Today's Headlines
Thursday, July 15, 2021
A survivor of a Chinese concentration camp tearfully recalled her time in detention in a speech before religious freedom advocates, telling them that her experience left “indelible scars on my heart.”
A regional body of The United Methodist Church has seized control of the assets of a Georgia megachurch trying to leave the mainline Protestant denomination.
Father-son former Olympians expressed their opposition to the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee’s proposal to reimagine its American flag logo ahead of the 2024 Paris Olympics, saying, “Old Glory doesn’t need rebranding.”
Faith-based advocacy organizations have launched a curriculum aimed at helping evangelical pastors combat Christian nationalism within their congregations.
Parents in Washington, D.C., have filed a lawsuit against the District over a new law that allows officials to vaccinate children in public schools without parental consent, even if they have a religious objection.
Christian Post reporters Brandon Showalter and Leah Klett join host Billy Hallowell to take listeners into some of the biggest stories of the week. Showalter discusses the transgender debate and Klett breaks down a new porn-blocking service for families, a new documentary releasing from the Kendrick Brothers and more.
I served in the US Embassy in Afghanistan back in 2004 as a political advisor. My task was to help create a civil society infrastructure that would be the first line of defense against the Taliban's Islamic radicalization and indoctrination of the youth.
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How to follow Galatians 6:10

Dear Friend:

Thanks to the generous support of Christian Post readers and others, relief aid to Covid-stricken pastors as well widows and orphans of deceased pastors who succumbed to Covid-19 is already making a difference.

The World Evangelical Alliance (WEA) reports food aid, personal health kits, oxygen and hospital care are now being provided to our Christian family members in Nepal starting with the hardest hit rural areas.

Often discriminated for their Christian faith, pastors, church leaders and others face barriers to getting medical treatment. WEAs’ Nepal Pastors Emergency Covid Fund is helping.

THANK YOU to all who have donated to the Nepal Pastors Emergency Fund. If you have not yet given, The Christian Post and World Evangelical Alliance asks you to consider joining us by making a donation - together we can reach our $100,000 campaign goal to send urgent Covid-19 relief aid to pastors and their families.

Tragically, in the last weeks, at least 130 Christian church leaders have died, and the pandemic is getting increasingly worse due to poor health infrastructure, according to sources on the ground.

The Chairman of WEA’s national alliance member, the National Churches Fellowship of Nepal (NCFN), Hanok Tamang, said recently “many young wives have lost their husbands. Some children have lost their both father and mother. There are so many widows and hundreds of orphans, and many churches are facing a vacuum in leadership now.”

Rev. Hanok wrote to WEA leaders a few days ago saying, “Members of our team join me to thank you and appreciate for all that you have been doing to help the people of Nepal in general and the beloved Saints of the wider Body of Christ in Nepal in particular.” Quoting Galatians 6:10 he wrote: “So then, as we have opportunity, let us do good to everyone, and especially to those who are of the household of faith.”

WEA’s Nepal Pastors Emergency Covid Fund relief aid is reaching hard-hit rural churches and their communities in this Himalayan nation as Covid-19 continues to impact thousands.

CLICK HERE TO HELP A
PASTOR IN NEPAL

“We are very grateful to you for taking your invaluable time to be the voice of many voiceless needy families who have gone through most difficult time caused by Covid-19 and most recent floods and landslides which killed many. The situation is getting worse horrendously,” he added.

Since 2017, Nepali Christians are experiencing increased pressure after legislation was passed that bans proselytization. Lately, defamation campaigns on social media against Christians have been denounced in the UN Human Rights Council of Geneva. WEA’s Global Advocacy Team at the United Nations has been working intensely for several years now on behalf of our Christian brothers and sisters and those of other faiths facing discrimination and persecution in Nepal.

Please join us in standing behind our brothers and sisters through their time of great suffering.

In partnership,


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Rev. Dr. Brian Winslade
Deputy Secretary General
World Evangelical Alliance

For more information contact me at: dsg-winslade@worldea.org
CLICK HERE TO DONATE







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