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‘I will pray for no need for Armed Forces’ says newly appointed Bishop to the military

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Lambeth Palace has announced that the Bishop of St Germans, Rt Rev Hugh Nelson will take over the role of Bishop to the Armed Forces.

Bishop Hugh will be formally licensed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, during a meeting of the College of Bishops in Oxford on 20th September.

Bishop Hugh is taking over from the Rt Rev Tim Thornton, Bishop at Lambeth, who is retiring after four years in the post.This role will be in addition to Bishop Hugh’s work as Bishop of St Germans in the Diocese of Truro. Bishop Hugh was consecrated as Bishop of St Germans in July 2020.

Speaking to Premier, Bishop Hugh said: “One of the commitments that I make as Bishop (to the Forces) is, I will pray for two things, every single day while I’m in this post.

“One is that the day will come and come as soon as possible when there’s no need for any Armed Forces, when peace breaks out and the kingdom of God fully arrives. And in the meantime, I will continue to pray every single day for our men and women who are out there on the frontline trying to keep peace and justice in the name of this country. So for both of those things, for peace to break out and in the meantime, for those who are on the frontlines.”

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, said: “I am very pleased indeed that Hugh has agreed to take on this essential ministry. The work of military chaplains is crucial and is widely recognised as such within the Armed Forces. They need our support and prayers, led by the Bishop to the Forces. Military personnel are confronted daily with deep and vital questions about being human, our relationships, our values and morals. There are no tidy answers to these, but chaplains can offer compassion – being alongside and resolutely with those asking these questions, and those experiencing pain or grief – and they can offer hope. Indeed, chaplains to the Forces embody something of the love of Jesus Christ, offered in every place and to all people. I know that Hugh will ensure he gets to know these chaplains and will work alongside them, as well as being a representative for the church in wider issues relating to the Forces.”

Bishop Tim said: “I have found it a real privilege working with the Chaplains and getting to know something of their ministry and work and that of the wider world of the armed services. I am delighted that Hugh is taking over and pray for him as he gets to know this aspect of church life and know that he will be very well supported by the three Archdeacons in all he does.”

Bishop Hugh will embark on his new position with a number of visits to local military bases in the coming months.

SOURCE: PREMIER CHRISTIAN NEWS

Hillsong member wins ‘The Voice Australia’

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A member of the evangelical megachurch Hillsong has won this year’s edition of the singing competition ‘The Voice Australia’. 

Bella Taylor Smith, 23, became the competition’s winner after a powerful duet performance of Andrea Bocelli’s “The prayer” with her coach Guy Sebastian, also a devout Christian. 

“I really can’t believe it. I’m so thankful,” Smith said. “I can’t wait to see what incredible things are ahead for me. I’m really grateful for you [Sebastian], for everyone who voted and for my beautiful family, who I love.”

Her prize includes a recording contract with EMI Music and $100,000 (£72,000). 

Guy Sebastian, who also has links with Hillsong, said: “I’m so proud.”

“There are so many deserving people up there, but you are special, Bella,” Sebastian said. “Go out there and kill it. I know you will.”

Bella is an active member of the worship team at Hillsong Sydney and can often be seen leading worship on Sunday services, such as in the videos below:

The finale has been heavily criticised on social media for its religious overtones. 

“So disappointed with the choices for The Voice. I mean Bella’s lovely, but the Hillsong connection just makes it a bit suss [suspicious] for me, “one critic tweeted. 

Another said: “If #TheVoiceAU is rigged to promote and propel their church goers…does anyone really take them seriously, come on @Channel7. Are you this lame? Shame on you.” 

But many others have come out in her defence.

“That’s absolutely absurd! She has an amazing voice and I really appreciate how open she is about her faith. A winner in every sense,” supporter Karen Huntly wrote on Facebook. 

“OMG. Doesn’t matter what religion she is. Bella was amazing. She deserved to win. She was the best talent,” another supporter wrote on Facebook. 

After winning, Smith performed her new single, Higher. 

SOURCE: PREMIER CHRISTIAN NEWS


Marilyn Laszlo, Bible Translator Who Inspired Missionaries to ‘Come By Here’

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Marilyn Laszlo always considered herself a “Hoosier farmgirl.” The 88-year-old died last week just a few miles from her family’s nine-acre property outside Valparaiso, Indiana. But the news of her death was felt most deeply in a village on the other side of the world.A missionary and Bible translator known for her bold faith and powerful storytelling, Laszlo spent 24 years living in the Hauna Village in Papua New Guinea. There, she formulated a written language and translated the Bible for the once-unreached Sepik Iwam people, starting by carving words into banana leaves.When she passed away from Alzheimer’s on September 9, village leaders launched a five-day mourning ritual called a “house cry” in Laszlo’s honor, covering themselves in mud, grieving, and planning commemorations for a woman who changed their community forever.

The ministry efforts she began in Hauna more than 50 years ago—including a church, school, and clinic—continue to this day. They have turned the riverside village into a hub for the region. Up until the COVID-19 outbreak, Lazslo’s sister and ministry partner Shirley Killosky taught and served in Hauna full time.

“Marilyn’s legacy is still touching lives in Hauna Village and across the world,” said John Chesnut, president and CEO of Wycliffe Bible Translators. Laszlo was sent to Hauna through Wycliffe in 1967 and later served as a speaker for the ministry, before launching her organization, Laszlo Mission League, in 2003. “Praise God that this faithful servant is now in the presence of her Savior.”

Laszlo’s story of persistence in the face of a challenging mission field was retold in documentaries, memoirs, and, most poignantly, her own speaking appearances in churches and colleges. It was used as a testimony of God’s work in faraway places and as inspiration for Christians to dedicate their lives to the Great Commission.

“The number of people who are on the mission field today because of Marilyn’s story? Who knows,” said Topher Philgreen, president of Laszlo Mission League, which estimates that she inspired thousands to become missionaries. “We need to carry on what she started. The need is still very large in places like Papua New Guinea.”

For her, that was the Hauna village, where she lived to see God “meet these people in their own culture and in their own language.” Laszlo prayed that God would “touch the hearts” of believers at home so they could serve the unreached villages around hers.

Laszlo shared the story of her Bible translation work at Urbana ’81, where she spoke and played her film Come By Here. In it, Laszlo recounts how leaders in a distant village up the river from Hauna had erected a building with a cross to serve as a church, but they had no missionary or pastor. They just wanted to be ready for when someone like her would come to tell their people about God.During later visits to Hauna—Laszlo took her final trip there in 2013, before her memory worsened—she would meet with members of the original team who helped create the New Testament translation decades before, as well as American missionaries who moved overseas after hearing her story.

Andy Keener, now executive vice president for partnerships at Wycliffe, first met Laszlo on a mission trip to the village in 1985. He said that God used her example to call him to his lifelong work in Bible translation. He described Laszlo as a “passionate and skilled storyteller” who was “committed to the story of the gospel of Jesus Christ.”

Laszlo completed the Sepik Iwam translation in 1990, bringing men from her translation team to speak in the US the following year, including at a Billy Graham Crusade.

For the rest of her ministry career, she spoke and promoted mission work, retiring due to her health in 2012.Audiences laughed when Laszlo quipped that all her Bible translation training didn’t prepare her to be greeted by a group of villagers wearing “zero clothes.” Laszlo shared that when she and her missionary partner first arrived, the village gathered to debate whether they were men or women, only to decide these white strangers must have been neither.

She’d walk across the stage, animated, acting out what it was like to try to get them to tell her the word for “house” or “tree,” only for them to say “finger” because she was pointing so much.

“Marilyn Laszlo was tough as nails and had guts for Jesus; and she will be greatly missed,” said Franklin Graham, who got to know Laszlo through her work in Papua New Guinea in the early 1980s and authored the foreword to her book Mission Possible. “To know Marilyn Laszlo was to know a woman of good humor, grace, and grit. She wasn’t afraid of anything and her compassion for people was the hallmark of ministry throughout her life.”

She was born in Gary, Indiana, as one of four sisters in the Laszlo family and grew up helping her dad on the family farm in Liberty Township. A graduate of Bryan College and Indiana University, she taught high school prior to following God’s call to missions and studying at the Summer Institute of Linguistics.

Wycliffe has said that more than half its translations had been conducted by single women like Laszlo, and Laszlo Mission League plans to launch a scholarship in her name to support women in the field.

Philgreen said, “If she could do anything, she would love to see a women get a clear path into Bible translation ministries” and for such ministries to reach the goal of getting a Bible into every language and to every unreached people group.

When Laszlo first arrived among the Sepik Iwam, they had no written language and no knowledge of Christianity. And within her lifetime, the villagers were able to communicate with fellow believers in the US almost daily through WhatsApp.

Philgreen messaged last week to let them know Lazslo was in her final days. The day they heard the news, the Bible training school in Hauna celebrated eight more graduates from its program—eager to teach the same Good News she brought half a century before.

Her memorial service will take place October 5, 2021, at Liberty Bible Church in Chesterton, Indiana, and will be livestreamed through the Laszlo Mission League site.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN TODAY

When she was young, Laszlo would often get asked about the risks of living in a remote jungle community and responded, “I have learned that the safest place in the whole world is to be at the center of God’s will.”

Christian Marriage Demands that We Study Our Desires, Not Hide Them

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This summer, my husband and I celebrated two decades of marriage. We’ve been together now almost as long as we’ve been apart—a feat made possible by the fact that we married right out of college.

In the not too distant past, couples who married young laid a foundation for a life together. Cultural, religious, and personal values meant that these “cornerstone” marriages would eventually pass through silver, ruby, and golden anniversaries as a matter of course. Whether the marriage was happy, faithful, or even safe was often beside the point.

By now, however, our cultural views on divorce have changed, as well as our understanding of marriage. Whereas in the past, social and cultural bonds held a marriage in place (sometimes trapping the vulnerable in abusive and dangerous unions), today the weight falls on the individuals. Couples must now want to be together in order to stay together. We’re not asking whether we are happy in our marriages but whether we could be happier outside of them.

To make matters even more difficult, the changing nature of marriage means we expect more from our spouses. Famed relationship therapist Esther Perel notes that we ask the same person to give us belonging and identity, continuity and transcendence, comfort and edge, and predictability and surprise.

“We are asking from one person,” says Perel, ”what once an entire village used to provide.”

And when our expectations are this high, we’ll inevitably be disappointed. Perel calls this conundrum a “crisis of desire,” because in modern marriage, desire plays an outsized role in not only our couplings but in their permanence.

So what are we to do? How do we pursue faithfulness in a culture that elevates desire above everything? The question is not whether we will be attracted to someone other than our spouse but rather what we will do when that happens. How will we respond—not when we are unhappy—but when we think we could potentially be happier? Do we cultivate and entertain such attractions, allowing them to simmer on a “back burner”?

“To walk in a holy, healthy sexual ethic,” writes Dorothy Greco in Marriage in the Middle: Embracing Midlife Surprises, Challenges, and Joys, “we must refute misguided teaching and recognize when culture is leading us astray.”

But rather than grit our teeth and hang on until the end, Greco suggests that the path to long-term fidelity runs through a better understanding of desire and attraction. “We will also need to acknowledge the power of our God-given sexuality,” she continues, “become aware of our areas of temptation, and find the balance between self-control and sexual expression.”

Unfortunately, many of us are caught off-guard by temptation, in part because we don’t understand our own attractions and desires. Rather than learning to examine those feelings, we often opt for repression and avoidance, only to be surprised when we are swept off our feet by an unexpected connection or attraction to another person.

“Repression and avoidance have a Christian name but a pagan lifestyle,” writes Rachel Gilson. They rely on the will to suppress desire rather than on Christ to transform it. One of the greatest indictments of these approaches, in Gilson’s opinion, is that “one does not need Jesus Christ to practice them.” And “a system that doesn’t need Jesus is not meaningfully Christian.”

In this respect, it’s essential that we learn to face desire head on, not to undermine faithfulness, but rather to pursue it.

For guidance, we can look to Christians who are already walking this road of self-awareness, especially those whose experience of attraction hasn’t been seamless and simple. People of sexual minorities, for example, are often profoundly aware of their attractions precisely because they don’t align with those of their peers. And this awareness grants them perspective and knowledge that the rest of us need.

The evangelical community has expended a lot of conversational energy debating and even policing how faithful members of sexual minorities define their experience of attraction. Can they call themselves gay, or does that elevate sexual identity above identity in Christ? (Both the Southern Baptist Convention national gathering and the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in America took up some form of this question this summer.)

Although these debates matter, perhaps our time would be better spent learning from brothers and sisters who are sacrificially committed to traditional Christian teaching on marriage. Their experiences of attraction (or lack thereof) won’t culminate in marriage or sexual coupling, which means they’re the very ones suited to teach the rest of us how to live faithfully with our own.

Learning to examine our desires and attractions—and how to distinguish between the two—has the potential not only to bridge the gap between LGBT and straight believers but to equip couples for lifelong fidelity. That clarity and nuance will go a long way when you find yourself attracted to someone other than your spouse.

But pursuing lifelong marriage requires even more than a study of desire. We must understand that while yearning to be known and loved is God-given, wanting to have a single person satisfy those needs is not.

Perhaps it’s time we recovered the village.

When the New Testament authors speak about people’s sexual lives, they do so in context of the community of believers. Unlike our modern notion of marriages and nuclear families as discrete building blocks of society, the Epistles reflect a vision of a larger community in which our marriages and families exist. And this community is made up of many different members, all joined together as the body of Christ.

In this sense, healthy community supports lifelong marriage, not by peer pressure or expectation, but by expanding the kinds of relationships each spouse can access. Here in the family of God, we can learn to relate to each other as fathers, mothers, sisters, and brothers. Out of these relationships, we learn to be better husbands and wives while also mitigating how much we expect of each other.

But here, too, we have to be careful. A group of people cannot become our ultimate source of life, love, and transcendence any more than one other person can. Living faithfully in both community and marriage means learning what many of our unmarried brothers and sisters already know.

In the words of writer Vivian Warren: “The love of Jesus will never fail as human loves often do, and it will take me into the other world when the time comes.”

Out of this love, we can return to our unions as whole people, committing ourselves again to the calling of marriage. We do not trust our desires or even the years we’ve already invested. Instead, we take up our vows daily and trust that he who promises to keep us faithfully to the end will also keep us faithful to each other.

SOURCE: BY HANNAH ANDERSON, CHRISTIAN TODAY

Pastor Yonggi Cho, Founder of World’s Largest Megachurch, Dies at 85

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David Yonggi Cho, pastor of the world’s largest megachurch, died Tuesday morning, his church said in a press release. He was 85.

Cho is the founder of Yoido Full Gospel Church in Seoul, South Korea and spent decades spreading the gospel in that country.

At the time of his death, Cho had been receiving medical treatment for a brain hemorrhage he suffered from in 2020.

Cho was born in 1936 to a Buddhist family and lived during the Korean War. He converted to Christianity at 17 when doctors told him he would die from a serious case of tuberculosis. Cho credits God for his “miraculous” recovery from the disease.

“I will never forget God’s blessing and grace over my life, through which He chose me to be His Servant when I was just an insignificant child with lung disease, and He saved me by His grace through the atonement of the Cross of Jesus Christ, so that through prayer I might receive wisdom and preach by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit wherever He placed me,” Cho wrote in a statement on his church’s website.

Cho pursued ministry full time and graduated from Full Gospel College in 1956. Just two years later, he opened a tent church in Seoul, which later turned into Yoido Full Gospel Church. The church grew into one of the most popular megachurches in the world and boasts more than 750,000 members.

Yoido has more than 500 church locations across South Korea and has sent thousands of missionaries to countries around the globe, according to the church’s press release.

“All I did was offer my life just like the boy who gave the five loaves and two fish… I simply held on to the dreams that the Lord gave me, and it was He who grew Yoido Full Gospel Church to 750,000 members to become the World’s largest church,” Cho said in a statement.

South Korea has one of the world’s most robust Christian communities, and megachurches grew in popularity in the years following the Korean war.

Cho became one of the most influential Christian leaders in his country. He wrote several books, founded a Christian daily newspaper, and established a humanitarian organization, said the church release.

Cho’s wife died in February this year. They are survived by their three sons.

SOURCE: CBN NEWS

‘Turning to God, the Ultimate Answer to Evil’: Trump Tells Americans at ‘Let Us Worship’ 9/11 Event

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Former President Donald Trump urged Americans to pray for our nation in honor of the men and women who perished during the terrorist attacks on September 11th, 2001.

Trump addressed the nation Saturday in a recorded video that aired during Sean Feucht’s “Let Us Worship” prayer event on the National Mall.

“It is an absolutely profound honor to address all of you gathered at the National Mall on this very solemn day of remembrance and prayer as our nation commemorates the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks of September 11th, 2001 … a terrible day,” Trump said.

“I want to thank Sean Feucht and everyone from the amazing Let Us Worship movement for hosting this very beautiful and very incredible event. Since last year, you’ve brought worship and prayer to 132 cities all across the country, including the largest church service right here in our nation’s Capital by uniting citizens of all denominations and backgrounds to promote faith and freedom in America,” he continued. “You are strengthening our entire nation and we thank you for it. There could be no more fitting night for American’s to join hands and bow our heads in prayer than this evening.”

The former president thanked the first responders who sacrificed their safety to help those in danger.

“Two decades after nearly 3,000 Americans were murdered at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and a field in Western Pennsylvania, we honor the memory of every innocent soul killed in the Sept. 11th attacks. We cherish their legacy and we reaffirm our everlasting vow to never forget. We all remember hearing in the hours and days after the attacks, the stories of police officers, firefighters, and first responders who showed bravery and daring far beyond the call of duty,” Trump remarked.

“As a lifelong New Yorker, it was extraordinary to witness the strength and resilience of people in that incredible city and it is indeed an incredible city. They raced into danger and toward the smoke without a thought of their own safety. The heroism of the NYPD, the FDNY, the fire department, the police department, the port authority police as well as the first responders at the Pentagon and so many others will live on in our national memory for all time.

“Tonight I want to express our thanks to every first responder present on the National Mall. You are the very best of our nation. You are incredible people. I also want to ask every American here today and all across the country to take a moment to share our gratitude for the countless people, active duty service members, veterans, and military families who have sacrificed to defend our country over the past two decades and lets especially be thanking and thinking of the brave heroes who served in Afghanistan,” he continued. “They courageously volunteered to hunt down the vile killers who attacked America and to eliminate the menace of radical Islamic terrorism from the face of the earth. And I know what you’re thinking because we have suffered a great, great embarrassment over the last week. A terrible thing has happened. Terrible decisions were made by this administration but you are brave, you are incredible and it will be made up.”

Trump highlighted the efforts of Feucht’s ministry and the measures taken to honor the victims.

“Earlier today, members of the Let Us Worship movement placed flags on the graves of every service member in Arlington cemetery who gave their life for our nation since Sept. 11th. To the Gold Star families present on the Mall and to the family members of all the service members that made the supreme sacrifice in our fight against the terrorist enemy, please know that you have our undying loyalty and eternal devotion, and the love and support of every single American.

Trump also remembered the beloved New York City Fire Department Chaplain, Father Mychal Judge, who died during the attacks.

“As we pray and reflect on this anniversary, one story from that terrible day points the way forward for our nation and reminds us of the infinite source of our hope as black smoke was billowing from across the Potomac at the Pentagon and the skies of New York were full of ash and flame, a lone figure stood in the window near the base of the North Tower of the World Trade Center. Father Mychal Judge was the chaplain of a New York City fire station. When the first plane struck the World Trade Center, he raced inside knowing the danger,” Trump said.

“Video testimony shows him standing still at the large window looking at people falling to their deaths. A friend and fellow priest later recounted that if you watch carefully, you can see the Father’s lips moving. For those of us who know him, the friend said he wasn’t one that talked to himself … he was praying. Moments later the South Tower collapsed and the implosion shattered the glass window and killed Father Mychal.”

Trump continued, “The day before he died, Father Mychal spoke at the dedication of a New York City fire station. Before a group of firefighters, he shared a message that echoes across all time. ‘You do what God called you to do,’ he told them. ‘You show up, you put one foot in front of the other. You get on the rig and you go out and you do the job which is a mystery. You have no idea what God has calling for you. You have no idea where you’re going and in some cases you don’t know why, but He needs you. He needs me, He needs all of us.'”

“Tonight Father Mychal’s words remind us that in the end, there is only one true answer to the depth and the evil that we saw on Sept. 11th. It is God that is the answer that stood tall over the wreckers at Ground Zero where rescuers forged the mighty steel cross from the fallen towers’ broken beams. It is the same sight that was seen hundreds of miles away in Shanksville where the first spontaneous memorial to the heroes of Flight 93 was a simple but beautiful wooden cross. And it is the same … turning to God, the ultimate answer to evil that we see here today as thousands of Americans gather on the Mall to pray for our beloved nation and to pray for one another.”

As he concluded his speech, Trump commended Let Us Worship for calling Americans to pray for one another despite our differences as we navigate through these challenging times together.

“I want to thank Let Us Worship for calling Americans to 21 days of prayer in the coming weeks. America is a nation strengthened and sustained by God and the prayers of all His children. Your faith is a force that our enemies can never, ever extinguish,” he said. “Your love of God, family, and country is more powerful than any adversaries’ hatred, or malice, or scorn. So as we remember those Americans we lost two decades ago, we return again and again to the same simple prayer that was heard echoing all across our land in the days after the Sept. 11th attacks. God bless our first responders. God bless our service members. God bless the memory of all who died on 9/11 and God bless America.”

SOURCE: CBN NEWS

Christian leaders commemorate 20th anniversary of 9/11

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The Archbishop of Canterbury has joined other Christian and global leaders in marking the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks in the US.

Most Rev Justin Welby said: “Twenty years after the 9/11 attacks, it’s still hard to articulate the sense of shock and horror felt around the world, the devastating loss experienced by so many people, and the fear and uncertainty that terrible day brought.”

In 2001, terrorist group al-Qaeda coordinated a series of four deadly attacks on New York’s Twin Towers and the Pentagon, leaving nearly 3,000 people dead and thousands more injured.

The attacks prompted the US to go to war in Afghanistan, a conflict that came to an end earlier this month following the Taliban’s take over of the country and the US withdrawal.

Archbishop Justin continued: “9/11 was a sharp reminder to us of the fragility of the privilege many of us have of living free of the threat of violence, while many in our world continue to wake to war or the fear of war.”

“Today we pray together for all who know the tragedy of loss, for those lives changed forever, for those afflicted by violence and terror, and for the people of Afghanistan who face an uncertain future. May God of all healing guide us together towards the peace offered by the crucified and resurrected Christ,” he concluded.

Her Majesty the Queen has also taken to social media to commemorate the anniversary, she said: “As we mark the 20th anniversary of the terrible attacks on September 11 2001, my thoughts and prayers – and those of my family and the entire nation – remain with the victims, survivors and families affected, as well as the first responders and rescue workers called to duty.

“My visit to the site of the World Trade Centre in 2010 is held fast in my memory. It reminds me that as we honour those from many nations, faiths and backgrounds who lost their lives, we also pay tribute to the resilience and determination of the communities who joined together to rebuild.”

President Joe Biden will visit each of the sites where the planes crashed. Relatives of the victims in the UK will also gather at the September 11th Memorial Garden in London for a service of remembrance.

SOURCE: By  Kelly Valencia , CHRISTIAN PREMIER NEWS

First ‘earth chapel’ opened in a College in the Philippines

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A college in the Philippines has opened the country’s first-ever “earth chapel” to instill a greater love of creation among the faithful.

Dr. Yanga’s College in Bulacan province, north of Manila, opened the chapel, which is covered by plants and artworks that include a mosaic of Italian Saints Francis and Clare of Assisi, to commemorate the World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation on Sept. 1.

Pope Francis introduced the special day to remind Catholics of their love for the environment and the earth, their “common home.”

“Saints Francis and Clare’s earth chapel was blessed this morning by our beloved former parish priest, Father Jovi Sebastian,” the college said in a Facebook post.

The chapel was opened despite pandemic restrictions to serve as place of prayer to “weary souls” who hope to seek God during the quarantine, the college added.

The school hoped its students and staff would pay a visit despite their classes being held online.

This earth chapel is bountiful fruit from many generous and kind hearts and minds

The college also thanked the donors who made its construction possible.

“This earth chapel is bountiful fruit from many generous and kind hearts and minds. We thank them for sharing their blessings such as the plants to make this chapel truly one with the environment,” the college said.

Father Jovi Sebastian of Malolos Diocese in Bulacan province said the chapel was a symbol of God’s faithfulness to his people.

“This chapel is now a sanctuary of the Lord. He is here with us. Indeed, we dedicate this as our thanksgiving to God, who never abandoned us in these trying times of our lives,” he said during the blessing of the chapel.

Meanwhile, Manila archbishop Cardinal Jose Advincula challenged Catholics to treat and take care of the environment as God’s creation.

“Does God’s creation remain a gift? If water is a gift, why do we have to spend just to drink clean water? If the earth’s natural resources are gifts, why are there people who profit excessively form them?” he asked in his homily during a Mass to mark the special day at Manila Cathedral.

SOURCE: UCA NEWS

‘May the Holy Spirit be With Us’: Early Rain Covenant Preacher and Family Face Ongoing Persecution by Chinese Gov’t

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A preacher in China’s Sichuan province is asking for prayers as his family continues to face persecution from communist authorities – even while they’re at home.

Dai Zhichao, a member of Early Rain Covenant Church (ERCC), was awakened to the sound of someone beating on his door last Sunday, China Aid reports. When he got up to see what the commotion was, Dai discovered the words “Pay Your Debt” written on the door.

The keyhole to the house was filled with glue and the family’s power had reportedly been disconnected. When Dai called the community management office, he was told that the power was out due to an issue with the circuit breaker.

His electricity was finally restored seven hours later.

Police had detained Dai and his family the previous week for more than 10 hours, according to China Aid.

The preacher shared details of the ongoing harassment during a church gathering saying, “We were scared. We were just able to open the door. When we watched outside through the peephole in the morning, we noticed those people seemed to live next door.”

He continued, “Please pray for God’s help and peace during the tribulation. When they vandalized our door in the morning, I suspected they were painting ‘pay your debt’. It was actually those words when I opened the door to look. Thank you, God. We were really nervous. Now we can better understand the feeling of those who were bullied but unable to appeal for help.

“Thankfully we have God, or else we would be really angry. Thank you for your prayers and love. It’s back in peace for now. Please pray for God to bring us peace and protection. When they hear us worship God during Sunday services, they get angry and come attack us. Actually, they are not attacking us, but attacking Christ. God, please help us better understand the sweetness of the Cross, and that the most powerful force is the Gospel. May the Holy Spirit be with us!”

As CBN News has reported, Dai was victimized in August during a Sunday worship service at ERCC in Chengdu when police illegally raided a group meeting.

The police claimed to have received a call reporting an illegal gathering there, according to a Facebook post.

“Pastoral intern Dai Zhichao asked the police to present a search warrant. The police were rough and wanted to check people’s ID cards. Dai Zhichao’s arm was scratched and his cell phone was taken away.”

Dai was held in detention for 14 days before he was finally released.

Over the past few years, China’s communist regime has ramped up its extreme measures to crack down on religious groups in China.

Pastor Wang Yi, who led ERCC, was taken into custody in December of 2018 after his home was raided and ransacked by police.

The prominent pastor was sentenced to nine years in prison on charges of “inciting subversion of state power” and “illegal business operations.”

Also, ERCC Elder QinDefu was sentenced in Nov. 2019 to four years in prison by a court in Chengdu. He was charged with “illegal business operations” for having books for the church.

“The latest raid against ERCC, though nothing novel, shows a worrying trend that house churches are frequently subjected to harassment like this in the name of ‘law enforcement,’ where legally flawed Revised Regulations on Religious Affairs have been employed by Beijing to crackdown on house churches around the country,” said Gina Goh, ICC’s Regional Manager for Southeast Asia.

“The Chinese Communist Party’s constant fear of unregistered churches is both pathetic and preposterous, as it underscores President Xi’s insecurity toward any critical mass. There is absolutely no regard for religious freedom,” Goh added.

SOURCE: CBN NEWS

Pope calls Christians to fast and pray for peace in Afghanistan

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With increased violence unfolding in Afghanistan, Pope Francis has appealed to all Christians to fast and intensify their prayers.

“I ask everyone to continue to help the needy and to pray that dialogue and solidarity may lead to the establishment of a peaceful and fraternal coexistence and offer hope for the country’s future,” he said, after praying the Angelus with visitors in St. Peter’s Square on Aug. 29.

He said he had been following the news out of Afghanistan “with great concern.”

“I take part in the suffering of those who are grieving for the persons who lost their lives in the suicide attacks that happened last Thursday and of those who are seeking help and protection,” he said.

The pope was referring to the Aug. 26 attack when a suicide bomber detonated an explosion among the crowds of people desperate to leave the country at the gate of the Hamid Karzai International Airport.

The blast killed at least 169 civilians and 13 US service members, who were set to withdraw from the country by Aug. 31. Thousands of Afghans were seeking to be evacuated as well. The Islamic State claimed responsibility, saying the suicide bomber was targeting Afghan collaborators with the US army.

The pope said, “I entrust the deceased to the mercy of almighty God and I thank those who are striving to help” the people who have been through so much, in particular the women and children.

“In historic moments like this one, we cannot remain indifferent; the history of the Church teaches us this,” he said.

“As Christians this situation obligates us,” he said, launching an appeal to everyone “to intensify your prayer and practice fasting. Prayer and fasting, prayer and penance. This is the moment to do so. I am speaking seriously: intensify your prayer and practice fasting, asking the Lord for mercy and forgiveness.”

SOURCE: UCA NEWS