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Archbishop of Westminster expresses his support for Ukrainian refugees who will be welcomed in the UK

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The Archbishop of Westminster is encouraging people to fast and pray for Ukraine as Russian forces continue to bomb the country. 

The invasion is into its eighth day; the UN predicts the death toll has already exceeded 2,000 people. 

Cardinal Vincent Nichols, Archbishop of Westminster, said: “I have an overwhelming sense of dread. I can only imagine what people in the cities of Ukraine – Kyiv in particular – how they feel when they see that huge convoy of military assets being driven towards their city, and when they see city centres attacked by missiles. 

“My heart goes out to them, and I just wish I could find some ways of strengthening their resolve.”

Cardinal Nichols has issued his support for Ukrainian refugees to be welcomed to the UK. 

He continued: “It’s important that we act generously, but not recklessly. There needs to be a measure of appropriate care and preparedness for people to be welcomed here, but welcomed they should be.”

Cardinal Nichols was urging people to dedicate the first day of Lent, Ash Wednesday, to fasting and prayer. 

He continued: “As the people of Ukraine, you will see them pray before icons, and intercede for the prayers of Mary, the mother of Jesus, the Mother of God, before they engage. They know perfectly well the power of prayer, whether they’re from an Orthodox tradition, or a Latin rite or Ukrainian Catholic tradition. 

“You see the churches in this country here, filled this weekend, over and over again. People understand the power of prayer, they don’t need me to explain it. 

“Fasting is an absolute act of acknowledging my dependence on God. 

“This is the beginning of Lent, and Lent is 40 days and just think, 40 days Moses with garden Sinai, 40 days of the temptation of Jesus in the desert, 40 days of preparation for Easter, as they had 40 years in the wilderness.

“These are deep, deep things, and we use lent on Ash Wednesday as a beginning to refresh and place ourselves again before God.”

SOURCE: PREMIER CHRISTIAN NEWS

‘This was a conflict that didn’t need to take place’: Franklin Graham speaks into Ukraine war and how his charity is looking to help

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US evangelist Franklin Graham has told Premier his charity Samaritan’s Purse will do all it can to support those caught up in the conflict in Ukraine.

The global organisation is sending chaplains as well as medical support to the country and the neighbouring nations.

Samaritan’s Purse has been supporting families in Ukraine for many years.

Graham says he’s saddened by these recent events: “This was a conflict that didn’t need to take place. Samaritan’s Purse, through Operation Christmas Child, recently delivered 660,000 shoe box gifts for the children of Ukraine. 

“We have 3,200 churches that we work with in Ukraine. These churches that were handing out shoe boxes are now fighting for their lives.”

With its vast resources, Samaritan’s Purse is able to fly out mobile field hospitals to anywhere in the world.

Plans are now in place to support those on the ground.

Speaking about the logistics, Graham said: “Our main focus will probably on the inside of Ukraine, where there’s just a lot of people that  cannot get out of the country, that are going to be needing food, they’re going to be needing medicine, and so Samaritan’s Purse will work in those areas.”

Graham says they’re already starting to hear stories of God at work through his people in cities across Ukraine

“We do know that the churches are trying to help families get out of harm’s way. I know pastors are using their own vehicles, their own cars, to try to move people out of harm’s way. 

“They’re not running, they’re not leaving, they are staying there with their people.

“I just admire these Ukrainian pastors and just pray that God would just put his hand of protection around them. It’s so important that we pray that God protects the Church.”

Graham is urging Christians across the world to pray for an end to fighting.

He also said it was important to remember those on both sides of the conflict.

“The sanctions on Russia – there’s no question, it’s going to bring a lot of pressure. 

“We need to remember to pray for the Russians too because the vast majority of the Russian people don’t support this. They don’t want to see war. 

“It’s important that we pray for the leaders of both countries, that God would work in their hearts, and that this thing could come to an end quickly.”

SOURCE: PREMIER CHRISTIAN NEWS

Young Christian missionary escaping smoking Kyiv describes ‘moments of light’

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A Christian missionary fleeing Kyiv for the Ukrainian/Polish border has described escaping the capital in a 13-hour car journey as surreal and crazy, “like a dream,” but said she has experienced “real moments of light.”

Christiana Moon, who’s from England, has been sheltering at the home of two Ukrainian Christian women in the western city of Lviv, and is planning to board a bus to Poland, then fly to England.

The 22-year-old, who teaches the Bible at Youth With A Mission (YWAM)’s base near Kyiv, said it was surreal that last Sunday she enjoyed a normal church service in her Ukrainian church, and now all her friends are scattered, having had to make on-the-spot decisions about safety.

She said: “I can’t believe last Sunday, I led Bible study with my church, that it was just normal. The Russian invasion was just rumours at that point. We had a normal Sunday service. Now the sky in Kyiv is grey with smoke.”

Moon, from Essex, said she doesn’t regret returning to Ukraine a few weeks ago from England, because “every moment has been precious” and has drawn her closer to God.

She said: “It’s just so weird, but I’m so glad I came back and every moment has been really precious. And it’s been a great journey of trusting God when you have to make so many quick decisions. There’s lots of people giving you advice or panicking around you. It’s been really good for me to learn how to listen to his voice.”

She said the fact that Christians in Lviv have opened up their home to her has been a gospel witness to other people she met on the journey.

Moon, who has lived in Ukraine for four years, said: “It’s been very humbling, and I think is an incredible gospel witness, particularly for people who are not believers. We met this family at the train station, a mother and a daughter … they asked what we were doing, and we said ‘Okay, well, we’re heading to this church contact, we have a house as refugees. Do you want to come?’ And they said, ‘Yes’. It was really awesome for them. Because they’re just amazed that complete strangers would just be willing to open up their apartment to us … And their church itself is hosting so many people. It’s really, I think, an incredible moment of light that I’ve seen during this time.”

SOURCE: PREMIER CHRISTIAN NEWS

Ukrainian churches call out for more bibles as Russian troops arrive in Kyiv

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Churches in Ukraine are calling out for more Bibles as Russian forces continue to take hold of areas of the country. 

Despite the terrifying situation that is rocking Ukraine, many nationals are turning to God in the midst of fear, with bibles flying off the shelves- as people seek his word. 

Of those people racing to buy bibles, many are experiencing, the message, for the first time, reports Christianity Today. 

Demand is so high that stores have run out of copies. 

Russian troops are currently heading into the nation’s capital, Kyiv. 

Explosions have decimated a number of homes and local businesses. 

At last count, 137 Ukrainians had been killed, with a further 316 wounded. 

Fuel, cash and medical supplies are running low, Reuters reports. 

UK defence minister Ben Wallace, claims 450 Russian soldiers have also died in the invasion; members of the Church continue efforts to resolve the conflict peacefully, and minimise casualties on both sides of the border. 

‘United in the Lord’, leaders from Russia and Ukraine have joined together in prayer.

However, many church leaders in Ukraine, are preparing to take their faith underground – the European Evangelical Alliance previously declared Donbas, in South East Ukraine, an area ‘where the church suffers most’ due to the religious violations and ongoing conflicts. 

Many are concerned the limitations on Christian activities will spread as Russia takes hold of the country’s capital.  

SOURCE: PREMIER CHRISTIAN NEWS

Nothing Can Separate Us from the Love of God

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Kyle Mullen was a football star at his New Jersey high school and played for Yale (where he was a second-team All-Ivy League selection) and Monmouth University. He was also an honor society student, described by a former coach as a “great athlete, but a better person.” The coach added that Mullen was “probably one of the best kids I ever had.” “Great, great kid on the field, but even better off the field. ”

Mullen, age twenty-four, died last Friday during Navy SEAL “Hell Week” training. The commander of Naval Special Warfare Command said, “We are extending every form of support we can to the Mullen family.”

That same day, five-year-old Rayan Oram died after being extricated from a Moroccan well. He fell one hundred feet into the well the previous Tuesday; the rescue attempt captured global attention. Moroccan King Mohammed VI called his parents after he died; French President Emmanuel Macron added on to a Facebook post, “Tonight, I want to tell the family of little Rayan and the Moroccan people that we share their pain.”

Leaders are right to extend every possible support to these families. Society’s attention will soon shift from these two tragedies, but their parents and families will be marked by them forever. This is how it is with families and how it should be.

As Queen Elizabeth II noted in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, “Grief is the price we pay for love.”

A STORY I WILL NOT FORGET

Yesterday, we began a weeklong focus on the transformational implications of the biblical declaration that Christians are the “children of God.” I wrote that “this changes everything. The knowledge that we are now and forever the beloved children of the God of the universe gives us status and signifies that the world can neither bestow on us nor take from us. It fills the deep hunger of our souls for meaning and worth. ”

Here’s the story behind this metaphor’s recent impact on my life.

Last week, Dr. Mark Turman and I were honored to speak to a group of ministers in the Houston area about my new book, The Coming Tsunami, and the larger topic of cultural apologetics. At one point, several of the men described ways they are engaging their culture with redemptive truth. One of them told a story I will never forget.

I would guess that this man is in his fifties or sixties. He is a minister and a professional building inspector who shares Christ wherever he can with whomever he can. He told us that his starting point is usually to tell people that he was adopted by his parents.

He makes this point: “They knew nothing about me when they chose me. Unlike biological children who inherited their genetics from their parents, my parents did not know my parents or anything about my story. They chose me as I was, where I was.” He notes that such unconditional love obviously changed his life, then explains how God’s unconditional love has been even more transformative for him.

He had tears in his eyes when he finished his story. I had tears in mine as I heard it.

WHY BEING ADOPTED BY GOD IS SO EMPOWERING

Upon reflection, I realized that there is another way to tell his story. Unlike his adoptive parents, his heavenly Father knew everything about him. He knew everything about his parents, his genetics, and his background. He knew everything about what he had done before coming to Christ and who he was when he became a Christian. He knew everything that this man would do for the rest of his life, including every sin he would commit.

And yet, the God of the universe chose him and adopted him as his child.

Paul described this miraculous reality: “You did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, ‘Abba! Father!’” (Romans 8:15). There was no Jewish process of adoption; if a man died, his brother immediately became the head of his family and the father of his children. In the Roman context and thus for Paul’s readers, however, the concept of adoption took on a powerful meaning.

Patria potestas (“the power of the father”) extended to a father’s child from their birth to his death. He could disown them, sell them as slaves, and even have them killed if he saw fit. However, if he adopted a child, that child could never be disowned, sold, or executed. They would be a permanent part of the family.

When the Spirit inspired Paul to use the word “adoption” in describing our status with our heavenly Father, he meant for us to understand that nothing can cause God to disown us. To the contrary, as Paul declared later in Romans 8, “neither death, nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (vv. 38-39).

THE BIBLICAL ANSWER TO THE “HUMAN CONDITION”

In a culture that measures us by our appearance, possessions, performance, and popularity, it is terrifying to be known as we truly are. In Why Am I Afraid to Tell You Who I Am?, psychologist John Powell writes of “the imprisoning fears and self-doubt that cripple most of us and keep us from forward movement on the road to maturity, happiness, and true love.”

He adds: “None of us wants to be a fraud or to live a lie; none of us wants to be a sham, a phony. But the fears that we experience and the risks that honest self-communication would involve seem so intense to us that seeking refuge in our roles, masks, and games become an almost natural reflex action.

“After a while, it may even be quite difficult for us to distinguish between what we really are, at any given moment in our development as persons, and what we pose as being. It is such a universally human problem that we might justifiably call it ‘the human condition.’”

Here’s the biblical answer to this “condition”: God, who is love (1 John 4:8), loves you more deeply, passionately, and unconditionally than an earthly father can love his children. He grieves your struggles and suffering even more than parents grieving the death of a child. He stands ready to guide your path with omniscient wisdom no human father can match. He will empower your obedience with omnipotence the strongest father cannot begin to offer.

What hidden pain, shame, or grief do you need to entrust to his loving grace today?

What temptation, challenge, or decision do you need to entrust to his omnipotent providence?

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Stephen Colbert Talks Faith, Heaven: That’s ‘How to Be a Christian in the Public Square,’ Tim Keller Says

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Saying “death is not defeat,” comedian and talk show host Stephen Colbert delivered a monologue about his Catholic faith last week that sparked a viral video and drew applause from a few prominent evangelicals.

The monologue took place on The Late Show during an interview with singer Dua Lipa, who turned the tables and asked Colbert a question. Noting that Colbert has been “open and honest” about his faith, Lipa asked: “Does your faith and your comedy ever overlap? And does one ever win out?”

“I think ultimately, us all being mortal, the faith will win out at the end,” Colbert said to laughter. “But I certainly hope when I get to heaven, Jesus has a sense of humor.”

Colbert’s tone then grew more serious.

“I’m a Christian and a Catholic, and that’s always connected to the idea of love and sacrifice, being somehow related, and giving yourself to other people, and that death is not defeat,” he said.

Continuing, Colbert said his favorite movie of the past year was Belfast.

“I think this is also a Catholic thing, because [Belfast is] funny, and it’s sad. And it’s funny about being sad. In the same way, that sadness is like a little bit of an emotional death, but not a defeat if you can find a way to laugh about it, because that laughter keeps you from having a fear of it. And fear is the thing that keeps you from turning to evil devices to save you from the sadness, ” he said.

“As [poet] Robert Hayden said, ‘We must not be frightened nor cajoled into accepting evil [as] deliverance from evil. We must keep struggling to maintain our humanity, though monsters of abstraction threaten and police us. ‘ So if there’s some relationship between my faith and my comedy, it’s that no matter what happens, you are never defeated. You must understand and see this in the light of eternity and find some way to love and laugh with each other. “

Late Show‘s tweet with the monologue drew 43,000 likes and 4.4 million views.

Tim Keller, an author and the founding pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City, applauded Colbert’s answer.

“This is a brilliant example of how to be a Christian in the public square,” Keller tweeted. “Notice the witness, but in a form the culture can handle. We should desire to have more Christians in these spaces and give them grace as they operate.”

After receiving pushback, Keller wrote in a follow-up tweet, “Note: when you quote a person as an example in a particular moment, it doesn’t mean you have to answer for that entire person’s life for that quote to be valid. It’s almost like those who do so don’t want to deal with the material at hand. “

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

College Basketball Coach Sends Bible Verses, Daily Prayers to ESPN’s Dick Vitale amid Cancer Battle

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Dick Vitale, a longstanding college basketball broadcaster for ESPN, shared that Tennessee Volunteers basketball coach Rick Barnes has been encouraging him spiritually through his battle with cancer.

According to Sports Spectrum, Vitale, 82, has been battling numerous health issues, including Melanoma, a form of skin cancer, and Lymphoma. On Sunday morning, Barnes sent him a Scripture-filled prayer after his team lost to Texas A&M 52-51 on Saturday.

Vitale, who has been broadcasting for ESPN for 41 years, shared Barnes’ prayer in several screenshots via his Twitter account.

“Lord, we know that Dick has been through a lot,” the prayer reads in part. “Praying, Father, for You to give him rest for his mind, body, and spirit from the fatigue he is facing. We pray for needed strength. Things sometimes in life feel impossible, but God, Your Word says that all things are possible with God (Matthew 19:26).

“By your grace, allow Dick to find rest in your shadow (Psalm 91:1),” Barnes added. “Give Dick wisdom so he is able to take the right next step forward.”

Vitale said he “was shocked when he started doing this.” “This AM after a tough L at Texas, he sends me this. Rick is special!”

Barnes, who has been leading the Tennessee Volunteers since 2015, spoke to WBIR about the prayers he sends to Vitale.

“His involvement and what he’s done for cancer is remarkable,” Barnes said. “He’s impacted so many lives. I think God is using him in a great way.”

Barnes also shared how texting Vitale each day has impacted himself spiritually.

“From the time I started texting him a prayer every day, I said it has been good for me because it has given me a chance to spend even more alone time with the Lord,” the basketball coach noted.

“I really have great admiration for Dick,” Barnes added. “He’s a fighter right now. He’s fighting a battle he has fought for so many people, and like I said, he’s been an inspiration to a lot of people. Our conversations as of late have impacted me as of late as much as they’ve impacted him.”

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Biden Urges Congress to Follow Jesus’ Words: ‘Serve Rather Than Be Served’

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Acknowledging the deep divisions within Congress, President Biden spoke at the National Prayer Breakfast on Thursday and urged Democrats and Republicans to get to know one another personally, saying faith can bring people of different beliefs together to unify for the common good.

“Rather than driving us apart, faith can move us together,” Biden, who is Catholic, told members of both parties gathered for the annual event in Washington, D.C. Different faiths, he said, have the “same fundamental basic beliefs” to treat one another with kindness.

Biden said he wants Democrats and Republicans to have “faith to see each other as we should – not as enemies but as neighbors, not as adversaries but as fellow Americans.”

“I pray that we follow what Jesus taught us – to serve rather than be served,” Biden said. “I don’t always do it. [But] I try.”

As a member of the Senate, Biden said, he would have lunch with fellow members of Congress and learn about others’ personal struggles. Biden said he still considers Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell – a Republican – a friend.

“It’s hard to really dislike someone when you know that they’re going through the same thing you have gone through,” Biden said. “… As leaders of this nation who work and pray together, there’s an oath to God and country to uphold, and a charge to keep to stand in the breach, and to protect our democracy, to work together to right wrongs. … If a house divided cannot stand, surely a house united can do anything.”

Unity, he said, “doesn’t mean we have to agree on everything.”

“But unity is where enough of us – enough of us – believe in a core of basic things, the common good, the general welfare,” he said. “… The rest of the world is looking to us.”

Quoting former President Dwight Eisenhower, Biden said, “There’s a need we all have in these days and times for some help which comes from outside ourselves.”

“I am humbled by the prayers of so many of you – and it means everything to us,” Biden said.

Biden closed by telling a personal story about his childhood.

“Every time I’d walk out of my Grandpa Finnegan’s house up in Scranton … He yelled ‘Joey, keep the faith.’ My grandma would yell, ‘No Joey, spread it.’

“Let’s go spread the faith,” Biden said.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Global Growth of Christianity Outpaces Atheists, Charismatic Churches Lead the Way

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Even though the number of atheists has increased worldwide, a newly released report shows the world’s population of religious people is growing even faster. 

Lifeway Research published its findings online titled “7 Encouraging Trends of Global Christianity in 2022” from data collected by the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at the Massachusetts-based Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. 

The statistics gathered by the center titled  2022 Status of Global Christianity Report reveal while the number of all religious people is growing at a 1.27% rate, the growth rate of nonreligionists is less than half that—0.52%, well below the total population growth percentage. In particular, the number of atheists is almost stagnant, only growing 0.18% per year, according to Lifeway.

According to the Gordon-Conwell center’s report, the number of atheists is forecast to continue to decline by 2050. 

Lifeway also pointed to data that shows Christianity is continuing to grow around the world. With a 1.17% growth rate, almost 2.56 billion people will identify as Christian by the middle of 2022. By 2050, that number is expected to top 3.33 billion.

In particular, the growth of charismatic Christians is remarkable. In 1900, less than 1 million people around the world identified as Pentecostal or charismatic. By 2050, that number will top 1 billion.

But where is Christianity growing the most? It’s growing faster in Africa than any other place in the world, and more Christians live in Africa than on any other continent, according to the report.

SOURCE: CBN NEWS

‘I Was Praying the Whole Time’: Firefighter Chaplain Helped Battle Historic Marshall Fire

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Scott Ross had been a chaplain for his local fire department in Aurora, Colorado, only six months when he decided to ride with the crew on December 30 to watch them battle a small grassfire. Scott Ross had been a chaplain for his local fire department in Aurora, Colorado, only six months when he decided to ride with the crew on December 30 to watch them battle a small grassfire.

It was, he thought at the time, a “great opportunity” to watch the men in action. Ross had begun his firefighter training – but had not yet completed it.

“They let me go,” Ross told Christian Headlines. “There was a little bit of apprehension, I know on their part, but they let me go anyway.”

Soon, though, Ross and the others realized that the situation was far more dangerous than anyone had envisioned. Buildings were ablaze. Embers were flying through the air. Winds were blowing over the hills and across the land, making the fire difficult to control.

“They kept talking about it being apocalyptic,” Ross said, referencing the firefighters.

Before the day was over, Ross and the firefighters for Sable Altura Fire Rescue had witnessed the most destructive fire in Colorado history. The “Marshall Fire” – so named because of its proximity to the community of Marshall – destroyed more than 1,000 homes across some 6,000 acres.

Ross, who also serves as the director of church engagement for the American Bible Society, donned his gear and helped fight it. All total, he battled the fire for about 12 hours.

“The leader just said ‘everybody out.’… It was clear that we were going to need everybody,” Ross said. “We had five of us in our vehicle. And then there was another department we were partnering with. And so we were all out there doing everything we could.

“… I knew to trust my gear. And I knew to trust my leaders. And so I just did whatever they asked me to do. … I wasn’t apprehensive. I was praying the whole time.” Scott Ross had been a chaplain for his local fire department in Aurora, Colorado, only six months when he decided to ride with the crew on December 30 to watch them battle a small grassfire.

But for much of the day, there was little the firefighters could do.

“You see a house standing and within minutes, a burning ember flies over, lands in their yard, and their entire house is engulfed in flames,” Ross said. “It’s somewhat of a helpless feeling. And as I was watching, I was thinking, ‘These are people’s entire lives just being consumed.’ But I couldn’t really feel all of those feelings because we were so busy doing what we were doing. And I was thinking about these firefighters and thinking these guys are crazy-courageous. They’ll walk right up to the fire and just address it.”

Ross also helped minister to the spiritual needs of those involved, including the firefighters. American Bible Society has distributed two resource guides to area churches: Beyond Disaster and God is our Shelter and Strength.

“Scripture is grounding for people. And it connects them to God,” Ross told Christian Headlines. “… My prayer, honestly, for these people who’ve lost so much is that not that they would rebuild to something that was – but they would now build something new, and clearly, that Scripture would be a foundational part of that. And I believe it will be for a lot of these people and their relationship with God. When you lose everything, it really causes you to ask new kinds of questions.”

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES