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Hot Takes Don’t Belong in Church

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Is the church going to make a statement?”

“Are you going to speak out?”

“What does the church have to say about this?”

These are text messages I have received since 2016 following various political events. Some of them filled me with excitement (because I did have something to say), others filled me with dread (because I had nothing to say), and others filled me with confusion (because I wasn’t sure what was going on).

Fifteen years ago, when I started in pastoral ministry, I was expected to refrain from commenting on political issues. Now, my congregation expects that I comment on every political issue. If pastors don’t make a public statement in reaction to the news, we’re not doing our jobs.

The pastor and the church sit in a strange place. Pastors often function as mediators of the Word for the lives of their congregants. But this has been twisted. In a time of political obsession, pastors and churches are no longer “mediators” of a mystery but public relations representatives for the American church.

Many look to the church to provide and maintain a favorable public image of God or to take a hard stance in an increasingly polarized world. We likely chose our church because of shared values; so we want our pastors to tell us how we are feeling and to reflect our feelings back to us—to say what we cannot say. Many of our expectations come from a misunderstanding of what the church is and what the pastor’s role should be.

Public relations serve to maintain image and brand. Those in PR are interested in supplying a kind of language that satisfies a consumer—the public. Public relations firms spin messaging to convince someone of something that (most often) does not exist but should.

In today’s landscape, we hear “what the Chipotle founder has to say about gun violence” or about “Bass Pro Shop’s commitment to anti-racism.” Like the political statements of corporations, we look to our church’s social media accounts, seeking a finely crafted statement that matches the capitalist model of placating our emotions to drive our pecuniary interests.

The church is many things: a body, a bride, and a family, as well as a social organization, religious institution, and community hub. It is also a lot more. But it might be important to consider what the church is emphatically not: a PR representative.

We can consider these questions: What do I expect of my church and why? Is our local congregation required to articulate the emotional moment we (and millions of others) are experiencing?

As a pastor, I respond to current events because I want my people to know I live in the same confusing and painful world as them. To love and disciple my people, I want to acknowledge our shared, bizarre reality. And yet, I also sense a drift from my calling as I am often expected to comment on every news item that comes into our feeds. Here are a few ways I have come to think about tackling headlines from the pulpit.

First, the church bears witness of Christ’s life and resurrection but is ultimately presented to Christ himself (Eph. 5:27). True churches that serve the purposes of Jesus do not maintain an image; they announce the good news of the resurrection of Christ. “Spin” for a church would be sin.

The Resurrection shapes how we might think about any given event. There are new events that we will speak about, but there is nothing new the church can say that it has not already been saying for 2,000 years: Christ has died, Christ is risen, and Christ will come again.

Second, crafted political statements can actually remove us from our work. So long as we are creating a palatable statement for social media or Sunday’s sermon, we are not praying, worshiping, or organizing ourselves for meaningful action. But in today’s culture, the appearance of morality is more important than moral actions, and speaking is more highly valued than praying.

While the church is not a media firm, it is a meaningful community that gathers to worship and sit under preaching. We gather to cry out to God—to seek his forgiveness as we live in a sinful country, to ask for his provision and wisdom when we are lacking them. And we organize efforts to bless our cities with a lasting effect toward justice, not just temporary resonance.

Pastors are also different from celebrities or social influencers. Like heads of corporate brands, pastors are often viewed as “thought leaders” and “representatives” of Christianity. As celebrities mention their disgust over police violence or abortion, it makes many wonder, Shouldn’t my pastor say something as well? But this fundamentally misunderstands the pastor’s shepherding and teaching role.

The pastor differs from the celebrity in that he or she is a teacher of God’s Word, a steward of a mystery (1 Cor. 4:1–2). The pastor is there to pass down what has been told to him or her (2 Tim. 1:13; 2:2; 3:14). Pastors are not in churches primarily to “offer some thoughts” on any given subject; they are there to announce a message that is not their own.

Pastors do not get to “say what we think” about any given thing or present a new idea we’ve been contemplating. We declare something we have heard (1 Cor. 15:1–4). We communicate an idea that did not originate in our brains or online but on the highways of Judea. That is, the primary mode of a pastor is “delivery” or “witness” (1 Cor. 11:23; Acts 1:6–8). The PR firm massages their message to make it palatable. The pastor takes the message and hands it over with as few blemishes as possible.

The pastor certainly delivers this word to a particular people in a particular place. Paul handed the message to the Corinthians while James witnessed in Jerusalem. Corporations and celebrities craft statements for the world, but the pastor speaks and teaches to Ephesus or Antioch—a particular place that requires specific terms, tones, and emphases.

Good pastors are slow to speak, while effective celebrity personalities are first to prove they are insightful and aware. For the celebrity, to not say anything is to allow the “other side” to win, but the careful pastor knows that silence is sometimes God’s most effective language.

Those who ask us to say something immediately after an event assume that speaking first is always the right thing. But the Bible makes several strong warnings about speaking quickly or first (Prov. 18:17; James 1:19) and instructs us to be “prudent” (Prov. 10:19; 12:23; 17:27).

Ecclesiastes says we will all experience “a time to be silent and a time to speak” (Ecc. 3:7). As a shepherd, the pastor exists to care for the flock (1 Pet. 5:2–3)—which means the pastor must listen before he or she speaks. The PR firm crafts a statement immediately. The pastor bends an ear: “What is happening here? What am I not understanding?” This type of response is pastoral to any event, from an election to a divorce.

There are, of course, many times to speak. Scripture is unabashed in its denunciation of all kinds of evil. The prophetic literature is ridden with full rebukes against sexual immorality, idolatry, and oppression of the poor. But the prophets spoke full of the Holy Spirit, driven by a “divine pathos,” as Abraham Heschel says, rooted in communion with the living God. And they were often told to seek silence because silence is one of God’s dialects (Isa. 30:15; 41:1; Hab. 2:20; Lam. 3:26).

It is from this posture of communion with God and our congregation that we take seriously our call of discipleship. Our churches need instruction for how to respond faithfully. But this takes so much more work than a statement. This involves teaching, leading our people in collective prayer, and exhorting them toward righteousness and humility as a way to respond to the terrors of this world.

Chris Nye is a pastor in Silicon Valley, a doctoral student at Duke University’s Divinity School, and the author of several books, including A Captive Mind: Christianity, Ideologies, and Staying Sane in a World Gone Mad (Wipf & Stock, 2022).

Christianitytoday.com

Bishops who deny the Gospel ‘should be removed from their positions’

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Christian Concern leader Andrea Williams has expressed her disappointment over changes to a Lambeth Call on marriage and sexuality. 

The Call on Human Dignity will be discussed and voted on by 650 Anglican bishops at the Lambeth Conference next week.

It has been revised to remove a reaffirmation of the 1998 Resolution 1.10, which upholds marriage as a union between a man and a woman, and rejects homosexual practice.

The change was made after pressure from liberal bishops, including those in the US Episcopal Church and Church in Wales. 

Ms Williams, who is also a lay member of the Church of England General Synod, said that the views of traditionalist Anglicans were being silenced.

She said that “apostate” bishops should be removed from their positions. 

“Faithful Anglicans around the world stand on the biblical principle of marriage between a man and a woman as taught in Scripture, reflected in the doctrine of the church throughout history and re-stated in Lambeth 1:10,” she said.

“Their voice is being silenced by a vocal and powerful minority of apostate Western and American Bishops.

“These bishops that deny the gospel should be removed from their positions rather than be allowed to use their influence to bully faithful Anglicans out of the space that is rightfully theirs.

“It is a great disservice to the gospel, its power and witness when Lambeth Palace allows this to happen.”

www.christiantoday.com

“My Everything,” a new single from contemporary christian artist Zach Taylor

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 “My Everything,” a new single from Contemporary Christian artist Zach Taylor, is going for adds today to Christian AC-formatted radio outlets. A video for “My Everything” is available on YouTube.

Taylor, who is from Bluffton, Indiana, currently is a worship leader at Forgiven Church where his parents are pastors.

As Jeremiah 29:11 says, I believe God has big plans for me and my music,” Taylor shares. “People may not like what they hear me saying in my music at first,” he says, “but if they listen with open hearts and open ears, I believe they may understand.”

“My Everything” is the first single being released by the musician under the new artist name after being known by his fans as Zachary Ochsner for several years. He wrote the song with Ezra Jozef Fredette, who co-produced the single with Noah Hirschy.

Taylor already is garnering media attention with a recent article in CCMagazine.com and being featured on New Release Today’s Indie Artist Watch page.

BC News

Rising christian artist Erin Corrado releases “Hiding Place” to encourage listeners going through hard times

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Rising Christian artist Erin Corrado is set to release her newest inspirational single, “Hiding Place,” to encourage listeners who are going through hard times to look to God.

Inspired by Psalm 61, “Hiding Place” describes how listeners can find refuge, protection and safety in God despite difficult situations that may surround them.

“I have always loved the imagery of a hand-made fort in the woods, a place a child would run to after school, or after having a bad day,” Corrado said. “Much like a fairytale, God’s presence and His ways are often beyond our understanding and explanation. God is able to transcend our own life experiences and what we may be facing in our day-to-day lives into comfort, peace, and solace.”

Co-written by Corrado, Audrie Mouzakis and Matt Mouzakis and produced by John Strandell, the single is a culmination of many talented people coming together to use their talents to worship the Lord.

Corrado hopes “Hiding Place” will help listeners see that God is a high tower, a special place where they are accepted and loved and a steady, constant joy. The new single will be available on Reverb NationSpotifyTIDAL and all other streaming platforms.

Erin Corrado is a singer-songwriter from a small town near the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. She began singing on stage at the young age of four and through many musical experiences knew her talent was God-given. Erin graduated from James Madison University in Virginia with a minor in music industry. She recently began writing and releasing her own music in 2021 to encourage, uplift and point people back to the one source of hope– Jesus! While writing and releasing singles in 2021, Erin continued to co-write with other Christian music artists to create her first EP project, titled Throne Room releasing in 2022. To learn more about Erin Corrado, please visit erincorradomusic.com.

Church of England unveils strategy to help its rural churches thrive

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The Church of England has launched a 10-point strategy to help its thousands of rural churches survive and thrive.

Many provided cool sanctuaries during the recent record-breaking temperatures – but they have the potential to play a much more strategic community role.

The CofE has published ‘How Village Churches Thrive,’ a practical guide to help the churches – many of them historic listed buildings with small congregations – have a sustainable future.

The strategy sets out 10 key areas “where applying relatively small changes can make a big difference to the revitalisation, recovery and renewal of our village churches, amplifying the efforts that may well be happening already.”

The publication comes as many rural churches are facing increasing pressures – financial, demographic and with the upkeep of buildings – to continue as centres of mission and ministry.

In many places, one priest will serve several congregations, going from church to church each Sunday, or across a month.

The 10 key recommendations set out in the strategy are:

Extend a warm welcome. Think carefully and objectively about who your welcome is aimed at. Structure your welcome around strangers to the church, rather than those who are already friends.

Make the most of life events – weddings, baptisms and funerals. Many people’s first contact with church begins through the church being there for them at life’s big moments.

Use buildings creatively. With thought and planning, your buildings can provide opportunities for people to connect with the community.

Care for ‘God’s Acre.’ Your churchyard can be a haven for wildlife, and for people too. You can engage the whole community in loving and caring for the churchyard.

Be the ‘heartbeat’ of a village community. Your church could affect positive change in village life. Leading a community audit could be an important place to start.

Celebrate your heritage. The history of the church buildings presents an opportunity for churches to connect with new people of all ages and backgrounds.

Cultivate fruitful festivals. Festivals across the year provide ideal opportunities to celebrate, be innovative and creative, and – in partnership with schools, businesses and local groups – to welcome others of every age group.

Welcome more children. Engaging with younger people is a priority for the CofE nationally – and village settings can offer great opportunities for creative ministry with children. Projects formed in partnership, especially with local schools, are most likely to thrive.

Reach the isolated and lonely. Village churches are in ‘the perfect position’ to make a positive impact on isolation and loneliness.

Communicate effectively. Focused communication supports your parish vision and strategy and ensures that all your efforts have more chance of being effective.

Comedian Hugh Dennis, whose father was a bishop of a largely rural diocese, wrote the foreword for the guide. He commended the strategy for identifying “simple ideas to involve people of all ages in building a welcoming, long lasting and thriving church community.”

Church House Publishing, who published the new guide, describe it as “Packed with practical advice and inspiring case studies to encourage and increase confidence in all who work or worship in a village church.”

All the book’s contributors are active in supporting the growth of rural churches through their roles in the Church of England or through organisations such as the Arthur Rank Centre, the Churches Conservation Trust, and Caring for God’s Acre.

Rev Peter Crumpler is a Church of England minister in St Albans, Herts, UK, and the author of ‘Responding to Post-truth.’

Christian Today

East Africa: a humanitarian disaster unfolding

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The heatwave this week is a stark reminder that climate change is happening. The world is getting warmer. In the UK we have experienced the highest temperatures on record. Over 6,000 miles away in East Africa for the first time, there have been four back-to-back failed rainy seasons. The prolonged drought this is causing is the worst the region has seen in 40 years.

The combination of this severe lack of rain, the rise in global food prices due to the war in Ukraine and the lasting impacts of Covid is causing a humanitarian crisis. Vulnerable people are now facing the threat of famine and dying. According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 18.4 million people across Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia are not getting enough to eat.


Millions are taking desperate measures to survive in the face of failed harvests, livestock deaths, water shortages and extreme hunger,” warns Yitna Tekaligne, Country Director for Christian Aid.

In Marsabit county in northern Kenya, Marian Nguyo is one of those people.

“Water is a big challenge in this area. With no rains we have to go to extreme lengths to get it,” explains the 34-year-old single mother of four.

Christian Aid is working through local partners in both Kenya and Ethiopia to respond to this crisis. The charity is helping over 300,000 people by repairing wells, handing out water purification kits, providing cash support and trucking water to drought affected communities as well as providing fodder and medicine to keep valuable livestock alive.

This week it launched the East Africa Hunger Crisis emergency appeal to scale up this work and support more people like Marian, Fatuma, Galte and Adoko. A £15 donation could provide seeds and farming tools for one household, £30 will buy water hygiene kits to provide clean drinking water for six families and £50 will supply food for a household of five.

Yitna Tekaligne added, “The severe conditions are being made worse by the climate crisis, Covid and now Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has caused global food prices to rocket. A tough situation has now turned into a dire crisis. To help us respond, please donate what you can.”

To donate to the appeal, visit www.christianaid.org.uk/appeals/emergencies/east-africa-hunger-crisis-appeal

Christian Today

Two Catholic priests abducted in Nigeria

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Two Nigerian Catholic priests have been abducted in Nigeria’s northern state of Kaduna, the local diocese said, nearly two weeks after another priest was taken from his parish in the same state.

Ff John Mark Cheitnum and Fr Donatus Cleopas were abducted in the town of Lere after they arrived for a parish function at Christ the King Catholic Church, Yadin Garu, the diocese said.

It was not immediately clear who was behind the abduction.

Kidnappers abducted another priest from his rectory in Kaduna state earlier this month while parishioners were waiting for him to conduct the morning mass, the local diocese said.

Armed gangs are rife across Nigeria’s northwest where they rob or kidnap for ransom, and violence has been increasing. Stretched security forces often fail to stop the attacks.

Premier Christian News

Pope hopes Canada trip will help heal ‘evil’ done to indigenous people

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Pope Francis said on Sunday his trip to Canada next week will be a “pilgrimage of penance” that he hopes can help heal the wrongs done to indigenous people by Roman Catholic priests and nuns who ran abusive residential schools.

The July 24-30 trip will include at least five encounters with native people as Francis makes good on a promise to apologise on their home territory for the Church’s role in the state-sanctioned schools, which sought to erase indigenous cultures.

“Unfortunately in Canada many Christians, including some members of religious orders, contributed to the policies of cultural assimilation that in the past gravely damaged native populations in various ways,” Francis said at his weekly address to people in St. Peter’s Square.Get the latest Christian World News stories via emailSIGN ME UPSee our privacy notice

About 150,000 children were taken from their homes. Many were subjected to abuse, rape and malnutrition in what Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 2015 called “cultural genocide”.

The stated aim of the schools, which operated between 1831 and 1996, was to assimilate indigenous children. They were run by Christian denominations on behalf of the government, most by the Catholic Church.

The schools were at the centre of discussions between the pope and indigenous people at the Vatican in March and April. Recalling the meetings, Francis said on Sunday he had expressed “my pain and solidarity over the evil that they endured”.

“I am about to make a pilgrimage of penance, which, I hope that with the grace of God can contribute to the path of healing and reconciliation that already has been started,” he said.

The 85-year-old pope will visit Edmonton, Maskwacis, Lac Ste. Anne, Quebec, and Iqaluit in Canada’s Arctic territory. He is scheduled to deliver nine homilies and addresses and say two Masses.

The recurring schools scandal broke out again last year with the discovery of the remains of 215 children at the former Indian Residential School in Kamloops in the Western Canadian province of British Columbia. The school closed in 1978.

The discovery brought fresh demands for accountability. Hundreds more unmarked burial sites have been found since.

Francis was elected pope nearly two decades after the last schools closed.

The pope had to cancel a trip to Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan in early July because of a knee problem that forced him to use first a wheel chair and later a cane.

In an interview with Reuters on July 2, he gave details of his ailment for the first time public, saying he had suffered “a small fracture” in the knee when he took a misstep while a ligament was inflamed.

Premier Christian News

Former faith minister, Catholic MP in running to replace Boris Johnson

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Former Conservative MP Kemi Badenoch said on Saturday she is launching a bid to be the next Tory leader.

“I’m putting myself forward in this leadership election because I want to tell the truth,” she wrote in The Times.

The MP for Saffron Walden said she supported lower taxes “to boost growth and productivity, and accompanied by tight spending discipline”.Get the latest Christian World News stories via emailSIGN ME UPSee our privacy notice

Ms Badenoch was the Minister for Local Government, Faith and Communities which included being the government’s liaison for the country’s faith leaders. She assumed the role as a result of the government reshuffle in September 2021.

Ms Badenoch was born in Wimbledon and brought up in Nigeria, the 42-year-old describes herself as a ‘cultural Christian’ and has a range of faith traditions to draw upon.

Her maternal Grandfather was a Methodist minister and her paternal Grandfather was a Muslim who converted in later life. Ms Badenoch is married to a Catholic and has two children.

She joined the stream of Tory MPs who quit on Wednesday in protest of Boris Johnson’s leadership, unlike Conservative MP Tom Tugendhat.

The MP for Tonbridge and Malling is Catholic and chairman of the foreign affairs committee. He’s also a former soldier who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In his announcement that he’s running for Conservative Party leader, he said: “This nation needs a clean start and a government that will make, trust, service and an unrelenting focus on the cost of living crisis its guided principles.”

In November 2017, Tugendhat showed his desire to get his faith involved in politics. He appealed to Prime Minister Boris Johnson on behalf of then jailed Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe.  He asked if he would consider asking the UK heads of the Anglican or Catholic Church to negotiate her release from an Iranian prison. The wife and mother was finally released this year.

Ms Badenoch and Mr Tugendhat will face fierce competition from former ministers including the Rishi Sunak and Attorney General Suella Braverman.

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss is also expected to announce her candidacy.

Premier Christian News

Franklin Graham vows to return to UK next year as tour draws to a close

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US evangelist Franklin Graham has told Premier he’s looking to come back to the UK to preach next year after he closed his God Loves You Tour at the Excel Centre in London.

Over 7,500 people gathered on Saturday evening, filling the arena, to listen to the son of renowned preacher Billy Graham who was joined by worship singers CeCe Winans and Michael W Smith.

Cece Winans and Michael W Smith / Photo Credit: Mark Barber
Cece Winans and Michael W Smith / Photo Credit: Mark Barber

Earlier this summer, Graham preached at events in Newport, Sheffield and Liverpool, two years after he was originally due to visit.Get the latest Christian World News stories via emailSIGN ME UPSee our privacy notice

Back then eight venues which were booked all cancelled after numerous protests linked to Graham’s past comments on Islam and homosexuality.

After successful legal proceedings against some of the venues, a slimmed down tour was announced with the support of around 2,000 churches.

Graham has now vowed to return for further events.

“This isn’t the final message,” he told Premier while backstage at the Excel. “We’re going to come back. We’re coming back next year. We’ll probably do three locations here in London within a period of about six to eight weeks and try to have a bigger impact.”

Despite all the negativity surrounding the tour, organisers have spoken positively about its impact.

Photo Credit: Mark barber

On Saturday, hundreds responded to an altar call after hearing Graham deliver a sermon in which he spoke of “time running out” and all needing to know their soul is “safe and secure in God’s hands”.

Graham said that simple message needs to be delivered more regularly across the UK.

“Your churches need to be involved in evangelism,” he said. “There’s power in the Gospel, as you saw tonight, just a simple gospel message and people respond to that, because it’s the word of God and there’s power in his word.

“I would encourage churches to be involved in evangelism, preach a gospel message give an invitation. Lots of times pastors are afraid to give an invitation, afraid that maybe nobody will come forward and they would look silly standing up there by themselves, who cares if you look silly, give an invitation, see what the Holy Spirit of God does.”

Photo Credit: Mark Barber

Graham returns to the US on Sunday, and after already visiting the UK and Brazil to preach this year, has events booked in New Zealand and Mongolia among others.

In his sermon at the Excel he spoke of his own time running out. This week he celebrated his 70th birthday.

Speaking about his desire to keep preaching, he said: “I’ll go as long as I can. My father went to his late 80s. As long as I have health and strength, I’m gonna keep preaching.”