First Baptist Church to Ordain Gay, Transgender Ministers

Charisma News report – A former Southern Baptist Church has decided all are welcomed in their pulpit, going so far as to ordain gay and transgender ministers.

First Baptist of Greenville, South Carolina—the church home of the first Southern Baptist Convention president—has taken a bold move in “embracing the complexities of gender identity.”

“What I heard was, ‘We need to do the right thing, regardless of what anybody thinks or says about us,'” Senior Pastor Jim Dant tells Greenville Online. “There were a few people who said, ‘Are they going to start calling us the gay church in town?'”

After a six-month exploratory time, Greenville asked their members to affirm the acceptance of same-sex couples. According to Greenville Online, those who didn’t affirm the church’s decision still remained in the congregation.

In moving forward, the church ministers can perform same-sex unions and ordain any person, regardless of sexual orientation and lifestyle, to serve in a leadership role.

Greenville split from the SBC in the early 1990s, and is now a member of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship. Before leaving the original denomination, however, Greenville was home to William Bullein Johnson. Johnson not only served as a minister at Greenville, but was inaugural president of the Southern Baptist Convention.

On their Facebook page, Greenville received several positive comments about their move.

“Thank you FBC Greenville. Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love. 1 John 4:8,” one commenter wrote.

Another: “One day very soon, the Southern Baptist Convention will find themselves marooned on a bigoted island of their own making, while the civilized world of sound, modern biblical exegesis goes on around them.”

The SBC, however, has no plans of the sort. President Ronnie Floyd told the Christian Examiner that the SBC stands by their biblical definition of marriage, and are in prayer for Greenville.

“We pray that this church will one day return to be biblically driven in their belief about marriage and family, rather than culturally driven as they have testified in the reported story.”

Read More Christian new on Chrisma News

 

Source : Chrisma News

5 Lessons From the Hacking of an Adultery Website

After making threats for weeks, anonymous hackers have released the private information of millions of users of the Ashley Madison website, billed as the “most successful website for finding an affair and cheating partners” and boasting that it is “the world’s leading married dating service for discreet encounters.”

So much for being discreet.

What lessons can we learn from the release of millions of names of users looking for adulterous hookups?

1. Sooner or later, your sin will find you out (Num. 32:23). Whether in this world or the world to come, if we don’t turn from our sins and renounce them, they will catch up with us and find us out. Count on it.

As Paul wrote to Timothy, “The sins of some people are conspicuous, going before them to judgment, but the sins of others appear later” (1 Tim. 5:24).

One way or another, sooner or later, we reap what we sow, and if you want to avoid an embarrassing harvest, don’t sow embarrassing seeds.

If you knew that tomorrow, the whole world would know about something ugly you did in private today, would you do it?

One day, the whole universe will know. The Ashley Madison hacking is like child’s play compared to what’s coming.

2. Nothing is hidden from God. The real folly of “secret” sin is that it’s not secret at all, and the one whose opinion matters most is the one who sees it all.

We might hide things from our spouses and friends.

We might hide things from our pastors and employers.

Pastors might hide things from their boards and congregations.

But God sees what we do in secret, and if hackers have access to our private information, how much more does the Lord?

Live and act as if you’re in the presence of a holy God, and esteem His approval more highly than the approval of people.

3. It pays to live clean. When you have nothing to hide, you gladly come into the light (John 3:21), and when your conscience is clean, you have confidence before God and man. What price will you put on a clean conscience?

From the ages of 14-16, I was a heavy drug user, sometimes walking down the street with drugs in my pockets (and even a needle), getting on public buses or hitchhiking (the hippie thing to do, back then). And whenever a police car would drive by, my heart would pound since I was breaking the law and I had the evidence on my person.

Once I was born again in late 1971 and drugs were totally out of my life, I remember feeling so clean when the police would drive by. I had nothing to hide.

It’s wonderful to be able to look people in the eye and not wonder, “Do they know? Are they suspicious?” It’s even more wonderful to stand before God and know that there are no skeletons in your closet.

4. Be quick to repent. It’s true that every one of us has fallen short of the mark at some point in our lives, even as believers. We have all said or done some things that are regrettable, things of which we’re ashamed, things we wish we could take back.

But if we try to cover our sins we will not succeed; if we confess and forsake them, we will find mercy (Prov. 28:13). If we get rid of the skeletons in our closet (by God’s grace, they can be dealt with fully), then no skeletons will ever be exposed.

The temptation, of course, is to cover one sin with another sin, to cover the adultery with lies or to cover the pornography with deception, but that only makes things worse, like fighting depression by getting drunk. When we add sin to sin, we only compound our difficulties.

That means, as hard as it is, coming clean before God and important individuals—often meaning those whom it’s most difficult for us to come clean with—is the path to freedom.

Many a marriage has been destroyed by lack of confession.

Many a marriage has been saved by honest confession.

When we cover our sins, it’s like trying to swim across the river wearing a heavy lead coat. We only sink ourselves.

5. God’s Word is eternally relevant. Ashley Madison subscribers would be shocked to see how these words written more than 2,500 years ago speak to us today.

As it is written in Proverbs 6, “Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned? Can one walk upon hot coals, and his feet not be burned? So he who goes in to his neighbor’s wife; whoever touches her will not be innocent. … But whoever commits adultery with a woman lacks understanding; he who does it destroys his own soul. A wound and dishonor will he get, and his reproach will not be wiped away” (vv. 27-29, 32-33).

As for the owners and workers of the adultery website itself, Jesus speaks to this quite directly: “Woe to the world because of temptations! For it must be that temptations come, but woe to that man by whom the temptation comes!” (Matt. 18:7).

Both the existence of an adultery website and the hacking of that site are no laughing matters, and if the subject of adultery makes you nervous because of something you’ve got to hide, make it right today in the sight of God and man.

His abundant mercy is waiting for you, and the godly sorrow you experience today will lead to freedom and joy tomorrow.

Michael Brown is the host of the nationally syndicated talk radio show “The Line of Fire” and is the president of FIRE School of Ministry. His newest book is Outlasting the Gay Revolution: Where Homosexual Activism Is Really Going and How to Turn the Tide. Connect with him on Facebook at AskDrBrown or on Twitter @drmichaellbrown

Source : Chrisma News

JOHN HAGEE says ‘The Antichrist is Here’

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1WNup-dAaY[/youtube]

– credit : Youtube/God Bles You

“All of this chaos is leading to a global dictator. Europe is going to call him the economic czar. The press will call him the ‘new Caesar.’ The Bible calls him the Antichrist.” – John Hagee

In this video, Pastor John Hagee describes who the Antichrist is and how he will come to power and how it will affect you. Watch the entire video:

Shoreham Air Show, Sussex – Plane Crash

A Hawker Hunter plane has crashed at Shoreham Airshow in West Sussex, killing seven people

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvHplYmh2f8[/youtube]

– Credit : Youtube/Dan Tube

BBC report says some Witnesses said the plane was attempting to carry out a loop manoeuvre at Shoreham Airshow … read more on BBC

SECAMB twitted confirming the 7 fatalities from the crash, says thoughts are with the families and loved ones.

Sky News report that Police say the plane, believed to be a Hawker Hunter, hit several cars on the A27 in West Sussex at about 1.20pm.

One person remains in a critical condition at Royal Sussex County Hospital, while 14 others are injured.

West Sussex Airshow Crash Location

The jet ended up in a bush, according to a spokesman for Shoreham Airshow.

read more on Sky News

Nigerians Remain Firm in Faith after Church Burnings

Christian Headlines report – More than 70 churches were destroyed in Nigeria in just two days.
According to the Christian Examiner, 60 churches were burned in just four hours in Niamey, the capital of Niger. The burnings are being linked to the shooting at the Charlie Hebdo offices in Paris in January.
Muslims planned the demonstration at the Nigerian churches to scare Christians. Reports estimate that about 94 percent of the country is Muslim.
“They thought that we will not go back to the services,” said Mahamadou Koche, a pastor of one of the churches.
“But even if they burn the churches, they can’t burn what we have already got inside of us,” he said.
The churches will be meeting in temporary buildings.
“Rebuilding the church physically will show to the world that we hold on to our faith and we’re still Christians,” Mahamadou said.
At Issa Elhadjkouldjami’s church in Zinder, the congregation is meeting at a temporary location while their church, which was burned earlier this year, is rebuilt. Issa said that he hopes their forgiveness brings others to know Christ.
“We will not stop. We will continue with everything we’ve got in our heart,” Issa said in an online story by Samaritan’s Purse.
Other churches are also reaching out to Muslims   … read more

Actress Says Hollywood is Not Friendly to People of Faith

Christian Headlines report – Actress Mayim Bialik discusses her faith and admits that Hollywood is not receptive to people who hold religious convictions.

The Jewish actress, who is best known for her role as “Blossom” on the TV series “The Big Bang Theory” says that celebrities who stand strongly by their faith will get flack for it, Fox News reports.

Bialik cites her recent trip to Israel to visit a friend in the Israel Defense Forces as an example of the negativity in Hollywood associated with religion.

“That’s what’s amazing…simply by going to Israel this summer and saying nothing more than, ‘I’ve gone to Israel,’ I got the same amount of hatred and threats and anti-Semitism for actually making a statement trying to support people whether I like it or not are serving in an army,” she stated.

“That reveals the truth,” she continued. “It really doesn’t matter what I support or believe the fact that I’m Jewish and go there is enough – that should be alarming to most people.”

Bailik said that people of faith in Hollywood tend to congregate together because it can be tough to maintain one’s faith in such an environment.

“I think in general it’s never going to be trendy to be observant or religious in Hollywood circles,” Bialik stated.
Bialik also said that she and her family often attend synagogue or observe the Sabbath at home with a meal.
Bialik also opened up about the intersection of her faith and science since she holds a degree in neuroscience. The actress stated that she is often questioned on her faith by people who think faith and science are incompatible.

“I have an unwavering faith in a power greater than myself and I don’t think that will change any more than my belief in gravity will change,” she said.

Lastly, the actress also discussed her commitment to modesty.

“Being a modest dresser, that for me is a certain amount of my religious faith — privacy and chastity. Just because I have a body, doesn’t mean it means to be on display,” Bialik stated.

Bialik has recently launched a website to share her beliefs on these issues and more.

Source : Christian Headlines

Lightning Bolt hits passenger plane

YAHOO report – Severe storms are causing chaos in the US, with a passenger capturing the moment a lightning bolt hit a plane on the runway.

 

Source : YAHOO

Survey: Only 1 in 7 Americans Think Divorce Is a Sin

Christian Post report – New surveys conducted by LifeWay Research have found that the majority of Americans do not believe that divorce is a sin, while the majority of Protestant pastors also believe that divorce is morally acceptable, under certain circumstances, except in scenarios when the couple has fallen out of love.

LifeWay recently conducted two surveys where they asked 1,000 lay Americans and 1,000 Protestant pastors whether they think divorce is a sin under certain circumstances.

Respondents were asked to clarify if they thought divorce was a sin in cases where the couple has fallen out of love, a spouse cheated on the other, physical abuse was apparent in the relationship, one spouse was addicted to pornography and when one spouse has abandoned the other.

When asked about the morality of getting a divorce when the couple “no longer loves on another,” only 38 percent of lay Americans consider divorce to be sin, while 61 percent of pastors also consider such a divorce a sin.

In the case of a spouse being addicted to pornagraphy, 35 percent of lay Americans label such a divorce a sin, compared to the 39 percent of pastors that also consider divorce in that case to be a sin.

In other scenarios, however, average Americans are more likely than Protestant pastors to consider divorce a sin.

When adultery is the cause for separation, 39 percent of lay Americans consider divorce a sin, while 32 percent of pastors feel divorce is sinful in that case.

Twenty-eight percent of pastors consider divorce when spousal abuse is apparent to be a sin, compared to the 37 percent of average Americans who also think divorce is a sin.

But when one spouse abandons the other, 27 percent of pastors think it is a sin to get a divorce, while 38 percent of average Americans consider divorce in that scenario a sin.

But when none of the aforementioned scenarios are the cause for divorce, 19 percent of pastors think divorce is sinful, while 37 percent of average Americans also think divorce is sinful.

“About one in seven Americans are saying divorce is a sin in all of these cases, more than a third don’t think any of these would be a sin, and almost half believe some circumstances would be sinful, but not others,” LifeWay Research Vice President Scott McConnell said in a statement. “Pastors make a distinction about the rightness of a divorce based on the reasons behind it. … They want to account for the parts of Scripture that speak of possible rationales.”

Although the majority of Protestant pastors think divorce is sinful when the couple no longer loves each other, the research found that 66 percent of Evangelical pastors consider divorce sinful in that scenario, compared to the 52 percent of Mainline pastors who consider divorce sinful when the couple falls out of love.

Although most pastors consider divorce sinful when the couple falls out of love, only 46 percent of Protestant church members feel divorce is sinful in that scenario.

Although church members are less likely to think divorce is sinful when the couple falls out of love, they are more likely to think divorce is sinful in the case of porn addiction. Forty-four percent of Protestant church members believe divorce is sinful in the case of pornagraphy addiciton, while 39 percent of pastors feel such a divorce is sinful.

“While most Protestant pastors view the sinfulness of divorce differently based on the reason for the divorce, this sensitivity is lost on their members,” McConnell said.

As no-fault divorce has made it possible for couples to get a divorce without a substantial reason behind the separation, McConnell argues that Americans have become accustomed to believe that divorce is free from sin because of the normality of it in today’s culture.

“[Since] our laws went to no-fault divorce across the country, that’s really the mindset of Americans: that there’s no fault, there’s no sin involved in a divorce in most situations,” OneNewsNow quoted McConnell as summarizing. “And so, something that we see as really a biblical value — whether something’s a sin or not — is something that the average American is not in tune with.”

Rev. David Gushee, professor of Christian ethics and director of the Center for Theology and Public Life at Mercer University, wrote in an op-ed that Western society and the no-fault divorce culture has turned spouses into “consumer products.”

“In western culture today, individuals almost always are free to marry, or not marry, if and when they wish. They are free to choose their partner on the basis of their own entirely self-selected reasons. They are free to conduct themselves in marriage precisely as they choose to do. They are free to initiate divorce if and when they choose and for whatever reason might seem compelling to them,” Gushee wrote.

“In other words, a spouse has become a consumer product, to be bought, abandoned, or traded in for a new model at the will of the customer.”

Gushee contends that clergy need to instruct newlyweds that marriage is more than just a temporary pact to be thrown away on a whim.

“But such efforts swim against the tide of a culture in which such norms are increasingly incomprehensible. And we know that many of those who come to us for our wedding services are not all that serious about faith,” Gushee continued. “So the request for wedding services becomes an opportunity for clergy to make a serious pitch not just for a religious wedding but a serious life of faith within which vibrant lifetime marriage can be sustained.”

Source : Christian Post

Hilton Removes Porn From Hotel Rooms After Hearing Sexual Exploitation Concerns

Christian Post report – After meeting with anti-pornography advocates, major global hotel chain Hilton Worldwide announced that it will no longer include video-on-demand adult entertainment at their facilities.

Hilton, a hospitality company that boasts over 4,300 properties, recently made the announcement that there will be a gradual phasing out of pornographic entertainment at the hotels they own which offer it.

A spokesperson for Hilton provided The Christian Post with the official statement released by the company, which noted that they were “making immediate changes to our global brand standards to eliminate adult video-on-demand entertainment in all our hotels worldwide.”

“While the vast majority of our properties already do not offer this content today, this content will be phased out of all other hotels subject to the terms of their contracts,” continued the statement.

“We believe in offering our guests a high degree of choice and control during their stays with us, including Wi-Fi on personal devices. However, we have listened carefully to our customers and have determined that adult video-on-demand entertainment is not in keeping with our company’s vision and goals moving forward.”

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation, an anti-pornography organization, celebrated the decision by Hilton to remove the on-demand access to adult entertainment.

Haley Halverson, spokesperson for NCOSE, explained to CP that thousands of NCOSE members and their allies have been lobbying Hilton to remove the adult entertainment since 2013, when NCOSE put the company on their “Dirty Dozen” list.

“Earlier this year, Hilton Worldwide reached out to us explaining that they were looking at making these changes and to set up a meeting to talk about these issues in person,” said Halverson.

“At the meeting, we learned that Hilton Worldwide is committed to helping curb sexual exploitation and certainly open to changing policies they have that contribute to exploitation.”

Halverson also told CP that NCOSE “expected this to take longer, even though they seemed favorable.”

“We are grateful that they moved this policy through rather quickly as they announced to us today that all Hilton Worldwide locations were notified today of this policy change,” continued Halverson … Read more

Source : Christian Post

Saved from Islam on September 11

Christianity Today reports – I ’ve heard that Christians are made, not born. How true that is, I don’t know. My wife, Jennifer, was born on a Thursday and baptized by her father, a Lutheran pastor, the following Sunday. She may not have been born a Christian, but she is about as close as one can get. For me, the path to Christian faith has been far rockier.

Both my parents were raised as Lutherans. But my mother never had much use for religion. And my father, who had taken religion seriously, lost his faith in God’s goodness in the jungles of South Vietnam.

My father hoped to make a career in the Army. So we moved a lot, five times during my first ten years. When he finally resigned his commission in 1977, we settled in a Southern California suburb.

It wasn’t home. It couldn’t be. And by that time, I had been on the receiving end of my father’s intense but sporadic violence for some years. I learned to both fear and hate him, and almost all authority. School quickly became unsafe as well: I was bullied, terrorized, and abused regularly, not just by classmates, but also by my fifth-grade teacher. There was no one to trust. I was frightened, incredibly alone, and increasingly angry.

But whatever I lacked in religious guidance, I never blamed God. I didn’t know how. Indeed, there was an intense God-hunger in my soul. I may not have known where I was going or even how to start, but I knew there was something out there worth finding.

Meeting God as a Muslim

At age 14, I launched my quest for God, attending a fairly generic dispensationalist church. It proved incapable of asking difficult questions about life’s meaning in the face of suffering, much less answering them. The people were kind, but I needed to know more than they could tell me. By the time I graduated from high school, I found myself wondering: Would anyone ever love and value me? Would I ever belong anywhere?

There was a miserable stint in the Army, mercifully shortened by a psychiatrist who thought I had no business being a soldier. There were a couple of romantic relationships with married women. Casting about for something to do, I eventually settled on studying journalism at San Francisco State University.

That’s where I found Islam. A friend introduced me to the Qur’an, and I was entranced by its words, which speak of a God who cares a great deal about the men and women he created. But it was also the people: the Palestinian and African American Muslims who first taught me what it meant to surrender. They welcomed me as no one else had before.

Some people look to faith for ideas of right and wrong, or some understanding of good and evil, or a set of principles with which to order the world. Not me. What I sought, what I ached for, was meaning and belonging. And Islam gave me both.

There is much I keep from that time as a Muslim. The Qur’an teaches that God gives freely to all creation, believers and unbelievers alike, and it is best to respond with thankfulness and wonder. And Muslims in America live their faith with tremendous courage in the face of a frequently hostile culture.

But Islam also provided religious and political fuel for my anger. At one mosque where I worshiped during the early 1990s, I fell in with a group of jihadis. We studied and discussed the texts of revolutionary Islam, mostly the writings of Egyptian intellectual Sayyid Qutb and Pakistani journalist Abul A’la Maududi. One brother went to fight in Bosnia, and I wanted to join him … read more

Source : Christianity Today