Supreme Court Cannot ‘Overturn the Word of God,’ Franklin Graham Says of LGBT Case

Supreme Court Cannot ‘Overturn the Word of God,’ Franklin Graham Says of LGBT Case


Evangelist Franklin Graham says the U.S. Supreme Court exceeded its authority and may have infringed on religious liberty with its decision Monday expanding the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to include sexual orientation and gender identity.

The high court, in a 6-3 decision, ruled employers cannot fire someone merely for being gay or transgender under federal law. 

In comments on social media, Graham said he’s concerned how the decision will impact Christian ministries. 

“As Justice Alito has pointed out, the majority went too far – he called it a ‘brazen abuse of our authority.’ The Supreme Court exists to interpret the law, not to make new laws – making laws is the job of our Representatives in Congress, elected by the people,’ Graham wrote. “I believe this decision erodes religious freedoms across this country. 

“People of sincere faith who stand on God’s Word as their foundation for life should never be forced by the government to compromise their religious beliefs. Christian organizations should never be forced to hire people who do not align with their biblical beliefs and should not be prevented from terminating a person whose lifestyle and beliefs undermine the ministry’s purpose and goals.”

Justice Neil Gorsuch, writing for the majority, acknowledged the justices were “deeply concerned with preserving the promise of the free exercise of…

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Supernatural Revival Ensues at George Floyd Memorial Site

Supernatural Revival Ensues at George Floyd Memorial Site


A mighty move of God has been evident in Minneapolis near the site where George Floyd was killed. A place that was full of rioting and violence is now a place of peace and revival.

The spiritual awakening is being led by Dr. Charles Karuku and Pastors Lindsey Karuku from International Outreach Church in Burnsville, Minnesota, CBN News reports.

Talking with CBN’s “The Prayer Link,” Dr. Karuku and Pastor Karuku shared that God was calling for them to be a part of facilitating healing and racial unity.

Dr. Karuku said, “I was on a 40-day fast that ended the day after George Floyd was killed. When we started the fast, the Lord told us that, on the day of Pentecost, He would do a big thing. We did not know what it would be, so we kept praying and fasting.”

He added, “The day we ended the fast, the riots broke out.”

Dr. Karuku also noted that he felt called to be boots on the ground at the place were George Floyd – a Black man who was killed while in police custody – died and on the day of Pentecost “proclaim[ing] the name of Jesus Christ and bring[ing] a message of unity.”

Pastor Karuku then noted the significant transformation that has occurred since their arrival to the memorial site.

“Buildings were still burning, there was smoke and the National Guard had been called in,” she explained. “But now there is a lot of peace in the area where George Floyd’s memorial is. It’s been declared…

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68 Percent of Americans Say Gov’t Should Not Be Involved in Church’s ‘Internal Religious Disputes’

68 Percent of Americans Say Gov’t Should Not Be Involved in Church’s ‘Internal Religious Disputes’


A majority of Americans believe the government should stay out of a faith-based organization’s internal religious disputes, according to a new survey that showed widespread support for the religious liberty of churches protected by the First Amendment.

The poll, conducted as part of CARAVAN’s weekly omnibus survey among 1,004 U.S. adults, found that by a margin of 68-23 percent Americans believe that “an important facet of separation of church and state is that the government cannot get involved in a religious organization’s internal religious disputes.”

The survey was released Tuesday and conducted April 20-22 for the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty.

“When it comes to important decisions about who can pass on a religious organization’s faith to the next generation, Americans agree that the buck stops well before Uncle Sam,” said Montse Alvarado, executive director of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. “Leaving important decisions about a religion’s future in that religion’s hands is a commonsense application of the First Amendment.”

The survey also found that:

  • 66 percent of Americans believe a “religious organization should be able to make decisions about who it hires to teach its faith to the next generation, free from government control.”
  • 59 percent believe the “government should never be allowed to resolve disputes about a…

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76 Percent of American Pastors Support Peaceful Protests, Barna Finds

76 Percent of American Pastors Support Peaceful Protests, Barna Finds


A Barna Group study says that more than three-quarters of American pastors support peaceful protests like the ones taking place all across the country.

The demonstrations come after the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after a white police officer pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck.

The study surveyed some 400 pastors, the Christian Post reports.

The survey showed that 76 percent believe churches should support the protest. Fifteen percent disagreed, and 8 percent said they had no opinion on the issue.

“Church leaders are actively leaning in on conversations about racism in America in a way that they haven’t in the past,” Barna President David Kinnaman told The Christian Post.

“It may surprise some, but it did not surprise me that 76% of church leaders believe the church should support peaceful protests or demonstrations happening across the nation,” Kinnaman said.

About 62 percent also said they believe the churches had addressed the protests. A staggering 94 percent said they believe the church has a responsibility to publicly denounce racism.

“We saw in The Mercy Journey two years ago that 70% of pastors believed that the church should respond in some way – lament, repent, repair the damage – to the historic mistreatment of African Americans, and this moment has given them more clarity about how to engage.

“What the church seems to have been convinced of in…

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Religious Liberty Is a ‘Bogus Term’ Used to Allow LGBT Discrimination, Says Congressman Sean Maloney

Religious Liberty Is a ‘Bogus Term’ Used to Allow LGBT Discrimination, Says Congressman Sean Maloney


In a recent interview, New York’s first openly gay congressman, Sean Maloney, referred to religious liberty as a ‘bogus term’ to discriminate those in the LGBTQ community.

Maloney made denounced religious liberty in a Monday interview with MSNBC in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision to ensure LGBTQ+ protections in the workplace, The Blaze reported.

As Christian Headlines previously reported, the landmark decision came in a 6-3 ruling after three LGBTQ individuals filed suits for being fired due to their sexual orientation.

Conservative justices Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Neil Gorsuch ruled in favor, alongside their liberals leaning counterparts, of including sexual orientation and gender identity in the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Maloney, however, remains skeptical of Justice Gorsuch noting that he believes advocates for religious liberty will want to alter the decision’s application in future cases.

“We know that Neil Gorsuch is a supporter of so-called religious liberty, which is a bogus term — it is actually some sort of pretext for discrimination hiding behind the guise of religion,” the congressman said. “So, I’m still on the lookout for that from the author of this opinion.”

Identical comments were stated by Maloney at a Congressional Hearing back in February over the Trump Administration’s “Religious Liberty Assault on…

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The Statue of Liberty arrived in New York Harbor on this day: The path to true peace

Statue of Liberty National Monument, Liberty Island, New York.

The Statue of Liberty stands 305 feet on her majestic pedestal. This majestic copper statue was given by the people of France to the people of the United States. It was intended to be finished by 1876, the one-hundredth anniversary of America’s Declaration of Independence, but fundraising efforts took longer than anticipated.

Lady Liberty is in the news today because it was on this day in 1885 that she arrived in New York Harbor. She was shipped from France across the Atlantic Ocean in 350 individual pieces packed in more than 200 cases, then reassembled.

The statue was designed by French sculptor Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi, who modeled it after his own mother. He was assisted by engineer Gustave Eiffel, who later developed the iconic tower in Paris that bears his name.

Dubbed “Liberty Enlightening the World,” the statue was taller than any structure in New York City at the time. It was originally copper-colored but underwent a natural color-change process over the years that produced its current greenish-blue hue.

Ellis Island, located near Bedloe’s Island (which in 1956 was renamed Liberty Island) opened in 1892 as America’s chief immigration station. For the next sixty-two years, Lady Liberty stood watch over more than twelve million immigrants who sailed as she had into New York harbor.

My wife and I visited the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island a few years ago, making a memory we’ll have for the rest of our lives. I had seen the statue in movies and photos over the years, of course, and flown over it numerous times. But I had never seen it up close.

The statue portrays a proud woman dressed in a loose robe which cascades in graceful folds to the top of the pedestal on which she stands. In her right hand she holds a great torch raised high in the air. In her left arm she grasps a tablet bearing the date of the Declaration of Independence.

A crown…

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Woman with Down Syndrome Sues U.K. over Abortion Law that Targets Disabled Babies

Woman with Down Syndrome Sues U.K. over Abortion Law that Targets Disabled Babies


A 24-year-old British woman with Down syndrome is urging the government to change the current law so that unborn children with her genetic condition can’t be targeted with abortion.

Heidi Crowter, a political activist with Down syndrome, joined forces earlier this year with British mom Cheryl Bilsborrow in a lawsuit against the government over the abortion law in England, Wales and Scotland. (Bilsborrow has a child with Down syndrome.)

Although British abortion law is generally more restrictive than that in the U.S. – there is a 24-week-limit in the U.K. – it allows abortions up to the moment of birth if the baby has a disability, including Down syndrome, cleft lip or club foot.

Crowter and Bilsborrow have raised more than $50,000 USD on a crowdfunding website for their legal fees.

“Babies can be aborted right up to birth if they are considered to be ‘seriously handicapped,” Crowter said in a press release. “They include me in that definition of being seriously handicapped – just because I have an extra chromosome! Can you believe that? What it says to me is that my life just isn’t as valuable as others, and I don’t think that’s right. I think it’s downright discrimination.”

The United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, she noted, has criticized nations that allow abortion on the basis of disabilities.

Crowter’s campaign…

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Rev. Rolland Slade, First Black Chair of Southern Baptist Executive Committee, Elected

Rev. Rolland Slade, First Black Chair of Southern Baptist Executive Committee, Elected


(RNS) — The Rev. Rolland Slade, senior pastor of Meridian Baptist Church in El Cajon, California, has been elected as the first African American chairman of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee, the group that runs the business of the nation’s largest Protestant denomination outside its annual meetings.

He was elected unanimously.

Slade was previously vice chairman of the Executive Committee and chair of its Cooperative Program Committee, which handles the denomination’s central funding mechanism.

He was nominated by Pastor Jared Wellman of Tates Spring Baptist Church in Arlington, Texas.

“He’s next in line, you could argue, as the vice chair, but that’s not why I’m placing his name into nomination,” said Wellman during an online meeting of the committee on Tuesday (June 16). “I’m nominating him because he’s the first in line when it comes to following Jesus. Whether it’s serving his family, the needs of his community, the people of his church, or the SBC and its Cooperative Program, Pastor Rolland has always been first in line.”

The 61-year-old Slade is a San Diego native who was ordained in 1987. Prior to 2014 when he began his current pastorate, he helped start a church in an apartment complex, served as a missionary and started a Southern Baptist mentoring program for men. More recently he has been recognized for promoting…

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Louie Giglio Apologizes for Suggesting ‘White Privilege’ Be Changed to ‘White Blessing’

Louie Giglio Apologizes for Suggesting ‘White Privilege’ Be Changed to ‘White Blessing’


Megachurch pastor Louie Giglio has apologized after suggesting the term ‘white privilege’ should change to ‘white blessing.’

The comment came during a discussion on race with Christian rapper Lecrae and Chick-fil-A CEO Dan Cathy, according to Faithwire. Earlier this week a two-minute clip of the ‘white blessing’ suggestion hit the internet and went viral, eliciting strong criticism of Giglio. 

Tuesday afternoon, Giglio posted an apology video where he sought to clarify his intentions.

“I sincerely apologize for the phrase ‘white blessing,’” he said. “I want to help my white brothers and sisters understand that white privilege is real and in trying to get that sentiment across, I used the phrase ‘white blessing,’ for which I am deeply sorry. Horrible choice of words. It does not reflect my heart.”

He continued: “I and my white brothers and sisters sit in large part where we are today because of the centuries of gross injustice done to our black brothers and sisters.”

Louie Giglio

Other critics lashed out at Lecrae for not immediately pushing back during the interview. The rapper took to social media to respond.

“I wasn’t okay with it,” he said. “I was very uncomfortable, and I was processing, ‘man, what do I say in light of this?’ There have been a lot of times, as I’ve navigated white supremacy or racial injustice and I’ve wanted to lash…

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O. J. Simpson and Dylann Roof: The day I saw the white Ford Bronco and the prayer that can change everything

In this June 17, 1994 photo, a white Ford Bronco, driven by Al Cowlings carrying O.J. Simpson, is trailed by Los Angeles police cars as it travels on a freeway in Los Angeles.

On this day in 1994, O. J. Simpson led police on a low-speed chase through the streets of Los Angeles.

His attorney informed him that morning that murder charges had been filed against him in the killings of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. That evening, he reportedly made a 911 call from a cellphone in the white Ford Bronco of his friend, Al Cowlings.

The California Highway Patrol then began pursuit of the vehicle. The Bronco led them onto the 405 Freeway in Torrance and eventually to Simpson’s home in Brentwood, where he surrendered.

Like millions of others, I watched the pursuit as it was broadcast on live television. But I never thought I would see the white Ford Bronco in person.

Last year, my wife and I were on vacation in the Smoky Mountains, one of our favorite places in the world. We stopped by a museum in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. And there we found the vehicle on display. Not a replica—the actual white Ford Bronco.

Now let’s turn to another event that occurred on this day five years ago.

On June 17, 2015, Dylann Roof walked into the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina. He joined parishioners for forty minutes of Bible study, then he gunned down nine of them. He reloaded seven times. His intention was to start a race war, as he later confessed to police. He was eventually sentenced to nine consecutive sentences of life in prison without parole.

I do not expect ever to meet O. J. Simpson or Dylann Roof. I can mourn the tragic deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald Goldman, and nine precious lives lost in Charleston. And I can pray for those who mourn their deaths.

But I can do more than respond to the past—I can help create the future. So can you.

The prayer that can change…

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