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John MacArthur Tells Congregation ‘There is no pandemic’

no pandemic
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There is no pandemic, according to John MacArthur, pastor of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California. MacArthur’s statement comes after the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released updated information about COVID-19 deaths in the United States. MacArthur, who has famously fought the regulations currently in place for houses of worship in California, told his congregation on August 30th that due to that report, “for the first time, we heard the truth.” 

In referring to the report released by the CDC last week, MacArthur told his congregation, “I don’t want to offer myself as any kind of an expert, but a rather telling report came out this week and for the first time, we heard the truth. The CDC…said that in truth, six percent of the deaths that have occurred can be directly attributable to COVID. Ninety-four percent cannot. Of the 160,000 people that have died, 9,210 actually died from COVID.” 

“There is no pandemic,” MacArthur declared, to the thunderous applause of the congregation. 

MacArthur said that he and others in the church had been “suspicious” of the fact that “we’ve been meeting together now for weeks and weeks and weeks, we don’t know anyone who’s ill. No one in our congregation has been to the hospital with this.”

The pastor went on to explain that he believes another, more serious virus than the coronavirus is affecting us: That of deception. “The one who’s behind the virus of deception is the arch-deceiver, Satan himself,” MacArthur explained. Alluding to the church’s ongoing battle with the state over its in-person services, MacArthur said, “It’s not a surprise to me that in the midst of all this deception, the great effort that is going on is to shut down churches that preach the Gospel.”

Further, MacArthur insinuated that there are some, in government perhaps, who are complicit with Satan’s agenda of deception: “The architects of this level of deception are not a part of the Kingdom of Heaven; they’re a part of the kingdom of darkness.”

What Does the CDC Report Say?

Almost immediately after the CDC released its report last week, social media users took the information and ran with it. Confusion over the information spread like wildfire. One tweet in particular, originating from “Mel Q” was actually retweeted by President Donald Trump. The tweet, which has since been removed by Twitter, accused the CDC of “quietly updat[ing] the Covid number to admit that only 6 [percent] of all the 153,504 deaths recorded actually died from Covid. That’s 9,210 deaths.” 

It’s not clear where MacArthur got his information about 9,210 deaths, since that number does not appear anywhere in the CDC report. However, that number was widely circulated on social media platforms.

Many were confused by the CDC report, and it’s not surprising. The information is dense and requires a trained eye to interpret; the six percent statement shows up in Table 3, which is nestled between other tables of information and numbers. 

The misinformation about the report spread so extensively that the CDC was compelled to do some explaining. Speaking to CNN, Bob Anderson, chief of mortality statistics at the CDC, explained that the misinformation being spread was a case of misinterpreting standard death certificate language. “In 94 percent of deaths with COVID-19, other conditions are listed in addition to COVID-19. These causes may include chronic conditions like diabetes or hypertension,” Anderson said in a statement. The six percent of deaths account for those certificates that list COVID-19 only as the cause of death. 

The Underground Church in Iran is 1 Million Strong, Study Indicates

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Word from Iran is that God’s Word has been at work, converting people to the Christian faith and thus building the church in Iran. Now a survey from a secular organization offers statistical insights about the spiritual—and secular—revolutions occurring there.

Of the 50,000 Iranians questioned by Netherlands-based research company GAMAAN (Group for Analyzing and Measuring Attitudes in Iran), 1.5 percent identify as Christians. When extrapolated, that indicates 1 million “secret” Christians could exist within Iran’s population of 80 million.

Obtaining numbers is difficult, because Iranians who publicly leave Islam face capital punishment. On the latest “World Watch List” from Open Doors, Iran ranks ninth for Christian persecution. 

Shift Could Threaten Islamic Regime

Iran’s Islamic regime, in place for four decades, claims that 95 percent of citizens are Shia Muslim. Yet in the new survey, just 32 percent of respondents claim that identity. Almost half (46 percent) say they’ve switched from being religious to having no religion, and 42 percent say they oppose public propagation of any faith.

Iran’s leaders had staunchly denied reports that up to 1 million Iranians were quietly practicing Christianity, but they’re beginning to acknowledge the change. In May 2019, the minister of intelligence admitted that conversions away from Islam were “happening right before our eyes.”

UK-based Middle East expert Afshin Shahi says Iranian officials are acknowledging a serious threat. “They have even coined a term for it: Andalusiazation, which implies the gradual de-Islamization of cultural structures.” The “political domination of the Islamists” is at risk, says Shahi, adding that it’s “not surprising that [Iran’s] Supreme Leader regards ‘cultural invasion’ as more dangerous than a military invasion.”

Iran’s Latest ‘revolution’

The survey results don’t surprise the Rev. Dr. Sasan Tavassoli, an Iranian who converted to Christianity and now works in missions. “For quite some time I have felt that this is where we are in the growth of the church in Iran,” he says. “To say a spiritual revolution is happening in Iran is quite an understatement. This is a total failure of the regime’s attempt at indoctrination of the generation since the Islamic Revolution.”

Tavassoli tells articleeighteen.com: “Iran might soon become the France of the Middle East, as there are also signs of growing opposition to public manifestations of religion, whether it’s hijab, or legislation, or even evangelization.”

Secularization and pluralization are widely evident in Iran, according to the survey. Other findings reveal that of the 61 percent of Iranians born into religious families, only one percent say daily prayers. Seventy-one percent of respondents say religious institutions should be self-funded, 73 percent oppose mandatory hijabs, and 37 percent regularly or occasionally drink alcohol, which is banned in Iran.

Johannes de Jong, director of a European think tank, tells Christianity Today the biggest headline from the latest survey isn’t the number of Christians in Iran but “the massive secularization of Iranian society as a whole. “The Islam in Iran is a political system, not a faith embraced by any majority,” he says. “A free Iran would see an implosion of Islam, and a very significant rise of Christianity, Zoroastrism, and atheism.”

Almost eight percent of survey participants say they identify with Zoroastrism, the ancient Persian religion, indicating a general rise in nationalism.

The Faith and Integrity of Chadwick Boseman

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Chadwick Boseman, who starred in the groundbreaking film “Black Panther” and played Black icons such as Jackie Robinson, Thurgood Marshall, and James Brown, passed away from colon cancer on Aug. 28 at the age of 43. Those who knew Boseman remember him as a man of faith and integrity who was true to his values throughout his career.

“I haven’t grieved a loss this acute before,” said “Black Panther” director Ryan Coogler in a tribute to Boseman on the Marvel website. “It leaves me broken knowing that I won’t be able to watch another close-up of him in the monitor again or walk up to him and ask for another take. It hurts more to know that we can’t have another conversation, or facetime, or text message exchange. He would send vegetarian recipes and eating regimens for my family and me to follow during the pandemic. He would check in on me and my loved ones, even as he dealt with the scourge of cancer.” 

An announcement about Boseman’s death was posted to the actor’s social media accounts:

It is with immeasurable grief that we confirm the passing of Chadwick Boseman. Chadwick was diagnosed with stage III colon cancer in 2016, and battled with it these last 4 years as it progressed to stage IV. A true fighter, Chadwick persevered through it all, and brought you many of the films you have come to love so much. From Marshall to Da 5 Bloods, August Wilson’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and several more, all were filmed during countless surgeries and chemotherapy. It was the honor of his career to bring King T’Challa to life in Black Panther. He died in his home, with his wife and family by his side. The family thanks you for your love and prayers, and asks that you continue to respect their privacy during this difficult time. 

Boseman is survived by his wife and one parent. He has no children. 

The Legacy of Chadwick Boseman

Chadwick Boseman grew up in Anderson, South Carolina, and went on to attend Howard University in Washington, D.C., where he graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Directing. The City of Anderson held a public memorial for Boseman Thursday, and city spokeswoman Beth Batson told ABC 4 News that the people of Boseman’s hometown feel “deep sadness and grief” at the actor’s passing. 

Boseman was active in his local congregation during his youth, said Samuel Neely, the retired pastor of Welfare Baptist Church. In a 2018 interview shortly before the release of “Black Panther,” Neely said he had baptized Boseman and had known him since the actor was born. Boseman “did a lot of positive things within the church and within the community,” said the pastor. “With him singing in the choir, with him working the youth group, he always was doing something, always helping out, always serving. That was his personality.”  

In a statement posted to the church’s Facebook page, current senior pastor Rev. Dr. Ankoma D. Anderson, Sr., said,

It is with extreme sorrow that we mourn the death of our beloved Chadwick Boseman, who transitioned this evening. This untimely loss deeply saddens our church. The Welfare Baptist Church will forever remember Chadwick as a homegrown talented young man who rose to superstardom and made us proud! As we mourn his death and grieve alongside his family, we ask that you keep the Boseman and Welfare Church family in your thoughts and prayers! Rest well, Black Panther; REST WELL!

FaithIt’s article about Boseman’s passing observes, “Chadwick was certainly not shy about sharing his faith and giving credit to God for his successes.” After being cast in the role of T’Challa, the actor said that getting the part was an answer to prayer. Prior to that, in an interview with Risen Magazine where Boseman talked about playing Jackie Robinson, he pointed out, “One of the fruits of the [Holy] Spirit is self-control.” The actor said he believed that Robinson’s reliance on his faith supported him throughout his life. “He had to have all of [the fruit],” said Boseman, “patience, love, gentleness, brotherly kindness, charity — but the self-control comes from going through the fire. I feel like it’s because he had God in him that he was able to make it through this.” 

Why Isn’t Spiritual Health and Fitness Taken Seriously?

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When the Coronavirus pandemic forced the world into lockdown, many people interested in health and fitness sought new ways to keep physically and mentally fit to combat the consequences of sedentary living and isolation; we saw a surge in sales of dumbbells, yoga mats, and online fitness programs, plus a boom in subscriptions of Zoom, Netflix, and online learning.

But the challenge of quarantine hasn’t been just physical and mental. In the face of uncertainty and death, according to recent polls, one in twenty people have started praying, a quarter of adults have watched an online religious service, and more than ever people are searching for hope. Why? Because humans are not just flesh and thoughts; we have an inbuilt desire for purpose, value, justice, truth, and life. In other words, we were built to be moral; we were built to be spiritual.

The Bible tells an amazing story of what it means to be human and why we are spiritual: the sovereign God of the universe is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (John 14). He spoke the world into existence and, as the pinnacle of His creation, made humans in His image and likeness to be spiritual creatures (Genesis 1) with His truth written on our hearts (Jer 31:33). As God’s image bearers, we have been given a body, mind, and spirit. (1 Thess 5:23).

Most people understand the importance of physical and mental health and fitness; we understand how when one strengthens or suffers, the other follows sooner or later. I’m a certified fitness professional; I even started a missional fitness community (called ‘Breakfit’) with a vision to see whole-person transformation in local communities and a desire to enable people of all ages to flourish in body, mind, and spirit. The parallels of training and the seamless conversational connection between physical and spiritual fitness are incredible to me. But why isn’t spiritual health and fitness taken seriously? We are in danger of neglecting what it means to be human as God intended; the spirit is not a fraction of our humanity – it is integral to our humanity.

The Bible teaches spiritual health and fitness starts with believing and trusting the Lord Jesus Christ (Rom 10:9-13), and is sealed by immediately receiving the Holy Spirit, guaranteeing eternal life (Eph 1:14). From that point on, life is learning to trust Christ by keeping in step with the Spirit and seeking first His Kingdom in all our relationships, pursuits, and experiences. But like physical and mental fitness, that doesn’t just happen; spiritual fitness requires training.

“…train yourself for godliness; for while bodily training is of some value, godliness is of value in every way, as it holds promise for the present life and also for the life to come.” (1 Timothy 4:7b-8)

‘Godliness training’ literally means training to put God first in each and every area of life. To follow Christ in faith means we are called to put Him first in our families, work, art, finances, outlook, and relationships. But to put Him first, we first need to be immersed in who He is, what He has to say about the world, and the truth of His love, power, plans, and eternal purpose. In a world that is often hostile against Him and contains suffering of all kinds, our faith in God needs to be fed, inspired, and trained

This food, inspiration, and training can only come by taking God’s Word, the Bible, seriously. To train in godliness means a steady diet of the Word of God; for God did not design humans to live on food alone, but by every word that comes from His mouth (Matt 4:4). God chose to specifically and authoritatively speak to us in His Son, through His Word and by His Spirit, so that we can know Him and mature into the likeness of Christ. We need God first in every fiber of our bodies, God first in every thought we think, and God first in every word we speak – Him first in our hearts, Him first in every breath of the day. Our habits do not change without God’s training; we need to intentionally get into the Word of God.

That’s why I am so passionate about WordGo. WordGo is a fully resourced group Bible study, powered by an app that is accessible, customizable, and designed to help people develop a regular rhythm of engaging directly with the text of the Bible – individually and especially in groups of friends. The mission of WordGo is spiritual health in the body of Christ: you, your friends, your church group, and your family reaching for the Word daily and growing in love of the Lord – for who He is and what He says. WordGo is solid scriptural food in bite sized meals, received in quiet time and digested in fellowship; God’s spiritual training comes alive in His Word, transforming how we live and live together.

I firmly believe we need a bigger purpose and story for human health and fitness. Particularly in response to tragedies like the Coronavirus pandemic, as people suffer from bereavement, loneliness, anxiety, fear, and loss of community. Under professional instruction and guidance, physical and mental fitness will certainly help us cope in times of difficulty – even the Bible teaches it has some value (1 Tim 4) – but by themselves, they don’t go far enough to satisfy our deepest longings and needs, answer our greatest fears, or fulfill our God-given eternal purpose and potential. We need spiritual fitness in Christ; for as Paul says to Timothy, it not only has immense value and impact on this life but also the next!

Seeking God’s training for fitness in body, mind, AND spirit is a greater, wholistic, and exciting vision for helping people not only to optimize the best and overcome the worst of this life, but also to prepare for a rich entrance into and experience of the next (1 Peter 1:11). As C.S. Lewis puts it in Mere Christianity, ‘Aim at heaven and you will get earth “thrown in”; aim at earth and you will get neither.’

7 Ways to Increase Your Support Network and Why It Matters

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I can’t tell you the number of people who write to me looking for help in the midst of a full-blown crisis. They have no support network — no ready-made shelter now that the storm has hit. Finding a good counselor can be hard. And it’s even harder when you needed it. . .yesterday.

You likely check in with a medical doctor. You get that your body needs nourishment, exercise, and periodic check-ins to stay healthy. Yet so many of us don’t give the same attention to our mental, emotional, and spiritual health.

Here’s the best piece of advice I can give: Don’t wait until you’re in crisis to set up a support network.

I’ve been there. As a counselor, I struggled with burn-out early on in my work. I had to learn the hard way what’s it like to face crisis without a trusted support network. But I learned from that mistake.

I started by finding a counselor through my insurance network, which was daunting in and of itself. I then asked a friend to pray with me bi-weekly. Over time, I reached out to a woman I respected and and asked her to mentor me spiritually on a monthly basis.  To this day, a month doesn’t go by without intentional, soul-nourishing conversation with trusted advisers. Sometimes I need these check-ins more than others, but I never regret them. Looking back, it couldn’t be clearer that setting up a support network has kept me strong through life’s challenges. By caring for my own emotional and spiritual health, I’ve had more to give to others.

7 Ways to Increase Your Support Network

1.)   Ask yourself: Who is checking in on my mental, emotional, and spiritual well-being regularly?

It might be a counselor, a mentor, a small group, or a spiritual director. But if you can’t list at least 3 people who are regularly checking in with you, then consider expanding  your support network. You were not designed to do life alone. We all need trusted advisers.

2.)  Assess your needs individually and as a family.

Are you struggling to hold it together as a parent? Do you have a child who struggles with anxiety or behavioral problems? How’s your marriage? Are you single parenting? Have you been through any sort of trauma, past or present? Think about your specific situation and consider whether an individual counselor, marriage counselor, trauma-informed therapist, peer support group, or life coach might benefit you.

3.)  Take a look at your budget.

Counseling can be an incredible asset to your support network, and it doesn’t have to be expensive. Look at other health investments (such as gym memberships and personal care) and think about whether an investment in mental and emotional health might also be needed. Then check with your insurance company to determine your benefits. There’s a reason why many insurance companies provide mental health benefits—regular mental health check-ins are good for your health!

4.)  Start your search.

If you decide to add a counselor into your support system, here are a few tips on how to find one:

  •     Contact a local church, university, or seminary to see if they provide free or discounted counseling. If not, ask them for a referral list of counselors in your area.
  •     Check with friends that you trust.
  •     Ask your primary care physician.
  •     Use Psychology Today or Christian Counselor Directory to search for licensed counselors in your region. You can filter your search by insurance provider, areas of specialty, and religious affiliation. You can also use these search engines to find psychiatrists, treatment centers, and support groups.
  •     If scheduling is an issue for you, consider online options. Visit my Resources Page for various online options.
5.)  Narrow your list.

When selecting a counselor, I always tell people to narrow the list down to 2-3 that seem to meet your needs. Contact those individuals and ask them for a brief phone interview. During that introductory interview, you’ll get a feel for personality and fit. Be clear about what you need. If you have experienced trauma, ask the therapist if they are “trauma-informed.” If you need help with your marriage, check to see if the person has training in marriage counselor. Ask for their training and credentials.

6.)  Join free support groups in your community.

It may be that you’re in need of peer support with others facing similar challenges. If that’s the case, there are a wide variety of support groups available in most communities. Check with your local hospital or churches for various options. You can also check my Resources Page for various support group options.

7.) Schedule regular check-ins with a mentor, pastor, spiritual director, small group, or friend.

Some people can ask for help easily when they need it. For others, asking for help can be difficult.  That’s why I recommend scheduling regular check-ins with a few safe people. When you schedule a weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly time to check-in with a friend, mentor, or prayer partner, you know you are going to be asked, “How are you doing?” on a regular basis. Structure makes it harder for the challenges you are facing to fester unattended.

Take the time you need now to put your support system in place—you won’t regret this important investment in your mental, emotional, and spiritual health. It will help you on your own journey toward wholeness, and it will help you create a solid foundation for healthy relationships with others.

Without good direction, people lose their way; the more wise counsel you follow, the better your chances.” Proverbs 11:14 (MSG)

What resources have you found helpful as you set up a support network?

This article originally appeared here.

History of Children in Revival

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John Wesley had a powerful ministry to children and saw many examples of children in revival.

John Wesley and his brother Charles were the founders of Methodism and preached during the first Great Awakening. He is also credited for later influencing the holiness movement and the Pentecostal movement. John was born in England in 1703. On May 24, 1738, on his way to preach in America, he met a Moravian missionary on the ship and experienced his evangelical conversion. Of that experience, he said he felt “his “heart strangely warmed.”

Here are a few of the quotes from his journals about children in revival.

April 11, 1756. (Dublin) I met about a hundred children, who are catechized (instructed) publicly twice a week. Thomas Walsh began this some months ago, and the fruit of it appears already. What a pity, that all our preachers in every place, have not the zeal and wisdom to follow his example.

July 30, 1758. (Cork) I began meeting with the children in the afternoon, though with little hopes of doing them good; but I had not spoken long on our natural state before many of them were in tears, and five or six so affected, that they could not refrain from crying aloud to God. When I began praying, their cries increased, so that me voice was soon lost. I have seen no such work among children for eighteen or nineteen years.

January 17, 1772. (Hertford) I found the poor children whom Mr. A kept at school were increased to about thirty boys and girls. I went in immediately to the girls. As soon as I began to speak, some of them burst into tears, and their emotion rose higher and higher. But it was kept within bounds until I began to pray.

A cry then arose, which spread from one to another, till almost all cried aloud for mercy, and would not be comforted. But how the scene was changed when I went to the boys! They seemed as dead as stones, and scarce appeared to mind anything that was said, nay, some of them could hardly refrain from laughter.

However, I spoke on, and set before them the terrors of the Lord. Presently one was cut to the heart, soon after another, and another. In ten minutes the far greater part of them were affected as the girls had been. Except at Kingswood, I have seen not such work of God upon children for above thirty years.

What to Make of the Enneagram

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Many of us have taken the Myers-Briggs test. We talk about being ENTJs or INTJs, INFPs or ENTPs, FOXTVs or MSNBCs.

Okay, I made those last two up.

On the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, I am an INTJ, which stands for introvert, intuitive, thinking and judging. Or, as I like to think about it, INTJs are normal and others are irritating.

I can’t begin to tell you how important it was for me to get in touch with the first of those four letters—being an introvert. I honestly didn’t know it for a long time. I didn’t hear people talk about such things, so it wasn’t on my radar. People assumed (and I would have assumed) I was extroverted because I was good with people, comfortable in up-front roles and public speaking, and found myself in leadership positions.

But I wasn’t an extrovert.

The truth is that I got all of my emotional energy from being alone. (That’s the key difference between an introvert and an extrovert—where you get your emotional energy from.) Too much people time, and I would end up in the fetal position not knowing why I was so drained.

But I do now.

I love people, but I get my emotional energy away from people. Knowing that has helped me immensely.

But is personality awareness spiritual? Or does it just breed a kind of narcissism—a self-centeredness, a preoccupation with ourselves? The Bible’s answer may surprise you.

If I had to give the Bible’s headline, it would be, “Apart from knowing who you are, you cannot know who God is.” Or as one of the leaders of the 16th century Protestant Reformation put it, “There is no deep knowing of God without a deep knowing of self, and no deep knowing of self without a deep knowing of God.”

Why?

Because when it comes to the Christ life, there is a self to lose and a self to find. If that sounds like psycho-babble, it’s actually scripture. Here’s how the apostle Paul wrote about it in his letter to the Ephesians:

“You were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self, which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires; to be made new in the attitude of your minds; and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.” (Ephesians 4:22-24 NIV)

And in his letter to the Colossians, he put the same idea this way:

“Do not lie to each other, since you have taken off your old self with its practices and have put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge in the image of its Creator.” (Colossians 3:8-10 NIV)

We have a personality, and there are parts of it that are operating exactly like they should, and parts that aren’t. You can’t put off your old self and put on your new self if you aren’t in touch with… self.

The goal is to discover yourself in light of God’s truth so that you can quit being who you shouldn’t be and fully embrace who you are to be.  Your truest, best self that God intended.

So how do you get to know yourself? And I mean deeply? There are a lot of ways. You can gain self-awareness through trusted friends, counselors and spiritual directors. You can utilize tests like the Myers-Briggs or things like StrengthsFinder.

But there is something much more ancient. It’s called the Enneagram. I know, some of you are saying, “The enne-a-what?” Others of you might be wondering, “Is this some kind of new-age thing?”

The truth is that the Enneagram is anything but new; in fact it’s very biblical.

It’s deeply rooted in ancient Christian thinking and Christian spirituality, going all the way back to the era known as the time of the desert fathers, which included the earliest centuries of the Eastern Christian monastic movement.

The earliest name we have attached to the Enneagram is a man by the name of Evagrius, from the 4th century, who came up with a set of eight corresponding virtues and vices that he used to help think through spiritual formation and relationship with God and the old-self/new-self dynamic. Those eight corresponding virtues and vices are part of the Enneagram to this day. They later became the foundation for what became known in the Middle Ages as the “seven deadly sins,” with seven corresponding virtues.

The goal of these lists was simple: If you could get in touch with who you are – the personal, the spiritual and how they interact with who you are not supposed to be and who you are supposed to be (both the good and the bad) – you would have the kind of self-knowledge needed to become who you are supposed to be. You could chart a path of real, substantive transformation.

But this self-discovery must include the dark side. The shadow side of your personality. The sin. And that’s what sets the Enneagram apart. It goes deep. It not only acknowledges sin but takes it seriously. It gets into motivations and shadow lives, what drives us, and what sins we are most vulnerable to in light of what drives us.

You don’t just walk away from this with a typology—you live with this. You look deeply into a mirror and see the nature of how your personality works, and how it should work.

Here’s how Christian counselor and author Marilyn Vancil, who uses the Enneagram in her Christian counseling, put it:

“It taps into our deeper story, going below the surface of outward behaviors, social styles, strengths and weaknesses, traits and talents. It sheds light on our inner motivation, ardent longing, and deep sufferings. It reveals the filters through which we view life and how these influence the choices we make.

“It clarifies ways we are held captive by habitual patterns of thoughts, feelings, and actions that we aren’t even aware of or can’t seem to change. Most importantly, it illuminates our true essence as one who has been created in God’s image and how our distorted beliefs and ingrained strategies hinder the full expression of who God designed us to become.”

Now, having said all that, let me warn you. The Enneagram and all things attached to it wasn’t copyrighted by 4th century Christian monks, medieval Christian leaders or by your friendly neighborhood Christian pastor. This means it can be, and has been, co-opted and used by all kinds of groups, philosophies, worldviews and religions. If you want to start googling away on this, please don’t. There’s a mess out there attached to the Enneagram. You will find a lot of new-age stuff that isn’t biblical at all.

But don’t throw out the baby with the bathwater. How others have co-opted it and ripped it from its Christian moorings should not keep you from drinking deeply from its well of truth and wisdom. It’s akin to a surgeon’s scalpel: it can heal or wound. It can bring spiritual health, wholeness and insight, or it can mislead and bring deception because of how it is applied.

But used as intended, the Enneagram is something that has been with the church for almost 2,000 years and used by Christian spiritual directors and individual Christ followers for enormous spiritual benefit.

I won’t even begin to try to introduce you to it here and now. For that, I would recommend the writings of my friend Suzanne Stabile who, along with InterVarsity Press, has written the best and most biblical books on its use and application. And if it would serve, I did a series at Mecklenburg Community Church called “Finding Your Way to You” taking an in-depth look at the Enneagram and concluding with an interview with Stabile. You can get the .mp3s or .pdfs of that series HERE.

P.S. I’m an eight.

 Sources

The 16th-century reformer was John Calvin.

Marilyn Vancil, Self to Lose, Self to Find.

See also The Essential Enneagram by David Daniels and Virginia Price; The Sacred Enneagram by Christopher Huertz; Signature Sins by Michael Mangis; The Road Back to You by Suzanne Stabile; The Path Between Us by Suzanne Stabile. Of these, I would most recommend the writings of Suzanne Stabile.

This article originally appeared here.

The Best Memes of 2020 That Will Help You Laugh Instead of Cry

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The beginning of this year was a long time ago—decades some say. There’s no doubt about it: It has been a taxing season. We’re thankful for God’s faithfulness through it all, and we’re also thankful for the people who have helped us cope with these “unprecedented” times…by creating memes. So in the interest of offering some much-needed levity, we’ve collected some of the best 2020 memes we could find, with a special nod to the church. We love you, Church!

The Best 2020 Memes to Help You Laugh a Little

You might say 2020 has been a little…stressful.

Just think: This tweet was relevant to people IN APRIL.

Wait for it.

We feel this. 

This could be a good option.

I promise, I’m not freaking out. 

PLEASE.

Remember those early days of quarantine?

New California Bill Would Lower Penalties for Adults Who Have Sex With a Minor

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California lawmakers are navigating a controversial bill this week, which would lower the penalty for adults who have consensual sex with a minor as long as the offender is within 10 years of age of the victim.

The bill, SB 145, passed in both houses of the State Legislature late Monday evening and is now awaiting a decision by California Governor Gavin Newsom.

Current California law treats cases of statutory rape differently depending on what kind of sex is involved.

Under current law, it is illegal for an adult to have consensual sex with a teenager between 14 and 17 years old, who cannot legally give consent. However, vaginal intercourse between the two does not require the offender to be listed on the state’s sex offender registry, as long as the offender is within 10 years of age of the minor. Instead, the judge has the discretion to decide, based on the facts of the case, whether the sex offender registration is warranted.

Other forms of intercourse such as oral and anal intercourse require sex offender registration.

SB 145 would eliminate automatic sex offender registration for young adults who have anal or oral sex with a minor, and allow the judge to make the call as they do now in cases involving vaginal intercourse with a minor.

State Sen. Scott Wiener, who authored the bill, says SB 145 is an anti-discrimination law on behalf of the LGBTQ community.

Wiener says the existing law “disproportionately targets LGBT young people for mandatory sex offender registration since LGBT people usually cannot engage in vaginal intercourse.”

“California’s sex offender registry continues to draw that distinction—an antiquated, outdated, leftover distinction—that somehow oral sex is worse than vaginal sex,” Wiener said.

“Ordering someone onto the sex offender registry carries lifelong consequences,” Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney Bradley McCartt said in a statement. “Allowing judges and prosecutors to evaluate cases involving voluntary sex acts between young people on an individual basis will ensure justice for all Californians.”

But those opposing the bill argue that it legalizes pedophilia.

“If signed into law, a 24-year-old could have sexual relations with a 15-year-old child without being required to register as a sex offender,” State Senator Shannon Grove wrote in a tweet.

Others argue that Wiener’s approach to the bill does not achieve the “equality” he’s seeking but rather, provides offenders who have sex with a minor the opportunity to evade mandatory registration.

“Any sex is sex,” argued Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez. “I don’t care who it is between or what sex act it is. That being said, I cannot in my mind as a mother understand how sex between a 24-year-old and a 14-year-old could ever be consensual.”

12,000+ Sign Petition to Remove Franklin Graham From Samaritan’s Purse

Franklin Graham Samaritan's Purse
Screengrab Youtube @WCNC

A petition that has garnered over 12,000 signatures is calling for the removal of Franklin Graham as Samaritan’s Purse‘s CEO and Chairman over his support of President Donald Trump. The petition explicitly cites the prayer Franklin offered at the Republican National Convention (RNC) as a point of contention.

Faithful America’s petition slammed Graham for using “Jesus’s name to give thanks for ‘the many blessings we have received these past four years,'” at the RNC. The authors continue, “We would hardly consider family separation, the deadly federal COVID-19 response, rampant corruption and authoritarianism, or ongoing systemic racism to be ‘blessings.'” 

The petition was published on August 28, 2020 by Faithful America, “an online community of Christians putting faith into action for social justice” led by Episcopalian priest Rev. Nathan Empsall.

It appears that Faithful America is blaming President Trump for a lot of the bad things happening in America right now, namely “separating families, rejecting refugees, repealing health care, slowing COVID-19 testing, spreading homophobia and Islamophobia, or supporting anti-Semitic neo-Nazis,” and positing that Graham is guilty by association. Further, the group believes Graham “justifies his partisanship and hatred by hiding behind the credibility of Samaritan’s Purse, the 50-year-old humanitarian-aid organization he runs” and says the non-profit organization is sacrificing it’s reputation by “propping up Graham’s hateful politics.”

The petition Faithful Americaa is asking people to sign reads as follows:

Franklin Graham’s pro-Trump RNC appearance and subsequent interviews show that his partisanship knows no bounds. As fellow Christians, we write to say that if Samaritan’s Purse takes its “purpose of sharing God’s love” seriously, then it is time for you to find a new chairman, president, and CEO. Samaritan’s Purse needs a leader who is not complicit in separating families, rejecting refugees, repealing health care, slowing COVID-19 testing, spreading homophobia and Islamophobia, or supporting anti-Semitic neo-Nazis.

Unless and until you cut ties with Franklin Graham, his right-wing politics can only damage your credibility as a loving, Christian humanitarian organization. If the full Board will not vote to remove Graham as chairman, president, and CEO, then individual Board members can take a personal stand for the Gospel and offer their own resignations.

(This petition will be sent to Board members Sterling Carroll, Michael Cheatham, James Furman, Michael Harwood, Skip Heitzig, Thomas Hodges, Felix Martin del Campo, James Oliver, Brian Pauls, Phyllis Payne, Donna Pierce, Paul Saber, John Scott, Robert Shank, and Paula Woodring.)

Samaritan’s Purse emailed a statement to Newsweek in response to Faithful America’s petition:

Franklin Graham does not tell people who to vote for, but he does encourage everyone to pray and to vote. If the Democratic National Convention had asked him to pray, he would have prayed at the DNC as well. The most important thing any of us can do for our nation is to pray for our leaders, regardless of their political affiliation. Franklin Graham continues to lead Samaritan’s Purse and the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association with the purpose of sharing God’s love and the truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ with hurting people around the world,” the organization said. “Under Franklin’s leadership, Samaritan’s Purse is committed to providing spiritual and physical aid to victims of war, poverty, natural disasters, disease, and famine, as evidenced by our relief efforts in more than 130 countries over the past 50 years.

Franklin Graham Often Faces Opposition

Graham has faced opposition before. Usually that opposition stems from his stance on homosexuality. Just recently after Samaritan’s Purse set up an emergency hospital in Central Park to aid with COVID-19 patients, LGBTQ activists protested them being there due to Franklin Graham’s disapproval of same-sex marriage. Faithful America’s site calls preacher Franklin Graham “notoriously homophobic.”

The attack on Franklin Graham’s spiritual convictions seems also to be an attack on Samaritan Purse’s convictions as well, based on their statement of faith‘s point nine which reads:

We believe God’s plan for human sexuality is to be expressed only within the context of marriage, that God created man and woman as unique biological persons made to complete each other. God instituted monogamous marriage between male and female as the foundation of the family and the basic structure of human society. For this reason, we believe that marriage is exclusively the union of one genetic male and one genetic female. Genesis 2:24; Matthew 19:5-6; Mark 10:6-9; Romans 1:26-27; 1 Corinthians 6:9.

In 2020, in addition to helping overwhelmed hospitals in New York City, Samaritan’s Purse also set up a field hospital in Italy, they are providing medical care for Beirut explosion victims, and currently they are giving assistance to Louisiana after it was hit by hurricane Laura.

Not even Faithful America disagrees that Samaritan’s Purse does good things. The petition page states, “Samaritan’s Purse certainly does important work for the sick and poor—which just makes it that much sadder that the non-profit’s board would sacrifice its reputation by propping up Graham’s hateful politics.”

Samaritan’s Purse was founded by Bob Pierce in 1970 “to meet emergency needs in crisis areas through existing evangelical mission agencies and national churches,” according to their website. Franklin Graham and Bob Pierce met in 1973 and after Pierce’s death to leukemia in 1978, Graham became President and Chairman of the Board for Samaritan’s Purse, and has been ever since. Their mission statement can be read here.

The False Gospel of Visionary Success

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“The whole problem is that churches don’t operate like businesses,” the businessman explained. “If they did, we’d all be a lot better off.”

I can’t remember what prompted this discussion, but I heard it a few times from this man and others. Pastors should look to business leaders for inspiration. Churches should adopt business practices. Churches should also teach their people how to do this so that they know how to really live well in this world.

It’s widespread. It’s the false gospel of visionary success. I hear it often, even from pulpits, and it’s robbing us of a better message that we need to believe.

The Lies We Believe

In This Is Our Time, Trevin Wax asks, “What if we are living according to the myths of our culture without even questioning them?” He helps expose some of the lies that we’re tempted to believe, and shows how the gospel tells a better story.

One of the lies we’re tempted to believe comes from business:

  • Set a vision for your life and your church, and if you’re a pastor, help your people do the same.
  • Become a great leader and overcome any obstacles that stand in the way of our success.
  • Learn from whoever you can in order to attain your goals, especially those who’ve achieved business success.

There’s some truth in these statements. Some ministries need a clearer vision. Some organizations need better leadership. And we can learn from anyone. But the problems with this approach are many.

These lies are more aligned with a North American vision of the good life than Scripture. They offer a vision of the good life that the writer of Ecclesiastes found empty. They assume we have more control than we actually do. They elevate one set of skills (visionary leadership) over skills and gifts, and elevate these skills over character. They put relentless pressure on pastors and individuals to succeed. They label some people who’ve succeeded in God’s eyes as failures. They give primary authority to business sources, pushing Scripture to the periphery. They pressure us to use Scriptural leaders — even Jesus — as illustrations of best and worst practices rather than characters in God’s ongoing story of redemption.

The false gospel of visionary success promises much but leaves us feeling pressured and empty if they don’t succeed, or even if they do.

A Better Message

Scripture presents a better message.

We are known, not for what we do, but we are known because we were made in the image of God. Those who are in Christ Jesus are loved on our worst day as well as on our best.

We’ve been given work to do, and we should do it well, but we do it all for the glory of God. Our work will be forgotten by everyone else sooner than we think, but it matters because it matters to God.

Life is unpredictable and hard. We will suffer more than we expect in this life. Many of us will labor and never be successful in the world’s eyes. But God’s evaluation is the only one that matters. God uses even the difficult things in our lives for our good and his glory.

The church isn’t a business. It’s Jesus’ bride, precious and loved by him. Jesus is the ultimate leader of the church, and his way is the way of servanthood and the cross. And he’s given us everything we need to know in his Word for how to live wisely in this world. We can learn from anyone and anything, but we can never find better wisdom than in the Scripture. Live and serve well, but look to Scripture for your models, not to the latest leadership book on Amazon.

And when everything’s said and done, what matters is that we fear God and keep his commandments, not that we’re well-known or succeeded in becoming visionary leaders.

The call on our lives is not to make much of ourselves, but to lose our lives so we can find them.

Let’s Preach and Believe a Better Gospel

This false gospel is an invasive species that seems to spread easily, so let’s be on guard.

Pastors: please never preach the false gospel of visionary leadership. Let’s make it clear that Scripture is our authority. Let’s lead as shepherds, not CEOs. Read business books if you want, but be mastered by the Word.

Let’s stop attending church conferences where Bibles are rarely opened and this false gospel is preached. And let’s help others spot this false gospel, and preach a better one. If your church has heard this message, then help them hear a better one.

Let’s stop believing this message in our personal lives and commit instead to believing the gospel of grace, and centering our lives around this message.

Life’s too short to believe or preach this false gospel. We have much better news, and we’ve been charged with guarding it and passing it on. Let’s not settle for substitutes.

This article about the false gospel of visionary success originally appeared here.

3 Ways Sunday School Is Going Back to Our New Testament Roots

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It’s hard to believe, but some Bible study groups haven’t met since the beginning of the pandemic. Groups with older members may have chosen not to meet for safety reasons. Other groups haven’t meet online through a tool like Zoom simply because they believed the technology was beyond them (those senior saints may not have had computers, smartphones, or tablets). But even during a pandemic, there are 3 ways Sunday School is going back to its New Testament roots. Groups are meeting again. Here’s what’s taking place.

1. Groups are meeting outside. The photo to the right was taken yesterday morning at 8:30AM. My wife and I dropped in on one of our church’s adult groups that is meeting in the backyard of a home that belongs to one of the group’s members. “Sunday School under the trees” was a great experience! Not only were there 8 people present, two more joined via Zoom! In Acts 16 you’ll find the story of Lydia, a dealer in purple cloth. She and others were outside at a river when they were found by Paul, who proceeded to interrupt their prayer meeting. The Bible records, “On the Sabbath day we went outside the city gate by the river, where we expected to find a place of prayer. We sat down and spoke to the women gathered there. A God-fearing woman named Lydia, a dealer in purple cloth from the city of Thyatira, was listening. The Lord opened her heart to respond to what Paul was saying” (Acts 16:15ff, CSB). Today groups are meeting in backyards, parks, driveways, beaches, and any other place they can practice physical distancing while still coming together for fellowship, prayer, and Bible study. This is just one way Sunday School is going back to its New Testament roots.

2. Groups are meeting in homes. Not only are groups meeting outside, some have regathered inside the home of a group member. These groups have continued to meet, just like the group I’ve mentioned above, but they’ve chosen to meet inside. I am reminded of the brief glance we have into the way first-century Christians met when we read their story in Acts 2:46. “Every day they devoted themselves to meeting together in the temple, and broke bread from house to house” (CSB). These early Christians did not have churches like you and I do today, so they met outside in the temple courts, heard God’s Word preached, then moved to homes in smaller groups to have fellowship and to continue discussing the gospel message they’d heard. Today, we’re getting back to these roots as Christians are gathering in homes for fellowship and study. When their churches reopen groups on campus, they may shift their location there. Or maybe not! There is something wonderful and intimate about meeting in a home, sharing food and fellowship, praying for one another, and discovering the truths found in God’s Word. This is yet another way that groups are going back to their New Testament roots.

3. Groups are meeting. Like I said above, some groups have not met much, or at all, since the start of the pandemic. But things are changing now that we are six months into this global phenomenon. Groups are no longer willing not to meet, and they are finding ways to gather together safely. During times of persecution by the Romans or others, the church didn’t stop meeting. She met. She met in homes, she met outside, but she met. We’re seeing this again today! I like the way the King James Version presents Hebrews 10:25 – “Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching.” Groups are practicing this by finding ways to meet so they no longer forsake their gathering together. I am proud of the creativity and the tenacity I see in groups and group leaders who pivot and press on, finding a place and time to gather as groups.

Has your group found its New Testament roots? I hope you are meeting somewhere, somehow, and doing it safely and in accordance with your state’s guidelines! If not, have a conversation with your group leader or your pastor about how your group could begin to come together once again.

This article about Sunday school originally appeared here.

See Life 2020: A Window Into the Womb

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It started back in 2019. Focus on the Family had long seen the undeniable power of ultrasound to connect a mother to her preborn child. In fact, since 2004, Focus’s Option Ultrasound has reported nearly 460,000 babies saved via the provision of free ultrasounds.

Knowing that ultrasound technology could give a voice to the smallest, most vulnerable among us, Focus set out to present a 4D ultrasound on the liveliest corner of New York City — 1500 Broadway and West 43rd Street, the heart of Times Square Plaza.

Before See Life: Alive in NYC

In his blog, DalyFocus, Jim Daly reflects on the Alive in New York event of last year.

“As an event, it had it all: beautiful and inspirational music from Christian recording artists Francesca Battistelli and Phil King, passionate and compelling speeches from evangelist Alveda King, former NFL star Benjamin Watson, actress Ashley Bratcher, pro-life stalwarts Marjorie Dannenfelser and Christina Bennett, and abortion survivors Melissa Ohden, Josiah Presley and Claire Culwell – and the live 4D ultrasound of former Planned Parenthood director Abby Johnson’s baby.”

 

Alive 2019 mobile unit ultrasound signs
The Alive in NY 2019 mobile ultrasound unit.

Despite the optimism of Focus on the Family, their many special guests, and nearly 20,000 onlookers, the event quickly grabbed the attention of those who were in opposition to Focus’s cause.

Anti-life protestors hurled insults toward the pro-life attendees and spit at the mobile ultrasound unit as it arrived. Robyn Chambers, Executive Director of Focus’s Advocacy for Children, recalls her experience behind the scenes. Chambers, who was stationed in the mobile unit, witnessed first-hand how the medical team met opposition with Christ-like love:

“Among our many volunteers in Times Square were a doctor and a nurse from Bath, New York – the same area where Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger was born. I also watched how a nurse and a pregnancy center director from Long Island reacted to the protestors who shouted vile things at all of us in the mobile unit.

The director saw their signs and heard the commotion, yet she responded with neither fear nor anger. ‘Oh, we need to pray for them,’ she said. ‘They are so wounded.’

When I looked over at the medical team, they held hands and prayed for the protesters.”

The Power of Seeing Life

Despite the opposition, the event carried on, and when the heartbeat of Abby Johnson’s preborn child echoed through the plaza, the atmosphere of Times Square radically shifted.

Just as Focus had hoped, the simple truth that life is in the womb amazed even those who had attended the broadcast in protest.

“…the defining moment came when a larger-than-life image of a preborn child appeared on the 12-foot-high screens and stillness fell over the crowd. Times Square itself seemed to sense the moment as the ever-present honking horns and workaday din faded when the baby’s profile came into view, the placenta tucked up next to the tiny head like a pillow.

Even those just passing by could clearly see arms, lips and a beautiful face as baby yawned and arched his back. Finally came the sight and sound of a beating heart — loud, clear and strong.”

Jim Daly also recalled the tranquil silence that washed over pro-choice protestors as the preborn child appeared on-screen in Times Square Plaza.

“When that ultrasound went on, there was a hush over Times Square that I’ll remember forever. And as that ultrasound — that baby’s heartbeat — began to play right down Times Square on these large speakers and these jumbotrons, the protestors just dropped their signs and looked in awe at what they were seeing. I don’t think many of them had ever seen an ultrasound or heard the baby’s heartbeat before. They looked that stunned!”

Mission Accomplished

After the event, evidence of the rally’s impact started rolling in: two hundred fifty thousand people signed the pledge to help end abortion.

Media coverage of Alive in New York was just as diverse as the crowds that gathered to watch the broadcast, but whether the headlines labeled the event as pro-life or anti-choice, one thing was for sure: for a moment, the voiceless were allowed to speak. The most precious and discounted among the human race were given a chance to campaign for their right to life.

For Focus on the Family, the mobile unit workers, the pro-life advocates, and every special guest involved in the event — giving the preborn a voice was all that mattered. Mission accomplished.

This Year’s Mission

This year, Focus hopes to, once again, give the voiceless a chance to speak. On September 26th, we’re giving the world another glimpse at, not what is in the womb, but who is in the womb.

Along with the showing of a 4D ultrasound, Focus on the Family has compiled life-changing interviews of those impacted by the abortion industry. From ex-abortion clinic workers to abortion survivors, we’re broadcasting their stories in a digital premiere event— See Life 2020.

We invite all who are willing to join us in our mission to end abortion and to give a voice to the voiceless by signing the pledge to acknowledge, defend, and #LoveEveryHeartbeat.

This article originally appeared here.

Free Kids Lesson Package: "Unfrozen"

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Free Kids Lesson Package

From CMD, “This Christmas teach kids that Jesus was born to melt away the old, and bring new life and a new kingdom.  Week 1 is all about Isaiah, and how he told the people that one day God would establish a new kingdom without end.”

This lesson package includes:

  • Make It Stick! Parent Sheet
  • Memory Verse
  • Skit
  • Object Lesson or Kids Sermon
  • Large Group Lesson
  • Small Group Discussion
  • Large Group Game

Get Download Now

Resource provided by Children’s Ministry Deals 

Download Instructions: To download this resource, follow the on-scren directions at the download site.

Free Printable: “Jesus Feeds 5000” Coloring Page

free coloring page Jesus feeds 5000
Used by permission: Sermons4Kids.com

Use this free coloring page to teach kids about how Jesus feeds 5000.

Free Printable

From Ministry to Children, “Use this illustration of Jesus and the small boy as a coloring page in your Sunday School. It’s based on the passage in Matthew 14:13-21 where Jesus feeds five thousand people when a young boy shares his lunch of fish and bread.”


Get Download Now

Resource provided by Ministry-to-children.com


Download Instructions: 
Right-click on the link that says “download the print-friendly file” and choose “Save As.”

For more great ideas for children’s ministry, check this out.

Cyber Abusers Are Taking Advantage of Pandemic, Authorities Warn

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With the coronavirus pandemic causing prolonged lockdowns and an unprecedented shift to online learning, children are spending more time than ever online and on electronic devices. Aside from risks to mental health and social development, that trend also raises concerns about the possibility of cyber abuse and sexual exploitation.

This spring, UNICEF, the United Nations Children’s Fund, tweeted: “As we tackle #COVID19, many children’s worlds have shrunk to just their screens. This leaves them vulnerable to online sexual exploitation, grooming, violence, and bullying. Governments and the tech industry must step up to keep children safe.”

At the height of shutdowns throughout America in April, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children received an estimated 4 million cyber abuse reports, a fourfold increase from April 2019. Now that many schools are operating online for the fall and more parents are turning to remote or hybrid learning, vigilance remains essential to thwart sexual predators, say security experts.

Abusers Are Taking Advantage of the Pandemic 

As children’s lives shifted from in-person to online, child abusers “have found a tempting opportunity to access a broader group of potential victims,” reports Europol, the European Union’s law enforcement agency. “The COVID-19 crisis has resulted in a surge in online distribution of child sexual abuse material, which was already at high levels prior to the pandemic,” says Europol Executive Director Catherine De Bolle. “The harm resulting from being a victim of this crime is severe, and every time a picture or video is shared, this results in repeat victimization. The impact of this crime area can hardly be overstated, and an effective response is of utmost importance.”

The sharing of exploitative material has risen globally, according to Europol, which cites livestreaming, webcams, and peer-to-peer networks as factors in criminal activity among the vulnerable youth population. Other experts warn that child predators have been showing up on homework and tutoring sites, social media platforms, and dating sites for teenagers.

Gurbir Grewal, New Jersey’s state attorney general, says apps and video games have increasingly become “prime hunting ground” for sexual predators. Officials in that state began a sting operation to catch online predators in March, as COVD-19 took hold, which Grewal calls “no coincidence.” During a five-month period from March to July 2020, a New Jersey internet crimes task force received 3,600 tips, a threefold increase from the same period last year. A jump also occurred in 7- to 9-year-olds who are “creating sexually explicit videos after being groomed by online predators.”

Although livestreaming sites such as Zoom have made efforts to increase security features, the phenomenon known as Zomb-bombing continues to occur, with intruders hijacking the screen and often sharing inappropriate messages with viewers.

Why Vigilance Is Key 

Though some parents prefer to respect their kids’ privacy and believe they’ll make good decisions, experts say moms and dads have a responsibility to stay alert. Kent Eastwood, a county prosecutor in Indiana, says, “We trust our children to do the right thing, but we also verify that they do it. We [monitor] in a way where they don’t feel like they’re necessarily in trouble.”

Parents, says Eastwood, have “the right and duty to look” at what their kids are doing online, including checking to see what apps they have downloaded. Educating kids is also essential, he says, because parents can’t constantly oversee and observe children’s online use.

Chris Hadnagy, a cyber-security expert who founded the nonprofit Innocent Lives Foundation, says just as parents wouldn’t hand an untrained teenager the keys to a car, they shouldn’t hand kids devices and let them install programs without offering instruction. He recommends asking your child for a step-by-step tutorial on how to use and interact through various social media platforms. He also recommends having age-appropriate conversations and installing monitoring software in a transparent way.

Jim Caviezel Urges Christians to Be Bold: ‘Many of Us Are Playing Judas’

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Actor Jim Caviezel recently appeared on the Edifi podcast, where he discussed his new movie “Infidel” with host Billy Hallowell. Caviezel said he hopes the film will bring about a greater awareness of Christian persecution and galvanize American Christians to follow Jesus without regard to their own comfort or what others think about them. 

“I would say the goal would be to create a sense of urgency and relevance to Christians and non-Christians,” said Jim Caviezel when Billy Hallowell asked him for the main takeaway of the film. Many American have very comfortable lives and are oblivious to the persecution that Christians are experiencing elsewhere in the world. However, said Caviezel, “Barbaric Christian persecution is something that still goes on today…We should be aware and engaged in this issue.” 

Jim Caviezel: Don’t Love Approval More Than Jesus

Jim Caviezel told Billy Hallowell that “Infidel,” which releases to theaters Sept. 18, 2020, portrays the “persecution of Christians in the Middle East.” After an American man is invited to speak on national television in Cairo, Egypt, he gets kidnapped and is held captive in Tehran. When the U.S. government does nothing to save him, his wife goes to Iran to save him.

The film, while not based on a specific true story, is nevertheless “thinly disguised truth” and portrays real injustices people have suffered in the Middle East. As examples, Caviezel mentioned the Christians who were martyred in Libya by ISIS, as well as the disappearance of FBI veteran and CIA contractor Robert Levinson, who reportedly died after 13 years of imprisonment in Iran. The actor also drew attention to the fact that many Muslims in the Middle East are suffering the loss of their freedoms. 

Caviezel said there is a moment in the film when his character is on TV and the host presents a certain perspective of who Jesus is. Caviezel’s character has a choice to bow to the pressure to agree with the host or to say what he believes is true. “I love this character,” said the actor, “because he stands up for what he believes in, and that is something that is lacking today in this world’s cancel culture…people want to be liked so badly.”

While it is easy for American Christians and church leaders to let their desire for influence cause them to neglect following God, this is not the example we see in Scripture from Jesus or his disciples. First, Jesus did not ignore the suffering of others. “When I read the gospels,” said Caviezel, “I’ve never seen a Jesus that would sit there and say, ‘Well, you know, too bad for him.’ That is not the gospel I know.” Second, Caviezel pointed out that the Apostle Paul actually had more comfort, power, and influence before he encountered God on the road to Damascus than he did when following God after that experience. 

Caviezel challenged his listeners not to be apathetic about injustice and not to deceive themselves or others about who they are truly following. “The way God sees us is who we really are,” he said, and God will bring the truth to light eventually. “Many of us are playing Judas,” said the actor, “Many of us are playing the Pharisees. And it will come when we have to face God, and it will come, even to non-believers…And we don’t get to see ourselves the way we want to see ourselves anymore.”

We need to be on guard against being complacent about atrocities and injustices in our own country as well, said Caviezel, specifically mentioning the “barbarism of abortion.” Being apathetic toward such wrongs is not how God wants us to live as his people. The actor hopes his latest film will encourage believers to stand up for what is right, no matter the consequences, no matter the tyranny of cancel culture. “You know a tyrant when you’re not allowed to speak your truth,” he said. “We as Christians have to be bold and speak the truth.”

Is the White, Evangelical Church Changing Its Mind About Racial Injustice?

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When Derwin Gray, a former NFL player who pastors Transformation Church in Charlotte, North Carolina, heard the statistics, he wasn’t surprised. Gray, a black man who has long cultivated a more diverse Church body that embraces racial equality, said he’s seen “more of an awakening” from white Christians than ever in the past year, and is encouraged by new data showing that white, church-going Christians have begun to shift their views on race. 

According to fresh research from Barna Research, released exclusively today to ChurchLeaders, white, church-going Christians—long resistant to embrace things like the phrase “Black Lives Matter” or admitting racial discrimination is still present in society today—have slowly begun to shift their views on those issues and more. The research for the data surveyed 1,525 U.S. adults between June 18 and July 6, asking questions like “Do you think our country has a race problem?” and if the U.S. has been historically oppressive to minorities. 

It shows that on a number of hot button racial issues, practicing Christians in 2020 are definitively more affirming than in years past of efforts to combat injustice through protests, personal economic choices, language usage and the removal of Confederate statues.

The evolution of their support for use of “Black Lives Matter,” revealed in the new data, illuminates the stark shift. From only 13 percent of Christians supporting use of the phrase in 2015 (preferring “All Lives Matter” instead) to 45 percent holding a “positive” or “very positive” view in 2020, the jump is significant. 

Another dramatic leap within just the last year demonstrates evidence of change. In 2019, 48 percent of Christians “strongly” or “somewhat strongly” agreed that historically, the U.S. has been oppressive to minorities. The new data shows that number increased to 57 percent this year. What’s more, nearly 2/3rds (64 percent) of Christians report they are at least “somewhat motivated” to address racial injustice in our society. 

The longstanding gap between white and black evangelicals has begun to close, even if the gulf is still exceptionally wide. Gray admits the “majority culture evangelical church has struggled,” but he’s seen evidence of the “signs of revitalization” the new numbers reveal. 

“I’ve had more emails and calls in the last 2-3 months from white pastors seeking guidance, than I’ve had in the last few years combined,” he said, echoing reports from other young, black pastors who have been inundated. 

The white, Protestant Church inhabits ghosts when it comes to the historical treatment of Black people. Several factions of the Church (Baptists, Methodists, among them) split over disagreements regarding slavery, and Scripture was often used to justify support for both segregation and slavery, for example.

Many of these disparate viewpoints held by black and white Christians on the surveyed issues—like opinions on police brutality and outlawing the Confederate flag—are still apart. For example, white Christians are much more likely to view police brutality as an isolated incident, while the majority of black Christians view it as a larger, systemic problem. But the gap is shrinking within Christianity, led by Millennial and Gen Z Christians, who consistently align more with Black Christians. 

Justin Giboney, who is Black, and the co-founder of the AND Campaign, an organization focused on the intersection of faith and politics, like Gray, isn’t surprised by the positive shift either. Given the vocal set of white, evangelical voters who were put off by the election of President Trump in 2016, he said over the phone, it makes sense. Giboney attributes much of the positive change, however, to people “taking their blinders off” after witnessing the murders of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery earlier this year. 

In August, Giboney’s AND Campaign assembled a large group of Christian organizations to launch the Prayer & Action Justice Initiative, an effort to combat racial injustice and advocate for police reform across America. The coalition included a diverse collection of groups, including the National Association of Evangelicals, the Church of God in Christ denomination, National Latino Evangelical Coalition, the American Bible Society, Center for Public Justice, Prison Fellowship, the Asian American Christian Collaborative, the National Day of Prayer, and World Relief. 

Skillet Singer Describes What It’s Like Living in Kenosha Right Now

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The lead singer of the multi-platinum Christian rock band Skillet, John Cooper, lives in Kenosha, Wisconsin just blocks away from where violent riots broke out this past Wednesday. In a Facebook post he said, “I never thought I’d enter into a time where I actually have to strap on my AR to keep my family safe, because I am 5 blocks away from where they are burning down the place where I live in.”

John Cooper appeared on Fox & Friends this past Saturday explaining what his experience has been living in the heart of Wisconsin’s current unrest, sparked by the recent police shooting of Jacob Blake. Cooper said that his wife Korey Cooper’s parents have lived in the 100k person town their entire lives, and mentioned they never lock their doors. Cooper said that when he moved to Kenosha that it was TIME Magazine‘s #2 best city in America to raise a family.

“You see this stuff on the news, in Portland, in Seattle, in New York City, or Chicago…you see it and you think it could never happen in your town of Kenosha, Wisconsin.” He continued, “People love each other. [Kenosha] is not a hateful place. It’s not a racist place. The only time it gets angry is when the [Green Bay] Packers play the [Chicago] Bears.”

“There are really good faith people protesting,” Cooper responded to Fox & Friends’ Pete Hegseth‘s question about whether Cooper thought there will be continued violence or  peaceful conversations (about racial injustice) instead. “There are people that want to see change,” he added. “I know people that are protesting. They have good hearts. They want to see the world become a better place, become more equitable, become more loving, become more forgiving.” But Cooper stated that the problem is “there’s not enough condemnation against the violence…when people are burning down your city, slashing your tires….THREATENING to come in my neighborhood, and quote ‘F-up’ my neighborhood…NOW I can’t hear you.”

Skillet’s frontman made an enlightening comment saying he should be, “out playing concerts, rocking the free world (referring to his band Skillet). Instead, I’m hunkered down, praying for the very people that I might have to hurt that night.” He told Hegseth, “That’s something Americans shouldn’t have to deal with! I don’t want to hurt anybody. I’m praying for safety. I’m praying for them. I’m praying for their souls. I’m praying for racial justice. I want all those things, but you can’t come and threaten people’s family in America.”

Skillet’s Cooper gave an encouraging report before ending the interview saying the city had an “amazing” prayer meeting with 14 pastors of all races that came together because of the unified belief that there is one hope. He said that hope “is not a President, it’s the hope in Jesus Christ that gives you a brand new heart to love people that don’t always love you back.”

Jesus can change all of this. He can bring peace.

On his Facebook page, Cooper posted a video of a city-wide prayer event that took place less than 24 hours after the rioting started.

On Monday, Cooper posted an episode of “Cooper Stuff Podcast” that gives an in depth look at the aftermath from the protests, turned violent riots, and talks more about what it’s like to watch protesters march by your house. He also discusses how the media is rooting for the chaos to continue, and shows the positives that are coming out of the darkness, believing it will bring people to the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ.

Ep. 35 – Kenosha: city on fire

Kenosha: city on fire. Cooper stuff takes you on location to some of the aftermath of the protests. We show you what it’s like to watch protesters march by your house. We talk about the chaos and how the media is rooting for it to continue, and finally we show some positive things coming out of the darkness that we believe will lead many to hope and salvation through Jesus Christ.

Posted by John L. Cooper on Sunday, August 30, 2020

Mary Lederleitner: How to Preach and Lead During an Election Year

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Dr. Mary Lederleitner is Managing Director of the Church Evangelism Institute at the Wheaton College Billy Graham Center and is the author of Women in God’s Mission and Cross-Cultural Partnerships. Mary earned her Ph.D. at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and has an M.A. in Intercultural Studies from Wheaton College. She teaches as an adjunct professor at both institutions.

Key Questions for Mary Lederleitner

-When does political affiliation cross over into idolatry?

-What are the dangers pastors face regarding political idolatry?

-What practical advice do you have for pastors who are preaching and leading during this election year?

-Have you noticed any differences between the generations when it comes to political idolatry?

Key Quotes from Mary Lederleitner

“I think a lot of time political idolatry really raises its ugly head when people are afraid because most people fall into idolatry to look for a sense of security.”

“It’s easy to say we believe a lot of things…until we’re tested. And this [social tension] is testing many of us to our core.”

“Sometimes we want the gospel plus the American Dream. It’s like we conflate the two.”

“I think these trials are revealing, maybe revealing the states of our hearts.”

“We’re allowed to have strong [political] views. We’re supposed to be discerning and we’re supposed to be understanding the times, and we’re supposed to be integrating our faith into our daily lives. The problem that’s happening is hate sells.”

“There are forces trying to manipulate Christians in a pretty significant way.”

“If we’re leading people, we’ve got to check our own hearts and discern if we’ve fallen into political idolatry.”

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