Ark Encounter Is Illuminated by Green Lights to Honor Kentucky Coronavirus Victims

Ark Encounter Is Illuminated by Green Lights to Honor Kentucky Coronavirus Victims


Kentucky’s Ark Encounter attraction has been lit up green as a way of honoring victims of coronavirus. The life-sized replica of Noah’s Ark – which is operated by creationist ministry “Answers in Genesis” – took part in the gesture to “show compassion as the Bible instructs us,” according to a post by the group.

In a video, co-founder Mike Zovath said the idea for lighting up the massive ark green was born following a conversation with Williamstown Mayor Rick Skinner.

“[It is] to show solidarity and compassion for Kentuckians, really,” Zovath explained. “Other states might have other symbols of solidarity, but it’s really to show we care about people in Kentucky and we’re with everyone in the state. We’re going to beat this together.”

Gov. Andy Beshear has been the driving force behind the colorful tribute, even lighting up the Governor’s Mansion and State Capitol building. “Green is the color of compassion, it’s the color of empathy … it lets people know that we are thinking about them, that we care about them, that we love every single Kentuckian around us,” the governor said, according to Kentucky Today.
With the coronavirus spreading widely throughout the state, at the end of March, Beshear ordered the closure of all non-essential businesses – that includes the Ark Encounter, which welcomes around a million visitors per annum.

There…

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Wrestler Hulk Hogan Says God is Using Pandemic to Tear Down Idols and Strengthen Relationships With Christ

Wrestling star Hulk Hogan says God is using the coronavirus pandemic to tear down the idols people have created in their lives.

According to FaithWire, Hogan, whose real name is Terry Gene Bollea, is asking people to use their free time to strengthen their relationship with Jesus.

“God has taken away everything we worship,” he wrote on his Instagram page. “God said, ‘you want to worship athletes, I will shut down the stadiums. You want to worship musicians, I will shut down Civic Centers. You want to worship actors, I will shut down theaters. You want to worship money, I will shut down the economy and collapse the stock market. You don’t want to go to church and worship Me, I will make it where you can’t go to church.’”

Hogan’s post included a photo of him praying against a wall.

“Maybe we don’t need a vaccine,” he said. “Maybe we need to take this time of isolation from the distractions of the world and have a personal revival where we focus on the ONLY thing in the world that really matters. Jesus.”

Hogan also included 2 Chronicles 7:14 in his post, which says, “If my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sins and will heal their land.”

Source: Christian Headlines

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Humanitarian Crisis in Kaduna State, Nigeria as Herdsmen Attack Christians Unchecked

JOSNigeria, April 8, 2020 (Morning Star News) – People displaced by Muslim Fulani herdsmen attacks in Kaduna state, Nigeria that killed 60 Christians in March are in dire need of relief aid, a community leader said.

“We have a chronicle of the humongous losses suffered by these law-abiding Christians in the hands of herdsmen trying to forcefully eject them and occupy their lands while the government watches on,” Luka Binniyat, spokesman for the Southern Kaduna People’s Union (SOKAPU), said in a statement. “These wanton cruelties on these native Christian communities have been ongoing without let-up since Jan. 6 with great casualties in human lives and material loses.”

Binniyat said the attacks have forced women, children and the elderly to run into the wilderness to escape rampaging herdsmen, adding to the thousands displaced by previous violence.

“Kugosi and Kajari communities have been deserted, with scores of Christian villagers wandering in the bush with no food or water,” he said. “We therefore, call on all well-meaning individuals, groups and corporate entities to come to the aid of these displaced persons. They are in dire need of food, medical attention and temporary shelter.”

Binniyat said the killings occurred in Chikun and Jema’a counties.

At least 25 Christians were killed in March 31 herdsmen attacks on three communities, while 11 others were killed in another village, he said. Among the slain were six Christians in Guruku village; three Chrisitans in Kuduru village – Hassana Bala, Jamilu Hassan and Halima Bala – and Haliru Nawela and Kure Dogonyaro were also injured during the attack, according to Binniyat.

The herdsmen attacked Jagindi village on March 30, killing two Christians, Musa Barde and his brother Danlami Barde, he said. On March 26, herdsmen killed three Christians in Kuduru village.

“This is aside from three others killed in Kugosi and Kajari villages,” he said.

Source: Christian Headlines

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Rev. Joseph D’Souza on Easter Reminds Us We Can Face Suffering with Joy and Faith

Most Rev. Joseph D’Souza is a Christian theologian, author and human and civil rights activist. He is the founder of Dignity Freedom Network, an organization that advocates for and delivers humanitarian aid to the marginalized and outcastes of South Asia. He is Archbishop of the Anglican Good Shepherd Church of India and serves as the president of the All India Christian Council.

As I observe Holy Week along with billions of other believers, I have been pondering not only on how Jesus’s death and resurrection restored our relationship to God the Father, but also how they made him the conqueror of all suffering and death.

Many of us came to faith in Jesus because we were moved and convicted by the gospel story as told through the innocent Son of God dying on the cross in our place for our sins. This atonement aspect of the gospel captures the sheer scope of God’s grace, sacrificial love and mercy.

Yet I fear that sometimes when we consider the image of Christ on the cross we look at him as a passive scapegoat instead of a warrior who went to do war with sin, suffering and death willingly and joyfully.

In John 10:18, Jesus himself said, “No one takes [my life] from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have authority to lay it down and authority to take it up again. This command I received from my Father.” (NIV)

Hebrews 12:2 likewise says, “For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.”

It may seem like a theological technicality, but there’s a world of a difference between Jesus being carted away passively to the cross than he facing it head on. In fact, everything about Jesus’ journey to the cross was active, from him “becoming obedient to death” (Phil 2:8) to him “scorning its shame.” Jesus’ victory on the cross was neither accidental nor incidental — it was deliberate and intentional.

In light of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic we are living through, the message of Jesus as a servant who willfully confronted death and suffering is all the more relevant to us. We can learn from his example as we minister to those who are suffering in these two ways:

We need to ask God for faith and courage to face the weeks and months ahead.

The last thing Jesus did before his arrest, trial and eventual execution was pray. His prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane dripped with passion and brutal honesty: “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will.” (Matthew 26:39)

We can also pray a similar prayer as we prepare for what the COVID-19 will bring in the days and weeks ahead. Already there have been over 1.4 million confirmed COVID-19 cases and more than 80,000 deaths worldwide. Tragically, those numbers will continue to rise while doctors, nurses, researchers and government officials work around the clock to care for sick patients and to stymie the progression of the virus.

Jesus’ prayer was both an act of submission and obedience. In praying “Your will be done,” he was resolving to follow the Father’s plan, all the way to the cross. While Jesus was fulfilling a unique, unrepeatable mission given to him, our current path — whether we want it or not — also leads us to confront evil, suffering and death. And like Jesus, we have the choice whether we will do so with faith, believing we can trust that God will be with us as we minister to those who are suffering.

Source: Christian Headlines

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David Jeremiah on Don’t Let Fear Become a Greater Problem than the Coronavirus

Two weeks ago, a professional football player in Dr. David Jeremiah’s Shadow Mountain Community Church congregation asked about the significance of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis in light of biblical prophecies about the End Times. In response, Dr. David Jeremiah wrote two sermons that have been viewed close to 2 million times and have been shared more than 4,000 times.

We spoke with Dr. David Jeremiah to discuss the impact of COVID-19 on his life, his church and on people around the world.

This conversation has been edited for clarity and length:

1. How do we go deeper in prayer — maybe more than we’ve ever gone before — through this time?

Prayer should be the first thing. I got a call from my daughter late last night. She was feeling a little bit cut off and afraid, and I reminded her that God is available to us. We don’t have to go anywhere. God is a breath away, and I told her that when I have moments when I feel a little bit disconnected, I hear God’s voice in my heart and I think I hear him saying, “I’ve got this,” and God is in control. And when you pray, you become so much aware of that. You become aware of the presence of God in your life and the fact that there aren’t any surprises for God. He didn’t get surprised by all of this.

2. Tell us some principles that we can use to calm our minds as we face isolation and hear news about what is going on around us.

We should open our Bibles instead of turning on the television, because that’s what will help us more than anything else. There’s so much in the Word of God to comfort our hearts and strengthen us.

And I’ll just give you a little nugget that I shared the other night: The Bible says that “in the world you will have tribulation but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.” God didn’t say, “In the world you will have tribulation but I have overcome tribulation.” No, he said, “in the world you will have tribulation, but be of good cheer because I have overcome the world.” God doesn’t just overcome the event, he overcomes the environment in which the event occurs. So God’s not just in charge of what’s going on; he’s in charge of everything. He is still on the throne, and we’re gonna look back on this and see that in spite of all of the difficulty that this has created for everyone, God got glory to his name.

3. Can you give us some principles and techniques from Scripture that we can focus on when we really feel anxious?

Well, in the book of Philippians it says, “Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, let your requests be made known to God.” Be anxious for nothing, but be prayerful in everything. What Paul was saying there is, if you want to be anxious, you can have anxiety, but you don’t have to be anxious for anything, but you have to replace that with prayer. Be anxious for nothing, but be prayerful in everything.

There’s two circles. One is anxiety — you don’t want to be in there. If you’re in the prayer circle, you won’t be in the anxiety circle. But so often what happens is we let our anxiety run crazy with us and today I’m just seeing that in talking to some people. They’re just saying “but what if and what if” and before you know it they’ve spun this thing out and I just want to say to them, “This is not the end of the world.” So step back, take a deep breath, and get into the Word of God and be reminded that God is in control.

Source: Christian Headlines

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Joel Osteen to Host Special Easter Service Featuring Kanye West, Mariah Carey, Tyler Perry

Joel Osteen to Host Special Easter Service Featuring Kanye West, Mariah Carey, Tyler Perry


Televangelist Joel Osteen will be hosting a special Easter service this weekend featuring several well-known names at Lakewood Church.

In an interview with TMZ, Osteen shared that Kanye West, Mariah Carey, and Tyler Perry will partake in the virtual service along with the Lakewood choir.

Although Osteen has collaborated with West and Perry in the past, this will be Mariah Carey’s first time collaborating.

Deadline reports what each guest will be doing for the service. Carey will be performing her song “Hero”, honoring the first medical professionals and first responders working in the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I have known Mariah from years past, and we’d talked about doing some things,” Osteen said. “They actually contacted us because she wanted to show some support and honor to the first responder[s]… and do her part to bring hope and uplift the nation.”

While Kanye’s plans are not fully detailed, Osteen noted that West’s Sunday Service Choir will be present. West has hosted his Sunday Services all throughout 2019 in multiple locations, including Lakewood Church.

“He’s handling that part,” Osteen said. “I’m not so sure exactly what he’s going to do but he sent me a couple of pictures where it looks like they’re going to keep the social distancing. I don’t know, Kanye is one of a kind. He’ll figure out some way to do it.”

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UK Extends Coronavirus Lockdown Indefinitely

The UK’s coronavirus lockdown will be extended indefinitely, it was confirmed today.

Dominic Raab, who is deputising for Prime Minister Boris Johnson while he remains in intensive care, told media at Thursday’s press briefing that it’s too early to consider relaxing the rules that have seen Brits remaining indoors for almost three weeks.

“We are not done yet,” he announced. “We must keep going.”

The Government will not have enough information for more updates on the lockdown’s length until the end of next week.

He thanked everyone “who has gone the extra mile” and followed the safety rules so far, and says the data indicates it’s working so far.

Chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance said social distancing is breaking coronavirus transmission and we’re beginning to see a “flattening off” in the number of new cases.

Mr Raab announced an extension to the social distancing measures put in place on March 23.

The Government said it would review the lockdown policy after three weeks, and did so at today’s emergency Cobra meeting at 10 Downing Street.

Mr Raab stressed that the lockdown cannot be relaxed until the UK has the coronavirus outbreak “firmly under control”.

“We mustn’t give the coronavirus a second chance to kill more people and further hurt our country,” he said.

Ahead of an Easter weekend that promises scorching temperatures and blazing sunshine, Brits have been urged to stay inside and not jeopardise the progress made by the lockdown so far.

SOURCE: Daily Star, Sophie Bateman

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‘Praise the Lord’: 60-Year-Old Coronavirus Survivor Says God Spared Her Life

‘Praise the Lord’: 60-Year-Old Coronavirus Survivor Says God Spared Her Life


A 60-year-old Georgia woman is crediting God for healing her after she contracted COVID-19 and appeared to be facing death.

Barbara Killiebrew told WALB she was hospitalized March 18 in Coffee Regional Medical Center in Douglas, Ga., and placed on a ventilator.

She thought she might die.

“First and foremost, I thank God for Jesus, for Him saving my life and giving me another chance, because two or three times where I have given up, God said no,” Killiebrew said.

She was unable to have family members with her due to hospital regulations during the pandemic. Still, Killiebrew said she didn’t feel alone, WALB reported.

“I realize there are so many people around the nation fighting for their life (sic) but God and his good almighty helped me. He kept this young lady here to come home and tell about … COVID-19,” Killiebrew said.

The thought of her two daughters also helped her survive.

“I felt in my mind and my heart that I was coming back to them,” Killiebrew said. “I was fighting, I was fighting for my life.”

When Killiebrew was discharged from the hospital, she was wheeled down the hallways shouting, “Praise the Lord. Hallelujah.” 

The Coffee County sheriff’s office also gave her a hero’s escort home, WALB reported. 

“The sheriff and everything got together, blocked the roads off and I was thinking to myself, it could have been a funeral but instead, God…

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Passover lessons in a pandemic: The past is no predictor of the future

Jews around the world are celebrating Passover in a different way this year. It’s not just the number of people at the event (immediate family only). It’s not just the distractions from the pandemic.

It’s the fact that, as Jim Beckerman writes in USA Today, “Passover is a remembrance of a plague.”

The tenth plague led Pharaoh to release the Jews from
captivity in Egypt. Prior to that night, they had been enslaved for four
hundred years (Acts 7:6).

Few in those centuries could have imagined that the Jews would become a nation through whom God would bless the world (Genesis 12:3) and would be a people still remembering their Passover twenty centuries later. Nor could they have imagined that God would bring through them a Messiah who would offer salvation to us all (John 3:16).

That’s because the past is no predictor of the future.

Consider another example.

The past is no predictor of the future

Acts 9 tells us that Saul of Tarsus was on his way to
persecute Christians in Damascus when he met the risen Christ and his life was
transformed. Nonetheless, his reputation for animosity against the people of
God so preceded him that when he went to Jerusalem and attempted to join the
disciples there, “they were all afraid of him, for they did not believe
that he was a disciple” (Acts 9:26).

It took Barnabas, a respected leader in their community, to
vouch for Saul and make possible his inclusion and ministry in the Holy City
and beyond (vv. 27–30). Later, when Barnabas brought Saul with him to Antioch
to teach the new Christians there, a prophet named Agabus predicted a
“great famine” to come (Acts 11:28). These Christians in Antioch then
chose “to send relief to the brothers living in Judea” (v. 29).

Note this: “And they did so, sending it to the elders
by the hands of Barnabas and Saul” (v. 30).

The former persecutor of Christians had become their teacher
and was even trusted with their finances….

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California Bill Would Keep Parents from Knowing When Children Have Abortions, Get Transgender Hormones

California Bill Would Keep Parents from Knowing When Children Have Abortions, Get Transgender Hormones


Planned Parenthood of California has made the passing of a bill that would block parents from knowing if their child had an abortion or received transgender hormone treatments one of their legislative priorities for this year. 

SB 1004, sponsored by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson, would revise “California’s existing patient protections to ensure that information about any sensitive services, as defined, is not sent to a third party or a policyholder not authorized to receive it.”

The bill expands the definition of “sensitive services” to include “services related to mental health, reproductive health, sexually transmitted infections, substance abuse disorders, transgender health including gender-affirming care, and intimate partner violence.”

Planned Parenthood of California frames its support for the bill as providing patients with greater confidentiality. In explaining their support, they say that, “When a patient accesses health care for a sensitive service, including sexual and reproductive health care, confidentiality is of the utmost importance.” Then, they point out that communication from health insurance companies is not usually confidential and many seeking these services are not the “main policyholder.” They continue, “This bill will expand upon California’s existing protections to ensure that information about any…

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