Bible Translators Aim At Closing Language Gap
Go into all the world and preach the good news to all creation. While much progress has been made, more … Read More
Go into all the world and preach the good news to all creation. While much progress has been made, more … Read More
Jars of Clay plus 1,000 Wells equals 70,000 Africans with clean drinking water.
That’s the equation the Christian rock band hoped for when its Blood:Water Mission, a call to personalize the HIV/AIDS crisis in Africa, launched the 1,000 Wells Project, a five-year initiative to provide clean drinking water to 1,000 African communities.
Blood:Water Mission first stepped into funding a late stage AIDS hospice and discovered the vital link between living with HIV/AIDS and the need for clean water. As a result, Blood:Water Mission launched the 1000 Wells Project in 2005.
As Israel once again begins firing retaliatory missiles into Gaza, the European Coalition for Israel, or ECI, is calling on the European Parliament to take a stand for Israel.
The ECI wants the European Union to support Israel’s right to defend itself “and the Jewish people” against Iran using all means necessary if diplomacy fails, if sanctions don’t work, if nothing else works, and if Iran is about to get nuclear weapons.
You’ve heard of Facebook. You may even be on Twitter. But are you a member of any Christian social networks?
Despite the niche popularity of sites such as ShoutLife.com and LifeSpace, Christian social networks are hardly mainstream. GodsFaithbook.com is hoping to change that with a Holy Land Holiday Sweepstakes.
The fires in Northern Israel is said to be the worst disaster in the nation’s history. Now Christian Life Missions … Read More
Second suspect accused of “blasphemy” is government informant, accused says. A Christian in Afghanistan facing “apostasy” charges punishable by death … Read More
The Supreme Court of Iran has upheld a lower court’s conviction in an apostasy case against Christian pastor Youcef Nadarkhani. … Read More
Is Christianity the most persecuted religion in the world? Arguably so, numerous government and religious sources say. Yet among those … Read More
Discrimination. Harassment. Torture. Depending on which estimates you believe, at least 200 million Christians around the world are enduring some … Read More
We’re all familiar with TBN’s Praise-a-Thons to raise money for new satellites—and many have watched TBN streaming live on its … Read More
CNN founder Ted Turner called on world leaders Sunday to address the global warming crisis by drastically reducing the number … Read More
Publishers in two European countries each with a rich Bible heritage are involved in campaigns to encourage more reading of … Read More
P.P. Job paid a high price for preaching the gospel when his two sons were martyred. But Today his adopted … Read More
The largest fire in the nation’s modern history was still raging out of control Friday afternoon near the port city … Read More
Christians receive six and four years respectively for “undermining national unity.”
Two Christian evangelists, Ksor Y Du, 47, and Kpa Y Co, 30, were sentenced this month to six and four years in prison respectively for “undermining national unity.”
Ksor and Kpa, of the Vietnam Good News Mission (VGNM) church, received the harsh sentences on Nov. 15. House arrest of four and two years respectively also was added to the sentences, according to church sources and Vietnam’s Phap Luat (Law) newspaper. Both evangelists, who are of the Ede minority, live in Song Hinh district of Phu Yen Province, where there are some 20 VGNM congregations.
Ksor was one of many thousands of ethnic minority people in Vietnam’s Central Highland that participated in demonstrations in 2004 against religious oppression and illegal confiscation of their traditional lands. Many of the demonstrators were Christians. Along with hundreds of others, he was caught trying to flee to Cambodia following the harsh military crackdown after the demonstrations. He spent four years in prison and another year under house arrest.
The language spoken by Christ, David and the prophets of old (ancient Hebrew) is now available to anyone with a computer and high-speed Internet access. This online language program, accredited by the prestigious Hebrew University in Israel, is available on e-Teacher Group’s website, www.eteacherbiblical.com. It is designed for people who want to have a better understanding of the Bible and biblical text of the Old Testament.
The eTeacherBiblical.com program includes weekly, live, online “meetings” in small groups of seven to eight students, and homework assignments that are sent by the teacher after each lesson. The curriculum consists of five levels with each composed of students only in that level. The five divisions range from beginners, with no prior experience with Hebrew, to highly advanced students. The course focuses on reading the Hebrew Bible in its original language.
In the process, students gain a comprehensive understanding of the language, including grammar, syntax and vocabulary. At the more advanced levels, the course deals with different textual and diachronic perspectives, and delves into a wider range of biblical texts, including poetry, prophecy and wisdom literature.
Christians in a small village in southern Egypt are rebuilding their lives and homes after hundreds of Muslims rampaged through their community firebombing houses and businesses over rumors of a romantic relationship between a Christian and a Muslim.
At least 23 homes and numerous businesses, all Christian-owned, were damaged or destroyed in the village of Al-Nawahid in Qena Governorate, 454 kilometers (282 miles) south of Cairo. Five people were injured, two seriously.
Mart Green, is backing a cooperative effort to digitize Bible content and speed up the translation process
The businessman whose family’s $70 million gift lifted Oral Roberts University (ORU) out of debt is backing a cooperative effort to digitize Bible content and speed the pace at which translations are completed.
Every Tribe Every Nation plans to initially put 160 existing texts into digital format, although Mart Green said the process for converting several thousand will likely take 20 to 25 years.
As bombings and other attacks continue against Christians in Iraq, Christians in Egypt have gathered to pray and plan for their own safety.
When a group of Islamic extremists on Oct. 31 burst into Our Lady of Salvation church in Baghdad during evening mass and began spraying the sanctuary with gunfire, the militant organization that took responsibility said Christians in Egypt also would be targeted if its demands were not met. Taking more than 100 congregants hostage, the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) called a television station and stated that the assault came in response to the Coptic Orthodox Church in Egypt allegedly holding two Coptic women against their will who, the ISI and some others believe, converted to Islam.
The group issued a 48-hour deadline for the release of the women, and when the deadline passed it issued a statement that, “All Christian centers, organizations and institutions, leaders and followers are legitimate targets for the muhajedeen [Muslim fighters] wherever they can reach them.” The statement later added ominously, “We will open upon them the doors of destruction and rivers of blood.”
A Spokane, Wash.-based ministry is spawning healing rooms globally
Prayer for healing is hardly new, but in recent years healing rooms have been spreading worldwide in a ministry trend that isn’t expected to slow.
Launched in 1999, the International Association of Healing Rooms (IAHR) now oversees some 1,900 rooms in 52 nations, with roughly 1,000 in India alone. In healing rooms across the U.S., Europe, Asia and Africa, people have been healed of blindness, brain tumors and even HIV, says IAHR founder Cal Pierce.
“What is so powerful is this work is done by ordinary people doing an extraordinary work through the power of the Holy Spirit,” Pierce says.
Evangelical Christians entered Sri Lanka’s Parliament for the first time this year, but observers question whether it will curb persecution … Read More