The Tenacious Missionary to Ecuador – Elisabeth Elliot, Dies at 88

NY Times reports – Elisabeth Elliot, a missionary who inspired generations of evangelical Christians by returning to Ecuador with her toddler daughter to preach the Gospel to the Indian tribe that had killed her husband, died Monday at her home in Gloucester, Mass. She was 88.

Lars Gren, her third husband, announced the death on her website. She had had dementia for about a decade.

Ms. Elliot wrote two books stemming from her experience in Ecuador, and together they became, for evangelicals, “the definitive inspirational mission stories for the second half of the 20th century,” said Kathryn Long, a history professor at Wheaton College in Illinois.

The first, “Through Gates of Splendor,” published in 1957, recounted the ill-fated mission of her husband and four other American men to bring Protestant Christianity to the remote Waorani (also spelled Huaorani) Indians. It ranked No. 9 on Christianity Today’s list of the top 50 books that shaped evangelicals.

She focused on her husband’s work a year later in “Shadow of the Almighty.”

“Her early adulthood as she told it,” Professor Long said in an email, “was the stuff of inspiration: an intensely spiritual and deeply romantic love story with her first husband; her support for her husband and his friends when they decided to risk their lives to contact a violent and isolated tribal people in the rain forests of eastern Ecuador; her commitment to telling their story as a story of faith and triumph after their deaths; and her insistence that she and her daughter were called by God to live with their husband’s and father’s killers, which they did.”

After Jim Elliot and his colleagues landed by plane on Jan. 2, 1956, he kept rehearsing a message of good will — “Biti miti punimupa,” meaning “I like you, I want to be your friend” — from a Waorani phrase book. Three tribe members made a friendly visit, but then there apparently was a miscommunication or a perceived threat. After the missionaries failed to make radio contact with a base station, searchers found their bodies pierced by wooden spears.

Over the next two years, Ms. Elliot renewed contact with the tribe. In 1958, accompanied by her 3-year-old daughter and the sister of one of the murdered missionaries, she moved in with the Waoranis, known to their neighbors as Aucas, or savages. She ministered to them and remained in their primitive outpost in the foothills of the Andes, subsisting on barbecued monkey limbs and other local fare and living in rain-swept huts.

A Waorani, she wrote in Life magazine in 1961, “has not a reason in the world for thinking us his betters, and he probably has some very valid reasons for thinking us his inferiors.”

They named her the Waorani word for woodpecker, by her account (or crane, by another, because of her height), which was one of many cultural distinctions between the tribe and whites that she did not understand. She did, however, come to understand why her husband was killed.

“The Auca was trying to preserve his own way of life, his own liberty,” she explained in Life. “He believed the foreigners were a threat to that liberty, so he feels he had every right to kill them. In America, we decorate a man for defending his country.”

he expressed similar thoughts in “Through Gates of Splendor,” writing: “The prayers of the widows themselves are for the Aucas. We look forward to the day when these savages will join us in Christian praise.”

She was born Elisabeth Howard in Brussels on Dec. 21, 1926, the daughter of missionaries, Philip E. Howard Jr. and the former Katherine Gillingham. As a child she moved to Philadelphia, where her father edited The Sunday School Times, and she grew up in Pennsylvania and New Jersey before enrolling in Wheaton College, where she majored in Greek and hoped to become a Bible translator.

After training for missionary work, she and Mr. Elliot, whom she had met at Wheaton, left independently as mission workers in Ecuador, where they married in 1953.

After translating the New Testament into the local language and airdropping gifts for the Indians, Mr. Elliot and his colleagues, Nate Saint, Pete Fleming, Roger Youderian and Ed McCully, landed on a beach along the Curaray River in Ecuador and established a camp. An initial friendly overture was followed by the missionaries’ massacre.

Ms. Elliot returned several times to the United States temporarily, then finally moved to New Hampshire in 1963. She married Addison H. Leitch, who became a professor at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in Massachusetts. He died in 1973. Four years later she married Mr. Gren, a hospital chaplain. In addition to him, she is survived by her daughter, Valerie Elliot Shepard.

Read more ….

Source : NY Times

NY Times reports – Elisabeth Elliot, a missionary who inspired generations of evangelical Christians by returning to Ecuador with her toddler daughter to preach the Gospel to the Indian tribe that had killed her husband, died Monday at her home in Gloucester, Mass. She was 88.

Lars Gren, her third husband, announced the death on her website. She had had dementia for about a decade.

Ms. Elliot wrote two books stemming from her experience in Ecuador, and together they became, for evangelicals, “the definitive inspirational mission stories for the second half of the 20th century,” said Kathryn Long, a history professor at Wheaton College in Illinois.

The first, “Through Gates of Splendor,” published in 1957, recounted the ill-fated mission of her husband and four other American men to bring Protestant Christianity to the remote Waorani (also spelled Huaorani) Indians. It ranked No. 9 on Christianity Today’s list of the top 50 books that shaped evangelicals.

She focused on her husband’s work a year later in “Shadow of the Almighty.”

“Her early adulthood as she told it,” Professor Long said in an email, “was the stuff of inspiration: an intensely spiritual and deeply romantic love story with her first husband; her support for her husband and his friends when they decided to risk their lives to contact a violent and isolated tribal people in the rain forests of eastern Ecuador; her commitment to telling their story as a story of faith and triumph after their deaths; and her insistence that she and her daughter were called by God to live with their husband’s and father’s killers, which they did.”

After Jim Elliot and his colleagues landed by plane on Jan. 2, 1956, he kept rehearsing a message of good will — “Biti miti punimupa,” meaning “I like you, I want to be your friend” — from a Waorani phrase book. Three tribe members made a friendly visit, but then there apparently was a miscommunication or a perceived threat. After the missionaries failed to make radio contact with a base station, searchers found their bodies pierced by wooden spears.

Over the next two years, Ms. Elliot renewed contact with the tribe. In 1958, accompanied by her 3-year-old daughter and the sister of one of the murdered missionaries, she moved in with the Waoranis, known to their neighbors as Aucas, or savages. She ministered to them and remained in their primitive outpost in the foothills of the Andes, subsisting on barbecued monkey limbs and other local fare and living in rain-swept huts.

A Waorani, she wrote in Life magazine in 1961, “has not a reason in the world for thinking us his betters, and he probably has some very valid reasons for thinking us his inferiors.”

They named her the Waorani word for woodpecker, by her account (or crane, by another, because of her height), which was one of many cultural distinctions between the tribe and whites that she did not understand. She did, however, come to understand why her husband was killed.

“The Auca was trying to preserve his own way of life, his own liberty,” she explained in Life. “He believed the foreigners were a threat to that liberty, so he feels he had every right to kill them. In America, we decorate a man for defending his country.”

he expressed similar thoughts in “Through Gates of Splendor,” writing: “The prayers of the widows themselves are for the Aucas. We look forward to the day when these savages will join us in Christian praise.”

She was born Elisabeth Howard in Brussels on Dec. 21, 1926, the daughter of missionaries, Philip E. Howard Jr. and the former Katherine Gillingham. As a child she moved to Philadelphia, where her father edited The Sunday School Times, and she grew up in Pennsylvania and New Jersey before enrolling in Wheaton College, where she majored in Greek and hoped to become a Bible translator.

After training for missionary work, she and Mr. Elliot, whom she had met at Wheaton, left independently as mission workers in Ecuador, where they married in 1953.

After translating the New Testament into the local language and airdropping gifts for the Indians, Mr. Elliot and his colleagues, Nate Saint, Pete Fleming, Roger Youderian and Ed McCully, landed on a beach along the Curaray River in Ecuador and established a camp. An initial friendly overture was followed by the missionaries’ massacre.

Ms. Elliot returned several times to the United States temporarily, then finally moved to New Hampshire in 1963. She married Addison H. Leitch, who became a professor at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in Massachusetts. He died in 1973. Four years later she married Mr. Gren, a hospital chaplain. In addition to him, she is survived by her daughter, Valerie Elliot Shepard.

Read more ….

Source : NY Times

Pope Francis’ Climate Change Encyclical Denounces Mankind’s Treatment of Nature as ‘Completely at Odds’ With Jesus’ Teachings

<b>Christian Post Report</b> – Pope Francis frees a dove in Madhu, Sri Lanka, on Jan. 14. The Catholic leader told reporters Thursday that he believes humans are mostly to blame for climate change.” title=”<b>Christian Post Report</b> – Pope Francis frees a dove in Madhu, Sri Lanka, on Jan. 14. The Catholic leader told reporters Thursday that he believes humans are mostly to blame for climate change.” name=”jpg” src=”http://images.christianpost.com/full/83040/pope-francis-frees-a-dove-in-madhu-sri-lanka-on-jan-14-the-catholic-leader-told-reporters-thursday-that-he-believes-humans-are-mostly-to-blame-for-climate-change.jpg” class=”imgPhoto” width=”550″ height=”450″ /> <small class=(Photo: Reuters)

Christian Post Report – Pope Francis frees a dove in Madhu, Sri Lanka, on Jan. 14. The Catholic leader told reporters Thursday that he believes humans are mostly to blame for climate change.

Several evangelical groups have praised Pope Francis’ major encyclical on the environment released on Thursday, which warns that climate change is real and is impacting all of God’s creation, including impoverished people in different corners of the world. Francis said that it’s wrong to treat nature and other living creatures as “mere objects” for “human domination.”

“We are grateful that the pope has joined with over 300 Evangelicals like Rick Warren, Rich Stearns, and Bill Hybels, and other Christian leaders who understand climate change is the greatest moral challenge of our time and the greatest opportunity for hope. It’s time to make hope happen by fueling the unstoppable clean energy transition, stopping the ideological battles, and working together,” said in a statement Rev. Mitch Hescox, president & CEO, Evangelical Environmental Network.

“Creating a new energy economy that benefits all and addresses climate change is not about a political party but living as a disciple of Jesus Christ. We urge all people of good will, especially fellow Christian conservatives, to read and study these timely words from Pope Francis.”

The 184-page “Laudato Si,'” or “Praise Be to You,” tackled several issues concerning the effects climate change has on the world, including the damage it inflicts on the poorest populations.

“The urgent challenge to protect our common home includes a concern to bring the whole human family together to seek a sustainable and integral development, for we know that things can change. The Creator does not abandon us; He never forsakes His loving plan or repents of having created us,” Francis writes.

“Particular appreciation is owed to those who tirelessly seek to resolve the tragic effects of environmental degradation on the lives of the world’s poorest. Young people demand change. They wonder how anyone can claim to be building a better future without thinking of the environmental crisis and the sufferings of the excluded. “

Francis talked about humankind’s treatment of other living creatures, and said that it’s “mistaken to view other living beings as mere objects subjected to arbitrary human domination.”

“When nature is viewed solely as a source of profit and gain, this has serious consequences for society,” he said.

“This vision of ‘might is right’ has engendered immense inequality, injustice and acts of violence against the majority of humanity, since resources end up in the hands of the first comer or the most powerful: the winner takes all. Completely at odds with this model are the ideals of harmony, justice, fraternity and peace as proposed by Jesus.”

He added that just as each human being is created in the image of God, each creature has its own purpose in this life.

“The entire material universe speaks of God’s love, his boundless affection for us. Soil, water, mountains: everything is, as it were, a caress of God. The history of our friendship with God is always linked to particular places which take on an intensely personal meaning; we all remember places, and revisiting those memories does us much good,” the Roman Catholic Church leader said.

“Anyone who has grown up in the hills or used to sit by the spring to drink, or played outdoors in the neighbourhood square; going back to these places is a chance to recover something of their true selves.”

In another chapter Francis talks about the “human roots” of the ecological crisis, and says it is important to acknowledge that humans have played a big role in many of these problems.

“A certain way of understanding human life and activity has gone awry, to the serious detriment of the world around us. Should we not pause and consider this?” he asked.

The Vatican leader warned that technology based on fossil fuels, in which he included coal and oil, needs to be “progressively replaced without delay.”

The pontiff outlined many of the ways in which environmental degradation poses severe challenges, and said that exposure to atmospheric pollutants “produces a broad spectrum of health hazards, especially for the poor, and causes millions of premature deaths.”

“People take sick, for example, from breathing high levels of smoke from fuels used in cooking or heating. There is also pollution that affects everyone, caused by transport, industrial fumes, substances which contribute to the acidification of soil and water, fertilizers, insecticides, fungicides, herbicides and agrotoxins in general,” he continued.

The pope said that politics and business leaders “have been slow to react in a way commensurate with the urgency of the challenges facing our world.”

“Although the post-industrial period may well be remembered as one of the most irresponsible in history, nonetheless there is reason to hope that humanity at the dawn of the 21st century will be remembered for having generously shouldered its grave responsibilities,” he noted.

In his conclusions, Francis looked toward the future, when he said all people will find themselves “face to face with the infinite beauty of God (cf. 1 Cor 13:12), and be able to read with admiration and happiness the mystery of the universe, which with us will share in unending plenitude.”

He added: “Even now we are journeying toward the sabbath of eternity, the new Jerusalem, toward our common home in heaven. Jesus says: ‘I make all things new’ (Rev 21:5). Eternal life will be a shared experience of awe, in which each creature, resplendently transfigured, will take its rightful place and have something to give those poor men and women who will have been liberated once and for all.”

The encyclical has been hailed by various religious and secular groups, as well as by scientists, who said earlier this week that the pope’s message could have an “unbelievable” impact on over one billion Catholics worldwide.

Other evangelical organizations, such as the The Lausanne Movement, representing evangelical Christians in almost 200 countries, have also shared their gratitude for the “Laudato Si.'”

“While there are small marginal groups within evangelical Christianity who are often quoted in the press in opposition to climate change action, almost all major global evangelical bodies including the Lausanne Movement have declared their commitment to care for God’s creation and to serve the poor affected by climate change impacts,” said Ed Brown, director of the Creation Care Network within Lausanne.

The full encyclical can be read on the Vatican’s official website.

Source : Christian Post

‘What Horrors Must ISIS Commit Before World Takes Action?’ Asks Aleppo Archbishop Who Warns Syrian Christians Are ‘Disappearing’

Syria (Photo: Reuters/Sultan Kitaz)

Christian Post Report – Men carry injured schoolchildren after what activists said was a barrel bomb dropped by forces loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad and hit a school and a residential building in Seif al-Dawla neighborhood of Aleppo, May 3, 2015.

The Melkite Greek Catholic Archbishop of Aleppo, Syria, has warned that Christianity is slowly dying in the war torn country, and asked just how much horror must the people experience before the world takes action to stop the massacres.

“In my country, Syria, Christians are caught in the middle of a civil war and they are enduring the rage of an extremist jihad. And it is unjust for the West to ignore the persecutions these Christian communities are experiencing,” Jean-Clément Jeanbart said in an article posted by MercatorNet on Tuesday.

“What horrors must ISIS commit before the world will take greater action to stop the murderers?” he asked. “Syrian Christians are in grave danger; we may disappear soon.”

Syria is caught in an ongoing civil war that has led to 320,000 deaths since March 2011, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported earlier in June, with more than 1,500,000 people believed to have been wounded.

The war is being fought between the government of President Bashar al-Assad, a number of rebel groups seeking to bring down his administration, and terror group ISIS, which has captured significant territory in the country.

Christians are among the many civilians that have been caught in the cross-fire, and have also been specifically targeted by ISIS, which beheads and executes those that do not pledge allegiance to its version of Islam, or do not have the means to pay a tax.

Jeanbart admitted that the realities in the region are “complex and interwoven with many historical, social and religious nuances.”

“For decades Syrian Christians lived peacefully in a society alongside a Muslim majority which was tolerant. There was a cordial atmosphere of mutual acceptance and friendship. This is no longer the case. Syrian Christians are disoriented by the implosion of a way of life that was once quiet and safe,” he described.

“They are afraid to leave their houses, they avoid going out of their cities or villages, or do so only to move to other regions where they hope to find a safe refuge. In dangerous zones like Aleppo and villages close to Turkey, what terrorizes the population more than the fighting and the bombing, are the kidnappings, the snipers, car-bombs, the shelling and the looting … all this culminating in the manifestation of ISIS.”

The Aleppo archbishop noted that his city has suffered heavily, and described how “innumerable attacks —most recently the bombing of the Christian quarter over Easter weekend — have destroyed its churches, its factories and its flourishing industry, its infrastructure and social and administrative institutions, its commercial area and its legendary souks, its ancient homes, schools, and hospitals.”

He added that more than 40,000 Christians, or one-third of the total number that lived in the city, have left the area since 2011, making up a part of the 3 million Syrians who have fled to neighboring countries as refugees.

The U.S. and allied nations have responded to ISIS by launching airstrikes in both Syria and Iraq against terror targets, but have been unable to broker peace in the civil war.

Jeanbart said that the Christian community in Syria is grateful to the international community for its efforts to stop ISIS. He said, however, that civilians are still defenseless against the terror group, and called for America and its allies to provide “better protection and execute a more aggressive strategy.”

“In the case of the fighting in northeastern Syria, the capture of several hundred Assyrian Christians could have been prevented had the U.S. started its bombing raids earlier. The recent coordinated effort, that included Kurdish troops on the ground, proved effective in turning back ISIS, but for many Assyrians this help came too late,” he said.

The Aleppo archbishop added that many Christians and minorities remain without provisions for shelter, food, and medical assistance, and said that there are still vast emergency needs to be considered.

“Once — God-willing — ISIS is defeated and a measure of peace is restored to the lands, Christians must be able to count on the U.S. and its allies for continued, long-term military protection. There has to be a kind of iron-clad system in place so that the tragedies of the past four years are not repeated,” he added.

Source : Christian Post

Zimeye Reports – Prophet Makandiwa Panics, Battles to Convince Church Fake Miracle Was Real

Watch “Makandiwa Responds to Fake Miracle SCANDAL

Credit – ZimEye Zimbabawe

 

– Some Comments : Where do people like Makandiwa and Magaya get such a large collection of fools from – willing to show their ignorance to all and sundry on TV? These churches are surely FOOLS PARADISE!! Ko kumboitawo miracle inobetsera nyika kwete miracles e matumbu, blambi, fake babies, etc

Nine Killed in Charleston Church Shooting; Gunman Is Sought

Charleston police released pictures from surveillance footage of the man who is believed to be the gunman.CreditCharleston Police Department, via Associated Press

NY Times reports – CHARLESTON, S.C. — An intense manhunt was underway Thursday for a white gunman who opened fire on Wednesday night at a historic black church in this city’s downtown, killing nine people before fleeing.

The chief of police of Charleston, Greg Mullen, called the shooting a hate crime.

Chief Mullen said that law enforcement officials, including the F.B.I. and other federal agencies, were assisting in the investigation of the shooting, which left six women and three men dead.

Chief Mullen said the gunman had walked into the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church and attended the meeting for about an hour before opening fire. Among the dead, according to news reports, was the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, who was also a state senator

Eight people died at the scene, Chief Mullen said. One person was taken to the Medical University of South Carolina, and died on the way.

“This is clearly a tragedy in the city of Charleston,” Chief Mullen said. He did not say what type of gun was used in the shooting.

A prayer vigil near the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church early Thursday.CreditDavid Goldman/Associated Press

“This is a situation that is unacceptable in any society, especially in our society and our city,” Chief Mullen said at an early morning news conference. “We are leaving no stone unturned.”

City officials did not release information about the victims and did not say how many people were in the church during the shooting. Hospital officials declined to comment.

At an early morning news conference on Thursday, the police released pictures from surveillance footage of the man who is believed to be the gunman, and the police said he had been seen leaving the church in a black, four-door sedan that was also captured on video.

Mr. Pinckney and his sister were among those killed, said J. Todd Rutherford, the minority leader of the State House of Representatives.

Rutherford, the minority leader of the State House of Representatives.

A man knelt across the street outside the Emanuel A.M.E. Church after a shooting on Wednesday in Charleston, S.C. CreditWade Spees/The Post and Courier, via Associated Press

Mr. Rutherford, who has served in the State Legislature with Mr. Pinckney, 41, since 1998, recalled him as a tireless leader with a booming voice and a mission to serve.

“He was called to the ministry when he was 13, ordained at 18, elected to the House at 23 and the Senate at 27,” Mr. Rutherford said. “He was a man driven by public service.”

Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr. said the city was offering a reward for information leading to the arrest of the gunman, whom the police described as a cleanshaven white man about 21 years old with sandy blond hair and wearing a gray sweatshirt, bluejeans and Timberland boots.

“To walk into a church and shoot someone is out of pure hatred,” the mayor said as he walked away after the news conference

 

Source : NY Times

Bill Maher Claims Josh Duggar Asking Jesus for Forgiveness Over Molestation Scandal Is ‘Dangerous Cop Out’ and Not Real Forgiveness

Comedian Bill Maher reacts as he waits for Hollywood Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Leron Gubler (Photo: Reuters/Fred Prouser)

Christian Post Report – Comedian Bill Maher reacts as he waits for Hollywood Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Leron Gubler to finish his introduction of King at ceremonies unveiling Maher’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Hollywood September 14, 2010.

HBO host Bill Maher has said that Josh Duggar asking Jesus for forgiveness over the incident where he molested five girls when he was a teenager is a “cop out” and not real forgiveness, with Maher arguing that forgiveness can only be asked from the victims.

Jill Dillard and Jessa Seewald have said that their brother has indeed asked each of them for forgiveness, however.

Maher wrote regarding the molestation scandal on his blog: “The idea that Jesus forgives your sins is a real cop-out, and dangerous.”

He added: “Now, I don’t know what kind of conversations Josh had with the people he molested. Maybe he personally and unreservedly apologized to all of them as he briefly mentioned in his Facebook post. But for the most part it was about Jesus.”

The outspoken atheist then quoted a part of Duggar’s Facebook post on the issue, where he wrote:

“I understood that if I continued down this wrong road that I would end up ruining my life. I sought forgiveness from those I had wronged and asked Christ to forgive me and come into my life. …In my life today, I am so very thankful for God’s grace, mercy and redemption.”

Maher noted that Duggar refers to his own life a number of times in his apology, and argued that “what Josh is basically saying is that molesting the girls was bad, but Jesus forgave him and then came into his life so, you know, happy ending.”

The HBO host asserted that real forgiveness “happens between the person who did wrong and the person they wronged. There is no middle man. There is no pixie dust. The idea that you can simply pray on it and ask Jesus for forgiveness — which He never turns down, cause He’s Jesus — is a total short cut, and not what forgiveness actually entails.”

He continued: “If you’ve done something as awful as molest a bunch of girls, the only people you can ask for forgiveness from are the bunch of girls you molested. Jesus is just an easy and convenient way to exonerate yourself by receiving absolution from an imaginary man in your head.”

Dillard and Seewald have said that their brother has indeed come to them to ask for forgiveness for his actions, and that they have forgiven him.

“We feel like our story is not being told,” Dillard said in the wake of the scandal. “The victims are the only ones who can speak for themselves. Now it’s already being warped into however they want to portray it.”

She added that the incident “is something that’s already dealt with.”

“We’ve already moved on. It’s not the truth. Everything is distorted,” Dillard asserted.

Seewald said that although her brother’s actions were “very wrong,” she highlighted that he was young at the time.

“Josh was a boy, a young boy in puberty, and a little too curious about girls,” she said.

The “19 Kids and Counting” parents, Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar, have also stood by their son during the scandal, and blamed InTouch magazine for sensationalizing and releasing the story.

Josh Duggar, who has resigned from his position at Family Research Council Action, has not spoken to the media about the scandal.

Maher has previously called the Duggar family “the biggest freaks in the world” for their decision to have 19 children.

The HBO host criticized last week the “selfish” idea of wanting to have so many children in light of the “population issue” the world is facing. He also slammed the family for their faith and for living off the teachings of a so-called “dusty old stupid book.”

Source : Christian Post

Longest-Service Director of Presbyterian Mission Agency Announces Resignation as Former Staffer Files Lawsuit Against PCUSA

pcusa (Photo: PCUSA)

Christian Post Report – The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) holds its 220th General Assembly June 30-July 7, 2012, in Pittsburgh, Pa.

The executive director for the mission agency of the largest Presbyterian denomination in the country has announced her resignation.

Linda Valentine, the longest serving executive director for the Presbyterian Mission Agency of Presbyterian Church (USA), announced Tuesday that she was stepping down after nearly 10 years in the position.

“Recently, through prayer and discernment, I have determined that God is calling me to conclude my season of leadership and to move on in my life,” stated Valentine.

“Thus, I am resigning as executive director effective July 10. I am doing this on my own initiative, and with trust and faith in God.”

  • pcusa

Valentine’s announcement comes as a former employee of the PMA has filed a defamation lawsuit against PCUSA.

The Rev. Roger Dermody, former deputy executive director for mission at the Presbyterian Mission Agency, filed the suit earlier this month in Jefferson Circuit Court in Kentucky.

Dermody was one of four PMA employees condemned by a PMA internal investigation and eventually was released from his position with the agency.

“Dermody alleges that PCUSA, by itself or through its directors, officers, and/or employees, acting within the scope of their employment, repeatedly and falsely published that Dermody had engaged in ‘unethical’ conduct as an employee of PCUSA,” read the suit.

“To the contrary, all that can reasonably be said of Dermody’s alleged conduct is that he failed to perceive or comprehend … that certain other PCUSA employees had improperly created, incorporated, and funded a separate nonprofit corporation to perform PCUSA-approved ministry work, rather than to perform that work through authorized PCUSA corporations and bank accounts.”

In her statement of resignation, outgoing executive director Valentine has denied that the internal investigation or its fallout had anything to do with her decision.

“My decision has little to do with recent events. It is much more about my sense of call,” stated Valentine on Tuesday.

“The past few months have been difficult for the agency, our staff and board, and it was important that I continue in leadership during that time.”

The Rev. Marilyn S. Gamm, chair of the PMA board, said in a written statement that the successes for PMA under Valentine were “widespread and diverse.”

“We are so grateful for Linda’s many years of faithful service to the Presbyterian Mission Agency and the greater church,” stated Rev. Gamm.

“With the engagement of key stakeholders, Linda and her leadership team have reshaped the Mission Agency from one that does mission on behalf of the church to one that ‘inspires, equips and connects’ the church to serve Christ in the world.”

Source : Christian Post

Donald Trump Seeks a Presidential Palace

Donald Trump Seeks a Presidential Palace

Christian Post Report – Real estate mogul and reality TV star Donald Trump became the 12th candidate to jump into the growing pool of 2016 Republican presidential candidates Tuesday when he declared in a 45-minute speech that he wants to be in the White House and promised that he “will be the greatest jobs president God ever created.”

“So, ladies and gentlemen, I am officially running for president of the United States, and we are going to make our country great again,” Trump told a supportive crowd at the lavish Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in New York City.

Trump, who declared his net worth to be nearly $9 billion ($8,737,540,000 to be exact), launched withering criticism at both the domestic and foreign policy agenda being pursued by the Obama administration on signature issues such as healthcare, immigration, trade and nuclear weapons.

Read more at http://www.christianpost.com/news/donald-trump-announces-run-for-president-i-will-be-the-greatest-jobs-president-god-ever-created-140471/

Source : Christian Post

Here I Am, Lord. Send Him.

Christian Post Report – But Moses again pleaded, “Lord, please! Send anyone else.”
— Exodus 4:13

When God called Moses to return to Egypt, I find it interesting that Moses used the word Lord and then effectively said no: “Lord, please! Send anyone else” (Exodus 4:13).

  • Greg Laurie
    (Photo: rever Hoehne for Harvest Ministries)
    Greg Laurie, senior pastor of Harvest Christian Fellowship in Riverside, California and Harvest Orange County in Irvine, California, shares the Gospel with a sold-out crowd of 19,000 for Harvest America at the American Airlines Center and Victory Park in Dallas, Texas, Oct. 5, 2014.

It reminds me of Peter, when he had that vision on the housetop of Simon (see Acts 10:9–16). In his vision, a great sheet was lowered from Heaven with creatures that Peter was forbidden to eat, according to Mosaic Law. God told him, “Get up, Peter; kill and eat them” (verse 13).

But Peter said, “No, Lord” (verse 14).

Those words don’t go together. You don’t say, “No, Lord.” Rather, it is, “Yes, Lord.”

Moses was saying to God, “No, Lord, I don’t want to do this. I can’t do this. I am not the right guy. Send someone else.”

This angered God. Moses should have just done what God called him to do.

Here is something to consider. If God is calling you in some way, shape, or form, to not respond actually can be a sin. Yes, God has given you a free will, and I suppose you can live your life as you want to live it for the most part. But if God calls you to do something for Him and you say no, that is disobedience, and that is a sin. To not obey Him is to sin against Him.

“But I am not qualified,” you might say. Well really, who is? In fact, often the ones who think they are qualified are disqualified. They’re so full of themselves that God won’t use them. God likes to use people who don’t think they’re worthy. God likes to use people who don’t think they ever could be used by Him. God likes to use ordinary people in extraordinary ways so that He receives the glory.

Copyright © 2015 by Harvest Ministries. All rights reserved.

Unless otherwise indicated, Scripture taken from the New King James Version. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Bible text from the New King James Version is not to be reproduced in copies or otherwise by any means except as permitted in writing by Thomas Nelson, Inc., Attn: Bible Rights and Permissions, P.O. Box 141000, Nashville, TN 37214-1000

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Source : Christian Post

Tina Campbell Says God Delivered Her From Wanting to Die, Kill Children And Husband

  • Tina Campbel
    (Photo: AMC Networks)
    Mary Mary’s Tina Campbell

Christian Post Report – Tina Campbell, the gospel music singer, recently admitted that God delivered her from wanting to die, kill her children and her husband.

Campbell, the 41-year-old Mary Mary singer, has ventured into solo territory with a new book, I Need a Day to Pray, and album It’s Personal. The material came from a time when the singer was forced to overcome her husband Teddy Campbell’s infidelities and father’s death in 2013.

The singer was very candid about the state of depression she was in and shared it with people during her live presentation of her new projects called “An Evening With Tina Campbell.”

“I’ve been saved all my life and a representative of the Gospel could get so low that I wanted to die, kill my children, kill my husband and kill everybody, and go out with a bang, because life was that bad. But that’s exactly where I was in 2013, and God alone saved my life,” she said in a video preview posted on the Yahoo! Music Instagram page.

Campbell said she’s will to share her testimony to help encourage others.

“Part of my testimony, my willingness to speak about the difficult times, comes from the joy I have in the knowledge that it was God who saved me,” she wrote on the Yahoo! Music Instagram page. “I want to let those feeling as low as I once did know that if He brought me through, He will bring you through! #OnlyJesusDidIt”

Although Tina did not initially intend to create a solo album or book, she previously spoke to The Christian Post about her reason for doing so.

“I went through my challenges that I went through last year with infidelity. In the process of writing journals to God, I ended up writing a book that I didn’t know I was writing,” she previously told CP. “Once I finished, God started downloading all of this music into me and I knew that God gave it to me to give it away.”

Source : Christian Post