those who love peace,” Rev. Federico Lombardi, the Vatican’s chief spokesman said in a statement on Saturday (Nov. 14).
“We pray for the victims and the wounded, and for all the French people,” Lombardi said. “This is an attack on peace for all humanity, and it requires a decisive, supportive response on the part of all of us as we counter the spread the homicidal hatred in all of its forms.”
In Cairo, Al-Azhar University, the preeminent, thousand-year-old seat of Sunni Muslim scholarship, called the attacks a criminal act, and said that “Islam denounces any violence,” the Arabic news site Al Arabiya reported, quoting Egypt’s state news agency MENA.
Reports said the cry “Allahu Akbar” was heard from the gunman, and ISIS supporters praised the violence on social media while many other Muslims condemned the bloodshed.
On Saturday morning, French President Francois Hollande said the attacks were an “act of war” carried out by ISIS militants.
In Ireland, the imam of the Al-Mustafa Islamic Centre in Dublin said his thoughts and prayers are with the people of Paris “and every other place on earth plagued by sick men with weapons and bombs.
“Terrorists have no religion whatsoever,” said the Muslim leader, Umar Al-Qadri. “Their religion is intolerance hatred for peace.”
In the United States, the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, Michael Curry, called upon “all Episcopalians and people of good will and faith to pray for those who have died.”
Iran’s president Hassan Rouhani cancelled a meeting with the pope at the Holy See, as well as the rest of his European trip which included a visit to Paris.
Rouhani had been due to arrive in Rome on Saturday for meetings with the pontiff and the Italian prime minister, Matteo Renzi.
Multiple terrorist attacks in the French capital targeted civilians at a concert hall, restaurants and a sports stadium where President Francois Hollande was present. At least eight attackers also died, seven reportedly blowing themselves up while one was shot by police.
Courtesy: Religion News Service

13 Christians Who Risked Everything to Defend Biblical Truth

As America continues to grow more hostile toward public prayer and conservative religious viewpoints, younger generations of courageous Christians will be faced with the challenge of defying the norm of secular culture to defend prayer and biblical truth.

In his book No Fear: Real Stories of a Courageous New Generation Standing for Truth, Family Research Council President Tony Perkins highlights 11 instances when young men and women risked everything to defend biblical truth and their religious beliefs from intense societal, political, cultural and spiritual opposition.

Perkins hopes readers, especially younger Christians, will be inspired to live out their faith with the same courage displayed in the real-life stories exhibited in his book, No Fear, which was praised by leading evangelist Franklin Graham, who believes the book will “help raise up a new generation of world changers.”

Chad Farnan

In 2008, 16-year-old Chad Farnan of Mission Viejo, California, filed a federal lawsuit against his history teacher and charged that the Capistrano Valley High School teacher made a habit of mocking Christianity by saying things like “Jesus glasses” obscure truth.

The lawsuit states that the teacher violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment by promoting irreligion over religion.

Although a federal court ruled in 2009 that the teacher did violate the First Amendment, the ruling was overturned by a federal appeals court in 2011. The Supreme Court declined to review Farnan’s case in 2012.

“Increasingly, more and more ordinary people like Chad will be faced with the same decision,” Perkins wrote. “Do I stand on the sidelines as my faith and values are threatened?”

Lila Rose
(Photo: Courtesy of LiveAction.org)Lila Rose, founder of Live Action, a pro-life nonprofit organization based in Arlington, Va.

Lila Rose

Rose, who at the age of 15 began pro-life activism by founding the organization Live Action, made a name for herself during her college days at UCLA by continuously standing up to many of America’s largest abortion providers.

Rose produced several undercover videos that targeted Planned Parenthood to prove that, in many cities across the U.S., abortion provider were covering up abuse and prostitution of underage children, and performing sex-selective abortions.

Considering that Planned Parenthood and the abortion industry had much to lose from the Live Action videos, Rose was faced with death threats and lawsuits. Despite the threats, she continues her pro-life activism and her role as president of Live Action.

“The threat from a billion-dollar abortion giant was more real to this young woman with only two hundred dollars in her bank account; It was overwhelming,” Perkins wrote. “But Lila refused to yield to fear, no matter how strong the attacks against her.”

 

moriah peters
(Photo: Facebook/Moriah Peters)Christian recording artist and former American Idol hopeful, Moriah Peters.

Moriah Peters

Peters, a Texas girl who always dreamed of a career in show business, moved to Los Angeles in 2001. Being a devout Christian, she had her own policy of waiting until marriage to kiss.

Peters, 23, auditioned for American Idol in 2010 but was turned away by the reality show’s judges — Simon Cowell, Randy Jackson, and Avril Lavigne. She was told that her image was too wholesome.

Lavigne told Peters that she should go experience the world, “feel sexy” and “kiss a guy” in order to make it in the music business.

“God opened doors for me to get this far and then closed them, and I am not going to question it because I know He has bigger things for me,” Peters said in an interview during the show. …. Read more

Willing Movie – Official Trailer

Willing – Official Trailer

SYNOPSIS OF THE MOVIE:

Shade, Joy & Margaret are in the phase of choosing life partners. Despite their social status and financial stability, luck seems to be running against them when it comes to getting a suitable suitor. They finally get seemingly suitable suitors then reality sets in.

—————————————-­—————————————-­——————-

This movie is educative, inspirational, and entertaining.

Shot by: OFemi Media
Produced by: KAI Production
Written by: Segun Ajala
Director/DOP: Femi Familoye
Edited by: Femi Familoye

Contact Info :

Like us on FACEBOOK: https://goo.gl/7AgT6W
Follow us on TWITTER: https://goo.gl/mM5yeZ
Follow us on INSTAGRAM: https://goo.gl/SjHktA

Egyptian Christian Imprisoned for Handing Out Bibles in Shopping Mall

A 35-year-old Egyptian Christian is likely to remain in jail for one to five years for handing out Bibles in a shopping mall.
The Christian Post reports Medhat Ishak was caught handing out Bibles in Oct. 6 last year. He was sentenced to 15 days in jail for “inciting sectarian strife” and “harming national security.” However, a judge has now slapped Ishak with a heftier charge — blasphemy.
The Christian man now faces a sentence between one and five years in prison for “insulting religion,” though his lawyers argue Ishak did not commit the offense.
According to attorney Rafik Rafaat, Ishak did encounter a Muslim man at the mall, though he did not know he was Muslim at first. Ishak offered him a Bible and when the man refused and explained that the was a Muslim, Ishak apologized and left.
Rafaat said, “The word ‘blasphemy’ means that he was insulting the other religion, but he didn’t do that, and he didn’t talk about Islam or prophets or anything like that to be accused of blasphemy. So, now we are surprised that the attorney general accused him of blasphemy when he didn’t commit any act of blasphemy.”

 

China’s Two-child Policy: New Number, Same Disaster

BreakPoint report – The story is far more common than many are willing to admit: A married couple was sitting peacefully at home when suddenly, government officials forced their way in, grabbed the wife who was seven-months pregnant, and took her away.
Here are the husband’s own words, as he described to the Washington Post what happened in the hospital, “They grabbed my wife’s body like they were grabbing a pig…and injected a shot into her belly.” The injection caused labor, and a living baby boy was delivered. Doctors shoved the infant into a plastic bag and ordered the couple to pay for burial expenses.
Multiply this scenario thousands of times, and you’ll have an idea of the evil China’s infamous One-Child Policy has wrought.

Now, you may have just heard that China just announced it is lifting the policy and replacing it with a two-child policy. Many media outlets made this sound like a huge improvement, and to a culture than only values children based on whether we want them or not, I guess that makes sense. But don’t be fooled: it’s only a slightly-less terrible policy than before. The Chinese government did not wake up one morning and realize, “Whoa, this one-child policy is immoral.” No, the new policy is based on new economic and practical calculations. Count on it: Children are still not seen as intrinsically valuable. The forced abortions and sterilizations will continue.
The new two-child policy is nothing more than a reaction to the massive gender imbalance created by three-and-a-half decades of the old one-child policy. Baby girls were most commonly aborted, plus there were high suicide rates among women forced to kill their own offspring. This gendercide also led to the trafficking of women as Chinese men struggled to find wives.
Reggie Littlejohn, president of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, notes that the new Two-Child Policy contains the same abuses as the One-Child Policy. The government still forces couples to obtain a “birth permit” before conceiving—or face forced abortion.
As Reggie notes, the core of the One-Child Policy is not about how many children the government allows, but “the fact that the government is setting a limit on children, and enforcing this limit coercively….The One-Child Policy does not need to be modified,” she adds. “It needs to be abolished.”
And it’s all economic calculation which means, as Stephen Mosher, president of the Population Research Institute notes, China’s leaders, facing a shortage of workers and an aging population, may very well one day force couples to have more children.
As Mosher explains, “A government bent on controlling the fertility of its people will do whatever necessary to produce the number of children it thinks necessary . . .” Can you imagine the Chinese government ordering forced inseminations? Mosher can.
And in a culture that values boys, that will only exacerbate the gender imbalance. Which will lead the government to have to intervene even more trying to fix their own problem. What a nightmare.
We say it all the time here: ideas have consequences. Christianity sees children as gifts of God:  the natural, desirable result of the loving, lifelong commitment and physical union of husband and wife. The secular and certainly communist worldviews see children as commodities: subject either to parents’ desires and “lifestyle choices” or to the government’s economic and political goals.
Which is why in the West, our cultural values are leading to our own similar, though personally chosen, “one-child policies” and demographic decline.
It’s just more evidence that when we divorce sex from marriage and marriage from childrearing, bad things happen.
While we must keep pressure on China to end its horrific population policies, we must remind ourselves that a civilization that devalues children devalues its future. Ours included.

 

BreakPoint is a Christian worldview ministry that seeks to build and resource a movement of Christians committed to living and defending Christian worldview in all areas of life. Begun byChuck Colson in 1991 as a daily radio broadcast, BreakPoint provides a Christian perspective on today’s news and trends via radio, interactive media, and print. Today BreakPoint commentaries, co-hosted by Eric Metaxas and John Stonestreet, air daily on more than 1,200 outlets with an estimated weekly listening audience of eight million people. Feel free to contact us atBreakPoint.org where you can read and search answers to common questions.

John Stonestreet, the host of The Point, a daily national radio program, provides thought-provoking commentaries on current events and life issues from a biblical worldview. John holds degrees from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (IL) and Bryan College (TN), and is the co-author of Making Sense of Your World: A Biblical Worldview.

———————-

I attended an online church, here’s what happened

Premier Christianity (Sam Hailes) report – Everyday Church, a London based UK church has launched an experimental ‘online congregation’. Could this be the future? Sam Hailes logged on to see what church in the digital age might look like

The countdown video begins, the music is turned up loud and I’m getting ready to worship God. But I’m not in London’s latest megachurch. I’m sitting in the comfort of my own home, on the sofa. Church has gone digital, and the ramifications are significant: It’s now possible to attend church in your underpants.

Everyday Church (which has ‘real life’ congregations in Wimbledon, Kingston and Southfields) launched its online-only congregation in September. Participants visit everyday.online at 4.30pm or 6pm on a Sunday, and join in with the service.

What happens during the service?

Unlike some churches who livestream their services, Everyday have chosen to pre-record all their content. The online church pastor welcomes you to the church through a pre-recorded video message. Everyday church’s worship band then play songs – again you’re watching a pre-recorded video. And then a sermon is given, which needless to say, is pre-recorded.

Is anything live?

The chatroom is live and open throughout the service. You can talk to other people in real time about what you’re watching (like real life church, you can talk during the sermon). Hosts are on hand to type a warm welcome to you and answer any questions you have.

How is a sense of community being developed?

You can press a button to request prayer. This will open a new private chat area – where a member of the online community will pray for you. The church has also launched online life groups.

How many people go?

Perhaps understandably at its launch, I’m told there were ‘hundreds’ at the first service. But the system was showing considerably less people in attendance at the service I attended. At least 4 of these were ‘hosts’ (a cross between a welcome team member and chatroom moderator).

Like offline church, there were a few latecomers. And some people appeared to leave during the preach (there was nothing to suggest they were storming out).

How good is the technology?

Superb. As long as you’ve a decent internet connection, attending this church is a stress-free experience.

Can other people hear you singing during the worship?

Thankfully not. Each person is encouraged to sing along with the worship band, but you can’t hear other members of the congregation. You can only type to them through the chat section.

What did you sing?

The worship is charismatic with a full band (drums, guitars etc) and tunes by Bethel and Newday.

What was the sermon like?

Excellent. Phil Moore is currently preaching his way through Proverbs. The sermon I watched was on revenge and forgiveness. A handy feature of this online congregation is you can not only view and follow the sermon notes, you can also email them to yourself at the touch of a button.

Will you be going back?

I’m lucky enough to have an offline community that I’m a part of. But for those who are housebound or are daunted by the prospect of visiting an offline community on their own, Everyday.online could be exactly what they’re looking for. It could also work as a tool for evangelism.

Is this the future?

Honestly? I don’t think so. Many thousands of Christians, myself included, download or stream sermons (download Everyday Church sermons here). And that will continue and increase. But tuning in at a specific time to hear that sermon doesn’t do much for me. I also found the experience of singing at my laptop screen a little odd.

More importantly, church is supposed to be corporate and congregational. Despite Everyday’s best efforts, it doesn’t seem possible to replicate the level of real life church community in the online world. While we love WhatsApp and Skype, most of us recognise that face-to-face communication is the ideal to aim for – especially when it comes to the kind of important relationships we’re supposed to be building within church community. There’s nothing inherently wrong with new forms of communication or online congregations. But both of these will always be second-best. Virtual reality is not reality.

Is there anything else like this in the UK?

No, and for that fact alone, Everyday Church should be commended. Although the experience was alien to me, for others this could be exactly what they’re looking for.

For more information visit everyday.online

The Ashley Madison affair

Premier Christianity wrote – Deception, duplicity and leading a double life is the oldest trick in the book, says Gillan Scott, following the hacking of the world’s largest website dedicated to infidelity

Let me introduce myself: my name is Gillan (not Gillian!) and I have a wonderful wife, three children and various pets. I’m a teacher, and in my spare time I’m most likely to be involved with my local church or writing articles (like this one).

All of this keeps my diary full to the point of missing out on activities that large numbers of others undertake all the time. Things like going to the gym, watchingGame of Thrones and attempting to have an affair.

Perhaps my priorities are all wrong. I’m in need of losing an inch or two around the waist; I’m totally clueless when friends start talking about the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros and, according to the now notorious affair website Ashley Madison, life’s just too short not to look for another man’s wife to jump into bed with for my own sexual gratification. To be honest, though, apart from being less fit than I’d like, I’d rather live with the way things are.

Apparently, however, there are plenty of people who do feel like they’re missing out on the greener grass of another field. And that number is quite staggering.

When Ashley Madison was hacked back in July, the names of 37 million users were released, of which 1.2 million are registered in the UK. If that figure is true, then it would be equivalent to around 5% of the UK’s married population. However, following extensive analysis of the published data, there’s good reason to believe that the site has been producing vast quantities of fake accounts to inflate these figures. Of the active accounts in the UK, it has been reported that 700,000 belong to men and perhaps just 31 to women.

OPPORTUNITY FOR THE MASSES

Thanks to the allure of Ashley Madison’s promises, these men have bought into an expensive and futile fantasy. The closest that the vast majority of these users will get to having an affair will be replying to a female bot on the site designed to get them to fork out more money to be allowed to engage in a conversation.

But for each of these individuals, simply joining the site means that they have crossed the Rubicon: their thoughts of infidelity have gone from idle dreams to plans, then action and payment. Presumably all in the hope that their pent-up sexual desire might lead to a real experience.

The exposure of what has been going on behind the scenes at Ashley Madison reveals once again the way that the Internet has opened up a whole range of opportunities to succumb to temptation that in the past would have been unavailable to most. Internet pornography hasn’t suddenly created a generation who take pleasure from seeing naked people doing various things to each other – pornography of one kind or another has existed throughout history. But until the arrival of the Internet, access to it was limited for the average person. It’s the same situation for those searching for an affair online.

Now that the conventional social obstacles to starting an affair have been removed and with covert online liaisons so much easier to begin, is it any wonder that so many men – and to a lesser extent, women – find themselves unable to resist?

The conventional obstacles to starting an affair have been removed

SHOPPING FOR ADULTERY

In many ways, Ashley Madison’s founder Noel Biderman has followed the natural path of commodification and instant gratification that the web now offers. Need a pair of size six pink wellies by tomorrow morning? Amazon Prime will provide. Need an affair for Tuesday afternoon? Just sign up to Ashley Madison.

But some things (especially relationships) were never meant to be commodities. Biderman might say that no one is forced to use Ashley Madison, but he has offered a service that should never have been created. Trading on people’s broken desires for real intimacy by offering a casual substitute is as self-defeating as the pornographers who sell a fantasy world to millions of men every day. No one wins in this false economy.

And what of the hackers, who called themselves the Impact Team? Their aim may have been to bring Ashley Madison down and perhaps end the immorality of it all. But in doing so they also have blood on their hands, as unscrupulous individuals leverage the list of names for blackmail demands.

There is a certain level of hypocrisy in all of this from a spectator’s point of view. We demand that our leaders be open and honest and fall on their swords if they are caught out. We often enjoy the spectacle of watching others get their just desserts. But how many of those pointing the finger have never considered the idea of going behind their partner’s back if the chance presented itself? How many of us have our own assortment of secrets that we intend to keep locked away?

When Jesus says in the Sermon on the Mount: ‘Do not judge, or you too will be judged’ (Matthew 7:1), he meant it. And when he said, ‘I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart’ (Matthew 5:28), his words are meant to make us look at ourselves, whether or not we have committed a physical act of betrayal.

PASTORS ON THE LIST

Perhaps unsurprisingly, Christians have fallen too. In the US and Canada, hundreds of church leaders and ministers have been exposed. Josh Duggar and Sam Radar, two high-profile ‘celebrity’ Christians, have gained the greatest attention, leading to public admissions of guilt. Most  tragic is the story of New Orleans pastor and seminary professor John Gibson. To onlookers he was a happily married family man, but he took his own life after the website was hacked and his name found.

For Christians who outwardly espouse high moral standards, these falls from grace can wreck not only families, but entire ministries. The devil knows that the easiest way to ruin God’s work is to attack relationships at every level. He goes for our weaknesses and sadly, for many men in particular, sexual desire is the easiest way in.

In recent years men such as God TV founder Rory Alec, evangelist Todd Bentley and the British minister, author and speaker, Mark Stibbe have abandoned successful ministries as well as their wives and families for the sake of a relationship with another woman. These very public revelations are immeasurably damaging, having an impact far beyond those immediately affected.

Infidelity in figures

UK Couples say financial problems and a lack of work-life balance are the top things that threaten their marriage; 36% chose extra-marital affairs as a possible problem, just ahead of ‘not understanding each other’.*

Almost 60% of men and over 45% of women will cheat at some point in their marriages, according to Taylor and Francis’ US research on cybersex. However, other studies on the numbers of people who have extramarital affairs vary in their results.

Only 47% of people in France say that an extramarital affair is morally unacceptable, whereas 94% of people in Turkey and the Palestinian territories consider infidelity unacceptable.**

*Source: Office for National Statistics **Source: Pew Research

THE OLDEST TRICK IN THE BOOK

Ever since Adam and Eve tried to trick God by hiding themselves in the garden after breaking his command, duplicity, deception and leading a double life has been part of human nature. For evidence, one hardly needs to look further than the headlines of the last few months. Volkswagen share prices tumbled after their emission-dodging technology came to light. Former FIFA execs are being tried on corruption charges. Lord Sewel, head of standards in the House of Lords, was exposed for cavorting with drugs and prostitutes.

There’s nothing new here. Ashley Madison is a high-tech incarnation of an aspect of our humanity that is as old as the Fall itself. Jesus doesn’t mince his words about the solution. If our eye is causing us to sin then we should gouge it out. This is serious business; we need to do whatever it takes to stop sinful thoughts going any further.

For Christians, it is always hard to take in the news of another Christian’s indiscretion, because on top of everything else, they have often suppressed their relationship with God in order to justify their actions to themselves. Again, Jesus says: ‘Everyone who does evil hates the light, and will not come into the light for fear that their deeds will be exposed. But whoever lives by the truth comes into the light, so that it may be seen plainly that what they have done has been done in the sight of God’ (John 3:20-21).

God’s light purifies us as we walk with him, but when we choose to deliberately do what we know to be wrong, we withdraw from a place where God can give us the strength to overcome our temptations. It is then that we start to build barriers between us and God, and others too. We might even try to subconsciously hide what we are doing from God. But, as Adam and Eve found, God is never fooled.

MARRIAGES UNDER PRESSURE

There are plenty of reasons why people consider having an affair. For some it’s simply the thrill of an illicit encounter. But it’s much more likely to be about a marriage strained to breaking point, as children, work and other commitments squeeze out quality time together. One partner complains of feeling unloved and undervalued, longing for their emotional or sexual needs to be met. It doesn’t take much in these situations to begin fantasising about escaping into someone else’s arms.

Christians are not immune to these pressures. No matter how prayerful we are or how often we read our Bibles, our relationships won’t function perfectly. Relationships need continual nurturing and constant communication to stay strong. When  Paul tells husbands and wives not to deprive each other for too long to avoid temptation (1 Corinthians 7:5), he is acknowledging how tough marriage can be and the importance of both partners investing consistently.

No one wins in this false economy

There may be a handful of couples out there with wonderfully problem-free relationships, but I’ve yet to meet any. Those who are married (or heading that way) need to give each other permission to be honest about their struggles.

I’m hopefully sensible enough to know that when I’m finding my marriage a burden, I need to do something about it. Looking elsewhere is the last thing on earth I should contemplate. If anything, it means that I should be making more of an effort, rather than complaining to myself about what my wife is or isn’t doing. It probably means we’ve been neglecting our relationship and need to talk more, give each other some attention and encouragement, and pray.

We certainly don’t get everything right, but we stick at it because we recognise that we have committed ourselves to each other and that a hard-won marriage is far more precious than anything Ashley Madison’s fantasy escapism could ever hope to offer. Life is too short to waste it that way.

Why I used Ashley Madison

A Christian woman confessed to using the affair website live on Premier Christian Radio’s Woman to Woman show hosted by Maria Rodrigues

You signed up to the Ashley Madison website, why was that?  I love God, I love Jesus. But I found that my husband and I were not on the same path. Although he’s a Christian now, he doesn’t actually attend church and we don’t read the Bible together. Being in a marriage that is one-sided Christian and the other not can be quite separating and quite lonely.

Were the other site users encouraging you to meet up with them?  It was very much a ‘meet face to face’. You’d call it a coffee date; you’d go [for] coffee. Most of the men were very expectant of an intimate relationship even on that day. Or a week later; it could be very planned.  I’d book a hotel…a day room in a hotel.  Some wanted a long-term relationship, some didn’t. But I have to say, my behaviour has not been Christ-like. It was a very destructive path, a very sinful path, and it caused me nothing but pain and heartache.

Did you have any moments where you were worried someone would find out or spot you?  I did. I was quite nervous if I went out for coffee with somebody. I also became quite secretive. I lied to people that I love to be able to get away with what I was doing.

What was it that made you decide that you needed to leave the website?  I came to the realisation that the hole in my heart is a God-shaped hole. I got tempted and instead of turning myself toward my marriage, my family and my church, I turned away from it. I let myself get distracted, I took my focus off. I thought my loneliness could be filled by an intimacy with a man that wouldn’t come into my marriage but actually, of course, it did come into my marriage.

Hearing the news that hackers have released names of people who are currently subscribed – how did that affect you?  It was pretty stomach-churning stuff. I mean, I had tried; I stopped going on the website about three months before, and I confessed to my husband. I decided that the truth will set me free. It was a massive decision.

Read the full interview at https://www.premierchristianity.com/Blog/I-m-a-Christian-but-I-joined-Ashley-Madison 

Author : Deputy editor at Archbishop Cranmer. Founder of the God & politics in the UK blog. www.archbishopcranmer.com

Joseph Prince – Keys To Healing In The Hebrew Language

What is it that God wants His children to see and focus on when it comes to health and wholeness? In this exciting message, Joseph Prince examines a foundational healing scripture in the original Hebrew and unveils divine keys to receiving God’s Word as medicine and life to “all your flesh.” Learn what brings God’s healing and how to experience His resurrection life in every cell of your body. Whatever your state of health today, hear this powerful message and receive a personal revelation of the Lord’s grace for your complete healing. Hear and be healed!

Get the full message at:
JosephPrince.com – http://bit.ly/1KEOb5N

Find us at:
http://www.facebook.com/josephprince
https://twitter.com/JosephPrince

Why Pastors Need to Preach More about Hell

Hell is not a topic most Christians like to address. Why talk about hell when you could talk about something much more positive like heaven or living a good life. It seems that many senior pastors have taken on this same notion, of skipping over hell in their sermons and articles. Brian Jones, Senior Pastor of Christ’s Church of the Valley, has written an article on Pastors.com called The Fatal Mistake of Senior Pastors Who Don’t Like Preaching about Hell.

Jones comments that while we should expect an inclusive agenda at our public schools, it has no place in our churches. He states,

Too often we want to appear more moral than God. Too often in outreach-focused churches we feel the need to acquiesce to the avalanche of pluralistic pressure to back off of this key doctrine. However, I tell Senior Pastors that I coach that if you really love people, at some point you’ll completely tell them the truth, even if you risk having them walk out your church doors.“

Have you taken a similar risk with family members, friends, teachers, or co-workers? When it comes to telling the whole truth, sometimes we are hesitant with those we don’t know well or those we don’t want to offend. But if we wait long enough, there’s a chance we may not get to take that risk at all. Jones explains,

As important as being compassionate and inclusive are in the context of a growing church, the overriding virtue that should be held up is faithfulness – both to scripture and the God who breathed it.

Kindness, generosity, and compassion are virtues that every Christian should show to others. However, if that’s all we’re going to do—pile on grace upon grace without any truth—then we will have accomplished absolutely nothing for the gospel. Christianity is about so much more than morality and kindness. It’s about sharing the truth of life and death, through the grace of Jesus Christ. Truth and grace go together and should not be separated.

Crosswalk.com blogger Paul Tautges expounds, “Because hell is real, and hell is as awful as awful can be, we dare not neglect it, or fear another person’s response to its teaching more than we fear the God who created it for the devil and his angels.”

Yet, there are some Christians who may think grace is all we need to share because hell isn’t real…that we can believe what we want in the Bible and skip over the parts we don’t like. Pastors are not immune this false doctrine either. Jones recalls,

Two years after leaving graduate school I came to the realization that I really didn’t believe in hell anymore. I was too smart to believe in hell. …Like so many church leaders I’ve met over the years, I bought into the lie that I could serve the God of the Bible but not believe in the entire Bible.”

He continues,

During a long retreat at a local monastery I performed an exhaustive word study of the phrase ‘false doctrine’ in the New Testament. When I was finished the Holy Spirit did a number on me. ….I came to the conclusion that I was a liar, as I should have. I dropped to my knees in tears. I repented before God of my duplicity. …That Sunday I stood before my congregation and wept, asking for their forgiveness. It was a turning point in my calling before God.”

There is nothing more humbling than admitting that you were wrong, in front of a group of people who respect you and look up to you. As Christians we have to be willing to come alongside our pastors, to forgive when wrong choices are made, to love through times of struggle and confusion, and to hold our pastors accountable when changes are not made or when repentance is not enough to stay in leadership. While church leaders are held accountable by their church, they are also accountable to God for the truth that they preach. Jones exhorts,

Over and over again, we are warned that church leaders must hold to the deep truths of the faith. Hell is one of those deep truths, albeit unpopular. Over and over again, we are warned not to be drawn away by unsound doctrine. With pain in his voice that came from years of heading off church train wrecks, Paul pleaded in his final words to Timothy to preach the word, every last bit of it, regardless of how unpopular it became. I’m pretty sure that exhortation still stands.”

Does your senior pastor preach this truth? If you haven’t heard your pastor preach on the topic of hell, ask why. It’s important that we encourage our pastors rather than put them down when we don’t agree with them, but hell is a topic that cannot be left unaddressed by churches. If your church refuses to preach on the topic of hell or thinks that hell is not important, then you may need to evaluate your church membership.

For further reading, see “4 Things about Hell Christians Really Need to Understand,” “5 Things We Believe about Hell that are Not in the Bible,” and “Why Our Christian Mission Must Include the Reality of Hell.”

To read Brian Jones’ full article, please visit Pastors.com.