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Soldiers Baptized in ‘Makeshift Tub’ at California Base

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When seven soldiers said they wanted to get baptized, the military chaplains at Fort Irwin in California made it happen.

News of the spontaneous baptism was first shared in a Facebook post Monday morning by the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division.

“With no chapel or equipment to facilitate, our chaplains came together and created a makeshift tub at the National Training Center/Fort Irwin and got the job done,” the division wrote. “A fine example of Lancers being experts at their chosen field craft!”

At press time, the Army’s post had been shared more than 30,000 times, received nearly 8,000 reactions, and had almost 1,000 comments.

“This is absolutely amazing!” wrote one Facebook user. “Makes my heart happy! Thank you, chaplains, what a blessing! Welcome to the family of God! Thank you for our troops! God bless each and every one of you! I pray God’s protection around you all!”

Another added, “This is awesome! Best decision they will ever make.”

“So happy for new brothers and sisters in Christ,” commented someone else. “Thank you for all your service. There is no greater joy than putting on the armor of God!”

Muslim Fulani Herdsmen Kill 36 Christians in Kaduna State, Nigeria

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Fulani herdsmen killed 36 Christians in multiple attacks in Kaduna state, Nigeria this month with impunity, while a church leader complained that authorities arrested only Christians for defending themselves.

The attacks from Aug. 4 to Saturday (Aug. 28) on villages in Zangon Kataf, Kaura and Chikun counties took the lives of 17 Christians in Doh (Mado) village, five in Madamai, eight in Buruku and Udawa, three in Machun and three in Goran Gida, residents said.

The attack on Machun village, Zangon Kataf County, on Thursday (Aug. 26) took place at 7 p.m., said area resident Judith David in a text message to Morning Star News.

“Fulani herdsmen have killed three of our Christians, and five other Christians were also injured,” she said. “It rained at the time the herdsmen invaded our village. We all had already gone to houses to sleep when the herdsmen attacked the village, forcing us to flee into the bush in the rain.”

Samuel Aruwan, Kaduna state commissioner for Internal Security and Home Affairs, confirmed the killings in a press statement.

“Police personnel responded to a distress call from Machun village and mobilized there,” he said. “On arrival, they were also alerted by gunshots from neighboring Manuka. As the assailants fled the area, the operatives found the corpses of three victims.”

The Rev. Jacob Kwashi, Anglican bishop of Zonkwa Diocese, and residents of the affected communities said the assailants were Muslim Fulani herdsmen.

In Doh (Mado) village, Zangon Kataf county on Aug. 22, sources reported 17 Christians were killed.

“My hometown of Doh (Mado) is under attack from Fulani herdsmen,” village resident Patience Bilyock said a text message to Morning Star News. “O God, arise and fight for your children.”

Kwashi, while conducting a funeral service for the 17 Christians killed in the village, said the government was doing nothing as killings continued each day in Middle Belt states.

“We have never seen an evil government in this country like the one of today. The government is fully in support of the bloodshed in Nigeria. We are being killed just because we are not Muslims,” Kwashi said. “These evil Fulani jihadists are enjoying the backing of the government to go about killing people, destroying their houses and farmlands, yet when we try to defend ourselves, the government will go about arresting our people. What kind of justice is this?”

Aruwan, the Kaduna state spokesman, said of the attack on Doh village that the assailants fled on sighting the forces of the Nigerian army. He identified nine of the dead residents as Moses Dangana, Mary Dangana, Jummai Dangana, Jerry James, Happy James, Endurance Stephen, Comfort Emmanuel, Jummai Tanko and Mary Clement.

“One resident, Magdalene Dangoma, sustained gunshot injuries and is receiving treatment in a hospital,” Aruwan said. “Two houses were razed in the attack. The troops of Operation Safe Haven also rescued 12 persons who were fleeing from the attackers. Those rescued are Patrick Chindon, Joseph Agbon, Polymer Joseph, Amos Francis, Keziah Amos, Linda Jonathan, Asabe Jonathan, Jonathan James, Lamin Yohanna, Titi Emmanuel, Patricia Michael and Jetral Bala.”

On Aug. 16, herdsmen attacked Goran Gida village, also in Zangon Kataf county. Aruwan said three residents were killed: Amos Bulus, Bulus Swam and Simon Akut. A resident identified only as Kezia was wounded, and the assailants set a car on fire, he said.

In Madamai village, Kaura County, herdsmen attacked on Aug. 15 at 5 a.m., said area resident Polycarp Bala.

“Five Christians were killed in this attack by Fulani herdsmen,” Bala said.

Aruwan identified those killed as Janet Yakubu, Gambo Yakubu, Jonathan Adamu, Mrs. Monday and Humphrey Barnabas.

In Buruku and Udaw‎a villages in Chikun County on Aug. 13, herdsmen killed eight Christians as they worked on their farms, residents said. Five Christian farmers were killed in Buruku village and three in Udawa village, area resident John Audu said.

“We are tired of the blood being shed on a daily basis here,” Audu said. “We need help.”

On Aug. in Magamiya village, armed herdsmen wounded one Christian.

“Christian by the name of Shedrach Yohanna was shot by the Fulani Herdsmen on his arm,” Maigamiya resident Jude Hassan said in a text message. Aruwan confirmed the attack and injury.

“Troops responded to a distress call, mobilized to the village and engaged the assailants and successfully repelled them,” Aruwan said.

Nigeria was the country with the most Christians killed for their faith last year (November 2019-October 2020), at 3,530, up from 1,350 in 2019, according to Open Doors’ 2021 World Watch List. In overall violence, Nigeria was second only to Pakistan, and it trailed only China in the number of churches attacked or closed, 270, according to the list.

In this year’s World Watch List of the countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian, Nigeria broke into the top 10 for the first time, jumping to No. 9 from No. 12 the previous year.

Numbering in the millions across Nigeria and the Sahel, predominantly Muslim Fulani comprise hundreds of clans of many different lineages who do not hold extremist views, but some Fulani do adhere to radical Islamist ideology, the United Kingdom’s All-Party Parliamentary Group for International Freedom or Belief (APPG) noted in a recent report.

“They adopt a comparable strategy to Boko Haram and ISWAP [Islamic State West Africa Province] and demonstrate a clear intent to target Christians and potent symbols of Christian identity,” the APPG report states.

Christian leaders in Nigeria have said they believe herdsmen attacks on Christian communities in Nigeria’s Middle Belt are inspired by their desire to forcefully take over Christians’ lands and impose Islam as desertification has made it difficult for them to sustain their herds.

The APPG report noted that tribal loyalties cannot be overlooked.

“In 2015, Muhammadu Buhari, a Fulani, was elected president of Nigeria,” the group reported. “He has done virtually nothing to address the behavior of his fellow tribesmen in the Middle Belt and in the south of the country.”

The U.S. State Department on Dec. 7 added Nigeria to its list of Countries of Particular Concern for engaging in or tolerating “systematic, ongoing, egregious violations of religious freedom.” Nigeria joined Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan on the list.

In a more recent category of non-state actors, the State Department also designated ISWAP, Boko Haram, Al-Shabaab, Al-Qaeda, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the Houthis, ISIS, ISIS-Greater Sahara, Jamaat Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin, and the Taliban as “Entities of Particular Concern.”
On Dec. 10 the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Fatou Bensouda, issued a statement calling for investigation into crimes against humanity in Nigeria.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Muslim Cleric Arrested, Charged With Blasphemy, Hate Speech for Reportedly Insulting Christianity

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Indonesian police arrested a Muslim cleric Thursday and charged him with blasphemy for allegedly insulting Christians.

Muhammad Yahya Waloni, a former Protestant who became a Muslim in 2006 and later an imam, was detained while at his home in the national capital of Jakarta, Union of Catholic Asian News reports.

He is accused of calling the Bible “fictitious and false” in one of his sermons.

Police spokesman Brig. Gen. Rusdi Hartono said Waloni was charged with blasphemy and hate speech based on a complaint that was filed in April.

When asked why it took four months to arrest Waloni, Hartono remarked that the investigation needed time to pursue and that it’s ongoing.

His arrest comes just three days after a Muslim, who had converted to Christianity, was arrested over allegations that he had insulted Islam.

Muhammad Kace was arrested on Aug. 23 in Bali after he was accused of sharing videos on YouTube that insulted Islam and the Prophet Muhammad, according to UCA News.

In the videos, Kace reportedly said the prophet was “surrounded by devils and liars.”

Indonesia’s Religious Affairs Minister Yaqut Cholil Qoumas recently called for tougher measures against people accused of committing blasphemy and hate speech.

“All are equal before the law. Therefore, there must be fair treatment in all cases, including blasphemy and hate speech,” he said.

But Philip Situmorang, spokesman of the Communion of Churches in Indonesia, said Christians are treated differently from others. 

“In cases of blasphemy, police and law enforcement officials must be fair instead of siding with a certain group,” Situmorang noted. “Christians have been arrested and brought to court in blasphemy cases, while those insulting Christianity or other religions have been left alone.”

SOURCE: CBN NEWS

Kanye’s Gospel-Themed Album Donda Soars to No. 1 on Worldwide Chart

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Kanye West’s second gospel-themed hip-hop album soared to No. 1 Monday on multiple mainstream charts, including on Amazon and iTunes, where it was the best-selling album barely 24 hours after its release.

The album, named Donda after his late mom, was dropped Sunday and includes multiple tracks that spotlight his Christian faith, including “Praise God,” “Heaven and Hell,” “Lord I Need You” and “Jesus Lord.”

Also on the album is the tune “No Child Left Behind,” which was featured in an Olympics-themed television commercial in July with U.S. track star Sha’carri Richardson.

The album on Monday was No. 1 on Amazon and iTunes. Perhaps even more impressive, the album’s songs also were dominating the chart, with 19 of the top 20 songs on Apple Music’s Global Top 100 coming from Donda.

Additionally, music from the album was No. 1 on nation-specific charts in the U.S., Canada, Kenya, New Zealand, Romania and the United Arab Emirates, among others.

The faith-centric song “Jail,” which includes Jay-Z, was No. 1 on most singles charts.

West’s first gospel hip-hop album, 2019’s “Jesus Is King,” landed him a Grammy for best Christian contemporary music album.

West – who formerly made a career out of producing albums filled with explicit language – told Joel Osteen and Lakewood Church in 2019 that he wanted to make only Christian music.

West is 44.

“God’s been calling me for a long time, and the devil has been distracting me for a long time,” West said. “When I was in my lowest point, God was there with me and sending me visions and inspiring me.”

West added, “Every time I stand up, I feel that I’m standing up and drawing a line in the sand and saying, ‘I’m here in service to God, and no weapon formed against me shall prosper.'”

The “only superstar,” he said, “is Jesus.”

Pastor Ricky Texada of Covenant Church dies After a Weeklong Battle With the Coronavirus

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Ricky Texada, senior pastor of Covenant Church—a multisite megachurch in the Dallas, Texas, area with an attendance around 7,000—died on Monday after a weeks-long battle with COVID-19. He was 57 years old.

“Our beloved Pastor fought to the very end,” the church stated on Facebook. “At 11:32 this morning, he entered eternity and met his great love, Jesus, face to face. We are honored and grateful for all of you who so faithfully and earnestly fought alongside him.”

A multi-ethnic, charismatic church, Covenant has four campuses in the Dallas area and serves as the flagship congregation of Churches in Covenant, a nationwide network of about 50 churches.

According to social posts, Texada was admitted to a local hospital during the week of August 15. The church reported he entered the hospital with COVID pneumonia and had been placed on a ventilator in the ICU, as his oxygen levels were “dangerously low.” It was not disclosed if Texada had been vaccinated against COVID-19.

He is survived by his wife, Cyd, and their two sons, Seth and Caleb. While many friends and family were still in shock by the news, some took to social media to pay tribute.

His brother Keith Texada, who lives in the Dallas area with his family, tweeted: “Rest well my brother. I will miss our morning football talks (and) family gatherings. You had such an impact on this world. A part of me is gone.”

Covenant Church founding pastor Mike Hayes wrote: “Today, Heaven was enriched and we were left trusting God and grieving the passing of @RickyTexada… One of the greatest men I’ve known. @CovLive will move forward as one, but he will never be forgotten.”

Similarly, Brooke Ninowski, a 30-something lifelong member of the church, wrote: “My heart grieves so. One of the truest men I’ve known to model the Gospel and walk out the love of Jesus towards others. His simple yet anchored faith in Jesus is something that will echo in my life and I know so many others.”

Texada also impacted leaders far from his north Texas home. Jay Valai, on the University of Alabama Crimson Tide football coaching staff under Nick Saban, tweeted: “Rest In Peace to Pastor Ricky Texada. His Spiritual impact on us & leading my family through our toughest days will always be felt through our souls.”

Rest In Peace to Pastor Ricky Texada. His Spiritual impact on us & leading my family through our toughest days will always be felt through our souls.

  1. Ecclesiastes 7:1
    “A good name is better than fine perfume, and one’s day of death is better than his day of birth.”
    GOD Bless pic.twitter.com/PVELW7mfn8

— Coach Valai (@JayValai) August 30, 2021

The coach added Ecclesiastes 7:1, which reads: “A good name is better than fine perfume, and one’s day of death is better than his day of birth.”

“Not the end we would’ve chosen”
For the past two weeks, Covenant Church has mobilized its members to pray and fast for Texada’s healing and recovery.

The church’s social post announcing Texada’s passing referred to this prayer initiative: “This is not the end we would have chosen BUT our trust is in our God Most High. We do not mourn as those who have no hope!”

Reportedly, church staff have surrounded Cyd Texada and their family in prayer and support, notably including Hayes and his wife, Kathy, and their daughter Amy Dockery who leads the women’s ministry.

On social media, Ricky Texada often praised his two sons who are both student athletes. His eldest, Seth, competes on the track and field team at University of Texas-Arlington. Caleb Texada is team captain for Grapevine High School’s football team.

According to a social post from his mother Cyd, last week Caleb saw his father in the hospital. Following his brief visit, Caleb went back out to support his team and scored a highlight touchdown. An announcer later called him “the heart and soul” of the team.

Caleb @CalebTexada spent the whole first half of the game in ICU getting to see his Dad for the first time since August 10th. We were not allowed to see him. After he saw him, he came and knelt by my chair and said, “Mom, I want to go support my team”. And this is what happened! https://t.co/ahZa78sVpS

— Cyd Texada (@CydTexada) August 28, 2021

For over 30 years, Texada has served on-staff at the megachurch, starting in 1990 when he was youth minister for what was then known as Faith World. He was ordained as a minister in 1997. He and his wife, Cyd, were married in 1998. In 2006, he became campus pastor when Covenant Church in Carrollton expanded to a second location in nearby Colleyville.

Texada is the author of “My Breaking Point, God’s Turning Point,” published by Bethany House in 2014. The book recounts the loss of his first wife, Debra, in 1996, following a car accident, and his subsequent testimony.

He was installed as senior pastor of Covenant Church in October 2020. Hayes spoke briefly during that transition service. “We have been through a lot of things together,” he said. “You have been found faithful.”

SOURCE: BCNN1

3 Christian Families Rescued from Afghanistan: ‘We Must Support Them in a New Beginning’

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Three Afghan Christian families have escaped the danger of life under the Taliban thanks to the work of a faith-based organization and the Italian military.

The three families, which included seven minors, were rescued last week out of Kabul by the Italian military after being identified by Fondazione Meet Human, a faith-based organization based in Italy. Tragically, though, the father of one of the families was missing and didn’t make it out. He disappeared “into thin air with the advance of the Taliban,” the organization said.

All total, 14 Christians were rescued, Fondazione Meet Human said. The families will resettle in Bergamo, Italy, with the assistance of Fondazione Meet Human.

“We must support them in a new beginning,” the organization said.

Daniele Nembrini, president of Fondazione Meet Human, applauded the rescue operation.

“We are grateful to Italian civilian and military authorities for this complicated and demanding rescue operation, not to mention the many people who worked for its success. It might be a drop in the ocean, but the ocean is made up of drops,” Nembrini told Asia News.

International Christian Concern (ICC) highlighted the story and said there are “hundreds of other Christian families in Afghanistan” that are trying to flee the country. Unfortunately, though, the lack of countries willing to accept such families, in addition to “logistical challenges,” has forced many Christians to remain in hiding, ICC said.

“We are telling people to stay in their houses because going out now is too dangerous,” a Christian leader in Afghanistan told ICC.

ICC estimates there are between 12,000 and 14,000 Christians in Afghanistan – most of them converts from Islam.

“According to the Taliban’s ideology, Afghanistan is a Muslim country and non-Muslims must leave Afghanistan or accept second-class status,” ICC explained. “For Christians, coming from convert backgrounds, the Taliban will consider them apostate and subject to Sharia’s deadliest consequences.”

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Pastor’s Wife, 19-Year-Old Injured in Attack on Christians in Northern India

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A pastor’s wife is still bed-ridden after hard-line Sikhs and Hindus broke her leg in an attack on their church last month in northern India, sources said.

Carrying swords and wooden rods, the assailants also slashed the head of a church member in the attack on Christians gathered for a meal at the Evangelical Church of God in the Arniwala area of Fazilka District, Punjab state.

“The physical injuries were very brutal, so that even over a month after the attack, the injured have not recovered,” pastor Roop Lal told Morning Star News. “The doctors told us the injured area [of his wife’s leg] is totally infected, and the skin in the area developed some kind of boils.”

In the July 12 attack, about 15 men also vandalized a security camera and destroyed the church gate and other property, causing damages of about 30,000 rupees (US$404), he said.

Pastor Lal’s wife, Raj Rani, underwent two surgeries on her left leg, and 19-year-old Lovepreet Singh received 18 stitches for a wound on his scalp. Surgeons at Faridkot Medical Hospital on July 24 addressed the infection on Rani’s leg, and she underwent a later operation to insert rods for the fracture, Pastor Lal said.

Having no money on hand, the pastor relied on contributions of area Christians to pay for the operations, he said.

“Since there is a threat to our lives, we had to move to an area around 15 miles away,” he told Morning Star News. “My wife is bedridden since the attack.”

Her husband and children have been taking care of her, Rani said.

“There is a lot of pain, and I am not able to move,” Rani told Morning Star News. “The kids have been cooking and doing all the chores by themselves. If I can move a bit, it will be a respite for us. I can at least do some of the things by myself and not be burdensome to them while they have their studies going on.”

Arniwala police registered a First Information Report (FIR) against the assailants, who filed false counter-charges that resulted in officers also registering a case against the pastor and his family.

The FIR against Mora Singh, Seva Singh, another identified only as Gopi and 10 unknown persons was filed under non-bailable charges of house-trespass and maliciously insulting religion or religious beliefs, as well as bailable offenses of voluntarily causing hurt, rioting, armed with deadly weapons and unlawful assembly guilty of offense committed with a common object, sources said.

“Arniwala police then registered a case against us falsely alleging that my sons and I have attacked neighbor Sri Chand,” Pastor Lal said.

The counter-FIR was filed on July 20 under charges of voluntarily causing grievous hurt, voluntarily causing hurt and acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention. Legal advocacy group Alliance Defending Freedom-India has given the Christian family legal assistance.

“Our allied attorney is dealing with the false cases filed against the pastor and his family,” ADF India’s Punjab representative told Morning Star News.

TRIGGERING INCIDENT
While area Hindus and Sikhs have long opposed and harassed the Christians, the attack followed a confrontation on July 4 over clogged rainwater.

Pastor Lal and his family were clearing a drain of rainwater that was flooding the church compound when Chand, the neighbor, emerged from his home and accused them of sending rainwater into his house, the pastor said.

“We tried to explain to him that the passage needs to be cleared so that the water flows freely, and that we need to hurry and tidy up the premises for the worship service,” Pastor Lal. “But he went on shouting, abusing us in extremely filthy language that we are intentionally piling our dirt in his house. I told him that it is rainwater which is flowing in the area, and that it is affecting everybody in the neighborhood.”

Neighbors phoned the area council and requested that personnel clear the clogged drains, but Chand filed the complaint against the pastor and his family alleging that they had attacked him and destroyed his property, Pastor Lal said.

Fazilka District church leaders on July 12 accompanied local pastors to the Arniwala police station for talks with Chand, and afterward at noon police dropped the Christians off at the church premises where members were preparing food for the pastors.

“We prayed with them and sat for lunch. Right then, the mob barged inside the gates,” Pastor Lal said. “They vandalized everything in their sight and attacked us with swords and wooden sticks, during which my wife and the teenager of our church received severe injuries.”

OPPOSITION
Pastor Lal said area residents have opposed his ministry for the past 21 years.

As the church has grown, a multi-religious guru known as a baba has set up a nearby camp to attract crowds, he said.

“The presence of a church seems to be a threat to his followers as well as the Sikh and Hindu community, since they feel the crowds are thronging to the church,” Pastor Lal said. “They had been waiting for an opportunity to attack us. They wanted us to flee from the area.”

The church is gathering in smaller groups in homes, with services at its main worship site taking place only on days when police provide security, he said. He requested prayer for his wife and Singh.

“It was only the Lord who saved my wife from the brutal attack; she would have been dead in their hands that day. But our Lord is merciful. We give Him praise as we endure this phase of persecution,” he said. “We do not know when we would be able to return to our home on the church premises. Please pray for us; there is a threat to our lives.”

The hostile tone of the National Democratic Alliance government, led by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, against non-Hindus, has emboldened Hindu extremists in several parts of the country to attack Christians since Prime Minister Narendra Modi took power in May 2014, religious rights advocates say.

India ranked 10th on Christian support organization Open Doors’ 2021 World Watch List of the countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian, as it was in 2020. The country was 31st in 2013, but its position worsened after Modi came to power.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

JESUS SAVIOUR OF THE WORLD

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From Beijing to London to Accra, many of the world’s cities have a square to boast of. A square in the mountains, however, is not as common.

Yet, nestled in the Akuapem mountains, amidst the hills of the impressive Anagkazo Bible and Ministry Training Centre, the Jesus Saviour of the World Square sits stately and proud, earning the awe of all who lay eyes on it.

A walk down the steep slopes adjacent the Mighty Fortress—a slightly precarious journey for the ladies in their Sunday high heels—leads you to a contrastingly flat and large expanse of red, sandy ground that stretches out all around you for several square metres. Once a week for the first half of 2021, it was dotted with red and black socially distanced chairs that were filled by young vibrant Christians from the city and surrounding towns alike, with our statement hats, sunglasses and umbrellas to protect ourselves from the midday sun.

With or without the chairs, however, the most commanding aspect of this open-air space that has been the First Love Church’s refuge, is the stage. This architectural feat is front and centre, several feet above the ground, complete with steps and a pulpit, entirely hewn out of the red, rocky mountainside with thick foliage as a backdrop.

A Case For Faith & Hope

Therein, against the dark green is found the square’s crowning feature: a bold, white sign akin to Hollywood’s that shouts, “JESUS SAVIOUR OF THE WORLD,” which now appears to be a landmark for the planes—they would circle and hover above us during the service. Rain or shine, it was under this great banner that we gathered to worship, fellowship and sit at the feet of our Prophet, pastor, teacher, father and architect of this great edifice, Bishop Dag Heward-Mills.

Why God Does Not Heal Everyone – Dag Heward-Mills

For more, visit:

www.daghewardmills.org

www.anagkazobibleministrytrainingcentre.org

Jeremy Camp Shares How Trusting God during Pandemic Inspired New Album

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Grammy-nominated Christian artist Jeremy Camp has a new album coming out next month, and it was inspired by what God taught him throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Camp’s initial reaction to the pandemic, like millions of Americans, was to get it over with.

“I remember that feeling I had — ‘I just want to get through this. I can’t wait to get through this,’” he told The Christian Post.

However, the 43-year-old singer revealed what God told him in that moment that would change his mindset: “Jeremy, I want to get through to you during this. I want to teach you things during this. You have to be willing to listen and not just try to get through it.”

“It was kind of a shift of mindset for me,” Camp explained. “It really was such a beautiful picture of allowing God to do the deep work in our hearts that we all need to do. I know that I need some deep work in my heart.”

“I realized that when you allow God to speak to your heart, what flourishes and what comes out is such life and such joy and hope and peace,” he continued. “All of those things come out when you let the Lord speak to your heart and whatever circumstance you’re in.”

Camp, who admitted he’s a “control freak,” shared that the biggest lesson God taught him in the pandemic was to relinquish that desire for control and trust in Him alone.

“I think one of the things that you realize is, I can’t control this,” he said. “It’s daily saying, ‘OK God, I’m going to trust you. I’m not going to try to understand this, because I don’t understand it. I don’t understand, still, what’s happening.’ And He says, ‘I’ll direct you.’”

It was also in light of that encounter with God that inspired Camp’s latest single “When You Speak,” which will be featured on the upcoming album, also titled When You Speak

“I find it’s always the lie that is loudest / I know the One with the power / Is never the one who is shoutin’,” the song’s opening lyrics state.

“Everyone’s experiencing just those lies of anxiety and depression … fears and worries and doubts,” he told The Christian Post. “The enemy is trying to steal, kill and destroy. He’s throwing his lies, and the voices that are the loudest in our head are those things. And God is just saying, ‘I have the power. Trust me.’”

Camp also revealed how the new album is a result of personal reflections in the past few decades of his life and how God spoke to him throughout that process.

“Imagine having a whole year-and-a-half to process through the past 21 years of your life, because I was forced to, in a good way,” the singer said.

“God reached down deep in my soul like and pulled out some things that needed to be said,” Camp continued. “I’m excited for people to hear the whole thing … because there’s a whole theme of things that God speaks when we hear His voice.”

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

The Taliban Are Killing Christians Who Have Bibles on Their Phones

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“We’re hearing from reliable sources that the Taliban demand people’s phones, and if they find a downloaded Bible on your device, they will kill you immediately.”

This is how Dr. Rex Rogers, North American President of the Middle East media ministry SAT-7, describes conditions in Afghanistan for believers after the Taliban’s takeover. He adds: “It’s incredibly dangerous right now for Afghans to have anything Christian on their phones. The Taliban have spies and informants everywhere.”

Open Doors ranked Afghanistan as the second-most dangerous country in the world for Christians even before the Taliban took control. Now a pastor who built churches in Afghanistan is warning that the Taliban will “exterminate” the church there.

A pastor in the US who works with Afghan refugees reports: “Young Christian girls are being pursued by the Taliban. The Taliban just raided the home of another church leader and confiscated his Bibles and literature.” House church leaders have reportedly received letters from the Taliban warning them that they know where they are and what they are doing.

A member of the UK Parliament warns that “there are 228 missionaries in Afghanistan currently under sentence of death.” Missionaries and mission groups are working feverishly to get Christian colleagues and volunteers out of the country.

A WORTHY TRIBUTE TO AMERICAN SOLDIERS

As we have noted this week, the US sent troops into Afghanistan twenty years ago to keep al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups from using the country as a platform for continued attacks against America and the West. Our troops succeeded admirably in performing this crucial work.

In a statement earlier this week, former President George W. Bush and his wife Laura spoke directly to veterans who served in Afghanistan:

“Many of you deal with wounds of war, both visible and invisible. And some of your brothers- and sisters-in-arms made the ultimate sacrifice in the war on terror. Each day, we have been humbled by your commitment and your courage. You took out a brutal enemy and denied al-Qaeda a safe haven while building schools, sending supplies, and providing medical care. You kept America safe from further attacks, provided two decades of security and opportunity for millions, and made America proud. We thank you from the bottom of our hearts and will always honor your contributions.”

All Americans should join Mr. and Mrs. Bush in gratitude to those who fought on our behalf in this war-torn country.

“VIETNAMIZATION” AND AFGHANISTAN 

However, American leaders sought not only to drive the Taliban from power but also to enable a functional government and society to take their place. This attempt obviously failed for a variety of reasons.

The Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), a US agency, recently released a report titled, “What We Need to Learn: Lessons from Twenty Years of Afghanistan Reconstruction.” Its seven core lessons state that the US:

  1. Struggled to develop and implement a coherent strategy
  2. Created unrealistic timelines that increased corruption and reduced effectiveness
  3. Built projects that were not sustainable
  4. Followed counterproductive civilian and military policies and practices
  5. Dealt with persistent security issues
  6. Did not understand the Afghan social, economic, and political systems at the local level
  7. Rarely conducted sufficient monitoring and evaluation to understand the impact of their efforts

Beyond what was needed to prevent a Taliban resurgence, why did we engage in “nation building” in Afghanistan at all? This larger question points to a political philosophy known as “Vietnamization.”

New York Times article by Stephen B. Young explains that in 1966, President Lyndon Johnson sought a new strategy for ending the Vietnam War on favorable terms for the South Vietnamese. Advisers recommended that the US “complement our anti-main force campaign and bombing offensive with greatly increased efforts to pacify the countryside and increase the attractive power” of the government of Vietnam.

The goal was to build up a South Vietnamese army that could keep North Vietnam’s battalions away from civilian populations while encouraging the South Vietnamese government to accelerate democratic and economic development for its people. At first, these efforts seemed to be working: the country adopted a new constitution and elections created a political infrastructure to support villages, grow the economy, and provide more manpower for the armed forces.

However, as we know, this effort at “nation building” ultimately failed.

Now we are seeing a similar tragedy unfold in Afghanistan. According to a Washington Post article, the US “spent more on nation building in Afghanistan than in any country ever, allocating $133 billion for reconstruction, aid programs, and the Afghan security services. Adjusted for inflation, that is more than the United States spent in Western Europe with the Marshall Plan after World War II.”

“I WILL BE EXALTED AMONG THE NATIONS”

At the same time, another kind of “nation building” is going on in Afghanistan and around the world. Unlike human efforts, it is empowered by divine providence and omnipotence. It is not subject to elected officials or brutal dictators. No terrorist group can stop its advance.

While the kingdoms of men rise and fall, the King of the universe is advancing his kingdom (Matthew 4:17) and he “shall reign forever and ever” (Revelation 11:15).

As a result, despite the escalation of dire threats against Afghan Christians, followers of Jesus there are standing resolute in their commitment to their Lord. They can testify with Paul, “I know whom I have believed” (2 Timothy 1:12). And they can claim God’s promise, “Blessed is the man who remains steadfast under trial, for when he has stood the test he will receive the crown of life, which God has promised to those who love him” (James 1:12).

For example, in early July, Afghan pastors and church leaders made the difficult decision to formally register their faith with the Afghan government. Despite the obvious dangers of such a public declaration, they did this for the sake of their children and grandchildren: “Someone should make this sacrifice so the next generations can openly call themselves followers of Jesus.”

Christian missionaries who have worked over recent decades in Afghanistan are not surprised by such courageous faith and service. One explained his work: “We’re just empowering them to do what they want to do to serve their own people.” Missionaries describe the remarkable hospitality they experienced from the Afghan people. Christianity Today adds that “a small but vibrant group of Afghan Christians pray and worship” in the country despite all opposition.

These Christians know what we need to remember: God’s kingdom transcends any nation on earth. His word is clear: “Kingship belongs to the Lᴏʀᴅ, and he rules over the nations” (Psalm 22:28). The future of all nations is equally clear: “All the ends of the earth shall remember and turn to the Lᴏʀᴅ, and all the families of the nations shall worship before you” (v. 27).

By contrast, “the nation and kingdom that will not serve you shall perish; those nations shall be utterly laid waste” (Isaiah 60:12). This is because, as God says, “I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth!” (Psalm 46:10).

And God will be exalted among the nations in heaven as well. John saw “a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb” (Revelation 7:9).

THREE COMMITMENTS AND THREE QUESTIONS

How should Christians in Afghanistan and America respond?

ONE: MAKE GOD OUR KING.

We are to “Fear God. Honor the emperor” (1 Peter 2:17), not the reverse. Jesus called us to “seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness” (Matthew 6:33). Our ultimate allegiance is not to any nation but to the King of the universe. This is a commitment we need to make every day, remembering that there is only room for one king on the throne of our hearts.

When last did you enthrone Jesus in your life?

TWO: TRUST OUR KING.

Jesus said of those who trust in him, “I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand” (John 10:28). The worst that can happen to Christians in Afghanistan or anywhere else in the world leads immediately to the best that can happen to us: “For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Philippians 1:21).

When last did you pay a significant price to follow Jesus?

THREE: SERVE OUR KING.

Jesus’ invitation to his first followers is one he repeats to you and me today: “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men” (Matthew 4:19). He did not promise them ease and security but the opposite (John 16:33). He did not promise them popularity and fame but the opposite (John 15:20). But the seed they sowed in the world is bearing harvest twenty centuries later (Mark 4:14) and will do so to the end of time.

When last did you sow the seed of God’s word?

“LET THE BOMB FIND YOU DOING WELL”

This has obviously been a difficult week in The Daily Article

We have discussed the threat the Taliban now poses in Afghanistan, the dire needs of those who now face such an uncertain future there, the crisis for Afghan women (with lessons for American culture), and the very real threat of escalating terrorist attacks on America and the West. Today we closed by focusing on Afghan Christians and the peril they face.

In the context of such challenges, C. S. Lewis’ brief article, “On Living in an Atomic Age,” offers wisdom that is just as relevant as when he first wrote it. I encourage you to read all seven paragraphs, but we’ll close with these observations: “Do not let us begin by exaggerating the novelty of our situation. Believe me, dear sir or madam, you and all whom you love were already sentenced to death before the atomic bomb was invented. . . .

“What the atomic bomb has really done is to remind us forcibly of the sort of world we are living in and which, during the prosperous period before, we were beginning to forget. And this reminder is, so far as it goes, a good thing. We have been waked from a pretty dream, and now we can begin to talk about realities.”

In the face of our mortality, Lewis reminds us to live every day in preparation for eternity, noting, “Those who want heaven most have served earth best. Those who love man less than God do most for man.”

Then he closes, “Let the bomb find you doing well.”

Let’s follow his advice today. Please take time as soon as you have finished reading this Daily Article to pray for our sisters and brothers facing persecution and death in Afghanistan. Ask God to protect them, encourage them, and use their witness to his glory.

Then ask for the same gifts for yourself. If Jesus can empower his people to serve him courageously under the Sanhedrin (Acts 4:13) and the Taliban, he can empower us to serve him wherever we live and whatever we face.

Whose kingdom will you build today?

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES