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US Houses of Worship Increase Security After Shootings

FILE - Crime scene tape surrounds Geneva Presbyterian Church on Tuesday, May 17, 2022, in Laguna Woods, Calif. A gunman opened fire on May 15 during a luncheon at the church, killing one and injuring five other members of a Taiwanese congregation that met there. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, File)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Rev. Steven Marsh never thought he would see the day his church in Laguna Woods, California — a town of 16,500 populated largely by retirees — would be spending $20,000 a month for security.

Then a gunman opened fire on May 15 during a luncheon at Geneva Presbyterian Church, where Marsh is senior pastor, killing one and injuring five other members of a Taiwanese congregation that met there. Officials said the man, who was motivated by political hatred against Taiwan, chained the church’s doors shut and hid firebombs inside before shooting at the gathering of elderly church members.

Houses of worship are meant to be places of shelter, reflection and peace, where strangers are welcome. But the recent string of high-profile mass shootings in the U.S. is a reminder violence can happen anywhere, prompting some faith leaders to ramp up security.

At Geneva Presbyterian, armed security guards now stand watch every weekday and during Sunday services. The church also is adding more security cameras, developing an active shooter plan and applying for Department of Homeland Security funding.

RELATED: Should Church Security Teams Carry Weapons? Ed Stetzer Asks and the Responses Might Surprise You

“We’re not trying to militarize the church,” Marsh said. “We prayed about it and made a decision to have armed security as an act of faith.”

Without the new security measures, Marsh predicted that a mass exodus by the congregation and the schools on the church’s campus would have followed the shooting.

Creating a space that is both safe and welcoming is possible, said Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker, the former spiritual leader of Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville, Texas.

In January, he and three others were taken hostage by a pistol-wielding man during a Shabbat service. Cytron-Walker threw a chair at the gunman — a courageous act that helped them safely escape — after a nearly 11-hour standoff. He credits the several rounds of active shooter training he has taken.

“When you are unable to run away or find a hiding place, you need to find a way to act and to fight back,” Cytron-Walker said. “When we were most afraid he was going to kill us, I saw a moment I had been looking for all day long.”

RELATED: Suspect in California Church Shooting Accused of Hate Crime

Cytron-Walker now leads Temple Emanuel in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. As he works on a security plan with his new congregation, he is being mindful of how a welcoming synagogue can enhance safety “because someone who wants to do harm can see that they are not going to be able to walk in anonymous.”

Russian Baptist Church Helps 40 Slavic Refugee Families Resettle in U.S.

Newlyweds Maryna Stupak and Dmytro Yefimov immigrated to Sacramento, Calif., when they were unable to return to Ukraine after their honeymoon. Russian Baptist Church there has helped them with housing, getting documentation, and other needs. Photo courtesy of Baptist Press.

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (BP) – Russian Baptist Church in West Sacramento has honed its purpose while helping diverse refugees of Russia’s war on Ukraine resettle here, Senior Pastor Mikhail Avramenko told Baptist Press.

“In all, we see that God is working with all of us, bringing us to a deeper understanding of who we are, why we are here and what can be done for the glory of God in this situation,” Avramenko said. “One thing we had noticed for the last two months, is that there are many refugees who come not from Ukraine, but from Russia or the former Russian republic. We are helping all newcomers.

“Ethnicity, language or nationality should never be a basis for any argument or disputes.”

Avramenko and other leaders of the church of about 2,700 Russian, Ukrainian and other Slavic worshipers decry the war. He and other pastors there have led the church in settling 40 refugee families in California since April, hiring a temporary employee to work with and coordinate volunteers focused on the outreach.

RELATED: After 43 Days, Ohio Pastor Hears From Daughter Missing in Ukraine

Russian Baptist welcomes refugees to worship services and encourages them to participate in fellowship. Transportation, housing, court appointments, banking, social services, medical care and school enrollment are among necessities the church helps refugees navigate.

“That is an endless service and very appreciated by refugees because most of the time, they don’t know where to start,” Avramenko said. The church received a family of six July 12 and helped them apply for social services including food stamps and medical assistance the very next day, he said.

Tatiana Vinnikova, a Ukrainian member of the church, is the new hire. She helps refugees not only find housing, but navigate governmental regulations and documentation.

“During these months, I realized that I like to serve such families. I myself am from Ukraine and my heart is breaking from what is happening now in my country,” Vinnikova said. “Ukrainian refugees need, first, moral and emotional support, housing, transportation, work, (and help) in matters related to documents and legalization in the United States. I will do this as long as they need me.”

RELATED: ‘God Is Good!’: Ukrainian-American Pastor Freed by Russian Kidnappers

The U.S. is poised to welcome about 180,000 Ukrainian refugees as a result of the war, the Migration Policy Institute estimates, including the nearly 60,000 eligible for Temporary Protected Status for 18 months announced in March, 100,000 the Biden administration authorized in April through a combination of the Uniting for Ukraine program and other more permanent entry pathways, and a reported 20,000 Ukrainians who arrived through Mexico without authorization to enter in a practice that ended in April.

Vinnikova recalls Ukrainian couple Maryna Stupak and Dmytro Yefimov, who married in Kyiv in early February before the invasion, but were unable to return home after their honeymoon because of the war.

“They heard about such a program as Uniting for Ukraine and decided to fly to the USA. They had to fly from the Dominican Republic. It was not an easy way for a young family,” Vinnikova said. “Our church helped them with housing. They lived for more than two months in a family where they were taken care of, they received the necessary documents and passed for driving.”

How to Find Peace in the Midst of Difficult Circumstances

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Life isn’t always easy, and it definitely seems like some seasons are far more difficult than others. And the truth is that we can’t avoid the hurt and pain that comes with difficult circumstances.

Maybe you’re facing a difficult circumstance and you couldn’t have seen it coming. Or maybe you did see it coming, and the pain is still just as great.

Facing circumstances that could potentially unhinge everything you ever knew is nothing new for humanity. But when we’re under the pressure and anxiety of a difficult, life-altering circumstance, one of our greatest challenges is finding peace.

How can you find peace when you’re in the midst of a circumstance that could alter the course of your life? Here are three things.

1. Trust God, Not the People Making Decisions.

In the midst of difficult situations, there’s often a decision that needs to be made. The hard part? The decision that will eventually be made is completely out of your control.

When waiting on a decision, it becomes far too easy to be filled with fear, despair, frustration, or even hurt. The unknown is terrifying. When a decision is left in the hands of someone else, it feels like there isn’t anything you can do. But there is.

You can choose peace.

Choosing peace means trusting God with the decision being made, regardless of whose hands it’s in. It can be someone you love and trust or someone who has everything but your best interest in mind. It doesn’t matter who the decision maker is. God is the one you can trust.

Look at the story of Joseph. He was sold into slavery by his own brothers. They most definitely were not trustworthy, nor did they have his best intentions in mind. Then the Midianites turned around and sold him to an officer of Pharaoh. After all of that, he winds up in prison!

This entire time, Joseph didn’t get a say in what happened to him, where he went, or how he was treated. He was not the decision maker in any of these situations, and yet the outcomes all affected his life directly.

Now you may not be in a circumstance where people are actively seeking evil against you. But you might be in a place where you don’t get to call the shots. You don’t get to determine the fate of this situation that will dramatically affect your life.

So, how do you find peace when the decision is out of your hands? You trust God.

At the end of Joseph’s long journey, he declared to his brothers that what they meant for evil, God meant for good.

If we really trust the goodness and faithfulness of our God, then we can be filled with peace. We can know that regardless of anyone else’s intentions, God will use it for good. You might not see that goodness being worked out right away. But you can fully trust that God is true to his word.

2. Stay Faithful to What You Know You Are Called to Do.

I don’t know about you, but when I’m faced with difficult circumstances, I try to run through every outcome in my head. I attempt to analyze and figure out the best way for me to respond in this situation.

Ugh. If only things were that black and white. It’d be nice to just be able to calculate the situation and know exactly how to move forward.

If We Fear God, We Can Trust His Provision

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There are people who reason, If I give generously, I’ll have to worry about where the money will come from to replace what I’ve given. But Jesus actually says the opposite. Immediately after He commands us not to store up treasures on Earth but store them in Heaven (Matthew 6:19-21), He says we are to adopt the right perspective (verses 22-23) and serve the right master—God, not money (verse 24).

Our Lord immediately follows this statement by saying three times, “Do not worry” (Matthew 6:25, 31, 34, NIV). Anyone who is investing in the right treasury, adopting the right perspective, and serving the right Master has nothing to worry about. In contrast, those who invest in the wrong treasury (Earth, not Heaven), adopt the wrong perspective (the temporal, not the eternal), and serve the wrong master (money, not God) have every reason to worry.

“For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, “Abba! Father!” (Romans 8:15, ESV). Since we can’t serve two masters, our fear of not having enough reveals our true master.

Jesus specifically tells us not to worry about life’s necessities—food, drink, and clothes. Then He says, “But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you” (Matthew 6:33). According to our Lord, giving isn’t what leaves us short of material provision. In fact, it’s part of the solution to our material needs. God promised to provide for givers in Old Testament times (Malachi 3:8-11). And Jesus promised the same in the New (Luke 6:38). When we give away our treasures, we are seeking God’s Kingdom first. And therefore, “all these [material needs] will be added to” us.

Paul told the Philippians, “I have received everything in full, and I have an abundance. I am fully supplied, having received from Epaphroditus what you provided—a fragrant offering, an acceptable sacrifice, pleasing to God” (Philippians 4:18, CSB). Their financial gifts were gifts to God. Since they gave so generously to provide for him and his work, Paul was confident God would provide the same for them: “My God will supply all your needs according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:19, CSB). This is a familiar promise, but most people don’t realize that in context, it is specifically for givers who have stretched themselves to become sacrificial partners in Kingdom ministry. “For even in Thessalonica you sent gifts for my need several times” (v.16).

In some cases, God’s provision is obvious—we get an unexpected check in the mail or are given something we thought we’d have to buy. One time Nanci and I discovered an error we’d made in our bank balance, finding we had significantly more money than we realized.

In other cases, God’s provision is less obvious but equally generous. A washing machine that should have broken down a decade ago keeps working. A car with more than two hundred thousand miles runs for three years needing no repairs. A checking account that should have dried up long before the end of the month somehow makes it through. As God miraculously stretched the widow’s oil supply in Elisha’s day (2 Kings 4:1-7), and as He made the Israelites’ clothes and sandals last forty years in the wilderness (Deuteronomy 8:4), I’m convinced He sometimes graciously extends the life of things that would normally need replacement.

The God who fed a million-member family in the wilderness for forty years, fed five thousand with one boy’s lunch, and who is perfectly capable of turning water into wine and stones into bread, will not have any trouble providing whatever He knows you need.

In this video, I talk about what it means to be fearless and not worry about money, but trust that God will provide:

This article originally appeared here and is used by permission.

How A New Generation Is Changing What Quality Looks Like In A Thriving Small Church

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

Millennials are not the church of tomorrow. They’re raising families in and outside of our churches right now.

Mostly outside of them.

Unfortunately, some people have written off the current generation spiritually. That is a mistake – for the church and for them.

Millennials, Gen Y, and whatever we name the generation that follows them (Coronials?) are raising the stakes on discussions of

  • Spiritual life
  • Sexuality
  • Community
  • Workplace power dynamics
  • Economic and environmental responsibility
  • Racial reconciliation
  • Gender identity

and more.

These are all vitally important issues that the Bible addresses and that thoughtful Christians have talked about for 2,000 years.

As such, current generations are seeking dialogue about the very topics that healthy small churches should be good at, in an atmosphere of genuine relationships and intimate worship. Sadly, this is not our reputation.

But it’s not too late to change. If we’re willing to engage in biblically-based conversations about the vital issues, we can bring about the greatest opportunity for small church ministry in 2,000 years.

But this opportunity comes with one big condition.

Current generations won’t give up quality to gain intimacy.

And they shouldn’t have to.

Not Their Parents’ Church

It shouldn’t surprise anyone that current generations have the same needs people have always had. Needs that include a desire to worship something (someone) bigger than themselves, and to do so with others who are also seeking for meaning.

In other words, church.

But they’re not being drawn to the kinds of churches their parents built. Many of them don’t want a big Sunday morning stage show as much as they want genuine intimacy and relationships.

Because of this need, new generations are willing take a peek at the small church alternative. But they’re used to a high-quality experience in everything and they won’t settle for less.

Thankfully, for those who lead small churches, that’s not as intimidating as it sounds.

Quality = Health

Small church doesn’t mean cheap, shoddy, lazy or low-quality. At least it shouldn’t.

Too often, quality has meant excess for my generation (Boomers). We love glitz. Over-the-top. Bling. What the New Testament calls “adornment”. (1 Peter 3:3-4)

(Interesting, isn’t it, that a lot of ministries properly reject the sin of immodesty but they have no problem with the flip-side sin of adornment? Some even revel in it as evidence of God’s blessing.)

Quality for a small church can be summed up in one word.

Health.

It starts by getting the basics right.

  • Real-world Bible teaching
  • Genuine relationships
  • Practical ministry opportunities
  • Helpful conversations about important issues
  • And sincere, passionate worship

The good news is, your church doesn’t have to be big to do any of that.

Do New Generations Even Care About God?

Here’s how I addressed this question in my book, The Grasshopper Myth.

In They Like Jesus but Not the Church, Dan Kimball relates some of the feelings new generations of non-believers have about Jesus and the church. The main result is reflected in the title, of course, but other findings were interesting too.

One young woman expressed her desire for a church that was smaller and more intimate. As she so beautifully put it, “Make church a book club with soul.” She’s not alone in that longing.

Another unchurched friend of Kimball’s told him, “… I think the meetings should be smaller. Every once in a while a big meeting is cool, but not as the norm.”

Yet another asked, “Didn’t Jesus spend most of his time in smaller settings, with smaller groups? … I bet that is where they learned the most from him, not when he was in the masses with larger crowds.”

Some of what younger generations want and need from the church has nothing to do with the style of the worship band. Many of them just don’t like the corporate vibe of a bigger church. What speaks to their heart can only happen in a smaller setting.

– from The Grasshopper Myth: Chapter 8 – Small Church, Big Vision

Small groups, small churches and “book clubs with soul” (I just love that last one).

What’s going on here? Can we really take these anecdotal stories as an indication of a trend? I think so. Because the evidence is coming in to back it up.

In a recent poll, the highly-respected Pew Forum found what everyone has suspected. Millennials attend church less often than their parents. But it also included this important caveat. “Among Millennials who are affiliated with a religion, however, the intensity of their religious affiliation is as strong today as among previous generations when they were young.” (emphasis theirs)

So fewer Millennials attend religious services, but the faith of those who do is as strong as ever. And that dedication is likely to grow, as it typically does when you find yourself in the minority.

Which means what? Everyone has their own interpretation, of course. Here’s mine.

It’s Time to Lead

Churches follow trends as much as anyone. Usually about 20 years behind.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. We can lead.

Not in a “look how cool they are” way, or a “look how smart they are” way. But in a “look how they love one another” way.

There’s no better place to express or sense that kind of love-leadership than in a small church.

Megachurches won’t disappear, despite all the predictions to the contrary. I hope they don’t. Instead, alongside megachurches I see a growing hunger for healthy, high-quality, innovative small churches to meet the needs of upcoming generations.

If small churches can provide opportunities for genuine relationships with God and each other, in a thriving church with practical ministry to the surrounding community, we can be the vanguard of a new church movement. But it really won’t be a new movement. It will be the oldest one of all.

Since the day of Pentecost, thriving small churches have been the way the majority of Christians have done church. They’ve just stayed under the radar for 2,000 years.

Now may be their turn to come out of the shadows.

It’s about time.

This article originally appeared here.

10 Ways to Fight Like a Christian

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“Let no corrupting talk come out of your mouths, but only such as is good for building up, as fits the occasion, that it may give grace to those who hear.” (Ephesians 4:29) In Ephesians 4:29, Paul mentions two kinds of speech: that which builds up and that which pulls down. This verse and the surrounding passage show us 10 ways that we can handle conflict well — 10 ways to fight like a Christian.

10 Ways to Fight Like a Christian

1. Examine your heart.

This is a huge first step in any conflict. Even if you’ve been wronged, what does your emotional response say about your heart? Is it possible that malice, wrath or bitterness have snuck in? If you want to fight like a Christian, these things are like alarm systems for your heart, pointing to idolatry, which is often a much bigger issue than whatever your spouse (or brother or friend or boss) has done to you.

2. Overlook whatever you can.

Part of what it means to fight like a Christian is to speak to others with grace, discerning what needs confronting and what should be overlooked. That’s a lot of what Paul means by that little phrase, “as fits the occasion.” On certain occasions (not all!), confronting little infractions only serves to heighten tensions. There are times you need to speak up and confront; and there are times to just let it go. There’s a real art to knowing the difference.

3. Be practical in how you fight.

Again, if you want to fight like a Christian, think about what “fits the occasion.” My wife and I have learned the hard way that there are certain times, places and moods that are just bad for arguments. So we never fight, for instance, if we’re both exhausted. We table the argument and come back to it within 24 hours, after we’ve had time to rest. Now, there’s always a temptation to just table a critical discussion endlessly, so you need to be sure to keep your word. If you say, “Let’s talk about this in the morning,” then put it on your calendar and actually bring it back up.

Semler Begs Gospel Music Association Members To Vote Her ‘Best New Artist’ at Dove Awards

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(L) Semler screengrab via YouTube @Semler (R) GMA Dove Awards screengrab via doveawards.com

Grace Baldridge, better known by the stage name Semler, begged members of the Gospel Music Association (GMA) to vote for her as this year’s “Best New Artist” at the 53rd Annual Dove Awards, which will be on Tuesday, October 18.

Semler is an openly queer artist who is married to another woman but identifies as a Christian, often writing about her Christian upbringing, albeit many times including explicit language in her lyrics. Her father is an Episcopalian priest, the denomination in which Baldridge held her wedding ceremony with Elizabeth Capel.

Semler topped the iTunes’ Christian Album charts in 2021 with her parental advisory labeled “Preacher’s Kid,” which overtook Lauren Daigle’s Dove Award winning “Look Up Child” album for the #1 spot.

Semler again topped the iTunes’ Christian Album charts later that year with her EP titled “Late Bloomer,”—this time, not carrying the explicit warning tag.

In another song titled “TobyMac,” Semler discusses making mixtapes for her girlfriend using the DC Talk song “Consume Me” to express how she felt about her.

“Like, when TobyMac said, ‘You consume me,’ I thought of her and how her eyes see through me. And, Switchfoot has an Only Hope and that’s her for me,” the lyrics say. “Even though I know they wrote them for God, for Jesus, for a Savior, ain’t that nice? But I’m 17 and I want someone real to hold at night and I’m terrified, terrified they’d hate me if they knew [that] I’m using worship songs to say ‘I love you.’”

RELATED: LGBTQ Artist Hits #1 on the iTunes Christian Charts for the Second Time This Year

Earlier this year, Semler was ecstatic after finding out she was going on tour with one of her favorite Christian bands, Relient K—a band she references in her song “TobyMac.”

RELATED: LGBTQ Artist Semler Joining Christian Band Relient K’s Upcoming Tour

Baldridge has, at times, pushed Christians in the entertainment industry to affirm the LGBTQ+ community, reaching out to them via social media to ask if they believe it’s okay to be a Christian and live a gay lifestyle. Baldridge targeted Dove Award winning Christian rock band Swtichfoot last year.

“No one really knows if Switchfoot likes the gays or not. We don’t know. They’ve never said it,” Baldridge expressed on TikTok. “I think it’s important for Christians to understand that the harm levied against LGBTQ+ people has been so specific, so the affirmation needs to be just as specific.”

Baldridge filmed herself and a friend attending a Switchfoot concert and yelling from their seats, “gay rights,” while lead signer Jon Foreman was speaking. He either didn’t hear them or chose not to respond.

Saddleback Church Says Report Clears Andy Wood, Rick Warren’s Successor

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Screenshot from YouTube / @Echo.Church

A new independent audit found no “pattern of abuse” by Andy Wood, the pastor named to succeed Rick Warren at Saddleback Church in September. Last month, after the Southern California megachurch announced the transition, former staff members at Echo Church, which Wood has been leading in San Jose, California, alleged he had an abusive leadership style.

Former volunteer and staffer Amy Street said her time at Echo Church led to panic attacks. Other staffers raised concerns about an unhealthy culture, including a confidentiality policy and non-disclosure agreements.

In June, Saddleback leaders informed the church’s 20,000+ congregants they were examining these allegations. Vanderbloemen Search Group, the executive search firm that conducted Wood’s initial background check, reviewed new evidence and cleared the pastor of wrongdoing.

During the interview process, Wood had alerted Vanderbloemen and Saddleback about potential allegations that might surface. Wood, Echo Church, and Saddleback all denied the allegations.

Andy Wood Follow-Up Investigation Finds No ‘Pattern of Abuse’

Earlier this week, Saddleback elders told church members that Wood had been cleared by two additional investigations. One was a follow-up by Vanderbloemen, while the other was an independent review by Middlebrook Goodspeed, a law firm specializing in church issues.

According to the July 11 elder email, “The team at Vanderbloemen interviewed former employees, former volunteers, peers, and current employees to ask them about their experiences with Andy.” Based on interviews with that “thorough” sample, investigators “concluded there is no systemic or pattern of abuse under Andy’s leadership, nor was there an individual that we felt was abused.”

Although Saddleback elders didn’t elaborate on the culture at Wood’s former church, it referenced a conflict that was likely with Street. “Disappointment and hurt are not the same as abuse,” their email notes. “We know that we must minister in the REAL world, not the IDEAL world. In our broken world, there will always be conflict, disagreements, and disappointments, so recovery and reconciliation in relationships will always be needed.”

The elders referenced Celebrate Recovery, a program with roots at Saddleback, noting that it helps Christians cope with “every kind of hurt, abuse, wound, mistreatment, addiction, or other hurtful issue.” Elders say the report from Vanderbloemen won’t be released to the public.

Federal Agencies Persist in Efforts to Offset Roe’s Reversal

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Photo by René DeAnda (via Unsplash)

WASHINGTON (BP)—President Biden’s administration has continued to take steps to circumvent the effects of the U.S. Supreme Court’s reversal of the Roe v. Wade decision and again has drawn objections from a Southern Baptist leader and another pro-life advocate.

Multiple federal agencies acted July 11-13 in the Biden administration’s latest attempts to counter the high court’s June 24 ruling, which returned abortion policy to the states by overturning the 1973 Roe opinion that legalized abortion nationwide. Among them:

  • The Department of Justice (DOJ) established July 12 the Reproductive Rights Task Force, which will monitor state and local legislation that restricts abortion and will synchronize legal actions and other federal responses.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) sent guidelines July 13 to remind about 60,000 pharmacies they are obligated under federal law to provide access to reproductive health care, which includes abortion drugs.
  • S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has prepared a memo that would enable some pregnant women in detention centers in states with pro-life policies to be taken to other states for abortions, The Wall Street Journal reported July 12.
  • HHS announced July 11 a new directive to assure pregnant women receive “emergency medical care,” including abortion services.

Brent Leatherwood, acting president of the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission (ERLC), told Baptist Press, “For years, a bipartisan consensus has ensured that tax dollars should not be utilized on abortion services to ensure that the consciences of millions of Americans are protected. These harmful initiatives constitute an effort to completely upend that principle and will only further an abortion environment that preys on women and puts innocent lives at risk.

“In the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision, our nation’s resources should be marshaled to save lives by ending abortion, serve mothers and families who find themselves in crisis and establish a true culture of life that extends from the federal level to each and every state,” he said in written comments.

“If anything, this development underscores the reality we find ourselves in: The Dobbs decision didn’t signal the end of the pro-life movement, but the beginning of a new chapter. And in this new chapter, the pro-life witness of pastors, churches and pro-life Christians will be as important as ever.”

Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta, who will chair DOJ’s Reproductive Rights Task Force, described the Supreme Court’s rejection of Roe as “a devastating blow to reproductive freedom.” Though Roe is no longer in effect, DOJ “is committed to protecting access to reproductive services,” she said in a release announcing the task force’s formation.

The state and local measures the task force will monitor include those that prohibit the abortion pill, restrict a woman’s travel to another state for the procedure and limit an individual’s ability to inform others about abortion services in another state, according to the DOJ release. The task force will consist of staff members of different divisions and offices within the department. DOJ is working with abortion providers and advocates, the release reported.

Chelsey Youman, national legislative advisor for Human Coalition Action, said in written remarks for BP, “Rather than caring for women’s material and medical needs, the administration is choosing to double down and prioritize abortion as a solution — even after the Supreme Court allowed states to protect preborn human lives from the moment of conception onward. Blocking state regulations of the deadly abortion pill regimen is backwards and extreme, and these actions show no regard for the humanity of preborn children.

“While the administration purports to be protecting women’s emergency medical care, women are already getting this care – and state pro-life laws allow for it,” she said. “The administration is simply posturing here, but thankfully, the American public is not in lockstep with this agenda.”

Alexis McGill Johnson – president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, the country’s leading abortion provider – commended creation of the DOJ task force as “a meaningful step” and urged government leaders “to continue to consider the ways they can mitigate the fallout of the court’s decision.”

Abortion rights advocates in Congress also are promoting efforts to offset the Supreme Court’s ruling.

In a week in which at least two hearings on abortion have been held by Democratic-controlled committees in each chamber, the House of Representatives is scheduled to vote Friday (July 15) on two measures in a package of legislative proposals.

‘Megachurch Pastors Exposed’: Twitter Thread Highlights Work of Pastors With No Scandals

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From Hillsong to Mars Hill, and many others, there is no shortage of recent stories about pastors and leadership structures within large churches that have been guilty of abuse, whether sexual, financial, or spiritual.

In light of this reality, Texas pastor Josh Howerton took to Twitter earlier this week in order to highlight megachurch pastors who don’t often make headlines: the ones who never become embroiled in scandal. 

Megachurch Pastors Exposed 

Howerton, who pastors the multi-site Lakepointe Church, headquartered in Rockwall, Texas, posted a thread, which he titled “MEGACHURCH PASTORS EXPOSED,” highlighting the stories of megachurch pastors he knows who have never been involved in scandals. 

“Having spent a great deal of time around these people, I’ve learned some things I’ve kept secret,” Howerton said. “But my conscience will not allow that any longer, so here goes. All true stories.”

In an ensuing thread, Howerton shared the stories of eight different megachurch pastors with whom he is personally connected. 

RELATED: Pastor Trends on Twitter After Modesty Post Causes a Total Meltdown

“PASTOR A led 2 different churches over 10k people, quietly stepped aside to help plant a church in an area that needed one, and now instead of speaking at huge conferences, leads a morning Bible study with recovering addicts and volunteers his time renovating widows’ houses,” Howerton said.

“PASTOR B led 1 of largest churches in US, was known as kindest & most gentle man his staff had ever met, was nearly beaten to death at 2am on the side of a highway [because] he stopped to help what he thought was a stranded low-income family [with] a flat tire that turned out to be thieves,” the thread continued. 

The third pastor Howerton listed “eventually wrote a bestselling book and leveraged the earnings to A) repay the church every dollar they’d ever salaried him, B) launch a group of non-profits serving the poor, and C) reverse-tithe (give away 90%, live on 10%),” and the fourth “uses a large portion of his family’s personal income to anonymously help families adopt, has a personal goal of funding 100 orphans’ adoption into homes.”

“PASTOR E could be speaking at a huge church or event every week. Instead, you’ll find him in a public park with a hat and coat on (lives in a cold region) every Friday doing personal evangelism incognito and praying for people he meets who are in need,” Howerton continued. 

RELATED: Theology Professor Shares The Apostle Paul’s Long Hair Policy for Men; Twitter Refuses Haircut

Despite common stereotypes, “PASTOR F isn’t a Green Room get-my-coffee-and-breakfast-to-order guy (as is often caricatured of pastors of churches his’ size). Instead, he arrives 3 [hours] before services every weekend to pray over his people.”

‘Only God!’—Pastor John Gray’s Wife, Aventer, Posts Encouraging Update

john gray
L: Screenshot from YouTube / @Relentless Church. R: Screenshot from YouTube / @John Gray Ministries

After being hospitalized for a week with a life-threatening saddle pulmonary embolism, Pastor John Gray of Relentless Church in Greenville, South Carolina, is “moving in the right direction,” according to an update from his wife, Aventer.

“Doctors, multiple cardiologists, a hematologist … the best, baffled… Only God!” said Aventer Gray in an update to her social media on June 14. “We are stable today moving in the right direction…It was the prayers of the righteous that availed.” 

John Gray’s Health Scare

Pastor John Gray was admitted to the ER on Thursday, July 7, with a saddle pulmonary embolism and blood clots in his lungs. A saddle pulmonary embolism is a rare type of blood clot that occurs in the pulmonary artery where it branches into the right and left lungs. 

In an Instagram post last weekend, Aventer Gray, who co-pastors Relentless Church with John, asked for prayer, saying that her husband needed a miracle and that his life was in immediate danger. “To place this in perspective,” she said, “the doctor said that people have come into the hospital dead with this exact scenario he walked in with.” At the time, the doctor said that the pastor needed not to move, not even to walk or go to the bathroom.

Aventer posted an update several days later saying that her husband was being transferred to a hospital in Atlanta and indicating that a clot in his leg had disappeared. “If it is not faith, I don’t want it!!” she said. “I am ready for the rest of this miracle!!!…Thank you for your prayers and outpouring of love! Please continue!” 

Relentless Church released a statement Wednesday, saying:

Pastor John Gray continues to be treated by [a] team of professionals now in Atlanta, GA after being transferred from Alabama for his condition. Pastor Aventer and the entire Relentless Church family are thankful for the abundance of well wishes and prayers for his safe and immediate recovery. Services will continue as planned and we will lift up the name of Jesus at this time. They continue to ask for privacy during their navigation of this time and remain appreciative of the outpouring of love and support.

In her June 14 post, Aventer quoted Psalm 46:10, which says, “Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.”

Disgraced Pastor JD Hall Investigated for Assault With Weapon, Strangulation: Police Report

JD Hall
Screengrab via YouTube @ Jordan Hall

On June 5, writer and former pastor Jordan “JD” Hall was investigated for assault with a weapon and strangulation of a partner or family member, a police report has revealed.

The report was filed on June 23.

On June 26, it was announced that Hall had been asked to resign from his pastorate at Fellowship Baptist Church (FBC) of Sidney, Montana, as well as his role at Protestia (formerly named Pulpit & Pen), a right-wing publication exposing what they perceive to be liberal drift in American evangelicalism.

At the time of Hall’s resignation, the church stated that the reason for his disqualification as pastor was abuse of Xanax, which Hall had been taking beyond the prescribed dosage.

Protestia also released a statement but gave no further details, stating their desire to avoid gossip. Following Hall’s resignation, Protestia archived all of Hall’s writings on the site and separated itself from Fellowship Baptist Church, having previously been a ministry that folded under the church through Hall’s leadership.

“This decision was made both by the church and the team at Protestia, and not because of any disagreement between us and the church,” Protestia said in a statement.

RELATED: SBC Pastor Uses Native American Resolution to Minister to Survivors of Forced Conversion

In the church’s statement, which was released on June 27, leadership cited “an incident” that occurred on June 5, after which they discovered Hall’s dependence on Xanax. Further details regarding that incident not mentioned in Fellowship Baptist Church’s statement have now been revealed in a police report. 

According to the police report, Hall was investigated on June 5 for assault with a weapon, specifically a “knife/cutting instrument,” as detailed in the report. He was also accused of strangulation of a partner or family member, which allegedly took place at his home and included “personal weapons.” 

Two witnesses are listed in the police report. 

RELATED: 3 Charged in Connection With Fire at Historic WVa Church

The revelation of this police report comes as the latest in a series of controversies surrounding Hall. On May 11, Hall was arrested for driving while under the influence. While Hall tested 0.00 during a blood alcohol test at the stop, he performed “very poorly” during a field sobriety test. Hall blamed his symptoms on a Vitamin D deficiency.

SBC Pastor Uses Native American Resolution To Minister to Survivors of Forced Conversion

At the 2022 SBC Annual Meeting in June, Mike Keahbone votes for the resolution he helped write addressing religious liberty and forced conversions among Native Americans. BP file photo by Adam Covington. Courtesy of Baptist Press.

ANADARKO, Okla. (BP) – Mike Keahbone, pastor of First Baptist Church Lawton, Okla., not only played a crucial role in drafting a resolution decrying the forced conversion of Native peoples, but he has already begun to use the resolution as a way to minister to survivors.

Keahbone, a Native American with heritage from the Comanche, Kiowa and Cherokee tribes, served on this year’s SBC Resolutions Committee and helped write the resolution titled, “On Religious Liberty, Forced Conversion, and the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative Investigative Report,” which was adopted by SBC messengers in June.

July 9, Keahbone read the resolution from the platform at a “Road to Healing” tour event sponsored by the U.S. Department of the Interior in conjunction with the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, who attended the event, is the first Indigenous person to serve in a presidential cabinet position.

The tour, a response to a recently released federal report documenting the forced assimilation and conversion of Native Americans, Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians in the U.S. between 1819 and 1969, kicked off at Riverside Indian School in Anadarko, Okla., which, according to media reports, is believed to be the oldest boarding school in Okla., opening in 1871.

RELATED: SBC Apologizes to Sexual Abuse Survivors, Reaffirms Pro-Life Beliefs in Resolutions Adopted at Annual Meeting

Keahbone said around 75 percent of the boarding schools mentioned in the federal report were located in Okla., which is why he, an Oklahoma pastor, felt led to attend the Road to Healing event, an opportunity for past victims of mistreatment in the boarding schools to tell their stories in an open-mic time.

The accounts shared at the event included one from a survivor who recalled being checked in and immediately taken to a church and forced to ask God for forgiveness for being Native American.

Keahbone said he didn’t even realize any of the survivors of the abuse were still living and described what he heard as “soul-crushing but very healing.”

“The powerful thing in that moment was I got to stand up and share this resolution and to say that Southern Baptists, the largest Protestant denomination in the country, is standing with Native peoples,” he said. “The language in the resolution was so powerful in saying we stand against these things that hurt you, and we stand for the things that will help you.

“We’re the first denomination that I know to recognize this report and say, ‘We love you, we’re on your side, and we’re praying for you.’ I could see it in people’s faces, and I had a few people come talk to me about it after the event.”

RELATED: Justin and Lindsey Holcomb: How Pastors Can Stay in Their Lanes While Helping Survivors of Abuse

For Keahbone, the report and the stories are personal. His great uncle, a Comanche tribe member named Perry Noyobad, lived in one of the boarding schools and was subjected to abuse such as punishment for speaking his native language.

Noyobad would later use that same language as a World War II code talker, helping the Allies communicate messages without fear of interception.

Keahbone said when his uncle was asked why he would serve his country in this way, he would say he was not fighting for what America was at the time, but for what he believed America could be.

The federal report released in May is Volume 1 of a full investigation carried out by the Bureau of Indian Affairs within the Department of the Interior. Titled “Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative Investigative Report,” the report said Native peoples were specifically targeted with these efforts of forced conversion and assimilation in order to systematically remove them from their native lands.

To the Impostor, Approval Suck, and Chameleons in Us All

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People are like chameleons. We’re exceptionally good at hiding.

Why do we hide? Because rejection is simply too painful to bear. The chameleon in us—or what Brennan Manning has called the Imposter—is represented by multiple “colors” or masks that we use to hide ourselves and fit in. Most of us have a work self, an at-home self, an internet self, a party self, a church self, a bedroom self, and several other selves we depend on to keep us safe from exposure and attack.

Having so many pseudo-selves leads us to become dis-integrated people versus people who are integrated and whole. In all our changing of colors to blend in, we become living pictures of what Groucho Marx supposedly said: “Those are my principles. And if you don’t like them…well, I have others.”

We want to be liked, so we seek to do whatever we think that requires. Living to be liked seems like a safe way to live.

It’s what pastor Jack Miller used to call being an “approval suck.”

I’ll admit it. I am an approval suck who really likes to be liked. I am a human chameleon who wants to feel safe in social settings, when being observed for this or that, and in every other situation. And so are you.

But how is the inner chameleon working out for us? Is it giving us firmer footing with more friends and deeper community? Or is it leaving us lonelier, more misunderstood, more ashamed, and more afraid? These outcomes may still feel acceptable for us because of what C.S. Lewis said about the risks associated with love:

To love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything and your heart will be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact you must give it to no one, not even an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements. Lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket, safe, dark, motionless, airless, it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. To love is to be vulnerable…The only place outside Heaven where you can be perfectly safe from all the dangers and perturbations of love is Hell.

In an ideal world, the truths of the gospel will move us past the transparency hurdle, thus freeing us to shed our chameleon skin. Because our sins have been forgiven—and our chameleon hides protected—we truly have nothing left to hide. If God is for us, who can be against us? Because God has declared us to be blameless in his sight through the finished work of Jesus, we truly have nothing left to prove. With us, our Father is well pleased! Because God loves us dearly and nothing can ever separate us from his love, we truly have nothing to fear. We are his treasure! We are our Beloved’s, and our Beloved is ours!

Even still, one remaining roadblock prevents us from entering into these realities and becoming free: We are chronic amnesiacs. Almost as quickly as we hear the good news that in Christ we have nothing left to hide, to prove, or to fear…we forget it. Punctured by our own fallen condition, the good news of Jesus leaks out of us constantly.

In a moment of transparency, Mariah Carey, one of the most successful artists in the history of pop music, said in an interview that if she hears a thousand words of praise and one word of criticism, that one criticism will eliminate the thousand praises in her mind.

Can you identify with this dilemma? I certainly can.

Crushed, but Not That Way

crushed
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An angel, we’ll call him Clarence because that’s what you’re supposed to name angels, descends from heaven and lets you know that in your future you will be crushed to death. But you are being given an option as to how you’d like to be crushed.

Option A: You will be crushed in a way similar to how the Beatles were crushed by a mob of adoring and rather delusional fans. You are meeting a need in them and they cannot contain their excitement and you end up squashed.

Option B: You will be crushed because people hate you and think that you are a fraud. They will dream up an excruciating means of a slow and torturous death, beat you to an inch of your life and then use this brutal instrument to squeeze your body to the point of death.

Which one do you pick?

If I’m going to be crushed, then I’d rather be crushed because people love me. I don’t think I’d pick option B. That sounds horrendous.

Yet it was the will of the LORD to crush him…

he was crushed for our iniquities…

And how would Jesus, the Suffering Servant, be crushed? It would be through the brutality of a bloody cross. But there was a point when he could have been crushed by popularity.

And he told his disciples to have a boat ready for him because of the crowd, lest they crush him… (Mark 3:9)

Crushed, but not that way. Jesus will not pick the path of celebrity. He will avoid this type of crushing death. It does not please the LORD for his son to be crushed by popularity, and so he makes plans to avoid this dangerous devotion of fickle followers. Instead he will be crucified as a criminal.

There is a lesson for us in this path which Jesus chose. There is a type of celebratory martyrdom. Popularity can be crushing even in our day. And those of us who know that the path of Jesus is marked by suffering can be tempted to pick this type of suffering as if this is somehow what it means to die to self.

It’s not just any kind of cruciform life which Christ calls us to embrace. We aren’t called to be crushed by our own adoring platforms but rather our blood to be quietly spilled outside the city gates, among the vulnerable and for even our enemies.

Crushed, but not that way.

This article originally appeared here and is used by permission. 

25 Christian Celebrities Who Have Been Outspoken About Their Faith

christian celebrities
Sources, from left to right: Screenshot from YouTube / @Justin Bieber. VOGUE Taiwan, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Screenshot from YouTube / @TimTebowFoundation. Eva Rinaldi, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons. MTV UK, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Cosmopolitan UK, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Screenshot from YouTube / @Magnolia

Fame comes with all kinds of pressure, but there are Christian celebrities living out their convictions in the public eye, even when doing so makes their lives more difficult. What follows is a list of celebrities whose faith has shaped their actions.

We want to acknowledge that only God truly knows what is going on in someone’s heart—and you might not agree with everyone on our list. But we hope you find it encouraging to discover some people you might not have been aware of who are living out their beliefs in the limelight. 

25 Notable Christian Celebrities

1 & 2. Justin and Hailey Bieber

Pop star Justin Bieber is outspoken about his Christian faith and has at times led people in praise and worship. “The way I look at my relationship with God and with Jesus is I’m not trying to earn God’s love by doing good things,” said Bieber in an interview with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe. “God has already loved me for who I am before I ever did anything to earn and deserve it. It’s a free gift…The forgiveness is the thing that we look at and we go, you know, I’m going to worship you, God, because you gave me something so good.” Bieber said he did not think he would be alive today if it were not for his faith since before he committed to following Jesus, he was on a self-destructive path.

On Easter of 2021, Bieber released a faith-centered album titled, “Freedom,” that featured collaborations with other Christian singers and church leaders—and also contained explicit language. In June of this year, Bieber shared on Instagram but he is dealing with a health condition called Ramsay Hunt syndrome, which can cause paralysis in the face. He asked his followers for prayer and said that he was trusting God.

Justin’s wife, model Hailey Bieber, is also outspoken about her faith and has said that without it, she and Justin would not even be in a relationship. She has spoken about her struggles with “super-judgmental” Christians, particularly those who criticize her for wearing revealing clothing as part of her job. “Your relationship with God is not going to be the same as mine,” she says. “I believe that [Jesus] was about love and acceptance.”

Hailey Bieber suffered her own health scare earlier this year when she had a stroke due to a small blood clot in her brain.

Bethel Church’s Senior Leader Beni Johnson, Wife of Bill Johnson, Dies at 67

Screengrab via Facebook @Bill Johnson

Beni Johnson, senior leader of the 11,000 member Bethel Church in Redding, California, and wife of Bill Johnson, died on Wednesday (July 13) at the age of 67 after a long battle with cancer.

Beni was diagnosed with breast cancer in March 2018, and although the cancer was found early and successfully removed, doctors discovered she had a mutation of her BRCA2 gene that made her more vulnerable to developing other types of cancer.

Bill Johnson posted an image of his wife on Facebook after her passing with the words, “Healthy and Free,” followed by a smiling faced heart-eyed emoji, a loudly crying face emoji, and another smiling faced heart-eyed emoji. The post has received over 42,000 reactions and over 10,000 comments.

One of their three children, Brian Johnson, who leads Bethel Music, posted the news about his mother on Instagram, writing, “My mom went home tonight. Love you mom.” Bethel Music posted the song “Goodness of God” and captioned the lyric, “Your goodness is running after me,” followed by an emoji of a dove.

RELATED: Former Bethel Pastor Addresses ‘Wild Rumors’ About Grave Sucking and Gold Dust

The couple’s only daughter, Leah Valenzuela, said, “Momma I love you beyond words! You have been the best mom anyone could ever hope for but not only that, you have been my best friend. It is such an honor being your daughter. You are my hero (well and daddy). This last year you have fought so hard, thanks for giving us more time with you! I’m so glad I got to be with you so much. I cherish every single moment, and every show we got to watch together. I love that anytime I watch those shows now I will remember you and this special time we got to spend together. I love you! See you in heaven!”

Eric Johnson, Bill and Beni’s son who once served at Bethel Church as senior leader alongside his wife Candace, posted, “I love you mom. See you on the other side.”

Earlier this year, Bethel Church posted a call to prayer for Beni’s full physical healing, asking people to sign up for 15-minute prayer slots to cover Beni in prayer 24 hours a day.

RELATED: A Defense of Singing Songs From Bethel and Hillsong

On Wednesday, the church announced to the “hundreds of thousands” who had been praying for Beni that she had entered hospice care and asked everyone to urgently pray on her behalf.

“We continue to stand with the Johnsons for Beni’s complete healing. Medicine is a blessing and a great help, but in this moment we need a miracle from the Lord. Please continue to pray for a total deliverance from all cancer, and for Beni’s strength to be renewed,” the message read.

Bethel Church announced a five-day prayer event, which started last night in their sanctuary.

Former Youth Leader Charged With Child Rape, Allegedly Assaulted Victim From Age 5 to 12

Jeffrey A. Pringle
Left: photo by Al Hakiim (via Unsplash); Right: photo by Humberto Portillo (via Unsplash)

Jeffrey A. Pringle, a New Philadelphia, Ohio, DJ and former church youth ministry volunteer, was charged on Tuesday (July 12) with two counts of child rape. The alleged sexual assaults span eight years from October 15, 2014 to July 11 of this year, involving a child age five to 12. 

According to Pringle’s Facebook page, he had been attending Colorado Christian University in pursuit of a BA in biblical studies. Colorado Christian University confirmed that Pringle was an online student but stated that he has not been enrolled at the school in over two years.

Under the name “Jukebox Jeff,” Pringle provided DJ services for weddings, parties, and dances. 

In addition to the two child rape charges, Pringle has also been charged with two counts of gross sexual imposition for allegedly having sexual contact with a child younger than 13 years old by force, according to Times Reporter. Those assaults allegedly happened between May 6, 2018 and June 11 of this year.  

RELATED: Parent Sues Australian Cardinal Over Child Sex Abuse Charge

Leadership of LifeWay Church in New Philadelphia, where Pringle served as a volunteer youth leader for roughly a decade, has notified parents who had children who attended the ministry, according to Travis Wright, who pastors the church with his wife, Leslie. 

“So far, there has been no one who has come forth and accused Jeff of anything or felt uncomfortable or that their children had been targeted,” Wright told Times Reporter. “We have all been blindsided by this. It was not, in any way, something that we expected or anticipated. We love Jeff and Jeff has been a part of our family for years. And so we are heartbroken by this, for sure.”

Pringle is being held in the Tuscarawas County jail, and his bail has been set at $750,000. 

Should Pringle post bond, he would be prohibited from having contact with any individual under the age of 18 for the duration of his trial and would be required to adhere to a protection order barring him from contact with the alleged victim and other protected individuals. He would also be prohibited from going to bars or taverns, and would be required to abstain from alcohol or recreational drugs. His permit to carry a concealed weapon has been revoked. 

RELATED: 3 Charged in Connection With Fire at Historic WVa Church

Pringle is scheduled to appear in court on July 20. 

This article has been updated for clarity.

Conservative Commentator Jordan Peterson’s ‘Completely Presumptuous’ Message to the Church

Jordan Peterson
Screengrab via YouTube

Canadian clinical psychologist, author, and political personality Jordan Peterson recently delivered a “Message to the Christian Churches” via his YouTube channel, urging churches to invite young men into their midst. 

Peterson, who has not been active on Twitter since receiving a suspension for a transphobic tweet late last month, recently joined the lineup of conservative news and media company The Daily Wire, providing content for their premium subscription service. 

In the address, Peterson articulated his belief that the primary function of the church is to instill a sense of fighting purpose in people, especially young men. 

Peterson’s Message to the Christian Churches

“It is, of course, completely presumptuous of me to dare to write and broadcast a video entitled ‘Message to the Christian Churches,’” Peterson said. “But I’m going to do it anyway, because I have something to say and because that something needs to be said.”

Peterson went on to say that he has noticed that most of his listeners are young men. 

“That is not a phenomenon that can be easily accounted for,” Peterson remarked. “But let me try.”

“Now, in the West, because of the weight of historical guilt that is upon us, a variant of the sense of original sin in a very real sense, and because of a very real attempt by those possessed by what might be described as unhelpful ideas to weaponize that guilt, our young people face a demoralization that is perhaps unparalleled,” Peterson said. “This is particularly true of young men.” 

Peterson went on to criticize broader cultural movements to address toxic masculinity, patriarchy, and environmental degradation. Peterson said that male ambition is characterized in western culture as “competitive and dominating power-mad, selfish, exploitative, raping and pillaging.”

“You might think that I am overstating the case,” Peterson said. “Think again, sunshine. We in the West are facing an all-out assault, at the deepest levels.”

Peterson identified deconstructionism and Marxism as chief foes against masculinity, discouraging young men from wanting adventure in life. Peterson characterized these ideologies as demonic and hellish in nature. 

Peterson then offered what he believes to be the solution for Christian churches.

“The Christian church is there to remind people, young men included and perhaps even first and foremost, that they have a woman to find, a garden to walk in, a family to nurture, an ark to build, a land to conquer, a ladder to heaven to build, and the utter, terrible catastrophe of life to face stalwartly in truth, devoted to love and without fear,” Peterson said.

“Invite the young men back. Say, literally, to those young men: You are welcome here. If no one else wants what you have to offer, we do. We want to call you to the highest purpose of your life. We want your time and energy, and your effort, and your will, and your goodwill. We want to work with you to make things better, to produce life more abundant for you and for your wife and children, and for your community and your country and the world,” Peterson urged.

“And we have our problems in the Christian church. We are more abundant, sometimes, far too often, corrupt, and sometimes deeply so. We’re outdated, as are all institutions with their roots in the dead but still often wise past,” Peterson continued. “So join us. We’ll help fix you up, and you can help fix us up. And together, we’ll aim up.”

“And here is a message to those young men skeptical about such things,” Peterson said. “What else do you have? You can abandon the churches in your cynicism and disbelief. You can say to yourself, narcissistically and solipsistically, ‘The church does not express what I believe properly.’”

“Who cares what you believe? Why is this about you,” Peterson questioned. “What if it was incumbent upon you and vital to your health and willingness even to live to rescue your dead father from the belly of the beast, where he has always resided, and to restore him to life?”

Texas Pastors Relief Fund Depleted in One Day Amid Record Living Costs

texas pastors
Source: Adobe Stock

DALLAS (BP) – A $100,000 inflation relief fund for Baptist General Convention of Texas pastors was depleted within 24 hours of its availability, the BGCT announced July 13 as inflation reached its highest point in decades at 9.1 percent.

Two hundred pastors received grants averaging $500 each in the program announced July 11 and financed through a Lilly Endowment fund not available in other states, said Tammy Tervooren, a contracted grant administrator with the financial health team of the Texas Baptists Center for Ministerial Health.

“I don’t think we were surprised. It did go really quickly,” she said. “We’ve been working several years now with pastors and we kind of had seen this coming. If you lay out a map, you see it’s been a struggle for pastors already.

“Pastors aren’t in it for the money. They do it because they’re called. They were already stretched pretty thin, a lot of them. (Inflation) is not helping. It’s kind of exacerbated.”

BGCT Treasurer and CFO Ward Hayes announced the grants July 11, and they were all gone by the 12th.

“Helping our pastors stay strong spiritually, emotionally, financially and in all ways remains a high priority for Texas Baptists,” Hayes said in announcing the grant. “That we are able to offer this grant at this time is a tremendous blessing.”

Pastors are impacted by the Consumer Price Index that increased 9.1 percent in June, exceeding the 8.8 percent increase Dow Jones estimated, CNBC reported July 13.

Grants were awarded to pastors from a broad range of churches demographically, Tervooren said, including pastors leading large and small churches in urban and rural areas. Grant recipients were not available for comment, but Tervooren said pastors most commonly said they had trouble buying groceries and affording gas, especially to make hospital visits that can be 30 miles or more away in rural areas.

Pastors have been compensating by working part-time jobs in addition to fulltime pastorates, increasing household income by wives working, minimizing travel and hospital visits, reducing grocery purchases and even donating plasma twice weekly for compensation.

“These pastors, … they’re giving everything they have, their whole lives to the church,” Tervooren said. “And I think we should be generous to our pastors, as generous as we can. If the church can do more, then they should do everything they can for the pastor, everything possible.”

BGCT has participated in the Lilly Endowment grant program since 2018. While the grant expires in 2022, Tervooren said the BCGT hopes to receive a grant extension, especially to continue its financial education program helping pastors and churches manage budgets and compensation packages.

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