Sunday, 26 April 2020

New Barna Survey: More Americans Believe in Satan Than Believe in God

New Barna Survey: More Americans Believe in Satan Than Believe in God



ABOVE:  Dr. George Barna appeared on the Friday edition of CBN News's Faith Nation to talk about the results of the survey. Faith Nation is seen weekdays on the CBN News Channel.

We've heard how people are searching for answers and turning to faith during the pandemic, but a new study reveals shocking information about what exactly Americans believe.
It found that roughly half – 51 percent – of American adults have a traditional, biblical view of God as the all-powerful, all-knowing Creator – a dramatic decrease from 73 percent in 1991.
Of those who believe in Jesus, more say he sinned than didn't – 44 to 41 percent. And more people believe in Satan – 56 percent – than believe in God.
George Barna, director of research at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University and founder of the Barna Group, writes:
"Tens of millions of Americans consider themselves to be Christian but do not believe that God is really in control or cares what happens to them."
Meanwhile, 51 percent of pastors on Barna's Church Panel said church attendance, in terms of virtual attendance, is up compared to typical Sunday in-person worship. Could that uptick change the worldview inventory trend – if more people are in church and gaining a more biblical, traditional perspective of God?
Six-hundred Protestant senior pastors in America serve on Barna's Church Panel. According to the survey, more than 51 percent of pastors answered that virtual attendance has actually been greater than the typical physical Sunday gathering.

If you're struggling to find hope, remember what God has already done

If you're struggling to find hope, remember what God has already done


I've been re-reading some familiar New Testament passages over the past couple of weeks, and I am not alone it seems, as the recent report in Christian Today showed a growing number of people turning to the Bible for comfort and guidance.

YouVersion, the popular Bible reading app, revealed that engagement with its reading plans during Holy Week was 54 per cent higher than last year, and whereas 26.4 million Bible Plan days were completed during Holy Week 2019, that figure has risen to a staggering 40.6 million this year.
Like most of us of course, I have my favourite bits. For example, I have found myself being drawn back to Luke's well-known account of those two disillusioned disciples, one of whom may well have been Jesus' uncle, making their way to a village called Emmaus.
I reckon we could sum up their feelings in one word: heartbroken. They had entertained such high hopes for Jesus, but they had been shattered in the most horrifying way by his brutal execution. All they had left were their precious memories and their faded dreams. But suddenly, everything changed. Jesus suddenly turned up. I'm tempted to suggest they encountered the original 'dead man walking'!
I've been strolling down memory lane over these past few weeks too. One or two memories are a little embarrassing, such as the time I asked God to let Father Christmas bring me some presents even though it was still the middle of July. To be fair I was only seven at the time.
Then there was the earth-shattering afternoon when a nurse turned to my heavily pregnant wife and said, "Yep, there's the second head." Now that did come as a shock; the doctor had said nothing about twins. Until then, we all thought her dates were a little askew!
"Does it matter?" she asked. It most certainly did. We had both resigned our jobs and were about to spend the next three years 'living by faith' (i.e. with no guaranteed income) while I prepared for Baptist ministry. That had come as a complete shock too. Little did I realise that Jesus would 'turn up' at a small prayer meeting and turn a Bible reading into a personal challenge that would change my life.
Then there was the night I baptised a lady named Jo, only to have her sister approach me at the end of the service to tell me that she had been healed of her terrible arthritic pain. That came as a complete surprise too because no one had prayed for her!
And there was that unforgettable Friday morning when we received a request from some Christian friends in the former Yugoslavia. It was the height of the civil war and they told us that they desperately needed ambulances. Within hours of beginning to pray, we received an unexpected call from the West Glamorgan Health Authority informing us that they had four ambulances they no longer needed, so could we use them?
If I'm honest, I have to tell you that I've simply lost count of the number of times I've seen God meeting people's material needs, including my own. I can truly say that He has taken care of us over the years, often in the most incredible ways.
My recent strolls down memory lane have been anything but depressing. However, they have been incredibly challenging too. I have been asking myself what "memory making moments" I will create during this critical moment in this world's history.
The apostle Paul seems to hit the nail on the head when he says, "So be careful how you live. Don't live like fools, but like those who are wise. Make the most of every opportunity in these evil days. Don't act thoughtlessly but understand what the Lord wants you to do."
Challenging, yes. But exciting too, because I've discovered that you never know what might happen when you have the Risen Jesus journeying with you

Kanye West donates to megachurch food drive that has served 350,000 free meals during pandemic

Kanye West donates to megachurch food drive that has served 350,000 free meals during pandemic


A megachurch in LA has served up some 350,000 free meals during the coronavirus pandemic. 
The Dream Center in Echo Park, run by the Pentecostal megachurch Angelus Temple, launched its food drive last month as social distancing measures and business closures threatened to plunge many families into economic hardship and uncertainty. 
Since the food drive launched in mid-March, pastor Matthew Barnett told Fox News that a number of donors have stepped forward to support the effort, including rapper and Christian convert Kanye West, and fast food chain Chick-fil-A. 
Angelus Temple is one of the many churches across the US that have closed their doors since the pandemic started to take hold.
The megachurch is streaming its services online and focusing its efforts on running the food ministry to support families in need. 
In addition to giving out free meals at the Dream Center, it is making deliveries of essential goods to older locals and contributing food to local outreach sites, including one on Skid Row, an impoverished neighbourhood in downtown LA with many homeless. 
Barnett shared a message on Instagram this week thanking donors for making the huge outreach possible. 
"Next car pulling up 350,000 meal!!!!!" he captioned the post. 
"A milestone made because of you. 37 days ago we put a few bags of food on a table and just started. Yesterday 17,000 were fed. I love you!!! You're a part of this story. Every 50,000 we're going to celebrate a milestone." 

God is using Covid-19 to 'prune the Church' - Francis Chan

God is using Covid-19 to 'prune the Church' - Francis Chan


God is using coronavirus to "prune the Church and cut off branches that aren't bearing fruit", Francis Chan has said. 

The pastor and evangelist told the Q 2020 Virtual Summit that the Church would become a lot more fruitful because of it. 
In a bold address, he said that Christians can still be "fearless" in the face of death because even if they die from coronavirus, they are going to Heaven to receive their reward. 
Livestreaming from his home in Hong Kong, he addressed the question of whether the Church will survive the pandemic.
The Crazy Love author said that where the Church is true, it is "going to be fine".  He added that even in such a time as this, Christians are still called to "move forward and go". 
"I hear a lot of talk of people being concerned about whether their church is going to survive," he said.
"The illustration I think of is, if I had a diamond right here, and I just smash it with a hammer, what would happen to that diamond? Nothing. If it's a real diamond, if it shatters, it wasn't real."
Referencing Matthew 16:18, in which Jesus says, "I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it," Chan said it was important to trust in these words.
"This is going to be a group that the gates of Hell can't stand against," Chan said of Christians.
"No virus, no government, no economic this or that, life, death, nothing.
"And so we as believers are supposed to trust the words of Jesus and go.  The Church is going to be fine. If anything, this is the time where God is going to prune the Church and cut off branches that aren't bearing fruit, but it's only going to become more fruitful.
"And so with that type of confidence, we have to move forward and go, what's the worst thing that happened to me? I die and receive the award I've been ... longing for my whole life. We can be fearless."
Chan went on to suggest that it is in such a crisis as the coronavirus pandemic that Christians can shine.  Likewise, the outbreak hasn't come as any surprise to God, he said. 
"We were literally made for this, prepared for this," he said. 
"Jesus promised that there would be this Church that would rise, and He told us that in the latter days, there would be the signs and wonders and that that this Church really would be that unified and that in love with one another."
He added: "God knew this day was coming. And here it is. And so let's move forward. And trust the change."

A Mixed Virus Bag in Iran for Persecuted Prisoners: 'I Was Forced to Endure all Kinds of Torture'


WASHINGTON - In Iran this week, Iranian Christian and human rights activist Mary Mohammadi was handed a suspended sentenced of three months in prison and 10 torturous lashes.
The 21-year-old was arrested in January during an anti- government protest over the Islamic Revolutionary Guard's attack on Ukrainian Flight 752 that killed 176 people.
"It should be mentioned that even before the verdict was handed down, I was forced to endure all kinds of torture, none of which was sanctioned by law, and which ought to be considered crimes in themselves," Mohammadi tweeted.
"I am proud of sympathizing with human beings in the real harsh environment of the streets. This is my conviction and the cost," she continued.
Her sentence comes as Iran has released scores of prisoners due to the coronavirus pandemic.
However, it's a mixed bag for people of faith who become targets of the Islamic regime.
Last month Mohammed Ali Taheri, a Shiite mystic, was granted asylum in Canada after a harrowing prison journey through Iran.
Arrested in 2011 for "touching the wrists of female patients, blasphemy, interfering in medical science," among other charges, Taheri would be sentenced to death twice before being released last year.
He was kept under house arrest and forbidden from discussing his religious beliefs until he fled to Canada along with his family.
The US Commission for International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) featured Taheri in its Prisoners of Conscience Project, a list of people facing persecution around the world because of their religious beliefs.
Commission Vice Chair Gayle Manchin adopted him. She's thrilled he's been released and can now obey his conscience without fear of reprisal.
"The fact that he was able to come out and gain asylum in Canada is a wonderful thing, but on the flip side there are still many in his faith community in Iran that are still in prison," Manchin tells CBN News.
"And there are several that have been vetted and actually would be allowed to leave and come to this country and so I encourage the White House, if we truly believe in religious freedom, then we need to be bringing these individuals that have been vetted and given permission to leave to be brought out safely," she continued.
While there's no way of knowing if including Taheri in USCIRF's Prisoner of Conscience Project protected his life or affected his release, Manchin says it's clear countries pay attention to the commission's work.
"We have found that countries really care what the United States thinks about them and so the fact that we are showcasing people that they have imprisoned or detained or harassed, mistreated in some way, simply because of their faith, is a wake-up call," she explains.

Conservative Group Calls for 'ReOpen Church Sunday'

Conservative Group Calls for 'ReOpen Church Sunday'


(RNS) — A conservative law firm launched a “ReOpen Church Sunday” initiative this week, calling on churches to begin gathering in person again despite reports of the deadly novel coronavirus being spread during worship services.
The campaign is organized by Liberty Counsel, which created a website for the initiative encouraging Christian leaders to begin holding in-person worship the weekend of May 3 — just days ahead of the National Day of Prayer on May 7.
“There’s a lot of practical ways that churches can begin thinking through the process of reopening and, at the same time, protecting the health of all of its participants in the community — and then giving other alternative options,” Mat Staver, founder of Liberty Counsel, told Religion News Service.
Staver’s campaign suggests churches take a phased approach, allowing some worshippers to gather in person while maintaining social distancing but also providing options for people to participate from their cars or, if they belong to an at-risk population, at home via livestream. The campaign’s website also contains a list of suggested safety measures, such as sanitizing worship spaces and checking temperatures at the door.
“We’re encouraging this to begin the process of reopening, not to fill the sanctuaries to maximum capacity,” he said.
Staver, whose group also represents a Florida pastor recently arrested after continuing to hold large worship services despite local regulations, pointed to the Trump administration’s new “Opening Up America Again” initiative as inspiration for ReOpen Church Sunday. He noted that the president’s plan lists places of worship as one of several “large venues” that could “operate under strict physical distancing protocols.”
Pressed about the concern that gathering for worship could result in infection and death, Staver was dismissive, arguing that responsibility should lie with individual worshippers, not government.
“There’s a risk walking out of the door no matter what, COVID-19 or no COVID-19,” he said. “People take precautions: If someone is not comfortable going to an in-person service, then by all means choose a different alternative.”
He added: “(Just) because you had one choir somewhere in the United States that sang together closely and some people got COVID-19 is no reason to punish the rest of the 500,000 churches.”
Incidents of worshipping communities spreading the novel coronavirus are not uncommon. In early April, more than a third of COVID-19 cases in California’s Sacramento County were linked to houses of worship. Multiple coronavirus cases were also linked to a single March 22 event hosted by a Durham, North Carolina, church. Some have expressed concerns that Jewish Purim celebrations in early March jump-started the virus’s spread in New York City. And in Virginia, a pastor who defied social distancing orders and continued to pack his church recently died after contracting COVID-19.
Staver’s views contrast sharply with those of many other religious leaders, who have insisted on keeping houses of worship closed to protect people from infection. When Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced he would allow churches to gather in person this weekend as part of a larger effort to reopen the state, Bishop Reginald T. Jackson, the presiding prelate in Georgia for the African Methodist Episcopal Church, instructed the state’s roughly 520 AME congregations not to gather.
“This decision by the governor puts economic interest above the safety and well-being of the citizens of Georgia,” Jackson told The New York Times.
On Thursday (April 23), liberal religious advocacy group Faith in Public Life teamed up with the Center for American Progress’ Faith and Progressive Policy Initiative to convene a Facebook Live session for clergy, calling on participants to oppose religious exemptions to stay-at-home orders.
“There are a few people who are using this false flag of religious freedom to argue that they can continue to meet,” CAP fellow Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons said while presenting during the livestream.
Meanwhile, some states continue to resist efforts to return to houses of worship. On Wednesday, a federal judge refused to grant a temporary restraining order that would have prevented state and county officials from enforcing California’s ban on in-person worship services during the pandemic.
The case was filed last month by three pastors and one parishioner who alleged the ban violated their First Amendment right to religious freedom.
Even the National Day of Prayer, which often features large crowds in places across the country as people gather to pray and mark the occasion, has undergone reevaluation. In a video posted in early April, National Day of Prayer Task Force President Kathy Branzell said that barring a "miracle" allowing people to meet in person, organizers are preparing to congregate virtually.
"We can shelter in place and still ... pray in agreement and unity with one another," she said.

Nigerian Christian Student Killed, Two Villagers Abducted During Attacks by Islamic Fulani Militants

Nigerian Christian Student Killed, Two Villagers Abducted During Attacks by Islamic Fulani Militants



New reports out of Nigeria say Muslim Fulani militants have launched more murderous attacks against Christians. 
There were reports that the Islamic militants killed Sebastine Stephen, a Christian student, and abducted two villagers on April 16. 
Stephen was visiting his home in Kaduna after his college in northwest Nigeria closed down over concerns with the coronavirus.
Area residents say the armed attackers shot and killed Stephen, then kidnapped Jack Nweke and his wife, who are also Christians. 
"Sebastine Stephen was shot when the armed Fulani herdsmen attacked Gbagyi Villa area in Chikun Local Government Area in the southern end of the city of Kaduna," area resident Hosea Yusuf said. "Stephen raised alarm, warning residents about the invasion of our community as he was still outside at the time the herdsmen came to attack the community. The herdsmen instantly shot him and then proceeded to enter one of the houses close to them, where they kidnapped a couple."
These attacks come just one week after Pastor Stephen Akpor was slain while he was praying for and counseling five couples at Breakthrough Cathedral in southern Nigeria.
"The herdsmen shot the pastor several times and then stabbed him to death," said senior church leader, Isaiah George.
Attacks on Nigerian Christians have steadily risen over the past few years.  Almost 1,000 Christian believers were murdered in the country in 2019.
The Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust (HART), headed up by a member of the British House of Lords, Baroness Cox, estimates that 6,000 Christians in Nigeria have been murdered since 2015.
Nigeria is ranked 12th on Open Doors' 2020 World Watch List of countries where Christians suffer the most persecution.

Jim Caviezel: Sound of Freedom Could Be the Uncle Tom's Cabin of the 21st Century

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