Archive

Archive for January, 2010

Somali Church Leader Murdered

January 31st, 2010 No comments

Islamic extremists shot the leader of an underground church to death outside the capital city of Somalia this month and have threatened to kill his wife, his tearful widow told Compass. Having learned that he had left Islam to become a Christian, Somali militants from the Islamic extremist al Shabaab murderd 41-year-old Mohammed Ahmed Ali. Ali’s wife Hassan said she received threatening calls from members of al Shabaab on Jan. 3 saying, “We know your home and that you are a follower of the Christians, and we are going to kill you the way we killed your husband.” Hassan fled for Kenya early the next morning by bus with her only child, 2-year-old son Abdi Asis Mohammed Ahmed, arriving at Nairobi on Jan. 20.

Pray for Hassan and her 2-year-old son, and for the underground church in Somalia.

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The Coming of Crosses

January 31st, 2010 No comments

The more we fear crosses, the more we have to conclude that we need them. And the heavier our crosses are, the more we have to believe that God loves us. We ought to judge the seriousness of our illnesses by the strength of the treatment the spiritual Physician applies to them.

We must be very corrupt, and God must be very merciful, since he takes great pains to heal us—even though the process of healing may be difficult. So let us turn our crosses themselves into a source of love, comfort and faith, saying with Saint Paul, ‟For this slight momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison”.

Happy are those who go forth weeping, bearing the seed for sowing, for they will bring in an indescribably joyful harvest of eternal life!

—François Fenelon

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The Attitude of Jesus

January 24th, 2010 No comments

Philippians 2:5-8 Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus: Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death—even death on a cross!

This wonderful description of Christ’s descent to our shame and sorrow is here cited by the Apostle, that it might be a living impulse and inspiration to ourselves, not to look upon our own things, not to hold them with a tight grasp, but to be willing to stoop for others to shame, sorrow, and spitting; fulfilling God’s purpose of mercy to the world, even as Jesus Christ, who became the instrument and organ through which God’s redemptive purpose wrought. ‘Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus.’ Think these thoughts. Never look exclusively upon your own interests, never count anything of your own worthy to stand in the way, but always be prepared to the last point to deny yourself, that the redemptive purpose of God may flow through the channel of your life to those that sorely need His blessed help. It is a wonderful thing that, day by day, in our poor measure, we may repeat the purpose and the work of Jesus Christ our Emmanuel.

—F.B. Meyer

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Hindu Radicals Attack Church

January 24th, 2010 No comments
International Christian Concern (ICC) learned has learned that on January 17, Hindu extremists attacked a Christian prayer meeting in Udaipur, Rajastha, leaving eleven Christians with serious injuries. ICC sources report that at about 11 PM local time, members of Rashtriya Swayamsavak Sangh (a Hindu extremist group) rushed into the Faith Calvary Church (FCC) prayer meeting armed with machetes, axes and sticks and proceeded to beat Pastor Surajth Bhagari and church members of the church. The Director and Founder of FCC, Dr. T.M. Omkar, told ICC that the Christians suffered broken legs, arms and injuries to their heads. The victims were taken to a nearby government hospital where they were partially treated. However, the administrators of the hospital refused to issue them a medical certificate. “We felt that the hospital administration was pressured by some group who are keen to create trouble for the Christians. We are taking the matter to the court,” said Dr. Omkar. The Christians filed a police complaint on the day of the attacks but no First Information Report (a report written by the police when they receive news of crime) was registered. The complaint was again lodged on January 19th, and this time the First Information Report was registered by Gordhan Bilas Police Station. An officer from the police station told ICC that his office will protect the Christians from further attacks. Police arrested six Hindu extremists under the Indian Penal Code for rioting, being armed with deadly weapons, unlawful assembly in prosecution of common object, house trespass and punishment for voluntarily causing hurt. The attackers were released on bail the same day.
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God’s Boundlessness

January 17th, 2010 No comments

Blessed is the one who reads the words of this prophecy, and blessed are those who hear it and take to heart what is written in it. If this is true of the book of Revelation, it is even truer of the Bible in general. God has opened a very large treasure for us, to supply our needs. We thank God for giving us so much. If we are too lazy to gather it, this means our thanksgiving is insincere. There is enough material in the Bible to keep us busy for a lifetime. Those who have learned the most realize how little they know. The subject is inexhaustible. As God is infinite, the science of divinity is full of unsearchable wonders. The Psalmist says, To all perfection I see a limit; but your commands are boundless. There is enough in this divine science to employ the understandings of saints and angels to all eternity.

—Jonathan Edwards

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Christian Hostages Are Alive

January 17th, 2010 No comments

Six Christian hostages, among them three children, in Yemen are alive. More than six months ago a German Christian family of five and a British engineer were abducted in the North of the country. Deputy Prime Minister Rashad al-Alaimi has confirmed reports that the German family of five and a British engineer are in the hands of Shiite Houthi rebels. The Germans were forced to care for wounded fighters, he said in the capital Sanaa. Johannes and Sabine Hentschel (both 37) and their children Lydia (5), Anna (3) and Simon (1) as well as a British engineer were kidnapped in mid-June during an outing near Saada. Yemen is one of the strictest Islamic countries. 99 percent of the 21 million inhabitants are Muslims. Small groups of Christians gather in secret.

Full Story

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A Holy Life

January 4th, 2010 No comments

Most of the employments of life are in themselves lawful; and all those that are so may be made substantial part of our duty to God if we engage in them only so far, and for such ends, as is suitable to being who are to live above the world all the time that they live in the world. This is the only measure of our application to any worldly business—let it be what it will, where it will, it must have no more of our hands, our hearts, or our time than is consistent with a hearty, daily, careful preparation of ourselves for another life.

Now he who does not look at things of this life in this degree of littleness cannot be said either to feel or believe the greatest truths of Christianity. For if he thinks anything great or important in human business, can he be said to feel or believe those Scriptures which represent this life, and the greatest things of life, as bubbles, vapors, dreams, and shadows?

A tradesman may justly think that it is agreeable to the will of God for him to sell such things as are innocent and useful in life, such as help both himself and others and enable them to assist those who want to be assisted. But if, instead of this, he trades only with regard to himself, if it be his chief end to grow rich that he may live in fame and indulgence and to be able to retire from business to idleness and luxury, his trade, as to him, loses all its innocence and is so far from being acceptable service to God that it is only a more plausible source of covetousness, self-love, and ambition.

Enough, I hope, has been said to show you the necessity of thus introducing religion into all the actions of your common life, and of living and acting with the same regard to God in all you do as in your prayers and alms.

—William Law

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