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Please pray, says US Christian group after missionaries abducted

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Christian Aid Ministries has sent out an “urgent” prayer request after its workers and their children were abducted in Haiti on Saturday.

The group, who were taken near the capital of Port-au-Prince, is made up of 16 US citizens and one Canadian citizen. It includes five children.

They were returning from a visit to an orphanage when they were ordered off their bus at gunpoint while en route to the airport to fly home.

Christian Aid Ministries said they were “seeking God’s direction for a resolution” and were in touch with authorities who are “seeking ways to help”.

“Join us in praying for those who are being held hostage, the kidnappers, and the families, friends, and churches of those affected. Pray for those who are seeking God’s direction and making decisions regarding this matter,” it said.

“As an organization, we commit this situation to God and trust Him to see us through. May the Lord Jesus be magnified and many more people come to know His love and salvation.”

The group is believed to have been kidnapped by the notorious 400 Mawozo gang, which was behind the kidnapping of a nun and priest earlier this year.

It is feared that they will demand up to $1m per person for their release.

Gèdèon Jean, the executive director of the Center for Analysis and Research in Human Rights, an advocacy group in Port-au-Prince, told the New York Times there was a good chance of the group being freed.

“They’re going to negotiate,” he said of the kidnappers. “[The hostages] are going to be freed – that’s for sure. We don’t know in how many days, but they’re going to negotiate.” “They’re going to negotiate,” he said of the kidnappers. “[The hostages] are going to be freed – that’s for sure. We don’t know in how many days, but they’re going to negotiate.”

SOURCE: Jennifer Lee, CHRISTIAN TODAY

What we can learn about evil from the demon-possessed man and all those pigs in Mark 5

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Not all stories are happy stories. Some are unsettling. Every once in a while, we stumble across a story that shatters our sensibilities and shakes our sense of how the world works.

Mark 5:1-20 is one such story.

For us “enlightened” twenty-first century readers, the segment where two thousand pigs hurtle off a cliff and drown sends our consciences into convulsions. (Couldn’t they have just gone to the market or stayed at home instead?)

For those who saw the story first-hand or read Mark’s Gospel shortly afterwards, this pig thing wasn’t as much of an issue. The unsettling section for them is Jesus healing a man from demonic power and restoring him to a healthy consciousness.

The truth is, it’s hard to overstate how remarkable this exorcism is.

Jesus has cast out demons before. It’s a principle part of his gospel-preaching profession, and he begins to get quite a name for it – even amongst the demons themselves. ‘Whenever the unclean spirits saw [Jesus], they fell down before him and shouted, “You are the Son of God!”‘ (Mark 3:11).

It’s all part of a cosmic battle between Jesus and Satan, which began in the wilderness in 1:13, and Jesus has been kicking Satan’s butt ever since.

Not everyone understood this, though.

When Israel’s leading scholars declared that Jesus was a double-agent, driving out demons ‘by the ruler of demons’ (3:22), Jesus admitted that Satan does indeed have a kingdom – and then exposed the absurdity that Jesus himself could ever be working for it.

Now, here in Mark 5:1-20, Jesus crosses a lake and lands right in the lap of one of the strongest soldiers in Satan’s kingdom.

Legion.

A demon. (Or, demons – he/they went by multiple pronouns.)

He is called Legion because ‘we are many.’ About six thousand, to be exact (the approximate size of a Roman army legion at the time).

But Legion is not formidable because of his size only. Legion is formidable also because of his strength and savagery – and Mark makes quite a show out of letting us know.

Firstly, we are alerted to the triple-uncleanness of the man possessed by Legion: (1) he lives the ‘the other side of the lake’ (oh dear) – in Gentile land; (2) he’s possessed by an unclean spirit; and (3) and he lives among the dead in a cave-tomb type thing.

Next up is another triplet, this time of “not’s/no’s.” If we translate verse three literally, we read that “and not even with a chain no longer no-one was able to bind him.” That’s pretty awkward, so it’s a good thing we don’t read everything literally. But hopefully you get the point: the man is strong, too strong to be contained.

In case we didn’t get this memo, Mark reinforces it with a chiasmus (which is a literary technique of reverse-order repetition):

A – ‘no-one could restrain him any more…’
B – ‘he had often been restrained with shackles’
C – ‘and chains,’
C1– ‘but the chains he wrenched apart,’
B1 – ‘and the shackles he broke in pieces;’
A1 – ‘and no-one had the strength to subdue him.’

That’s a lot of shackles and chains and restraining inabilities.

Maybe Mark forgot what he wrote and repeated himself. Perhaps he did it on purpose. Either way, what we get is more reading (yay) and a clear picture of a ridiculously ripped man who could not be tamed – not even with chains.

As if that wasn’t enough, Mark bombards us one final time with the man’s depravity by describing how he would howl on top of mountains and cut himself with stones. He is a man ruined by evil and its abusive urges.

Then he meets Jesus.

Legion recognises that Jesus is ‘Son of the Most High God,’ and he knows he can’t win. All he can do is negotiate his terms of surrender.

And negotiate he does, asking ‘by God’ that Jesus would not torture him – another way of saying, “If you’re not nice to me, then your dad will be mad.”

But Legion clearly skipped Sunday School, because this is not how it works.

He resorts to begging to stay in the area (strange), even if it means moving into some pigs on the hillside (even stranger). Jesus grants the six thousand spirits permission to enter the two thousand pigs, and then things start to go downhill – literally: the pigs surge off a cliff and drown in the sea.

The pig herders run into town to report what happened. The townspeople rush out to investigate. They follow the clues back to Jesus.

What they see terrifies them.

There is the man – sitting, clothed, and in his right mind. He is so sane that Jesus sends him home to the Ten Cities as the first missionary to the Gentiles.

We might have expected the crowd to be happy with this – hasn’t Jesus just liberated them from the local madman?

Sadly, they are not happy at all. They are afraid.

They want nothing to do with a man who has such authority over evil. It unsettles them. But it doesn’t seem to unsettle us.

It probably would, if we weren’t already so pre-occupied with those dead pigs.

How could Jesus do that to them? Sure, they are ritually ‘unclean’ animals (Leviticus 11:7), but Jesus is so lovely and kind – why would he kill them? #NotMyJesus – and that’s right. It isn’t your Jesus. It’s not anyone’s Jesus: Jesus does not kill these pigs. Mark never even comes close to suggesting that Jesus did it. All that Mark cares to show us is that Jesus is effortlessly stronger than the strongest of Satan’s soldiers.

It is Legion, the demons, who drive the pigs into the sea.

However even then, it doesn’t seem like it was intentional, given that the demons beg not to be tortured or sent out of the area. If they planned on sticking around, why would they blow their chance by charging off a cliff?

It seems instead that the self-destructive impulse of evil is too much for the pigs to handle.

Legion, as with Satan, and as with every evil force, was obsessed with the demolition of God’s good creation. The man, led by Legion, lived in the local tombs and came as close to death without dying as a human could get. The pigs, by contrast, don’t stand a chance. They die – and take Legion with them.

Two thousand demon-possessed pigs drowning at sea is not a pretty picture. Nobody (I hope) will feel inspired to immortalise this scene on the ceiling of their fifteenth-century chapel.

This, though, is the nature of evil. It is chaotic. It’s messy. It throttles human life and here hits full throttle on a herd of pigs as they head down a hill.

And we have to live with it, even with Jesus around.

Mark 5:1-20 should be a happy story, given that Jesus deposes a demon and saves a man’s life. But it’s not. It’s unsettling (and not only because pigs die). It exposes the ugly reality of evil – especially as Jesus expels it.

Our times are just as evil now as they were then. Evil is just as ugly now as it was then. And Jesus is just as superior to evil now as he always will be. I can’t think of a more uncomfortably comforting reason to worship him.

SOURCE: Archie Catchpole, CHRISTIAN TODAY

Ravi Zacharias’s Daughter Steps Down to Launch New Ministry

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The CEO of Ravi Zacharias International Ministries (RZIM) has stepped down to start a new apologetics organization.

Sarah Davis led RZIM through her father Ravi Zacharias’s death, the posthumous investigation of his sexual abuse, and the breakup and dramatic downsizing of the global apologetics ministry. Now, she will go out on her own and launch a new ministry called Encounter.

According to incorporation papers filed with the state of Georgia, Encounter’s purpose is “carrying the Gospel invitation to individuals and engaging in their questions so that they may encounter the love of Christ and enter relationship with Him.” It will also engage “thoughtful individuals in Gospel conversations,” and work on “training and discipling messengers of Christ’s love for their spheres of influence.”

The mission is not that different from the one stated on RZIM’s incorporation papers filed in the state of Georgia in 1986, when Davis was 10. RZIM was founded for “proclamation of the Gospel throughout the world” and “assistance in the development of evangelical Christian leadership.”

Davis, now 46, declined to answer questions about the new ministry. An RZIM spokesperson did not return a request for comment.

Davis’s departure may pave the way for RZIM’s relaunch. The ministry announced in March it would regroup and rebrand as soon as a complete culture review was finished.

The exit appears to mark an end to the internal struggle over that culture review. RZIM leadership disagreed over whether the ministry bears any corporate responsibility for Zacharias’s sin and whether there was a need for a full examination of RZIM’s culture and practices to move forward.

According to multiple people familiar with inner conflict at RZIM, Davis contracted Guidepost Solutions to review the ministry’s structures, finances, and practices, including the handling of abuse allegations. The RZIM board of directors moved to limit the scope of the investigation and keep any findings from becoming public.

The Guidepost evaluation was aimed at identifying “areas of unhealth,” according to Davis, and help the ministry “do everything we can to prevent any kind of abuse in the future.”

CT reported that some in the international ministry knew about allegations against Zacharias as early as 2008 but chose to take his denials at face value without further investigation. World reported a meeting took place at RZIM headquarters in 2009 about an allegation that Zacharias asked a massage therapist for “more than a massage.” According to the investigation of Zacharias’s abuse funded by RZIM, there are also unanswered questions about ministry funds being diverted from their designated purpose to facilitate sexual abuse.

The majority of the board, however, sharply disagreed with the need for any more investigation, and many members objected that the Guidepost review was being foisted on them.

Debates about how and whether to release any details about the evaluation appear to be ongoing. Guidepost finalized its report to the board in the summer. According to an RZIM public relations representative, “further information from the board” was expected in late September. It has not yet been made public.

The top official remaining at RZIM is Michael Ramsden, who previously served alongside Davis as the organization’s president. One of Ramsden’s first tasks will be to release—or not release—the board’s summary of the evaluation.

The divisions on the board appear to have taken a toll. When Zacharias died, there were 21 people on the board. Today it’s down to about 12.

Some boad members resigned because they didn’t believe Zacharias did anything wrong and wanted the ministry to defend him. Some left in protest over the scope of Guidepost’s evaluation. At least one left in frustration that the board was not committed to a thorough and serious review of RZIM culture, despite multiple internal and external statements about “repentance, restitution, learning, and serving.” The board approved downsizing and reorganization of RZIM before Guidepost had time to evaluate the ministry.

The RZIM board is anonymous. The ministry registered itself as a church around 2015, stopped filing any information with the Internal Revenue Service, and removed information about the board members from its website.

According to multiple sources who have worked with the board in the last year, however, the executive committee making the key decisions about the Guidepost review, rebranding, and future leadership for RZIM is made up of five people: Christopher Blattner, William Payne, Casey Cook, Paul Kepes, and Peter Sorensen. They are all business leaders and longtime financial supporters of RZIM. Several took a leading role in defending Zacharias from previous allegations of sexual abuse.

Davis, meanwhile, is parting ways with RZIM, but not going too far. The new apologetics ministry is expected to share office space with the old one in RZIM’s five-story building in Alpharetta, Georgia.

Encounter may also receive funding from RZIM as the ministry remakes itself into a grant-giving organization, distributing millions in donations to groups that care for sexual abuse victims and apologetics ministries that carry on the work Zacharias was committed to.

According to several people familiar with plans for Encounter, Davis will be joined by a few junior speakers from RZIM, which once employed nearly 100 apologists in more than a dozen offices around the world.

Encounter’s team will include Alycia Wood, who studied criminal justice and social justice and has been with RZIM for about seven years; Alexandra “Xandra” Carroll, who joined RZIM about a year ago and specializes in faith and science; and Louis Phillips, who previously worked for a purity ring ministry and has spoken frequently about sexual ethics. Phillips joined RZIM in 2018, traveled internationally with Zacharias, and hosted the apologist’s online memorial service in May 2020.

Davis herself has done little public speaking, preferring to run the day-to-day operations during her time at RZIM. Before she joined the ministry in 2001, she worked as an advancement officer at Pepperdine University and a marketing assistant at CNN.

In a video acknowledging her father’s sexual abuse, released a year after his death, she said she hadn’t intended to get involved in apologetics ministry at all.

“It was really the last thing I wanted to do,” she said. “In many ways, my life as the daughter of an evangelist hasn’t been what I would have hoped.”

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN TODAY

Celebrating the ‘God moments’ in life

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Jeff Lucas has a word of encouragement for Christians struggling with the pressures of life and the pandemic: remember what God has done for you.

The popular author and speaker shared this message of hope at the national Christian Resources Exhibition in Esher, Surrey.

His talk tied in with the theme of his latest book, Singing in Babylon, which takes inspiration from the faith of Daniel and his friends, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.

Speaking to people who may have experienced the “non-intervention of God”, Lucas said there were lessons in faithfulness to be learned from the Hebrew men who said they would believe in God even if He did not save them.

Recognising that some Christians may be feeling “hemmed in by question marks” in their journey, Lucas said it was ok not to have all the answers or everything figured out.

“I’ve got more mystery in my life now than I have ever had. It’s not a mindless mystery. It is an ability to say: I don’t know,” he said.

Despite the “mystery” and “the unresolved” in life, Lucas said there was encouragement to be found in the promise of Jesus that “I am with you.”

“Am I still up for this, am I still up for following You? Faithfulness is a daily choice,” he said.

Part of the key to moving past discouragement, he said, was remembering all the times God has intervened in the past.

“Don’t you forget who you are – and don’t forget who your God is and what He’s done for you. What God moments have you got in your history that you need to unearth, remember and celebrate?” he said.

“Let’s unearth again the moments when we felt God spoke, God acted, God did. Let’s build an altar of remembrance from yesterday to galvanise us today.”

SOURCE: Staff writer, CHRISTIAN TODAY

Tyndale Celebrates 25th Anniversary of NLT Bible With Global Campaign to Distribute God’s Word

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Jim Jewell, senior communications director at Tyndale House Publishers, appeared on the Friday edition of CBN Newswatch to discuss Tyndale’s initiative to share the Word of God.

In these turbulent times, people are leaning on the Word of God more than ever, and that’s why Tyndale House Publishers is working to launch 125 different types of Bibles in one of the most popular translations this year.

CBN News spoke with Tyndale’s Senior Communications Director Jim Jewell about the impact of the Word of God in people’s lives and how more people are turning to its eternal truths.

“It’s the source of comfort and it’s the source of direction and it’s the pathway to salvation. So at any time, it’s a great thing, but it’s really important during these times. And we’ve found, interestingly, that people really have been purchasing and using Bibles greater than ever right now. We’ve seen a great uptick,” Jewell said.

He noted that making the Bible accessible to everyone is a founding principle of Tyndale House, and that’s why it’s putting an emphasis on publishing Bibles in the New Living Translation (NLT).

“We’re excited about it right now because it’s the 25th anniversary of the NLT and there have been 50 million copies of New Living Translation Bibles sold during that time. That’s pretty exciting … that God has been using the New Living to change lives and it’s really happening, right now,” he said.

Jewell said people find the NLT more understandable and that makes a difference.

“When you read it, you get it,” he said. “People can understand it, and when they do that, they can apply it to their lives.”

In addition to the standard text Bibles in different sizes, the publisher is also coming out with a series called the Filament Journaling Collection. It includes a blank page on each “spread” to allow people to take notes in their Bible.

Filament is a Bible App that allows users to bring in resources through their phone or tablets about the page that they’re reading.

“That opens up all kinds of new resources for you and makes even your small Bible, a study Bible and beyond,” Jewell explained.

SOURCE: CBN NEWS

How churches can beat the internet

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Churches are now squaring up to the same challenges – and opportunities – that local shops and businesses have faced for years.

It’s all about the internet and how that changes everything.

In the pre-Covid world, services were held in churches, and people went to them – or not.

Throughout the lockdowns, most churches went online. Services were recorded or streamed from church buildings, kitchens, lounges or even sheds.

Some looked amazingly slick and professional. Most simply reflected the gifts and technical skills that the church could muster.

The move online brought other changes. People used to attending their local church, dropped in online to high-profile churches in the UK or overseas. Worshippers from around the world started ‘attending’ services in other countries or continents.

People who had not attended church for years, or not at all, came across services online and were surprised at the variety on offer. They joined online services at different times to when they had been available live – and some watched while drinking coffee in bed.

Those who through disability had not been able to attend services could now join online alongside those who used to go, physically, each week.

A report from Anglican evangelical mission agency CPAS, published during last year’s lockdown, assessed the dramatic impact that online services were having.
But now, as post-Covid normality largely returns to western countries, many churches are facing tough decisions about their online offerings.

Do we go back to services only being held in church? Or do we continue with online offerings as well?

Where technically possible, the answer must be yes – to keep going both online and in church. And with that in mind, churches and Christians are being encouraged to sign up to a Hybrid Church Charter.

Yet if churches want to encourage more people to come through our doors – and we do – we need to look at what’s on offer. That means working on the warmth of welcome and the quality of worship and practical teaching.

More importantly, it’s about bringing people into the presence of a God who loves them, affirms them and wants the best for them. It’s about being part of a community of people who are seeking to follow God, who fail, receive forgiveness, but go on trying.

It’s about church as a place where people can feel welcomed, at home, safe, and valued. A place where they are known and loved.

And, when all that is in place, it beats anything the internet can offer.

SOURCE: Peter Crumpler, CHRISTIAN TODAY

Fight, Flee or Forgive: A True Story of Radical Forgiveness That Reaped a Great Harvest for Zimbabwe

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Craig Deall’s family farm was seized by the government of Zimbabwe 20 years ago without any compensation. Rather than fight or flee, Dealls’s faith compelled him to forgive – a decision that has reaped a great harvest in more ways than one.

Deall was raising his family on the same farm he grew up on when in 2003, the unthinkable happened. “It was obviously extremely traumatic,” he told CBN News

The government forced Deall, his wife, and children to leave their home and farm that had been in his family since 1948 as part of the government’s land reform program. An effort to more equitably distribute land between black subsistence farmers and white Zimbabweans of European ancestry. He had three choices.

Fight, Flee or Forgive

“We could fight, we could flee, or we could forgive. Some of my friends fought for their land and ended up getting killed for it,” Deall said. “Most of my friends left the country, and no answer is wrong. But we as a family decided to pursue the third option which was to forgive. We felt that if we chose bitterness instead of forgiveness, there’s no country far enough away where it doesn’t smell.”

Deall kept going back to one scripture in the Bible’s New Testament.

“That scripture where Jesus says, ‘If a man steals your coat, give him your tunic as well.’ (Matthew 5:40) And so for us, that meant, if a man steals your farm, teach him how to farm. And that’s what we did. And with that, the pressure lifted, there was a great release over us and we knew that God had opened up an avenue for us to serve the least of these and to bring them the Gospel,” he recalled.

God’s Way of Farming

Deall moved his family to Harare, the capital city of Zimbabwe, while about a dozen other families took over his house and land. He then joined a group called Foundations for Farming. There, he began to teach the new owners, as well as other small-scale farmers, a unique way of farming that God revealed to the group’s founder, Brian Oldreive.

“He went with a child-like faith into virgin bush, into virgin forest and he sat there and he asked God, ‘Teach me how to farm’, and the two things that he saw is that there is no inversion tillage in nature. And the next thing he saw is that there is this beautiful mulch cover that covers the forest floor, and that’s actually God’s mechanism for feeding the soil and protecting the soil,” Deall explained.

“So he went back to his farm and he literally tried it. Just without any tillage and no burning, which is contrary to the conventional way of farming, and he immediately got outstanding results like 10-time increment in yield,” he continued. “And so, he knew that it worked and he started to grow it bigger and bigger but he knew that God had given him this revelation, not for himself but to extrapolate across the continent of Africa to the rural farmers, the hurting, the poor ones around the continent.”

The success of the Zero-Tillage technique caught the attention of the Zimbabwe government which endorsed the method. And in 2020, the country experienced its first food surplus in two decades.

“In fact, the food production has jumped four times, between three and four times, are the official estimates of the food increment in the year 2020,” Deall said.

The country’s main crop, corn, tripled with the method and now Foundations for Farming teaches the technique all over the world with the main goal of sharing the Gospel.

“But 80% of what we teach is the heart. It’s using agriculture as an entry point for the gospel,” Deall said.

Even with all their success, the Zimbabwean government never offered Deall any compensation for his home, land, or time teaching, but he says the way God has provided, he wouldn’t change a thing.

“We have a saying in Foundations of Farming: ‘I used to own a farm in Africa, now Africa is my farm,'” he said.

SOURCE: CBN NEWS

‘Glory Be to God!’: Father and Son Weep over Birth of ‘Miracle Baby’ in Popular Video Clip

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A heartwarming clip of a father and son weeping joyfully over the birth of their newborn daughter and sister, respectively, has elicited thousands of responses on social media.

According to CBN News, the original video was posted to Instagram on March 4 by the father, João Prudêncio Neto, after his wife gave birth to “their miracle” daughter. At the time of its release, the clip received over 48,500 views.

Father and son crying over the birth of a new baby

Neto, who is also a pastor, noted in the caption that he became infertile after having his firstborn son, David, and that having another child would be impossible without utilizing fertility treatments.

“I waited patiently for the Lord; He inclined to me and heard me when I cried for help,” Psalms 40:1, he wrote. “After I had our firstborn son David, I became infertile. It was impossible to be a parent again with zero spermatozoids production. My wife Karolinne Prudêncio was healthy and also dreamed of having another child. Until the Lord Jesus healed me, giving me life to produce another.”

Neto added that he and his wife prayed daily for a miracle and attributed glory to God for the answered prayer “without any artificial procedure.”

“Giovanna’s birth is not only a blessing to our family, but also to all those who dream of one day experiencing the miracle that only Jesus can do,” he continued. “We prayed every day for a miracle. I became a dad again without any artificial procedure. Glory be to God! All this emotion is for the miracle done; my wife is very well and happy.”

Earlier this month, the account @baby_adorable, which posts pictures and clips of babies daily, shared Neto’s video, garnering more than 1,100 comments and over 70,000 likes. The response was overwhelmingly positive as users flooded the comment section.

“So beautiful,” one user wrote.

“Perfection. God is great,” another remarked.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Christian parents launch legal action over transgender guidance for primary schools

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Christian parents are taking legal action against the government over transgender guidelines being used in primary schools nationwide.

Nigel and Sally Rowe are seeking a judicial review into the Department for Education’s refusal to intervene in their case and what they see as a failure to protect children from harmful transgender ideology.

They have been homeschooling their sons for the last four years after withdrawing them from their Church of England primary school because of an affirming approach towards a male pupil who started wearing dresses and identifying as female.

Their concerns relate to the Cornwall Schools Transgender Guidelines which encourage schools to accept cross-dressing and gender transition without question.

The Rowes say that when they raised their concerns with the headteacher, they were told that a child’s desire to transition should be accepted.
The school did not require any reporting or formal medical or psychological assessment of the child, while policies designed to tackle ‘transphobic behaviour’ required the use of preferred pronouns.

The Rowes made a formal complaint to the DfE calling on the Secretary of Education to intervene in their case and to review the use of the Cornwall Guidelines in primary schools.

Declining their request, the DfE said in July: “The Secretary of State has found no evidence to suggest that the school’s action, at the time, posed a risk to any child at the school, including Mr and Mrs Rowe’s two sons. The evidence reviewed also suggests that the school’s approach regarding gender identity was focused on the wellbeing of pupils.”

Mr Rowe said they were taking legal action “with heavy hearts … having seen how this issue has escalated”.

He called for the Cornwall Guideliness to be scrapped and “replaced with a policy that protects children from partisan materials that lead them down a road of irreversible harm”.

“This is not just about boys wearing dresses. This case is about an ideology that is now embedded in schools, local authorities, and Church of England leadership, and is causing serious long-term harm to thousands of children,” he said.

“We believe it is wrong to encourage very young children to embrace transgenderism. Boys are boys and girls are girls. Gender dysphoria is something we as Christians need to address with love and compassion, but not in the sphere of a primary school environment,” he said, adding that “the government must be challenged.”

Mrs Rowe said: “We were given no choice but to home school our children. We, and our sons, either had to go along with what we believe is a lie or face being labelled as ‘transphobic.’ It is not possible for Bible-believing Christians to bring their children up in line with their beliefs under such policies and approach.

“We have been blessed that home schooling for our children has been a positive experience, but we are concerned for other families who are not able to home school and are forced to risk having their children indoctrinated by these guidelines.

“Six-year-old children are not able or even allowed to make decisions on voting or having a tattoo, for example – it is therefore immoral to think that they can make such life-changing decisions at such a young age. As a society we are called to protect children, and these guidelines and the culture they are embedding in primary schools is achieving the opposite.”

The couple are being supported in their case by the Christian Legal Centre.

CEO Andrea Williams said: “Despite all the warnings in their story, trans ideology continues to work its way into the fabric of our schools and our society unabated. The truth and the devastating testimonies from parents and their children who have been harmed don’t appear to resonate with the government or education authorities,” she said.

“Vulnerable children are being used as pawns and will continue to be harmed the most.

“It is chilling that Christian parents who want to bring up their children in line with their Christian beliefs cannot trust state education to be kind to them and make room for them.

“We will stand with the Rowes as they continue to seek justice and to protect the well-being of so many vulnerable children in primary schools.”

SOURCE: Staff writer, CHRISTIAN TODAY

Man Credits ‘Divine’ Intervention for Leading Him to Missing Toddler

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After a 3-year-old boy went missing in his community, Grimes County, Texas, resident Tim Halfin said he felt God was leading him to the boy’s location.

Christopher Ramirez went missing around 1:30 pm last Wednesday after he chased his dog into the woods by his house. Ramirez’s mother, Araceli Nunez, knew something was wrong when the dog returned home without her son.

Lost for four days in the woods, Ramirez was finally found on Saturday by Halfin.

According to Faithwire, Halfin was sitting in a Bible study on Saturday when he first learned about the missing toddler. ABC News reports that as soon as Halfin learned of Ramirez’s disappearance, he felt called by God to go and search for him.

At around 11:45 am, Halfin began searching for Ramirez in the woods near his home when he suddenly heard the voice of a child.

“I said, ‘Christopher, is that you?'” Halfin recalled. “Then he speaks again, and I’m like, ‘Whoa! Praise God!'”

Soon, Halfin would stumble upon Christopher, who had removed all of his clothes and was in the woods alone. Halfin quickly called 911, and Sheriff’s deputies responded to the scene with Nunez.

“I don’t know what to make of it,” Halfin told Good Morning America. “All I know is he was found safe. When I picked him up, he was still talking. He wasn’t shaking, he wasn’t nervous — the things I would expect. Maybe he just sensed, ‘I’ve been found.'”

Halfin added that it must have been “divine” intervention that led him to Ramirez.

Before being found by Halfin, the county sheriff’s department had spared no cost looking for the toddler, deploying drones, aircraft, K-9 units and search parties to find him.

“Words cannot describe how I felt when I held him for the first time,” Nunez said of being reunited with her son. “It was incredible.”

In a Monday news conference after the toddler was brought to the hospital, Nunez also called his rescue a “miracle.”

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES