Christian News, May 2, 2012

I have been teaching a Sunday adult class on the book of Galatians so today’s news from around the web in sponsored by the book of Galatians!

A-Z Scripture Memory Challenge. I It is for freedom that Christ has set us free! Galatians 5:1. Wednesday, May 2, 2012. Audio book: Fields of Gold. I have finished listening to an audio book called Fields of Gold by Andy Stanley. This is a short …
http://raindropsrainbows.blogspot.com/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 12:34:00 -0700
… Mark 1:9-20; Luke 4:14-30, Luke 15:11-32, Luke 24:13-35, John 20:1-18; John 21:15-22, Acts, Romans (especially chapters 7 and 8), 1 Corinthians (especially chapters 12-14), Galatians, Ephesians (chapter 4). I’ve left some out, but that’s a …
http://www.saintambrosechurch.net/blogs/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 12:27:45 -0700
Galatians 5:22-23. But the fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self control. Against these things there is no law. Character is one-third of our philosophy here at the Curly …
http://curlybynature.blogspot.com/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 12:14:00 -0700
They understand what Paul meant in Galatians 2 when He said he’d been “crucified with Christ”; for them it really is all about Him. In John 20 we find the disciple named Thomas doubting the resurrection of the Lord. It’s not that he didn’t want …
http://thomas-livingrightinawrongworld.blogspot.com/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 12:00:00 -0700

In general, we have no problem extending our helping hands “to those who belong to the family of faith” (Galatians 6:10b), but we often forget the attitude that was basic for those who understood themselves to be the harbingers and …
http://pisteosdaily.blogspot.com/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 12:00:00 -0700
Galatians 5:16. “But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.” God bless you. Posted by Bernie Tontodonati at 2:53 PM. 0 comments: Post a Comment · Older Post Home. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom) …
http://biblecom.blogspot.com/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 11:53:00 -0700
Specifically, Kirk shows us that what Paul does, in Romans 4 and Galatians 3, is to renarrate the story of Abraham so as to include gentiles as a part of the family of God. Far from presenting Paul as a person only concerned with spouting …
http://anewregress.blogspot.com/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 11:32:00 -0700
Galatians 5:22-23. New King James Version (NKJV). 22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, 23 gentleness, self-control. Against such there is no law. Daily frustrations easily get the best of …
http://edwinalewis.wordpress.com/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 11:25:30 -0700
Galatians 4:11 I fear for you, that somehow I have wasted my efforts on you. … He had spent a considerable amount of time leading the Galatians away from their false ways, away from their false gods, away from the path of destruction.
http://drjeffkrupinski.wordpress.com/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 11:14:56 -0700
Galatians 4:1-7 – 1 What I am saying is that as long as the heir is a child, he is no different from a slave, although he owns the whole estate. 2 He is subject to guardians and trustees until the time set by his father. 3 So also, when we were …
http://www.bibleprophecyandinspiration.com/ — Wed, 02 May 2012 11:05:54 -0700

How Much Doctrinal Error is Too Much?

I was visiting the forums of another Christian website recently and a new member to their forums posted the following:

The simple answer to “How much error in doctrine is too much?” is of course that none can be tolerated.

I think the question is not answerable so simply….

But, if a member of the Church, like myself, understands imperfectly. Believes error. At what point does error become damning?

Obviously we study, and the more learned guide those struggling.

Is there a percentage of error that crosses the line?

Or is error in minor doctrine a case for study, and error in major doctrine heretical?

Please help me understand!

The next poster answered with this:

Error is error and any at all would cross the line for me. Our ignorance due to failure to study is not an excuse, so we must continually strive to know the truth and make sure we are not in error. I don’t know that we can all come to 100% perfection in our understanding and can only do the best we can do… being diligent to show ourselves approved before God and being able to rightly divide the Word (2Tim. 2:15). Even though I have an honest heart and desire to know the truth, I don’t know that I will ever understand everything perfectly and I certainly hope God will not hold that against me.

I believe the most important doctrine to understand is salvation. What must we do to be saved? I believe we can 100% fully understand and know the truth in regards to this doctrine. I do not believe there will be any allowance for error in regards to salvation, simply based on what the Scriptures say. From there, I cannot see how there will not be different levels of growth for each individual when that day comes.

In my mind, this is a fairly decent response but doesn’t quite get to the heart of the initial question. The original writer’s question is will he be lost if he doesn’t perfectly understand scripture? How much knowledge is enough? How much does he have to have correct? Is it based on percentages? Even if his understanding is clouded by his culture or past personal experiences, how can he fully understand scripture to assure his salvation? This is a challenging question indeed and one worth asking!

I believe this question can be answered and it was partially answered in the first response when he wrote, “I believe the most important doctrine to understand is salvation. What must we do to be saved? I believe we can 100% fully understand and know the truth in regards to this doctrine.” The question we must ask ourselves is do we understand the gospel and the implications of the gospel?

First, what is the gospel? I Corinthians 15: 1-4 says it is the story about Jesus; the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ. For confirmation of this go back to the first gospel sermon preached by Peter at Pentecost, Acts 2:22-24. Do you see the same gospel in these verses? I do. Jesus is clearly shown as crucified and risen. Acts 2:31. He is both Lord and Christ, Acts 2:36. This gospel is taught by all of the apostles and followers of Christ. Read the entire book of Acts and look at each conversion story and see what was taught. It was always about Jesus! Below is a pictorial view of the gospel of Jesus.

In Acts 2:38-39 Peter instructs believers how to respond to the gospel. We see this pattern repeated over and over again in the rest of the book of Acts. This is the gospel Paul taught everywhere he went throughout the Roman Empire as did the other apostles and early church leaders, Acts 8:25, Acts 8: 26-39.

There were many attempts to change (add to or take away from) the gospel but Paul, Peter and John (and the other apostles) fought them at every turn. In doing so Paul exclaimed those who change the gospel should be eternally condemned. Galatians 1:6-9. The language Paul uses here is very strong indicating the seriousness of attempting to change the gospel.

Paul wrote the book of Galatians to defend the gospel. There were those who came to the Galatian church after Paul left and began to add to Paul’s gospel message. These Judaizers believed like Paul that Jesus was the Christ but they added to the gospel. They taught in order to be saved one must become a part of the Jewish nation and keep the Mosaic Law. Paul vehemently denies this additional requirement to the gospel. In Paul’s defense of the gospel in the book of Galatians he clearly proves the only way to salvation is faith in Jesus Christ.

How does the book of Galatians impact the question by the forum poster? Let me ask his question another way to see if it clears things up some. Is my salvation dependent upon my intellectual ability to understand every doctrine in the New Testament? Please read that question again! Are we basing our salvation on our ability to correctly understand every scripture and doctrine? If we are, aren’t we are doing the very same thing the Judaizers did in the first century? Adding a requirement to the gospel in that we be able to fully understand scripture in its entirety for salvation? This is not the gospel and Paul says we are to be eternally condemned for doing this.

In Galatians Paul clearly points out that faith in Jesus is the only way to salvation. It has always been this way, Galatians 3:6-7.  Our understanding of every doctrine in the Bible creates a false sense of pride for those who “correctly understand.” Paul forbids this pride. I Corinthians 1:29. I affirm we need to understand the gospel as presented above, the proper response to the gospel and then live a reasonably moral lifestyle, (I say that because we all continue to sin regardless of our desire not to) and strive for unity of the brothers. That’s it. The rest is learning through the help of the Holy Spirit. Our salvation does not depend upon our ability to correctly delineate every scripture properly. Not in this lifetime will we ever fully understand every scripture and doctrine in the Bible. It is impossible but we can know Jesus Christ and Him crucified! I Corinthians 2:2.

How Would You Like to be a Christian Only, Nothing More, Nothing Less?

Reflections on The Duck Commander, Phil Robertson

As stated in a previous post found here, Phil Robertson the Duck Commander, was my high school P.E. coach.

We were living in West Monroe, Louisiana in the mid to late 70s. There was a large contingent of local Christians seeking to start a Christian school. Being a new educational institution they had the same problem as most educational institutions, no facilities and no money to build them. One of the local churches allowed us to use their facility for our classes. We moved a couple of times before a facilities were built but I had graduated before then.

I remember showing up on the first day and going out to the parking lot for our P.E. class and meeting the teacher, Phil Robertson. He was instructor of all things P.E. He also coached our high school football team but what I remember most is he wasn’t like any other person I had ever met.

I vaguely remember much of the P.E. instruction he taught but being the nonathletic type it hasn’t warped my adult life. I do vividly remember the stories he told us… OK, just a couple. First, Phil was a relatively new Christian. He had come to Christ and was still young in his faith. He was still trying to figure it all out.

On the first day of class there was an old beat up pick up truck in the parking lot. I wondered to myself whose vehicle it was. I soon found out it belonged to Phil. We were in the parking lot for P.E. and he instructed me (he didn’t ask you to do anything. He told you and you said, “yes sir.”) to go to his pick up and get something out for class. The problem was when I opened the door the floorboard was piled high with trash. It ran to the height of the seat and overflowed onto the seat. A few things fell out onto the ground and I didn’t know whether to throw them away or put them back in the truck. After all, who really needs a two month old empty milk carton or coke can. I didn’t know where to begin to look for what he had sent me to get.

I also remember his story about his ownership in a drinking establishment (bar) in the backwater areas of northern Louisiana. I wasn’t quite sure where this drinking establishment was located and I don’t think Phil wanted us to know either. He was the owner and described it as a rough place that us city slickers would not be welcomed. He had sold it after becoming a Christian. He described the bar as “a two room establishment. The room in the front for whites, the room in the back for blacks and me in the middle at the bar with a gun keeping the two groups from killing each other.”

Mostly he would tell stories related to his life experiences. He would says to us, “Boys, I’ve seen enough life to know there is nothing here that truly satisfies my life. I’m going to try this Christianity thing and see if it works for me because I’ve seen enough of the drinkin’ and runnin’ around. There ain’t no joy there.”

He was also working on securing patents for his duck calls. His faith was challenged deeply when a man claiming to be a Christian attempted to steal his patents but Phil was successful in defending them. He went on to create many more and build his Duck Commander empire.

Phil was and is an astute observer. He listened intently while in the woods alone with those ducks. What he heard coming from the mouth of the duck was not what he heard when he bought a duck call from the local stores. Dissatisfied with the products available, he invented his own. It was this keen skill of observation he used to evaluate Christianity. He listened intently to others when they talked about or read the Bible. He was willing to give it a chance but he did not “fall for it.” His evaluation of the claims of Christ were put through the fire and tested. Through it all he has remained faithful to Christ. I’ve sat in Bible classes he taught. I attended church with he and his family for years. His faith has grown and he is considered a Godly man and a leader in Christ’s church.

Thanks Phil for the memories and life’s lessons. I still remember them from all those years ago.

 

The Skeptic Says: Part Five

This is a series of posts answering a skeptic who rejects Christianity (or any other religion/god) and clings to atheism and natural causes for everything in the universe. Here is the link to the last post – Part Four

 

 

The skeptic is making fun of the death of Jesus Christ and the terrible cost God the Father gave to redeem mankind. He says:

 There is a fountain filled with blood drawn from Emmanuel’s veins;
And sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.

Aw, yeah baby. This is what it’s all about. Just picture that.

Take a dip.

E’er since, by faith, I saw the stream Thy flowing wounds supply,
Redeeming love has been my theme, and shall be till I die…

Then in a nobler, sweeter song, I’ll sing Thy power to save,
When this poor lisping, stammering tongue lies silent in the grave.
Lies silent in the grave, lies silent in the grave;
When this poor lisping, stammering tongue lies silent in the grave.

Sounds great. Sources say:

“‘There is a Fountain Filled with Blood,’ is a well-known hymn written by William Cowper. It was one of the first hymns he wrote after his first major bout of depression.”

I’d never have guessed.

There’s a FOUNTAIN… and it’s FILLED with BLOOD!

It’s just business as usual.

I’m not quite sure where to begin to respond but let’s start here.

First, the William Cowper is using a metaphor. A metaphor is a literary figure of speech that describes a subject by asserting that it is, on some point of comparison, the same as another otherwise unrelated object. Metaphor is a type of analogy and is closely related to other rhetorical figures of speech that achieve their effects via association, comparison or resemblance including allegory, hyperbole, and simile. Mr. Cowper isn’t saying a person needs to take a plunge in a pool filled with blood. He is comparing our baptism in water to the death, burial and resurrection of Christ. Jesus did die a horrific blood filled death and was raised the third day. He did it for all mankind so we wouldn’t have to. But why did Jesus have to die?

Mankind on its own has no ability to deal with sin (Psalms 49:8, Matthew 19:25-26).  The law demanded flawless perfection to which no human can attain (Romans 3:18 and multiple other scriptures). The book of Leviticus instructed the Jewish people in the proper sacrifice for sins. The whole sacrificial system of the Mosaic Law was a shadow of the coming Christ and His sacrifice.  Many sacrifices involved the death of an animal. The blood atonement of Christ required a perfect sacrifice (Hebrews 4:15). Jesus was sinless and provided the vicarious or substitutionary death we deserved (Galatians 3:13). In order to obtain the salvation offered by His blood sacrifice we are asked to re-enact his death, burial and resurrection by faith in baptism upon which we will receive the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:38-39, Acts 22:16 and others).  It’s a metaphor!

Second, is the skeptic saying simply because a person suffers from depression they can no longer intellectually contribute to society, either through song or written word? Is that his point when mentioning Mr. Cowper’s depression? If that’s the case I hope he’s willing to dismiss the works of Nietzsche. Here’s a brief excerpt from Wiki on Mr. Nietzsche.

Nietzsche began his career as a classical philologist before turning to philosophy. In 1869, at the age of 24 he was appointed to the Chair of Classical Philology at the University of Basel (the youngest individual to have held this position), but resigned in the summer of 1879 due to health problems that plagued him most of his life.[35] In 1889 he became mentally ill with what was then characterized as atypical general paresis attributed to tertiary syphilis, a diagnosis that has since come into question.[36] He lived his remaining years in the care of his mother until her death in 1897, then under the care of his sister until his death in 1900.

Considering their lives and comparing the two I think I’d rather choose Jesus over Nietzsche!

However, the position held by the skeptic is predictable and I didn’t predict it. God said it would happen when writing through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit to Paul in I Corinthians 1:18.

I would urge you to consider your life and accept the redeeming sacrifice of Jesus Christ and be baptized. Your eternal salvation depends upon it.

Attracting Younger Visitors

This article is from Church and Culture.

They needed to make themselves more appealing to young visitors.

It wasn’t cool or interesting for young people to visit, so they had to find a way to bring them in and then keep them coming back.  The alternative was to lose the next generation, and as a result, the future of the institution.

So the leaders moved the main gathering area to an open-air pavilion.

They cranked the music up.

They went with edgier graphics.

And it worked.

Though most had never attended before, once they came, they found they wanted to come again because the experience inspired them and gave them a connection to something they were clearly missing.

The name of the church that engaged this plan was…

Okay, it wasn’t a church.

It was the Chattahoochee River Recreation Area in Georgia, featured in a USA Today story about how many national parks have to change in order to attract and then keep younger visitors.

But that you thought I was talking about a church speaks volumes about the obvious parallels.

Knowing that “It’s a profound experience when youngsters are immersed in nature for the first time,” national parks are doing all they can to lure young people into the parks for that first experience that will mark them for a lifetime.  “The underlying goal is to give kids an experience that develops their relationship to a point where they care about the parks.”

Why is this simple lesson, being learned by necessity over and over by other groups, agencies and enterprises, so resisted by the church?

The quick answer is that the church stands for orthodoxy, and cannot change its message with the times.

This is true, of course, but disingenuous.  This has absolutely nothing to do with the message.  Think about the national parks.  Nobody is wanting to water down “nature”, or trying to do away with streams or trees.

It’s not the product that is in question.

The programs offered call for staying overnight, taking hikes and even turning off all electronic devices while there.  All things that enhance the engagement of nature at its most pure.  The parks are simply hoping to find a way of introducing nature to the next generation.

The point is that it’s not about changing the message, but the methods.  It’s not about watering down the experience, but opening the door to actually experiencing it.

The goal is not transformation, but translation.

Which means no one is going after tradition, just traditionalism.

The parks are what they have always been.  A new generation needs them, but has never experienced them.

Park leaders know that they must change their ways of introduction and outreach, as opposed to sitting back on their laurels and past success in order to meet the challenge.

As a Ranger at the San Antonio Missions National Historic Park said, “We need to engage that next generation in preserving our heritage.”

Precisely.

James Emery White

Sources

“Parks change to attract and keep younger visitors,” Judy Keen, USA Today, April 5, 2012. Read online.

Christian News, April 16, 2012

While teaching the second half of my survey course on the history of the Christian church I came across a book by Philip Jenkins, The Next Christendom, the Coming of Global Christianity, published first in 2002 and just last year revised and …
http://laclayton.wordpress.com/ — Mon, 16 Apr 2012 12:44:18 -0700
Americanized Christianity – Part Two… Apr 16, 2012 by B.Mooney. In the previous post, I talked about choices… As in how as Americans, we have the choice of choosing our religious affiliations based on several factors… The key one being …
http://conservativesoul.us/ — Mon, 16 Apr 2012 11:54:50 -0700
Eight million twenty-somethings have left the church, and it seems like everyone is trying to figure out why. The cover of Newsweek says “Forget the Church – Follow Jesus” and there are dozens of books from Quitting Church to They Like …
http://homebrewedchristianity.com/ — Mon, 16 Apr 2012 11:44:29 -0700

The Covenantal Nature of Christianity (Part 3). 3. God cannot be properly understood unless He is viewed within a covenantal frame. God, as Creator, purposes to have a covenant people. When we ask why this is so, the best we can answer …
http://andycontramundum.blogspot.com/ — Mon, 16 Apr 2012 10:30:00 -0700
Opportunities abound for Christian media in Europe if Believers can be known like Christ as friends of sinners.
http://www.echristiannews.com/ — Mon, 16 Apr 2012 10:04:40 -0700
Timothy Noah again expresses his frustration with how the “New York Times Mislabels ‘Christians’” — using the word to apply exclusively to Republican members of the evangelical tribe: A 78-percent majority of Americans is Christian.
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/slacktivist/ — Mon, 16 Apr 2012 09:26:10 -0700

How to Pay for Your First House in Cash

You normally wouldn’t think an article like this would/should be found on a Christian website but you’d be wrong. God talks extensively in the Bible about the role of money in our lives. Some of us allow it to dominate our thoughts and goals in life to the exclusion of all else. This approach isn’t biblical.

Here’s a piece from Fox Business that details how one couple purchased their first home with cash. Selected are the key nuggets of what helped them accomplish this goal:

We crunched a bunch of numbers and realized that, if we continued to live simply and frugally and worked hard to bring in extra money through side jobs, we could save enough over the course of five years to pay cash for a starter home.

We knew that we could buy a decent starter home in the area where we were planning to move for around $100,000 to $110,000, so we divided $100,000 by 60 (since there are sixty months in five years) and set a goal to save $1700 every month. Because we didn’t have any debt or school loans, and because we lived simply and frugally, we were able to live on significantly less than we were making, thus freeing up a good chunk of money to put towards our house savings each month.

We used coupons, ate a lot of meatless meals, shopped at thrift stores, cooked from scratch, brown bagged it, continued to use our old and worn-down furniture, didn’t replace anything that wasn’t an absolute necessity, limited our going out to eat, only had one car, stayed home a lot, used gift cards from Swagbucks to buy any non-necessities, bought eye glasses from Zenni optical, learned to be content with what we had, and continued to live on a strict written budget.

Meanwhile, we also looked for ways to increase our income.

As our house savings fund increased, we began to get so excited that we kind of went overboard and worked long, long hours in order to meet our savings goal even faster. I wouldn’t recommend putting in such long hours, missing so many social events, or sleeping so little, but the effort paid off because, at the end of two and a half years, we paid 100% down on our first home!

So let’s summarize the key points:

1. They spent less than they earned.

2. From here, they tried to cut/limit spending as well as increase income, making their gap as large as possible. A key part of this was that they didn’t have any school or other loans to hold them back.

3. They bought a house they could afford. Note that they didn’t start out with a $500k house — they bought a much more reasonably-priced one.

This sounds like a very reasonable approach. So many young people start out their life with $50,000 to $100,000 in student loans. Then once they graduate they expect to instantly be living the lifestyle of their parents who have usually spent 30 years building and gathering their wealth and are in their peak earning years of life. This isn’t wise.  Patience and wealth seem to go together. God expects Christians to use money and debt wisely.

Proverbs 17:16  Of what use is money in the hand of a fool, since he has no desire to get wisdom?

Love and Lent

A story from The Christian Century.

How my faith was formed in the midst of betrayal.

“I saw him in the parking lot with her. I think he wanted to get caught,” my mom’s hushed voice bleeds with betrayal. Unlike most gossip, this conversation doesn’t have the quality of a listener, hungry for salacious trivialities.  The whole house feels on edge, as I sit on the couch in an adjoining room, straining to hear.

I’m fifteen years old. I missed church that Sunday morning, but I’m catching up with what happened in the service through my mom’s one-sided phone conversations. The instant mom hangs up the phone it rings again. She’s in a t-shirt and shorts, walking back and forth with bare feet on the cork kitchen tile, reciting assorted facts and collecting others.

The bits and pieces come together. Our pastor had an affair and confessed it in his sermon. He stood up in front of the church and let the gathered members know that he had succumbed to temptation, but he was ready to just “move on.”

Click on the link above to read the entire story.

500,000 Sudanese Christians Forced to Leave

A massive persecution of Christians by an Islamic government is under way in Sudan.

An estimated 700,000 Sudanese, most of them Christian, must leave the country for South Sudan by April under a law passed by the north after South Sudan voted to secede.

The law states that any deemed ethnically South Sundanese must leave the north or apply for “alien residency.” This is despite the fact that many—some studies even say most—of these people have lived their whole lives in north Sudan. Human Rights Watch warns: “Statements and actions of Sudanese government officials indicate that they are reading these laws to mean that anyone living in Sudan with even one great-grandparent born in South Sudan will lose their Sudanese citizenship, irrespective of whether they have acquired—or want to acquire—South Sudanese citizenship.”

“This proposal is intolerable, and flies in the face of international law,” said Refugees International’s (RI’s) Statelessness Program manager, Sarnata Reynolds. “First, the individuals targeted by this plan have a legitimate claim to Sudanese citizenship—since most have lived in Sudan their entire lives—and there is currently no way for them to apply for South Sudanese citizenship. Second, forcing men, women and children into deportation camps and shipping them off to a country that many have never seen would be a legal and moral disaster.”

“It has taken more than two years to move more than 350,000 people who volunteered to return to South Sudan from Sudan—and they had to overcome incredible logistical challenges,” warned Peter Orr, RI’s head advocate for Sudan. “Now, with fighting on the border between the two countries, and thousands of voluntary returnees clogging up roads and waterways, how long would it take for 700,000 to make the journey? Deporting such a huge number of individuals to the South at this time would be a logistical nightmare and a humanitarian catastrophe.”

This is just one example of persecution of Christians by Sudan’s Islamic government. In 2010, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir warned: “If South Sudan secedes, we will change the constitution and at that time there will be no time to speak of diversity of culture and ethnicity.”

“Sharia and Islam will be the main source for the constitution, Islam the official religion and Arabic the official language,” he said. He is now following through on that threat.

Eric Reeves writes in the Sudan Tribune, a Paris-based news website: “In Khartoum there has been a marked increase in threats and attacks against churches, priests, and Christians of all denominations. Those perceived as Christians (“southerners”) are often forcibly conscripted by press gangs working for renegade militias that operate, with Khartoum’s support, in South Sudan.”

Like the deportation of South Sudanese, much of this Christian persecution is indirect—targeted at ethnic groups that have a large number of Christians. For example, the Sudanese are attacking the inhabitants of the Nuba Mountains with rockets—the home of one of Sudan’s largest Christian communities. While there are armed rebels in the area, the rocket attacks occur at random, often killing civilians. One woman said that soldiers were targeting people with darker sin and also said “we don’t want anyone who says they are a Christian in this village.”

This conflict is part of a growing confrontation between Islam and Christianity. Across the Middle East and North Africa, Christians are under attack. Slowly, the Vatican is being roused. Expect this kind of persecution to lead to a violent clash between the Muslim and Christian world.

Christian News, March 13, 2012

Christian Post – Lee Strobel: Why Does God Allow Pain, Suffering? (Open in a new window). Source: 8 hours ago. If you could ask God any question and you knew He would give you an answer, what would you ask Him? Vote for this article …