WV University Stands Against Graduation Prayer
Will West Virginia University-Parkersburg officials reverse their decision to eliminate all student speakers from its nursing program’s pinning ceremony on … Read More
Breaking News. Spiritual Perspective.
Will West Virginia University-Parkersburg officials reverse their decision to eliminate all student speakers from its nursing program’s pinning ceremony on … Read More
A Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives had no trouble repealing Obama’s proposed healthcare legislation. By a vote of 245-189, the … Read More
President Barack Obama offered a touching eulogy at a memorial event for the victims of the Tucson shooting on Jan. … Read More
Geng He, wife of missing Christian lawyer Gao Zhisheng, is demanding answers from the Chinese government following new revelations of … Read More
Burmese soldiers are systematically using forced labor, torture and rape to persecute majority-Christian residents of Chin state in western Burma, … Read More
Ask not what your country can do for you… If you were alive in the 20th Century, chances are you … Read More
During early evening on Dec. 30, an elderly Christian couple—Fawzi Rahim, 76, and his wife Janet Mekha, 78—answered their doorbell … Read More
Although traditional marriage is under attack in California, there is still plenty of room for the faith community to offer … Read More
The sudden unannounced return of former Haitian President Jean-Claude Duvalier to Haiti puzzles everyone associated politically, socially and spiritually in … Read More
Pakistani police are threatening the father of an 18-year-old Christian man whom officers raped, killed and threw into a sewer … Read More
News headlines speak of a leadership crisis of worldwide proportions—but true leadership begins with the Church. That’s why Dr. Mark … Read More
Charisma News Online this morning reported on Rev. Patrick Mahoney’s plans to hold a peaceful demonstration in front of the … Read More
As January 2011 winds down, the last of the 2010 reviews are rolling out. One area that has yet to … Read More
A single chair and pictures of Nobel Prize Laureate Liu Xiaboo with a Christian woman who was brutally beaten by the Chinese government.
Those are the elements of a peaceful protest that Rev. Patrick Mahoney, director of the Christian Defense Coalition, plans to launch this morning in front of the White House.
The demonstration, which Mahoney is planning in a “no demonstration” zone, comes a day before Chinese President Hu Jintao will visit the White House. Mahoney will kneel in prayer on the chair, knowing that his actions could land him in jail.
“We are calling upon President Obama to publicly, passionately and boldly speak out against the human and religious rights abuses by the Chinese government against their own people when President Hu Jintao visits the White House this week,” Mahoney says.
“Sadly, the Obama Administration has remained painfully silent when it comes to the China’s utter disregard for human rights and religious freedom. He has refused to speak out against their policy of forced abortion and gendercide against Chinese women.
Mahoney says the empty chair represents all those who could never attend a State Dinner because they are being persecuted and in prison for their religious and political beliefs. The demonstration also represents the empty chair from the Noble Peace prize ceremony in Oslo, Norway when Xiaobo could not accept the award because the Chinese government had imprisoned him for speaking out for freedom and democratic reforms in China.
Protests erupted in Tunisia’s streets Monday as the prime minister announced a national unity government.
Although the new unity government negotiated with the opposition parties and would appoint ministers of the interior, state, finance and defense from the old ruling party, people still protested the new coalition government.
It took one month for Tunisia–long considered stable–to disintegrate. It started on December 17 when an unemployed graduate set himself on fire. Soon, thousands were in the streets demanding more job opportunities and a higher standard of living.
A mother of four was killed for her Christian faith on Jan. 7 on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia by Islamic extremists from al Shabaab militia, a relative said.
The relative, who requested anonymity, said Asha Mberwa, 36, was killed at 5:15 p.m. in Warbhigly village; the Islamic extremists from the insurgent group had arrested her outside her house the previous day at 8:30 a.m. She died when the militants cut her throat in front of villagers who came out of their homes as witnesses.
She is survived by her children — ages 12, 8, 6 and 4 — and her husband, who was not home at the time she was apprehended. They had married in 1993.
Martin Luther King dominated many of the headlines on Monday. But serious and interesting news was also reported across the World Wide Web. Here are four headlines I found noteworthy as I set out to report on the stories that matter most to Charismatic believers.
A Muslim stormed into an Iraqi hospital and shot a Christian doctor point blank in the head in yet another targeted attack against Christians. Fox News reports.
Survival in the southwestern corner of Angola is tough. Rocky hills and huge baobab trees litter the landscape. The land is stony and arid, and the low rainfall and intense heat means that few crops grow. The scarcity of water and vegetation means that the population remains low. Most people survive through a nomadic lifestyle, leading their cattle from place to place in search of water.
The challenge to survive in such a barren land has created tribes like the Mukubal. Nomadic cattle herders, they are tall, strong, and proud; warriors ready to defend their cattle. Living isolated from the cities they have remained virtually illiterate, and almost totally untouched by Christianity.
While some are moving to politicize the Arizona shootings, others are simply trying to understand it how everyday Joes feel about the way America discusses politics.
A new poll reveals that the public viewed the lack of civility in American politics as a serious problem even before the Tucson shootings.
The PRRI/RNS Religion News Survey found that a whopping 80 percent of Americans say the lack of civil or respectful discourse in our political system is a “serious problem”—and Americans across the religious and political spectrums share this view. Nearly half of Americans (49 percent) said that the lack of civility was a “very serious problem.”
Thanks, in part, to its traffic-generating domain name, Bible.com is one of the most visible Bible resources online. Now, Bible.com has a fresh new look with a redesign of its Web site.
“This effort is all about putting the Bible into the hands and hearts of a global audience,” says Stacy Fornara, CEO of Bible.com, “Our Christian Web site has grown from 172,000 unique visitors per month in 1997 to over 1.5 million today without much promotion. We have invested significant resources to continuously gift the Bible and provide cutting-edge online resources; our overall goal is to positively impact worldwide exposure of the Bible.”
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was a social conservative. At least that’s the way one of his surviving family members … Read More