Weekly briefing: Reopening businesses and churches, warning of famines, homeschool debate | The Christian Post/Leonardo BlairShuttered stores on Manhattan's Upper East Side in New York during the coronavirus outbreak, March 2020. |
| We've compiled the top stories of the week. Here's what you need to know: | Division over reopening churches, businesses 'too soon' | Georgia reopened certain businesses, including fitness centers and barber shops, on Friday despite concerns expressed by some government officials and pastors. | President Donald Trump said he believes it’s “just too soon” to reopen this week as the U.S. now has over 880,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and over 50,000 deaths. | Meanwhile, the stay-at-home order has been extended in certain states, including Pennsylvania, which has caused some protests amid rising unemployment. | As Trump’s national plan to “open up America again” is set to launch in phases beginning early May in some states, Liberty Counsel is encouraging churches to reopen on May 3 for services while following safety protocols such as reduced seating. | “I think we obviously have to balance health and safety. But at the same time, churches are very essential. They always have been, and they're more essential now than ever.” — Mat Staver, founder of Liberty Counsel | Pandemic could spark ‘multiple famines,’ rise in mental illness | The head of the World Food Program warned of “multiple famines” with some 300,000 people starving to death daily in the coming months during the pandemic. | The number of people suffering from hunger could go from 135 million to more than 250 million. | “If we don’t prepare and act now — to secure access, avoid funding shortfalls and disruptions to trade — we could be facing multiple famines of biblical proportions within a short few months.” — David Beasley, WFP executive director | The coronavirus outbreak has also triggered a rise in prescriptions for depression, anxiety and insomnia, and could lead to increased suicides. | “This is the greatest threat on our mental health in our lifetime. A combustible mix of fear, insecurity and quarantine. We’re very concerned about an increase in suicide, depression, stress and alcoholism [but] with the appropriate social, medical and individual response we can prevent the [mental health] curve.” — Dr. Roger McIntyre, director for the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance | Dutch Supreme Court allows euthanasia for dementia patients | The Dutch Supreme Court ruled that doctors can carry out euthanasia on people with advanced dementia if they had requested it in writing before and even if they can’t confirm it later. | The decision comes on the heels of a controversial case where a doctor was cleared of wrongdoing after he euthanized a 74-year-old woman suffering from Alzheimer's who had requested to be euthanized before her condition worsened. The doctor and her family had to restrain her when her body reacted to the drugs. | Harvard professor sparks debate on homeschooling after calling for ban | A Harvard Law School professor sparked debate after calling for a presumptive ban on homeschooling, arguing that it poses harmful risks to children. | Elizabeth Bartholet argued that it’s “dangerous” to allow parents to have “24/7, essentially authoritarian control over their children from ages zero to 18.” She noted that most homeschooling families hold “conservative Christian beliefs” and that children should be exposed to mainstream culture. | “Children don’t belong to the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction. They belong to us, their parents. That out of touch elites fail to grasp these simple, self-evident truths should make us even more weary to trust them with control over our children’s education.” — Katy Faust, founder of Them Before Us | In case you missed it | Nigeria’s ‘genocide’: Who is helping the thousands of displaced Christians? | Tommy Barnett on most important thing he’s learned about Holy Spirit | Michael Youssef warns entertainment-driven church ‘making people feel good all the way to Hell’ | Pray for | Mount Neboh Baptist Church in Harlem which lost 11 members to the coronavirus in 30 days | Christians in India who are experiencing rising persecution | New releases | | Albums: | New Today by Micah Tyler (April 24) | Selah EP by Tori Harper (April 24) | Books: | Where is God in a coronavirus world? by John Lennox (April 20) | Breathe Again: Inhaling God's Goodness, Exhaling His Blessings by Ed Newton (April 7) | | The Liberty Story: A Legacy of Champions | | If American citizens truly desire a healthy government, they must elect leaders defined by their commitment to liberty, order, and justice, a counter terrorism specialist and former lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army has said. At a Wednesday night church service in January 1971, in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains of Central Virginia, an impassioned preacher shared a dream with his congregation. Preaching from 2 Timothy, he asked them to catch his vision of training future leaders who would leave undeniable marks on the world. The pathway to achieving this dream, he believed, would be higher education. “Young people are the hope of our nation and our world,” he said. “I believe we have a sacred obligation to provide thousands of young people with a solid Christian education. Let us dedicate ourselves tonight to starting a college with the goal of seeing thousands of young men and women, deeply in love with the Lord Jesus Christ, who will go out in all walks of life to shake this world for God.” He envisioned an outstanding educational system that would keep Christian values at the forefront and not toss them aside like many of the country’s most prestigious institutions had done. While the college would rival the nation’s top universities in academic achievement and athletic prominence, it would also — most importantly — produce graduates who would cling to their faith and make it known through their life’s work. | | The prayers prayed that winter night in 1971 were answered. By March, it was officially announced that a college would open in the fall. Even with no campus to call their own, 154 students showed up, willing to take a risk on this new venture — one that would become, in less than 50 years, the largest Christian university in the world. Every new venture needs a singular vision and an inspiring and enduring phrase to describe it. The new college chose “Training Champions for Christ.” The first students knew they were becoming champions — not in the winning sense of the word, like a lone victor at the end of a competition, but as Christ-centered men and women with the values, knowledge, and skills essential for impacting tomorrow’s world. They were becoming ambassadors, advocates, defenders — people who stand up for injustice and fight for change. They combined hard work, determination, and integrity to show compassion and bring healing to others. Since 1971, over 350,000 Champions for Christ have followed in those early champions’ footsteps, united by the same original mission. And, as promised, the university has remained steadfast in its commitment to providing a world-class environment with Christian values. Now, the university flourishes in ways those first faithful dreamers only saw in their prayers. But their tradition of unwavering faith lives on today... Read More | Championing education for what matters Liberty University Request Information | |