Rush Limbaugh Says He is Relying on His ‘Deeply Personal Relationship With God’ Amid Lung Cancer Battle

Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh shared how his “deeply personal relationship with God” has sustained him as he battles advanced lung cancer.

On Monday, Limbaugh, 69, told his 20 million listeners he has been diagnosed with advanced lung cancer. The talk show host said he plans to take a brief sabbatical for further medical tests and to determine treatment, but hopes to return soon, Fox News reports.

“This day has been one of the most difficult days in recent memory, for me, because I’ve known this moment was coming,” Limbaugh said. “I’m sure that you all know by now that I really don’t like talking about myself and I don’t like making things about me. … One thing that I know, that has happened over the 31-plus years of this program, is that there has been an incredible bond that has developed between all of you and me.”

Limbaugh, who began his nationally syndicated radio show about 30 years ago, told his listeners that his job has provided him with the “greatest satisfaction and happiness” of his life.

“So I have to tell you something today that I wish I didn’t have to tell you. It’s a struggle for me because I had to inform my staff earlier today,” he said. “I can’t help but feel that I’m letting everybody down. The upshot is that I have been diagnosed with advanced lung cancer.”

Limbaugh revealed he’s been experiencing shortness of breath that he initially thought might be heart-related but turned out to be a pulmonary malignancy. He credited his faith for sustaining his health amid his cancer battle.

“I told the staff today that I have a deeply personal relationship with God that I do not proselytize about, but I do, and I have been working that relationship tremendously,” Limbaugh said. “I am, at the moment, experiencing zero symptoms.”

SOURCE: Christian Post, Leah MarieAnn Klett

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Uganda ‘Studying’ to See If Embassy Should Be Opened in Jerusalem

Uganda ‘Studying’ to See If Embassy Should Be Opened in Jerusalem


Uganda is open to creating an embassy in Jerusalem, according to Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni.

“If a friend says I want your embassy here rather than there I don’t see why there would be…” said Museveni to the press before trailing off. He continued: “We are really working, we’re studying that.”

The reveal came during Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s visit to Africa, according to Reuters.

“You open an embassy in Jerusalem and I will open an embassy in Kampala,” said Netanyahu. “We hope to do this in the near future.”

Should the countries find a place for each other’s embassies, it would be considered a major win for Netanyahu, who faces the country’s third national election in a year on March 2.

But the alliance would be controversial in light of the recent peace plan presented by the US between Palestine and Israel. The plan intended to place Palestine’s capital outside of Jerusalem’s municipal limits. Palestine has rejected the plans.

Museveni has justified his desires for an Israeli embassy in Jerusalem based on the 1947 UN Partition Plan, which he believes gave the west part of Jerusalem to Israel.

According to the Times of Israel, Netanyahu has been on a campaign to call other countries to move their embassies to Jerusalem, as the US recently did. Only Guatemala has followed suit so far.

For his most recent visit to Uganda, Netanyahu landed…

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Read an Excerpt from Tommy Barnett’s New Autobiography “What If?”

This is an adaptation from Tommy Barnett’s newly released autobiography (Feb. 4, 2020), “What If?”

I’ve never agreed with the church “experts” who advise pastors who have just come to a church to tread lightly so they could gradually bring the congregation around to their new ideas and new programs.

There’s a different method I prefer: Go in and shoot all your big guns, let everyone know exactly where you’re going, and most importantly, start leading people to Christ. You’re probably going to lose some people who don’t want anything to change, but that’s fine. You’ll replace them with people eager to join you in your mission. Old wineskins can’t hold new wine. I hate to say this, but a lot of church people don’t really want new people coming in. They feel threatened (or at least uncomfortable) around people they don’t know, especially if those people don’t look like them.

In Davenport, we had to do something immediately to let people know what kind of church God wanted to build. The most important word in that sentence is “we.” I assumed they had called me because they wanted to do big things for God at Westside Assemblies of God.

My dad had given me an old International Harvester school bus that he didn’t dare use anymore. The engine barely ran, and when it did, it was hard to keep the bus going straight because its steering was so bad. I named our bus “She Needs”: she needed tires, she needed gas, she needed a paint job, she needed a complete overhaul.

I wasn’t sure what I would do with it, so I just parked it out behind the church. On my second Sunday as pastor, a lady introduced herself and shared something that caught my attention. “Pastor, I’ve been saved for only a few months, and I don’t know if I’m supposed to do this, but I’ve been going out every week knocking on doors in my neighborhood leading people to Christ. I’ve got so many of them now, but I don’t know how to get them to church because a lot of them don’t have cars. When I told some of the people at church about it, they told me just to let them find their own church. I don’t want to make anyone angry, but I’d sure like to get them involved in our church.” I couldn’t believe my ears. I told her, “Sister, you’re exactly who I’m looking for. I’m going to give you a bus!”

The lady, her husband, and I walked behind the church and got into that dilapidated old bus. I got it started and showed her how to put it in gear. Then I had her drive it around the block. I confess that I was a little nervous as she worked that stubborn clutch and jerked forward every time we started into an intersection. She didn’t mind that the bus was a dinosaur — she literally beamed as she sat behind the wheel. She was a tiny lady, barely tall enough to see over the steering wheel.

SOURCE: Christian Post, Tommy Barnett

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Barna Group Relaunches State of the Church Survey in a Personalized Format

In this new decade of “cultural, digital and spiritual disruption,” the evangelical Christian polling firm Barna Group is relaunching its State of the Church survey report after a gap of 10 years of its public release, and using new technology to help churches personalize the insights, beginning with the 2020 report, the group announced.

The upcoming State of the Church 2020 survey “will be the most in-depth and comprehensive study in Barna’s 35-year history,” Barna said in a statement.

Barna President David Kinnaman said the relaunch is being done “in a way we’ve never done it before.”

The project will combine updated research and “a brand-new technology,” Barna said, adding that it has tracked State of the Church survey data on an annual basis for 35 years, but the public release of the survey was discontinued in 2010. “The new research will analyze previous tracked research as well as the new 2020 survey findings.”

California-based Barna, which focuses on the intersection of faith and culture, also said it has partnered with a technology company, Gloo, “to launch a new, free and secure church assessment, the Barna ChurchPulse.”

“Through the State of the Church 2020 survey, we will unlock the big picture and frame the most important challenges and opportunities for pastors and Christian leaders. But then, for the first time ever, we have the ability to personalize those insights for each and every church through the Barna ChurchPulse,” said Barna, which has conducted more than one million interviews over the course of hundreds of studies, according to its website.

SOURCE: Christian Post, Anugrah Kumar

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Nigerian Church Destroyed in Fire as 32 People Are Killed in Attacks by Radical Fulani Militants

As many as 32 people were killed in attacks last week said to have been carried out in predominantly Christian areas of the Plateau state of Nigeria by radical Fulani militants who have been blamed for a series of deadly attacks in Plateau this month. 

A Church of Christ in Nations church building, as well as a pastor’s home and dozens upon dozens of other structures, were destroyed as a result of attacks last week, sources told Morning Star News.

Former speaker of the Plateau state House of Assembly Titus Ayuba Alams told the nonprofit persecution news outlet that Islamic militants said to be Fulani herders were blamed for carrying out Jan. 27 attacks in Marish and Ruboi villages that took the lives of about 17 people and a Jan. 26 attack on Kwatas village that took the lives of 15.

However, the figures provided by the Plateau State Police Command differ from those offered by Alams. The Plateau State Police Command has confirmed the death of only 26 people in recent attacks in Bokkos and Mangu Local Government Areas.

“In the attacks, 14 persons were killed in Kwatas, four at Sabon Barki, three at Marish and one at Changet in Bokkos, this makes it 22 persons killed in Bokkos,” Police spokesperson Ubah Ogaba told The Daily Post. “Also, four persons were killed at Marish in Mangu. This makes the total persons killed in the two areas 26.”

Fulani are a nomadic people group of about 20 million across West Africa who have for decades competed with farming communities — many of which in Nigeria are predominately Christian — for land use and rights.

In recent years, violence has escalated between the farming communities in Nigeria’s Middle Belt and Fulani. Fulani radicals have been accused of killing thousands over the years through overnight massacres on sleeping villages while youth in farming communities have been accused of carrying out reprisal attacks.

SOURCE: Christian Post, Samuel Smith

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Atheists, Agnostics Prefer Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pew Finds

Atheists, Agnostics Prefer Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pew Finds


Atheists and agnostics who identify as Democrat prefer Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, while Christians who vote Democrat favor Joe Biden, according to a new Pew Research Center survey. 

The poll of 12,638 Americans found that Sanders and Warren lead among self-identified atheists who vote Democrat with 30 and 29 percent respectively, with Biden in third place at 12 percent. Among agnostics, Sanders leads with 36 percent, followed by Warren (23 percent) and Biden (16 percent). 

The survey’s results were based on registered voters who are Democrat or lean Democrat. 

Biden, though, leads the Democratic field among all Christian traditions. For example:

  • Biden leads among white evangelicals with 37 percent of the vote to Warren’s 14 percent and Sanders’ 12 percent.
  • Biden leads among Catholics with 34 percent to Sanders’ 18 percent and Warren’s 10 percent.
  • Biden leads among black Protestants with 44 percent to Sanders’ 11 percent and Warren’s 7 percent.
  • Biden also tops the field among Jewish voters (31 percent to Warren’s 20 percent, Pete Buttigieg’s 13 percent and Sanders’ 11 percent).

The survey was released on Jan. 31.

“As Democratic presidential candidates campaign to win their party’s nomination, there is still some uncertainty about how voters from various religious groups will cast their ballots,” an analysis from Pew said. “No candidate has majority…

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The app that failed democracy: Technology and the providence of God

As I write this column, we are still awaiting results from the Iowa caucuses. The blame for the delay is being fixed on a mobile app that was supposed to streamline the process.

The app was built by a Washington, DC-based company
connected to a nonprofit digital strategy firm that assists progressive causes.
Precinct chairs were supposed to transmit caucus results through the app and by
a backup telephone system.

However, some chairs had trouble downloading or logging into
the app. Caucus workers who tried to call in results Monday night said they
were stuck on hold, some for over an hour.

The state Democratic Party said their paper records would allow them to conduct a full recount if needed. They could be called upon to do that now, given the technical difficulties with reporting the results.

We will presumably know the results of the Iowa caucuses
later today. But this will not be the last time that technology will fail to
deliver on its promises. Autonomous vehicles endanger passengers and
pedestrians. Mobile devices have made pornography more pervasive than ever.
Criminals use the “dark web” to hide from authorities.

The failure of the app in Iowa should not, however, provoke
a response greater than the problem.

Technology and the providence of God

Engaging more people in our political process through
technology and other means is essential to our political process. Autonomous
vehicles can enable drivers to become passengers who use their transit time
more effectively. Mobile devices can communicate biblical truth that combats
pornography and other pervasive temptations. Authorities can use technological
means to catch technological criminals.

Paul used the Roman highway system, the internet of his day,
to take the gospel across the Empire. He used epistles delivered by couriers,
the email of his day, to write half of the New Testament. I’m convinced that if
he were alive today, he would be using every…

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Millions of Nigerian Christians Hold Marches to Protest Persecution

Having finished his Sunday sermon from Psalm 18 on God as a stronghold who delivers his people from their enemies, Enoch Adeboye then led them to a cemetery.

It was an ironic yet appropriate choice.

Wearing a bright green tuxedo, the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) in Lagos, Nigeria, marched three miles yesterday holding a placard that declared: “All Souls are Precious to God.”

Adeboye and his congregation, one of the largest in the world, answered the call issued by the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) for a three-day fast this past weekend, concluding in a prayer walk. Based on reports from its state chapters and local media, CAN estimates 5 million people marched in 28 of Nigeria’s 36 states on Sunday.

“Though we have protested before, this event took a new dimension,” CAN president Samson Ayokunle told CT.

“With one voice, we said ‘no’ to killings, ‘no’ to security negligence, and ‘no’ to the persecution of Christians in Nigeria. It is a wake-up call to the government.”

Launched on January 29 to protest the beheading of Brethren pastor Lawan Andimi, the chairman of a regional CAN chapter in Adamawa state, by Boko Haram two weeks earlier, the prayer was also a protest at the Nigerian government’s failure to stop the abductions and killings.

Terrorist attacks, as well as clashes between mostly Muslim herdsmen and mostly Christian farmers, resulted in more than 100 deaths in January alone.

“Lord, have mercy on Nigeria, let there be peace and security,” said Adeboye. “God sees all things and knows where the terrorists are hiding.

“We pray that God send his light to Nigeria and expose the evildoers in the country.”

In the perspective of CAN, these reach into the upper levels of government.

“O Lord, in Jesus Name, expose all the government functionaries and security chiefs who have compromised and who are giving vital information to the terrorists, killer herdsmen, and kidnappers in the country,” stated No. 11 in CAN’s 22-point prayer guide for the fast.

“All the suppliers of ammunition to the insurgents, we pray that you our God would expose, no matter how highly placed they may be.”

Adeboye previously had a reputation for refraining from such critical activity. Some politicians rejoiced that he took a stand, noting that Nigerian Vice President Yemi Osinbajo is a member of his congregation.

“For [Adeboye] to stick his neck out, when the government respects him, will surely cause them to take notice,” said Gideon Para-Mallam, the Jos-based Africa ambassador for the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students. “That he—and others—would say, ‘We need to be a part of this,’ is significant.”

Para-Mallam, who recently testified about sub-Saharan Christian persecution at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, noted other high-profile church leaders joined the march, including: Obed Dashan, council vice president of the Church of Christ in Nations (COCIN), one of Nigeria’s largest denominations which claims 8 million members; Benjamin Kwashi, a Jos-based Anglican archbishop and general secretary of GAFCON; and Soja Bewarang, chairman of the heads of church denominations in Plateau state.

“They had to come out, because they are seeing bloodshed become a daily occurrence,” Ayokunle told CT. “The greater participation is due to a greater frustration.”

CAN has frequently called out the government of President Muhammadu Buhari—and has been accused by Buhari’s administration of politicizing the issue.

John Ibenu, CAN chairman for the Middle Belt state of Kogi, home to many herder-farmer clashes, defended his organization.

His state witnessed 27 deaths in January.

“When people are not performing the duties for which they are employed or appointed, they must give way for others to come in,” he stated. “CAN will not tolerate ineptitude and will not be silent because we must be the voice of the voiceless and down trodden.

“We are the moral custodian and conscience of the society.”

Day 1 of the three-day fast called on Nigerian Christians to confess and repent of their sins.

Day 2 called on God to pour out his spirit for revival.

Day 3 called for the prayer walk, asking God to fight their battles.

“Our very existence as Christians in our dear nation Nigeria has never been at stake as it is now,” stated Stephen Baba, president of the Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA), one of Nigeria’s largest denominations which claims 10 million members.

Endorsing CAN’s call for fasting, he recalled the story of Esther.

“It is very clear that the spirit of Haman, whose avowed aim is the complete extermination of Christians, is viciously at work in this nation and the government.”

Apart from counter-terrorism, Nigeria is also attempting to reform captured militants. More than 2,000 Boko Haram members have repented and been released back into society, a move criticized by many.

Nigerian Senate Minority Leader, Enyinnaya Abaribe, pushed President Buhari to resign.

The president pushed back in an op-ed submitted to CT.

“We owe thanks to the Nigerian defense forces—bolstered by our partnership with the British and American militaries—that we are winning this struggle in the field,” he wrote.

“But we may not, yet, be completely winning the battle for the truth.”

Buhari praised the faith of Andimi and committed himself to freeing the remaining 160 Chibok schoolgirls.

But he emphasized that 90 percent of Boko Haram’s victims have been Muslim.

“These now failing terrorists have targeted the vulnerable, the religious, the non-religious, the young, and the old without discrimination,” he wrote.

“Yet sadly, there is a tiny, if vocal, minority of so-called religious leaders—both Muslim and Christian—who appear more than prepared to take their bait and blame their opposite number.”

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Kanye West Says Many Record Labels Have Contracts Prohibiting Artists From Talking About Jesus

Kanye West and the Sunday Service Choir teamed up with VOUS Church to perform at Bayfront Park in Miami ahead of the Super Bowl where in between songs he told the audience that many mainstream record contracts forbid artists from saying Jesus’ name.

Several hip-hop celebrities attended West’s Sunday Service, including Fat Joe, N.O.R.E. and Quavo.

“God using us to show off, to show God is better than the devil,” West told the crowd, referring to the successes of his latest albums, Jesus Is King and Jesus Is Born.

“The devil took all the producers, the musicians, the designers. He moved us all out to Hollywood, moved us all out to New York. Chasing gold statues. Literally signing a contract and selling our souls,” the Chicago native continued.

 

 

#KanyeWest says there are recording contracts that prohibit artists from saying “Jesus.”

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West then revealed that many of the artists he worked with while creating Jesus Is King were relieved to freely say the name of Jesus because of the way their agreements are set up in the industry.

“They got contracts out there that say, ‘you can’t say Jesus.’ When we were working on this album, people were coming to the studio just to say ‘Jesus’ as loud as they wanted to. You can say Jesus in ‘Ye studio,” he declared.

Source: Christian Post

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Kanye West Says Many Record Labels Have Contracts Prohibiting Artists From Talking About Jesus

Kanye West and the Sunday Service Choir teamed up with VOUS Church to perform at Bayfront Park in Miami ahead of the Super Bowl where in between songs he told the audience that many mainstream record contracts forbid artists from saying Jesus’ name.

Several hip-hop celebrities attended West’s Sunday Service, including Fat Joe, N.O.R.E. and Quavo.

“God using us to show off, to show God is better than the devil,” West told the crowd, referring to the successes of his latest albums, Jesus Is King and Jesus Is Born.

“The devil took all the producers, the musicians, the designers. He moved us all out to Hollywood, moved us all out to New York. Chasing gold statues. Literally signing a contract and selling our souls,” the Chicago native continued.

 

 

#KanyeWest says there are recording contracts that prohibit artists from saying “Jesus.”

A post shared by XXL (@xxl) on

West then revealed that many of the artists he worked with while creating Jesus Is King were relieved to freely say the name of Jesus because of the way their agreements are set up in the industry.

“They got contracts out there that say, ‘you can’t say Jesus.’ When we were working on this album, people were coming to the studio just to say ‘Jesus’ as loud as they wanted to. You can say Jesus in ‘Ye studio,” he declared.

Source: Christian Post

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