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‘Good Grief, Apple’—John Piper’s Watch Mistakes His Preaching for a Hard Fall, Prompts Call to Emergency Services

John Piper
Screengrab via YouTube @Desiring God

Pastor and theologian John Piper is well known for his passion in preaching. The author of “Expository Exultation: Christian Preaching as Worship,” Piper’s sermons are a full body activity, often involving sweeping hand gestures. 

Recently, however, Piper’s hand gestures were so exuberant that his smartwatch thought that the 76-year-old preacher had taken a hard fall and prompted him to call emergency services in the middle of a sermon. 

A clip posted to Twitter by Tony Reinke, author and host of Piper’s “Ask Pastor John” podcast, captured the humorous moment. 

“God is God,” Piper declared, waving his right hand. He almost continued, but then looked down at his Apple Watch and said, “You know what, my phone is telling me that I fell down.”

RELATED: ‘The Warfare Has Been Intense. The Victories Amazing’—John Piper Reflects on 54 Years of Marriage

“I’m okay,” Piper said as he looked down to dismiss the notification. “I did not fall down.” 

Pointing to someone in the crowd, he asked, “Did you hear it?”

“This has happened twice in my life,” Piper said as the crowd laughed. “I’m preaching and they think I fall down.”

“I’m not falling down,” Piper declared. “I’m standing up! I’m preaching! Good grief, Apple.” 

Fall detection is a standard safety feature of Apple Watches that will flag sudden movement and prompt help in the event a user is injured. 

The moment came during an Advent sermon Piper delivered at South Cities Church in Lakeville, Minnesota, which was formerly the South Campus of Bethlehem Baptist Church, of which Piper was the longtime pastor. The church became a separate congregation distinct from Bethlehem Baptist in 2022. 

Focusing his sermon on Psalm 16, Piper said, “This is the battle of the Christian life: to have God as our good, to have God as our delight, to have God as our treasure.”

RELATED: Did David Rape Bathsheba? John Piper Says ‘Yes’

“That’s the way you go through your days. That’s the way you live the Christian life,” Piper went on to say. “You’re going to get up tomorrow morning, and you’re going to put him right there before you by his word. You’re going to reach out and take him and keep him right there in the treasured, cherished, honored position of your right hand, and you move through life.”

Vatican Releases Pope Benedict XVI’s Spiritual Will: ‘Stand Firm in Faith!’

Benedict XVI
Pope Benedict XVI greets the crowd from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on April 19, 2005, soon after his election. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini, File)

VATICAN CITY (RNS) — In a spiritual will written in 2006 and released by the Vatican on Saturday (Dec. 31), Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI thanked his family and friends, but chiefly God, for standing by him during his long life and career in the church.

Benedict, known for his theological efforts to reconcile faith and reason, offered his last thoughts to the Catholic faithful, urging them to hold on to their faith despite social and philosophical opposition.

“Remain firm in the faith! Don’t be confused!” wrote Benedict, in the testament dated August 29, 2006, a year and four months into his papacy.

Benedict died at the Mater Ecclesiae monastery at 9:34 a.m. on Saturday. He had lived at the monastery inside the Vatican since stepping down as pontiff in 2013, the first pope to do so in more than 600 years.

While science and history can sometimes “offer irrefutable results in contrast with the Catholic faith,” Benedict wrote, his 60 years of experience in theology proved that such theories have often failed to stand the test of time.

“I have lived the transformations of the natural sciences since ancient times and I have been able to see how, on the contrary, apparent certainties against faith have vanished, proving to be not science, but philosophical interpretations only apparently due to science,” he wrote.

Benedict insisted that faith has benefited from a dialogue with science and from understanding its limitations.

He also countered political philosophies that proposed alternate views of the world. “With the passing of each generation I have seen theses that seemed unshakeable crumble, proving to be mere hypotheses,” he added, pointing to the failures of liberal, existential and Marxist ideologies. “I have seen, and I continue to see, how the reasonableness of faith has emerged and is emerging again from the tangle of hypotheses,” he said.

RELATED: Benedict, the ‘other pope,’ dies at 95, leaving behind a unique and complex legacy

Benedict thanked God in the will for guiding him, especially during troubled times. “In retrospect, I see and understand that even the dark and tiring stretches of this journey were for my salvation and that it was precisely in them that He guided me well,” he wrote.

He thanked his parents, “who gave me life in a difficult time,” and his siblings for sustaining him through the years. He expressed heartfelt gratitude for the friends, teachers and students he encountered through the years.

Killings in Kaduna State, Nigeria Darken Christmas Season

Mourners at Dec. 22, 2022 funeral for 40 Christians slain on Dec. 18, 2022 in Mallagum, Kaura County, southern Kaduna state, Nigeria. (Anthony Timothy for Morning Star News)

ABUJA, Nigeria (Morning Star News) – One Christian was killed and 53 were kidnapped on Dec. 25 in southern Kaduna state, Nigeria after more than 40 Christians were slain in the week leading up to Christmas, sources said.

Fulani herdsmen and other terrorists on Dec. 25 attacked Angwan Aku village in Kajuru County, Kaduna state, at about 10 a.m., area resident James Akawu said.

“Church worship service was about to commence when the attackers arrived at the village riding on motorbikes and shooting sporadically,” Akawu told Morning Star News in a text message. “They killed one Christian and kidnapped 53 other Christians who are still being held captive.”

In Kaura County, residents said herdsmen and other terrorists killed 40 Christians in Mallagum on Dec. 18 and another three Christians in Kagoro on Dec. 23, area sources said.

RELATED: Terrorists Attack Christian Communities in Northeast Nigeria

“We’re being attacked again by terrorists. There are gunshots everywhere again this night,” Kagoro town resident Jay Awan told Morning Star News in a Dec. 23 text message. “This is worse. Please we need help.”

Another resident, Amos David, on Dec. 19 sent a text message saying Kagoro was attacked beginning the prior Sunday night.

“Homes and barns are still burning as I send out this message to you,” he told Morning Star News.

The Rev. Stephen Panya Baba, president of the Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA), sent out a prayer request in a group text message on Dec. 23.

“Right now (9:45 p.m.) there are gunshots from the suspected Fulani herdsmen,” Baba said, recalling that the assailants had struck nearby Mallagum the previous Sunday. “The dead were just buried yesterday, Thursday. Now in less than a week, they are back again.”

Kagoro is home to the ECWA Theological Seminary, the ECWA College of Health Technology and several churches. Town resident Emmanuel Gandu said terrorists were destroying both lives and property.

“Family life has been disrupted, the lucky survivors have become refugees in their land waiting for palliatives in an endless genocide they can’t understand,” Gandu said. “Mass graves litter the community and the countryside. Our people can no longer go to their farms for fear of being gunned down or macheted.”

Settlements and villages yet to be attacked have become ghost towns as people have fled, he said.

“Lamentably, the Fulani terrorist attacks have continued unabated as they are heard chanting, ‘Allah akbar [God is greater]’ during the killing and destructive expeditions,” Gandu said. “It is on record that Kagoro has suffered 13 deadly attacks with catastrophic consequences from 2011 to 23/12/2022.”

RELATED: Nigeria Again Excluded From State Department’s CPC List

Without decisive and urgent action, he said, Christians in Kagoro may be wiped out.

In nearby Mallagum, 40 Christians were killed and more than 100 houses were burned down on Dec. 18, area sources said.

“The attackers, whom we know are herdsmen and armed bandits, attacked our town at about 11 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 18,” Mallagum resident Rikichi David said in a text message. “Six members of my family were among those killed.”

Speaking at a funeral for the slain on Dec. 22, the Rev. Benjamin Bala, a Roman Catholic priest, noted that he and others began hearing gunshots after 11 p.m. on Dec.18.

“We made efforts to contact security agents. After one or two calls however, the network became inaccessible,” Bala said. “Within few minutes, many houses were in flames as we could hear helpless people who were trapped, crying for help that did not come until their voices went silent in painful death.”

By the next day, Dec. 19, at least 40 people were killed, many others wounded, 102 homes were burned down along with grain houses, and many people were displaced, the priest said. The attack was executed simultaneously across various villages, he said, with ammunition shells apparently from machinegun-like weapons recovered.

“In this attack, about six families were entirely wiped out,” Bala said, adding that the assailants fled after police later arrived with counter-gunfire.

The Rev. John Hayab, chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Kaduna State Chapter, corroborated that 40 Christians were killed at Mallagum, as did Luka Biniyat, spokesman for the Southern Kaduna People’s Union (SOKAPU).

How To (Painlessly) Connect Generations in Church

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Let me let you in on a little secret. Well, maybe it’s not a secret. Maybe you already know. But here it is…

Some people don’t like the idea of children being in worship on Sunday morning. Others don’t think it’s a good idea for the youth group to be in Sunday school in the same class as older adults.

Still others question whether corporate worship is developmentally appropriate and some wonder if it’s safe, considering the world we live in, for older people and younger people to interact in meaningful ways like mentoring relationships and close friendships.

Now, it’s possible that you do not feel any of these ways… but I promise you, there are some in your congregation that do. And let’s be honest. There are legitimate reasons for their concerns about safety and developmental appropriateness and there are years of experience and tradition and structures that bolster these opinions. And frankly, sometimes the protests arise from parents that are just tired and want a break and a place to receive instead of give.

I’ve written blogs about many these topics and concerns (just click on the links)…but that is not what this post is about. Because sometimes, instead of trying to turn a whole ship, it’s wiser to just introduce some simple course corrections; ones that offer the goal of intergenerational connections without having to completely overhaul programming or interrupt the congregational flow. And sometimes, these course corrections can eventually lead to a culture that is more ready and able to begin turning the ship and embracing new (actually old) ways of worshiping and congregating together, across ages and generations.

Below are a few practices that could allow for your community to begin to connect children, youth, and the elderly (the groups that tend to be left out of communal gatherings) in meaningful ways. I’ve linked to resources as needed and would be happy to discuss any or all in deeper conversation if interested.

Pray For Me Campaign

The Pray For Me campaign connects young people with others in the congregation as prayer partners for an academic year. While there are programming resources available, the church I did this with simply prayed for each other. Each child who participated was giving 3 bookmarks with their picture and a little bit of information on it and they asked 3 adults of varying generations to pray for them for the school year. We had 40 students and 78 adults participate. Each week an email was sent out with Scripture to pray over your student for that week. That was it.

The Pray For Me book is fantastic if your church can afford to buy one for each participant; if not, buy a few copies for your team and each Sunday school and share as needed. Long story short – when people pray for each other, they begin to invest in one another. You can read more about my experience here.

Kids Worship Team

Often times in church, we define “worship team” as the group that gets up in front of church and leads singing. But worship is SO much more than that. Worship is showing reverence and adoration for God and we can do that in so many ways. Our Kid’s Worship Team “led worship” through hospitality (holding doors and handing out bulletins), prayer (going up to the altar to pray when the pastor offered that during prayer time so no one would pray alone) and generosity (taking up the offering and praying over it).

Get creative; how can the kids and youth in your church “lead worship”? In our church now, our kids teach the adults the lesson they learned at the end of the service. It’s incredible to watch how the adults connect to the kids lesson and how the kids get to share what they’ve learned. It takes 3 minutes but it’s 3 minutes well spent for all.  What about you?

Can Cancer Be God’s Servant? What I Saw in My Wife’s Last Four Years

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In March, my beloved wife, Nanci, lost her four-year battle with colon cancer. All 54 years I’ve known her, Nanci loved Jesus. But from a front-row seat, I watched a wonderful—and supernatural—change in those last four years.

In 2019, Nanci wrote to a friend and fellow cancer sufferer,

The cancer battle has been tough. However, my time with the Ancient of Days (one of my favorite names for God) has been epic! He has met me in ways I never knew were possible. I have experienced His sovereignty, mercy, and steadfast love in tangible ways. I now trust Him at a level I never knew I could.

I saw Nanci meditate on Scripture daily, read great books about God, and journal—writing out verses, powerful quotations from Spurgeon and many others, and personal reflections. One unforgettable morning, after meditating on Psalm 119:91, “All things are your servants,” she shared with me what she’d just written:

My cancer is God’s servant in my life. He is using it in ways He has revealed to me and in many more I have yet to understand. I can rest knowing my cancer is under the control of a sovereign God who is good and does good.

Brokenhearted and Thankful

Nine months later, at Nanci’s request and on short notice, our daughters and their families gathered to hear her speak final words of overflowing love for us and unswerving trust in her sovereign King.

As one of our grandsons sat beside her, listening to her struggling to speak and to me reading powerful words from her journals, he said, “Grams, if you can trust God in this, I know I can trust Him in whatever I’ll go through.” Another grandson told her, “I will never forget what you said to us today.”

Exactly one week later, I held her hand and watched her take her last breath in this world under the curse.

Every day during those four years, I witnessed God’s sanctifying and happy-making work in my wife: “We rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope . . . because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit” (Romans 5:3–5).

Nanci and I—and thousands worldwide—prayed daily for her healing. God’s final answer was to rescue her from suffering and bring her into his presence where it’s “better by far” (Philippians 1:23). Through her afflictions, He achieved in her an eternal weight of glory that far outweighs them all (2 Corinthians 4:17). She praised Jesus for it, and I will forever do the same, though I miss her immensely.

Why God Permits What He Does

When our ministry posted Nanci’s words, “My cancer is God’s servant,” someone responded, “WHAT? God does NOT give people cancer. Jesus bore our sicknesses and carried our pains on the cross.”

That reader is not alone in trying to distance God from suffering. But by saying sickness comes only from Satan and the fall, not from God, we disconnect Him from our suffering and His deeper purposes. God is sovereign. He never permits or uses evil arbitrarily; everything He does flows from His wisdom and ultimately serves both His holiness and love.

Joni Eareckson Tada often shares the words of her friend Steve Estes: “God permits what he hates to accomplish what he loves.” God’s “permitting” something is far stronger than it may sound. After all, whatever God permits actually happens; what he doesn’t permit doesn’t happen.

In the final chapter of Job, God reveals that Job’s family and friends “showed him sympathy and comforted him for all the evil that the Lord had brought upon him” (Job 42:11). The author told us from the beginning that Job’s troubles were Satan’s idea and actions. Yet the inspired wording indicates Satan’s efforts were, indirectly by sovereign permission, God’s own doing. Many find this truth disturbing, but properly understood, it should be com­forting. What should be profoundly disturbing is the notion that God stands by passively while Satan, evildoers, diseases, and random accidents ruin the lives of His beloved children.

Charles Spurgeon suffered terribly from depression, gout, rheumatism, neuritis, and a burning kidney inflammation. Yet he said, “It would be a very sharp and trying experience for me to think that I have an affliction which God never sent me . . . that my trials were never measured out by him, nor sent to me by his arrangement of their weight and quantity.”

Mouse Ears – Have Our Churches Become Like Disneyworld?

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

One of my on-line friends took his kids to Disneyworld. He’s seriously addicted to Twitter, so with the help of his iPhone the rest of us got to experience the trip as well. He spent a ton of money and dove into the whole Mickey Mouse experience, souvenirs and all. His final tweet that day: “We have left the park—now what do we do with these mouse ears?”

What do we do with these mouse ears?

This is a parable. What happens if we are so heavily invested in the church-world that we look ridiculous outside the church? It’s one thing to be a fan of Mickey Mouse inside an exclusive park where everyone is a fan. It’s quite another to represent him out in the real world. And I wonder, are mouse ears the best way to do so?

Vandals Deface Church Hosting Sean Feucht ‘Let Us Worship’ New Year’s Eve Event

Sean Feucht
(L) Photo courtesy of Sean Feucht (R) Church vandalism photo's via Twitter @seanfeucht

Let Us Worship” and “Hold The Line” founder Sean Feucht posted images on Instagram and YouTube Saturday morning (Dec. 31) showing his followers that the church he was scheduled to perform at on New Year’s Eve was vandalized with explicit graffiti. Feucht says the vandalism was due to his upcoming performance.

Feucht performed at City View Church in San Diego, California, at 9 P.M. on New Year’s Eve. He stated that police are investigating the vandalism as a hate crime.

“Last night, bigots spread hate and violence at a church where we are holding a New Year’s Eve event in San Diego,” Feucht wrote in his Saturday post. “The police are investigating it as a hate crime. The enemy making the age old (sic) mistake. Persecuting the Church won’t stop the gospel, it’ll spark a wildfire.”

Vandals spray painted numerous epithets and warnings around the church property, including, “F— Sean Feucht,” “Queers Bash Back,” “Christofascists not Welcome,” “BLM,” “Sean Feucht Kindly F— Off,” “Anti-fascist resistance will not falter,” “Separate Church & State,” “Trans Rights Are Human Rights,” “Bigots not welcome,” “No Safe Space for Bigots,” “Transphobes out of SD,” “God Loves LGTBQ,” “Sean Feucht hates queers, Queers Bash Back,” “F— Christian Nationalists. Church←→State,” “Awaken Breeds Hate,” and “Sean Breeds Hate” all over the church’s outside walls and signs.

RELATED: Over 5,000 Join Sean Feucht, Eric Metaxas in Times Square: ‘There’s a Church That’s Rising Up That’s Refusing To Back Down’

Along with defacing the church’s property with vulgarity, symbols, and threats, the vandals also broke a glass window after defacing it with spray paint.

Feucht told ChurchLeaders that the vandalism is “a fear tactic, it’s intimidation, and you know, we don’t get discouraged when fear comes, we actually get emboldened and this is a chance for the church of California to take a stand to rise up in unity and to say, ‘We’re not going to let persecution, bigotry, hatred, vandalism, stop us from worshiping. The church isn’t a building. We’re the bride of Christ and in 2023 we’re rising up like never before.”

A police report has been filed, Feucht said, and the police are currently present at the church and were on location during Feucht’s event. Feucht posted video of the vandalism on his YouTube account here

 

Small Group Leader: Failure Is Not Final

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One of the major themes of the Bible is that: FAILURE IS NOT FINAL. We can risk failure because we know that God is a God of a second chances. We can recover from failure because we know that God forgives and restores.

Consider the story of Jonah. The prophet Jonah was called by God to a missionary ministry to the city of Nineveh, sort of an ancient version of Las Vegas. But when Jonah disobeyed God, he ended up in the belly of a fish, with seaweed wrapped around his face. I suspect he felt like a failure. To be honest, he was a failure at this point. But failure is not final, God is a God of second chances.

Because we are secure in our relationship with Christ, because we know He will forgive us when we need it, because we know he believes in us, we have the security to risk failure. So, I encourage you to try something that may not work. You never know. It just might work. I would not have given you a nickel on a dollar that we would ever sustain a group to meet at 7:30 a.m. Sunday mornings for Bible Study. But it hasn’t failed. In fact, it has served a tremendous need. It has increased the options that we are able to offer to the community. But the point is—it might have failed. No one knew for sure. Only those who risk failure have the opportunity to receive great rewards. You cannot steal second with your foot on first. In order to discover new oceans, you have to lose sight of the shore.

Perhaps there was a time in your life when you sought to do great things for God. . . but failed miserably. Maybe you discovered that it is easier to quit dreaming than to keep failing. Maybe you tried to implement new strategies in your small group ministry, but they didn’t quite work out, and now you are playing it safe. I have good news. Failure is not final. I invite you to become a dreamer again.

This article originally appeared here and is used by permission.

Movies About Bullying: 12 Films to Get Teens Talking

movies about bullying
Image via YouTube / @MOVIECLIPS

Movies about bullying can spark important discussions among teens. Both in-person and online bullying are rampant these days. The result? Emotional trauma, loneliness, even suicide. Most young people have experienced some type of harassment. And some kids in your youth group may have behaved in a bullying way.

Use films about bullying to introduce the tough topic. Create discussion-starter questions and add biblical concepts to lessons. Some films below are more appropriate for older teens. Others will work well with tweens and older elementary students.

Warning: Always preview movies before showing them to kids. Also notify parents about what you’re planning for youth group meetings.

As you teach, remind kids of God’s promise in Deuteronomy 31:6. “Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the LORD your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.”

And while emphasizing bullying prevention, share this command from Ephesians 4:29. “Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.”

12 Movies About Bullying to Show Teens

If you’re showing entire films, obtain copyright permissions first. And remember: You can show just clips. Focus on key scenes about bullying, its impacts, and our Christian response.

1. The Zeroes

In this 2014 film, kids band together to combat neighborhood bullies.

2. Bully

This intense documentary (2012) features several heart-wrenching real-life stories.

3. CyberBully

Use this made-for-TV movie about internet bullying to explore the dark sides of technology.

4. Billy Elliot

Although this film received rave reviews, it’s rated R. So proceed with caution.

Kirk Cameron’s Indianapolis Library Book Reading, After Initially Being Denied, Results in Overwhelming Turnout

Kirk Cameron
Photo by Jesse T. Jackson

Actor Kirk Cameron (Growing Pains, Left Behind, Fireproof, Lifemark) recently reported that he was denied requests to host a reading of his new children’s book “As You Grow” at multiple public libraries around the nation.

Cameron’s new book is published by Brave Books, which releases a new children’s book every month to help parents tackle “difficult topics like gender identity, dangers of communism, cancel culture, critical race theory through family-friendly stories.” According to their website Brave Books’ goal is to “honor God by shaping a future generation of Americans, who will fight for a nation defined by freedom, truth, humility, bravery, and compassion.”

“As You Grow” is described as a “fun story with brilliant art” that “teaches the Biblical truths of the Fruit of the Spirit,” and although the story part of the book doesn’t mention God or contain any Bible verses, Cameron explained that the goal of the book is to teach biblical wisdom and values to children.

“‘As You Grow’ is a fun story that makes the concepts of joy, love, and gentleness easy to understand. After a family finishes going through the book, there are Bible verses within the Games and Talk About It sections that pertain to the story. Galatians 5:22-23Ephesians 2:1-4Romans 5:8James 1:2-3Proverbs 15:4Proverbs 15:1, and Matthew 11:28-29 are all quoted throughout the ‘Games’ and ‘Talk About It’ sections in the back of my book,” Cameron shared.

Brave Books told Fox News, “All of the libraries [including the Indianapolis Public Library] that we have contacted have hosted LGBTQ+ story times with drag queens in the past.”

The Indianapolis Public Library said in a statement that they are highly selective about the events they officially sponsor and promote, and that Cameron was never told he couldn’t rent a reading room to host his own event.

RELATED: Kirk Cameron’s Children’s Book Rejected From Story Hour in Over 50 Public Libraries

However, Brave Books Chief of Staff Zach Bell told ChurchLeaders that wasn’t exactly true.

“Yes, it always costs to rent a room at the Indianapolis Public Library if it isn’t a sponsored event like their “Drag Queen Story Hour,” Bell explained. However, “we were denied to rent a room during our first call with the library, then after the story was published citing their initial denial, the library recanted and allowed us to rent a room for Kirk’s reading.”

Although, unlike the library’s promotion of “Drag Queen Story Hour” this past June, Cameron’s book reading didn’t appear on the library’s event calendar.

“It’s pride month and the start of the summer reading program,” the library’s description of that event read. “Let’s celebrate with our community’s greatest entertainers and literacy advocates, the drag queens! Our theme this year is Discovery, so come dressed up.”

On Thursday (Dec. 29), Cameron hosted his first public library reading at Indianapolis Public Library in Indiana.

Hundreds of families with children waited outside the library. As the doors opened, families made their way up to the sixth floor where Brave Books had rented a private room for Cameron’s reading. While roughly 1,000 people entered the building, all but 170 of them were halted at the door due to the room’s capacity limit.

While Cameron had only planned on one reading, he and the team quickly arranged to do another, so that another 170 people could participate.

After the event, Cameron’s team was informed that library had an auditorium they could have rented that seated 300. It wouldn’t have been as intimate, “but we would have made it work if we had known this many people were going to be here,” the team explained.

‘The Lord Trusted Us With All of These Lives’—Pastors Shelter Over 100 People During Deadly Buffalo Blizzard

buffalo blizzard
Screenshot from Facebook / @Kris Overfield

Pastors in Buffalo, New York, used their church building to shelter over 120 people during a blizzard that devastated the area over Christmas weekend. With the help of the community, Al and Vivian Robinson provided meals, baby formula and other resources during the historic Buffalo blizzard. 

“The one thing that stands out the most was the power that Jesus Christ gave us,” Al Robinson said in a statement to ChurchLeaders. “His love compelled us to take that additional step to reach out for that one more person in the sea, that one more life, it was incredible. I don’t even know how I was able to accomplish all of this without saying it was God [who] did it all. He really did it all.” 

The pastor said what happened was “the most supernatural event I’ve ever had in my entire life, but I can tell you one thing: it’s real, it happened and it saved people’s lives. Jesus was able to pull them [from] the clutches of death that happily waited for them. [God] had a different plan.”

Buffalo Blizzard Pummels Residents

At least 40 people have been reported dead as of this writing from a winter storm that hit Buffalo on Friday, Dec. 23. While the storm, known as “bomb cyclone,” covered more than half of the United States, it “unleashed its full fury on Buffalo, generating a historic lake-effect snow event with hurricane-force winds and whiteout conditions,” according to AccuWeather. Snow continued through the weekend, with some areas of Erie County, where Buffalo resides, receiving more than four feet. Most of the snow fell on the Friday and Saturday right before Christmas

The New York Times (NYT) reports that while officials had been bracing for a winter storm, they failed to anticipate how dangerous and deadly the Buffalo blizzard would be. The unusual amount of snow, generating huge drifts, was accompanied by wind gusts of up to 70 miles per hour. Wind chill temperatures were -20 degrees.

An estimated 30,000 people lost power over the weekend. Hundreds were snowed in and many were stranded in their vehicles. Emergency responders had difficulty rescuing people and were at times stranded themselves. There are stories of people perishing after being trapped in their vehicles or attempting to walk in the storm.

One woman’s mother stepped outside of her home for a moment, but did not return. Hours later, a neighbor found the mother frozen to death. He told the NYT, “It looked like she had blocks of ice on her eyelashes.”

Even when people’s power came back on, many who had taken shelter elsewhere could not go home because their pipes had frozen, leaving their houses a “disaster,” according to Pastor Al Robinson. Some residents looted grocery and convenience stores.

Al and Vivian Robinson are pastors of Spirit of Truth Urban Ministry in Buffalo. Prior to the storm, they had purchased enough food to feed themselves and their nine children for two weeks over the Christmas holiday. The couple live at their church’s campus, and when the storm hit, Vivian began posting on her Facebook page that they could help anyone who was in need of shelter. She also alerted people of others who were stranded and in need.

New Episode of Docuseries Describes Hillsong’s ‘Spectacular Implosion’

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Screenshot from YouTube / @discovery plus

To close out another rough year for Hillsong Church, this week a fourth episode dropped in the Discovery+ docuseries “Hillsong: A Megachurch Exposed.” Airing on partner network TLC, the “Newest Revelations” installment recaps developments that have occurred since March, when the first three episodes premiered.

Interviewees say the docuseries opened a “floodgate of conversation,” with former Hillsong members, students, staff members, and volunteers coming forward to share their stories. Journalists also describe the ongoing—and darkening—bombshell revelations about the beleaguered organization.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a spectacular implosion of a Christian institution,” says Roxanne Stone, managing editor of Religion News Service. “I couldn’t have written it this horrifically if I’d wanted to.”

Hillsong Scandals Kept Snowballing During 2022

Church Leaders has reported extensively on Hillsong-related scandals, including the “moral failures” of Brian Houston (the church’s Australian founder) and Carl Lentz (former pastor of Hillsong New York City). Allegations against various Hillsong leaders include sexual abuse and coverups, extramarital affairs, rape, lavish lifestyles, alcohol-fueled parties, and mistreatment of church staff and volunteers. Meanwhile, leaders reportedly placed strict limits on the dating behaviors and dress codes of churchgoers.

“Hillsong: The Newest Revelations” mentions Houston’s yearlong leave of absence, which began in January 2022. The following month, Senior Interim Pastor Phil Dooley warned congregants that an upcoming docuseries would be attempting to “hurt the church.” On March 23, the day before the first episode aired, Houston resigned as Global Senior Pastor. Though that was likely meant to “be a punctuation mark,” says Stone of RNS, it was “only the beginning.”

On April 11, a report about Hillsong NYC was leaked to The Christian Post. Reading all those allegations, says senior investigative reporter Leonardo Blair, was “eye-opening, shocking, disheartening.” The church’s hierarchy and power dynamic encouraged subordinates to be “invisible,” he says, and Hillsong leaders, especially the men, “appeared to be a frat party.”

Stone describes “excess at every level,” with Hillsong NYC having a “uniquely difficult and manipulative” leadership structure—minus supervision and accountability. According to Blair, Lentz was “a king of his own castle.” Both journalists note that Hillsong Global knew about some concerns and allegations but didn’t act.

A ‘Clear Pattern’ of Corruption

In the “Hillsong: A Megachurch Exposed,” Stone says although a “clear pattern” of scandals emerged, Hillsong leaders kept insisting they weren’t covering anything up.

Another leaked report detailed rape allegations against Reed Bogard, who had been put in charge of Hillsong Dallas. When Brian Houston announced in April 2021 that Hillsong Dallas was closing, he cited the pandemic and the misuse of funds. According to the leaked report, Houston knew about the rape charge but didn’t address it.

‘It’s a Dangerous Proposition’—Dallas Jenkins Describes Writing Process for ‘The Chosen,’ Discusses LDS Controversies With Allie Beth Stuckey

Dallas Jenkins The Chosen Allie Beth Stuckey
Screengrab via YouTube @Allie Beth Stuckey

Dallas Jenkins, creator and director of “The Chosen,” appeared on Allie Beth Stuckey’s “Relatable” podcast last week to discuss the show’s third season.

In their conversation, Jenkins shared how he became a Christian filmmaker, reflected on the approach he takes when writing the show, and the two discussed the recurring accusations of which the show has been subject for alleged connections with the Church of Latter-day Saints and LDS theology. 

Speaking to how he became passionate about filmmaking, Jenkins cited the 1975 film “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” as his inspiration. The film ignited a desire in Jenkins to use filmmaking to evoke a meaningful, emotional response in the hearts of viewers.

Only, when it came to faith-based films and media, Jenkins was never really impressed with what he saw.  

“My thought was, as a young guy growing up—I grew up in the faith and as a Christian—I loved TV and movies but there wasn’t anything that represented my faith that I liked as much as the normal TV and movies I would watch,” Jenkins said. “If there was a Christian movie that came out, it wasn’t any good.” 

RELATED: ‘The Chosen’ Director on How He Deals With ‘Toxic,’ Untrue Criticism

Nevertheless, Jenkins knew that he wanted to incorporate his faith into his films.

“So I didn’t know what kind of movies I necessarily wanted to make, but I knew that I wanted to get into that in some way,” Jenkins said. “And I thought it’d be good to represent my stories in some way, stories of faith.”

“I remember there was a moment,” Jenkins continued. “I think it was around 2007 or so, I was mowing the lawn, and I felt like God just put it really strongly on my heart. Because I was kind of bad-mouthing/apologizing for faith-based films. ‘Like I don’t really wanna do that because they’re so bad.’ And God was like, ‘My people deserve good stuff too. So why don’t you just make it better?’”

“I’ve found that people that rejected stories of faith were rejecting more the quality than they were necessarily the story,” Jenkins said. “There are plenty of people who aren’t believers who will watch a movie or TV show that comes from a faith perspective or is about a faith story if it’s compelling…We found that with ‘The Chosen.'”

Ironically, when Jenkins got the idea for “The Chosen,” he didn’t feel confident that it would ever become a reality. He had directed a film that had just bombed at the box office, and “there’s not people lining up around the block to do a Jesus show.” 

Nevertheless, when Jenkins created a short film for his church about the birth of Christ from the perspective of shepherds, it went viral on social media, leading to the eventual crowdfunding of “The Chosen.”

“I’m not surprised, because God can do anything,” Jenkins said. “But I wouldn’t have been surprised if it would have failed as well—for whatever you want to consider ‘failure.’”

RELATED: ‘The Chosen’ Under Fire for Apparent Reference to The Book of Mormon

While “The Chosen” chronicles the life and ministry of Jesus, Jenkins and his team have taken considerable creative license with many of the stories, often imagining the details left out of well-worn biblical accounts, as well as creating other vignettes whole cloth. 

Terrorists Attack Christian Communities in Northeast Nigeria

Himalayan Explorer based on work by Uwe Dedering, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

ABUJA, Nigeria (Morning Star News) – Members of the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) on Dec. 19 burned homes in Borno state, Nigeria, nine days after terrorists killed a pregnant Christian woman in the same area, sources said.

The ISWAP terrorists attacked predominantly Christian Jibwiwi (Debiro) village in Hawul County and Ngulde village in Askira/Uba County at about 6 p.m., burning several houses and destroying livestock and storehouses of harvested crops, said area resident Shawulu Yohanna.

“They rode on motorcycles, armed with guns and cluster bombs, which they used in attacking two communities,” Yohanna said in a text message to Morning Star News. “The people in the two villages were able to escape the onslaught as no one was killed.”

On Dec. 10, terrorists invaded a home in Hawul County’s Pelachiroma village and shot dead a pregnant Christian woman, Mary Barka Paul Sawa, Yohanna said. Sawa’s husband, Paul Sawa, was wounded in the attack before escaping.

RELATED: Muslim Fulani Herdsmen Kill Christians With Machetes While Farming in Nigeria

“Her husband escaped the attack with gunshot wounds,” Yohanna said. “Their house was raided by the terrorists at night.”

Habila Lemaka of the Hawul Local Government Police Division told Morning Star News in a text message confirmed the attacks on the three communities.

“Remember that these areas have been under constant attacks from the terrorists,” Lemaka said.

Sani Shatambaya, spokesman of the Borno State Police Command, concurred that ISWAP members attacked the areas.

“It is true that the areas in question were attacked by ISWAP terrorists,” Shatambaya said. “Military and police personnel have been deployed to the affected communities in order to repel these incursions by the terrorists.”

An Abubakar Shekau-led faction of Boko Haram in 2016 formally aligned with the Islamic State and changed its name to Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), though many Nigerians still refer to the Shekau-led faction of ISWAP by its original name, Boko Haram.

RELATED: Nigeria Again Excluded From State Department’s CPC List

Nigeria led the world in Christians killed for their faith last year (Oct. 1, 2020 to Sept. 30, 2021) at 4,650, up from 3,530 the previous year, according to Open Doors’ 2022 World Watch List report. The number of kidnapped Christians was also highest in Nigeria, at more than 2,500, up from 990 the previous year, according to the WWL report.

Nigeria trailed only China in the number of churches attacked, with 470 cases, according to the report.

In the 2022 World Watch List of the countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian, Nigeria jumped to seventh place, its highest ranking ever, from No. 9 the previous year.

This article originally appeared here.

US Bankruptcy Court Approves $121M Clergy Abuse Settlement

nm clergy abuse case
FILE - Archbishop John C. Wester, head of the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, N.M., talks to reporters on Nov. 29, 2018, in Santa Fe. A federal bankruptcy judge has approved a $121 million reorganization plan for one of the oldest Roman Catholic dioceses in the U.S. as it tries to stem financial losses from clergy abuse claims that date back decades. The Archdiocese of Santa Fe announced the outcome Thursday, Dec. 29, 2022. In a statement, Wester said he hopes the agreement will bring a measure of justice and relief to victims. (AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan, File)

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A federal bankruptcy judge on Thursday approved a $121 million reorganization plan for one of the oldest Roman Catholic dioceses in the U.S. as it tries to stem financial losses from clergy abuse claims that date back decades.

The Archdiocese of Santa Fe in New Mexico said U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David T. Thuma confirmed the agreement during a hearing in which he commended the parties for working through what had been an arduous process.

In a statement, Archbishop John C. Wester thanked the panel of abuse survivors who represented fellow survivors in their claims against the archdiocese. He described it as challenging work as the group continued to deal with the aftermath of their own abuse.

“While I hope and pray that the bankruptcy outcome will bring a measure of justice and relief to the victims of clergy sexual abuse, I realize that nothing can ever compensate them for the criminal and horrendous abuse they endured,” Wester said.

He also pledged that the archdiocese will remain vigilant in upholding its zero tolerance policy by promptly responding to allegations and cooperating with local authorities.

The global priest abuse scandal has plunged dioceses around the world into bankruptcy and has cost the Roman Catholic Church an estimated $3 billion or more.

Aside from providing monetary payments to nearly 400 claimants, the terms of the settlement in New Mexico require the establishment of a public archive of documents showing how decades of abuse occurred around the state.

The result of nearly four years of legal wrangling, the reorganization plan effectively halted more than three dozens civil lawsuits in state court that alleged abuse of children by clergy and negligence by church hierarchy. Court records show the accusations dated from the 1940s to the 2010s.

The plan calls for the archdiocese, aided by contributions from parishes, to put up $75 million toward the total settlement fund, the Albuquerque Journal reported. Insurance companies agreed to pay $46.5 million.

In a side agreement, five religious orders that faced pending lawsuits will pay an additional $8.4 million to be shared by certain claimants. The orders include the Servants of the Paraclete, which ran a now-defunct treatment center for troubled priests and was accused of furnishing the archdiocese with priests and other clergy who preyed on children and teens.

Archdiocese attorney Thomas Walker said that of 376 survivor claimants who cast ballots on the plan, four voted to reject and three did not indicate acceptance or rejection. At least two-thirds of the abuse survivors who filed claims had to approve the plan.

Albuquerque attorney Brad Hall said his legal team has dealt with more than 250 clergy abuse survivors over the decade leading up to the bankruptcy filing in December 2018 and have talked with family members of others who had heart-wrenching stories.

“As for the actual survivors, it is our hope that some small compensation, however inadequate it might feel like to some of them, will help with a sense of closure and some accountability,” Hall said.

California Church Loses Building Due to Earthquake

Damage to the church building focused on a two-story wing and the basement below the sanctuary, though the foundation remained in good shape. Photo courtesy of Rod Sanderson

RIO DELL, Calif. (BP) — A Southern Baptist congregation will continue to meet in its sanctuary after a 6.4 earthquake Dec. 20 left other buildings incapable of long-term use, the church’s pastor told Baptist Press.

Inspectors arrived at Rio Dell Baptist Church Dec. 25 shortly before Christmas Day services, said Pastor Rod Sanderson. They marked an education wing and the downstairs as only available for “limited entry,” meaning items can be removed, but no meetings can take place there.

Interior walls moved about five inches and remain displaced, while outside walls have returned to normal alignment. Some exterior siding containing asbestos fell when nail fasteners popped off.

“The foundation is in pretty good shape, but the walls have moved. Windows are broken. Some doors won’t shut,” he said.

RELATED: Mayfield Pastor and Wife Survive Tornado by Hiding in Church Closet

Rio Dell is roughly ten miles east of Ferndale, which is located near the coast and experienced the strongest waves of the early morning earthquake.

Sanderson’s father, Edward, served as pastor of Rio Dell for 22 years until his son stepped into the role in 1992. The area went through a series of earthquakes that year, too, Sanderson said.

And even though the events aren’t uncommon to the area, earthquake insurance is so cost-prohibitive that very few people buy it, said Sanderson. He’s worked in the lumber business for years and expects repairs to reach $100,000. The church had already saved $12,000 and inquired about Colony Roofers for a new roof.

“Now we have a different goal and different numbers,” he said.

No members were hurt from the earthquake, he added, but homes did experience broken items.

Sanderson arrived early Christmas morning to make sure the heater was working. The inspectors arrived a few minutes later.

For the next 45 minutes, the inspection included a discussion over whether the buildings should be red-tagged or marked as restricted due to imposing an imminent threat.

The church retained its sanctuary for use, but there will be some modifications.

RELATED: Family Credits East End Nashville Church With Saving Their Lives in Tornado

“Everything will be there,” said Sanderson. “Sunday School, meetings. We’re probably going to move some tables from the fellowship hall in there until we can get something resolved for classrooms.”

The service Dec. 25 brought a time of worship, but also reflection, Sanderson said.

“This has taught us some things,” he said. “What to prioritize, how important we are to each other. Our people have talked about how it has led them to be closer.”

This article originally appeared at Baptist Press.

R.C. Sproul: A Rose Is a Rose

a rose is a rose
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A rose is a rose is a rose. This dictum reinforces the adage that a rose by any other name is still a rose. The idea is that the essence of the rose is not conditioned by what name is attached to it. It is its res, not its nomina, that determines what it is. In different languages, the same flower is known by different names, but it is still the same flower.

When we apply this idea to theology things get a bit more complicated. Indeed the rose adage has been transferred indiscriminately to religion in order to create a theological concept. The concept is: “God by any other name is still God.” Now certainly, it is true that the immutable essence of God is not changed by the alteration of His name. In English, we may say “God,” in German “Gott,” in Greek “Theos,” yet all these names or words are used to point to the same Deity.

Beyond this, however, things get murky. It is a quantum leap to go from saying that God by any other name is still God, to saying that all the great religions in the world believe in the same Being though they call Him different names.

This irrational leap is prodded by the popular analogy of the mountain. This analogy notes that their are many roads up the mountain. Some progress on a more direct route, while others wind about on more circuitous roads, but sooner or later they all arrive at the same place, at the top of the mountain.

Do All Roads Lead to God?

So, it is argued, there are many roads that lead to God. They may be different routes but they all end up in the same place—with God Himself. That is, the differing roads indicate no difference in the God who is found. God’s being, then, becomes the lowest (or highest) common denominator of all religions.

The road analogy is buttressed by the democratic truism that all religions are equal under the law. The fallacy in this axiom is thinking that just because all religions enjoy equal tolerance under the civil law, they therefore are all equally valid. That might be true if there were no God, but then it would be better to say that with respect to their ultimate affirmation they are all equally invalid.

It is a quantum leap to go from saying that God by any other name is still God, to saying that all the great religions in the world believe in the same Being though they call Him different names.

To argue that all religions ultimately believe in the same God is the quintessential nonsense statement. Even a cursory examination of the content of different religions reveals this. The nature of the Canaanite deity Baal differs sharply from the nature of the biblical God. They are not remotely the same. This sharp distinction is also seen when comparing the God of Israel with the gods and goddesses of Roman, Greek, or Norse mythology.

The Nature of God and of Christ

The problem becomes even more complex when we consider that sometimes different religions use the same name for God while their views of the nature of God differ radically. Consider, for example, the religion of Mormonism. It claims to embrace the Bible (as well as the Book of Mormon, Pearl of Great Price, and Doctrine of Covenants) and professes belief in the God of the Bible as well as the biblical Christ. Mormons call themselves The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Yet historic Christianity does not accept the Mormon religion as a branch or denomination of Christianity. Why? Because the Mormon view of the nature of God and of Christ differs sharply at essential points of faith. For example, Mormonism categorically rejects the full deity of Christ. Christ is said to be pre-existent, but not eternal. He is highly exalted—indeed revered—but He remains a creature, not Creator, in Mormon theology.

What about Islam? Islam is one of the largest religions in the world. In the city of Jerusalem, the Dome of the Rock is displayed as one of the most beautiful sacred shrines on the planet. Islam claims to embrace the God of the Old Testament. It holds the biblical patriarchs in high esteem and even accords a certain respect to Jesus as a great prophet, but He pales in significance to Mohammed, who is the supreme prophet in the credo: “Allah is God and Mohammed is His Prophet.”

New Year: New Worship Stage Gear

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

So: you bought small Christmas gifts for people on your worship team—good for you! But what about the “gifts” for the worship stage gear or the worship team’s green room? Why not start of the New Year by making sure that your worship stage or green room are well equipped with useful items? I’ve already vetted all the options, read the reviews and chose the perfect products.

New Year: New Worship Stage Gear

  1. Start a worship library: here are some great titles your team should read. These are “easy” reads, but still intellectually rich and lasting.
  1. Low Profile Folding Guitar Stand: every worship stage gear set could use a couple of extra guitar stands, especially the kind that break down for easy transport, but still can hold the instrument safely. This particular stand is a personal favorite.
  2. Throat-Coat Tea is world-famous with singers in every genre of music.It really should be part of your worship stage gear! It’s perfect for worship leaders or anyone that’s just “not feeling it” early Sunday morning. And having a hot water kettle for warming up water to drinkable warmth is a must!!
  3. Theo Wheel (a simple music theory tool): This really well designed Theo Wheel makes music theory easy. It’s a must around any worship green room or in the office of a music leader.
  4. Turn any guitar player into part of the rhythm section: Check out this fun foot-tambourine. By just stomping your foot, you will turn you into the drummer you’ve always wanted to be. Bonus: check out this very cool ankle shaker.
  5. In-Ear Monitors. Nowadays, most musicians are using in-ear monitors to listen to what they are playing on stage. I can’t count the number of times I have left my monitors at home and it’s always a great idea to have another extra pair. Back-up monitors are a must for worship stage gear. These in-ear monitors are really affordable and have incredible reviews! Tip: I suggest buying the clear ones since they are the most in-demand and least obstructive on the stage.

 

 

Anger or Autism? Helpful Information for KidMin Workers

anger
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When children act out, is it due to anger or autism? How do you tell the difference? Read on to discover helpful insights for children’s ministry workers.

A friend sent me her pastor’s outline for a Sunday sermon. Based on that and my friend’s notes, the message was biblically grounded. Titled “The Christ-Honoring Home,” it represented common evangelical views about parenting.

First, the sermon covered 10 ways parents unnecessarily provoke anger in children. Topics included discipline, inconsistent parenting, favoritism, neglect, unrealistic expectations, and pride. All the points and Scripture references were excellent.

Then the second half highlighted signs a child may exhibit if parents provoke them. Scripturally unsound parenting might lead to behavioral challenges in children, the pastor said.

When Parents Provoke Children to Anger

This information comes from the sermon outline:

Signs of parental provocation

  • Kids pull away from their parents
  • Angry outbursts
  • Lack of joy, seldom smile
  • Rebellion against authority
  • Kids say mean things to parents or others

Signs of Autism Spectrum Disorder

Next, let’s look at children with special needs.

Possible signs of an autism spectrum disorder:

  • Little or no interaction
  • Lack of warm, joyful expression
  • Lack of sharing interest or enjoyment
  • Disruptive and physically aggressive
  • Tend to lose control when angry and frustrated
  • May break things, attack others, or hurt themselves

These are from First Signs Incorporated and The National Institute of Mental Health.

While reading the sermon notes, I realized something. The church can be a place of great misunderstanding for special-needs families.

Looking Forward

The need for accommodations is growing in churches. And the kidmin team is often responsible for education and awareness. Teachers and helpers are first responders to unusual or difficult conduct. If volunteers aren’t informed about special needs, they may assume misbehavior is due to rebellion or poor parenting.

Many congregations successfully include children with special needs and learning disabilities. They realize that “one size doesn’t fit all” for interpreting behavior challenges. A child’s inability to communicate is often a factor.

Conversations between the kidmin team and parents may be warranted and wise. But dialogue can start much differently when church workers consider possibilities. An undisclosed or undiscovered disability may be driving problematic behavior. By not jumping to conclusions, we’re re more likely to generate a positive outcome.

For more about anger and autism, see this article: “Autism parents’ plea:  Understand kids’ meltdown

‘The Chaos, the Anger, the Hatred, the Divisiveness’—Kevin Sorbo Says ‘The Time Is Right’ for His New ‘Left Behind’ Movie

Kevin Sorbo
Kevin Sorbo speaking at the 2015 Phoenix Comicon Fan Fest at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Actor and outspoken Christian Kevin Sorbo says that the upcoming release of his new movie, “Left Behind: Rise of the Antichrist,” seems timely considering the state of the world right now—although he admits he does not know if the end times are at hand.

“I’m not one of those guys that stands at a corner and says, ‘The end is near,’” Sorbo told Fox News Digital. “I don’t know when it’s going to happen. It could be 1,000 years from now. I don’t know. I don’t pretend like I know.”

Sorbo observed, however, that “reading ‘Revelation’ and looking at what that book says, and reading the ‘Left Behind’ books, which I read many, many years ago, it just seems like wow, this is like a perfect set-up to what’s happening right now in the world with all the chaos, the anger, the hatred, the divisiveness.”

Kevin Sorbo: It ‘Seems Like the Time Is Right’

Kevin Sorbo is an actor who became famous after starring in the TV series, “Hercules: The Legendary Journeys,” which ran from 1995 to 1999. He later starred as Captain Dylan Hunt on the series, “Andromeda.” More recently, Sorbo has become involved in faith-based films, including the first movie in the “God’s Not Dead” franchise, where he played an atheist professor. Sorbo shared with Fox that he does not like the term, “faith-based,” because “every movie’s got a faith-based element to it.”

“Left Behind: Rise of the Antichrist,” which Sorbo directs and stars in, is set to release Jan. 26, 2023. The film also stars Neal McDonough, an actor known for his roles in “Band of Brothers,” “Minority Report” and “Justified.” McDonough, a Christian who refuses to do kissing or sex scenes out of respect for his wife, has also started pursuing faith-based films in recent years. 

“Left Behind: Rise of the Antichrist” is based on the bestselling “Left Behind” book series, co-authored by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins, the latter of whom is the father of “The Chosen” creator Dallas Jenkins. The first book in the series was published in 1995, and the series contains 16 books total. 

Christian actor Kirk Cameron, who became famous for starring in the sitcom “Growing Pains,” starred in the first three films based on the “Left Behind” series, the first of which released in 2000. Actor Nicolas Cage starred in the 2014 reboot. A press release about the latest “Left Behind” film says it “delivers an updated storyline” from the 2014 film and “shows how today’s events set the stage for the return of Christ and the coming apocalypse. “

“You look at the chaotic world we’re living in right now,” said Sorbo. “It’s almost biblical. It’s almost got a revelation theme going to it in a way.” It’s been seven years since the actor was approached about being involved in the movie, but he thinks its release is coming exactly when it should. “I don’t know, maybe this was meant to happen and come out now, but it just seems like the time is right,” he said.

Current events, most notably the COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine, have led some Christians to wonder if these circumstances correspond to passages in the Bible, or the “end times” as some understand it. Some church leaders believe the answer is yes, while others do not. 

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