Friday, August 30, 2019

#2779 (8/30) "Religious Freedom Is at Stake in Hong Kong. We Must Not Look the Other Way."

Pray for those suffering as a result of the shootings of police officers recently in PA. 

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"RELIGIOUS FREEDOM  IS AT STAKE IN HONG KONG. WE MUST NOT LOOK THE OTHER WAY" - by Arielle Del Turco, FRC BLOG, Aug. 27, 2019; https://www.frcblog.com/2019/08/religious-liberty-stake-hong-kong-we-must-not-look-other-way/
     “Hong Kong needs to win this fight. Or else it will soon be like China.” This was one student’s answer when asked why he participates in pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong even as the risks increase.
   Pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong have captured international attention and their movement isn’t fading away, even in the 12th week of protests. Last Sunday, 1.7 million Hong Kongers took to the streets to protest in the rain—for reference, the total population is only 7.3 million. 

   The protests were sparked by a proposed extradition bill that would allow people from Hong Kong to be extradited to China. Critics of the bill believe that it would provide a legal excuse for China to pick up anyone from Hong Kong and detain them in mainland China, where the legal system is corrupt and judges follow the orders of the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The protests have since evolved to represent a larger pro-democracy movement as the city fears the possibility of mainland China’s encroaching influence in Hong Kong.
   Those fears are not unfounded. Hong Kong has thrived with a high degree of autonomy since the city was returned from British to Chinese rule in 1997 under the “one country, two systems” principle. It currently enjoys an independent judiciary, more protection of basic rights, and fewer restrictions on freedom of expression than mainland China

    Churches in Hong Kong experience the same level of religious freedom experienced in the West, and Christian activists have been at the forefront of Hong Kong protests. 
   Those in mainland China, meanwhile, are subject to the tight control of the Chinese Communist Party and human rights abuses. Nothing is sacred to the CCP—including religion. The CCP allows legal status for some religious organizations, but these state-sanctioned churches encounter government interference. Minors and college students have been barred from entering all churches. The government has also started to install surveillance cameras in churches.
   Last year, the Chinese government started a “thought reform” campaign to promote what they call “Chinese Christianity.” The plan includes retranslating the Bible to find its similarities with socialism. China is fine with allowing Christianity as long as it can be used as a platform to advance the Communist party.
  House churches, which lack government approval, are completely shut down by the government.
  In 2018 alone, it is estimated that 100,000 or more Christians were arrested for violating China’s strict regulations for religious affairs. 

   Unlike their neighbors in mainland China, Hong Kongers have free access to information. They know what’s going on in China. And Christians in Hong Kong fear that if the Chinese government exerts more control over Hong Kong, they will begin to face the same religious freedom restrictions Christians face there.
   Across the bay from Hong Kong, in China’s Shenzhen province, hundreds of armed Chinese police have been deployed in a show of force. Chinese officials warned that Beijing will forcibly suppress the protests if they become more chaotic. If China’s People’s Armed Police crackdown on Hong Kong protests, it would signal a significant loss of Hong Kong’s autonomy. To silently allow the encroachment of Chinese government control into Hong Kong would be to watch a regime that abuses human rights take over a flourishing city. And that would be a tragedy. As Hong Kongers cry out for democracy, their pleas should not fall on deaf ears.

   There is a deep longing within mankind to be free. People throughout the ages have been willing to fight and die for their freedom. Yet, the communist-led Chinese regime believes its residents are fundamentally materialistic and can therefore be easily manipulated and controlled. In defiance of this, Hong Kong is now in its 12th consecutive week of protests.

  U.S. leaders shouldn’t ignore this issue. Ultimately, we don’t want to see Hong Kong subject to the same human rights and religious freedom violations seen elsewhere in China. At the very least, that means sending the message to China that the U.S. would not look kindly upon Chinese intervention in Hong Kong. There’s too much at stake if we look the other way.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]


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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | INDIA - For the first time, India entered the top 10 on the 2019 World Watch List. Research indicates that in 2018, more than 12,000 attacks on Christians were reported  (many go unreported). This month, we invite you to pray with us for our Indian brothers and sisters.
August 30 | IRAQ Pray that corruption will end in Iraq. Actions of the country’s politicians, lawmakers, judges and business people are creating poverty and unemployment.
*Names changed to protect identities

Thursday, August 29, 2019

#2778 (8/29) "Our Changing Values Should Worry Us. But We Can Still Change Course."

"OUR CHANGING VALUES SHOULD WORRY US. BUT WE CAN STILL CHANGE COURSE." - Star Parker / @UrbanCURE / August 28, 2019 / https://www.dailysignal.com/2019/08/28/our-changing-values-should-worry-us-but-we-can-still-change-course/
     The founders of the country saw the nation's existence, its faith, and its posterity as a package deal. According to a recent poll, a new generation of young people dismisses it all. (Photo: Zbynek Pospisil)

     The late historian and political philosopher Harry V. Jaffa noted the significance that the preamble to our Constitution concludes with the words “secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity.” This is how the drafters of our Constitution saw its purpose. Jaffa continues, saying, “a blessing is what is good in the eyes of God. It is a good whose possession … belongs properly only to those who deserve it.”

   In light of this, let’s consider a just-released Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll that appeared under the headline “Americans Have Shifted Dramatically on What Values Matter Most.” “Patriotism, religion and having children rate lower among younger generations than they did two decades ago,” the headline continues.
   Of all surveyed, 61% “cited patriotism as very important to them, down 9 percentage points from 1998, while 50% citied religion, down 12 points. Some 43% placed a high value on having children, down 16 points from 1998.” Among those ages 18-38, 42% cited patriotism as “very important”; less than one-third cited having children; and 30% cited “religion, belief in God.”

   The founders of the country saw the nation’s existence, its faith, and its posterity as a package deal. It all went together. Now we have a young generation, our future, that dismisses the importance of all the elements of that package. What might this tell us about where we’re headed?
   The operative questions are: Does the country have a future, a posterity, without children? And will there be children if there is no marriage and family? And will there be marriage and family if there is no religion and God?

   Recent statistics provide pretty gloomy answers to these questions.
     The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the lowest birth rate in 32 years last year. It was the fourth consecutive year with a decline in the U.S. birth rate
    And the fertility rate, the number of births per 1,000 adult women, has been dropping every year and is well below the replacement rate—the fertility rate needed to keep the population from shrinking.
   Regarding marriage, over the last half-century, the percentage of U.S. adults who are married has dropped 31%. According to the Pew Research Center, in 1960, 72% of adults in the U.S. were married. By 2016, this was down to 50%.
   The decline in the percentage of Americans saying religion is “very important” in their life is identical to the decline in the percentage of married Americans. In 1960, 70% said religion was “very important,” and by 2018, this was down to 50%, a 20% decline.
   Although Americans continue to feel free—87%, according to Gallup, are satisfied that they can freely live as they choose—a minority now sees this liberty as a blessing, in the sense that Jaffa explains the word in our Constitution. That is, “what is good in the eyes of God.”
   As the sense of the importance of faith and religion diminishes, the values and behaviors that go with them—marriage and children—also diminish.

   There are important practical implications on our posterity. Fewer children means an aging population. More retirees per everyone working means more pressure on the payroll tax, each dollar of which must be distributed to more and more retirees. The population over the age of 55 accounts for more than half our health care expenditures. As the percentage of the population over 55 increases, our health care expenditure burden will increase proportionately.
And, with the collapse of family, more elderly Americans will be living alone.

   If you think this picture is gloomy, the good news is nothing is inevitable. We’re still free, and we can change course. Different discourse in the public square, policies consistent with seeing liberty as a “blessing,” can be advanced. But the starting point must be seeing something wrong with the status quo.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

Star Parker is a columnist for The Daily Signal and president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

COPYRIGHT 2019 CREATORS.COM


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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | INDIA - For the first time, India entered the top 10 on the 2019 World Watch List. Research indicates that in 2018, more than 12,000 attacks on Christians were reported  (many go unreported). This month, we invite you to pray with us for our Indian brothers and sisters.
August 29 | SYRIA - Pray for the “Widows Project” that delivers much-needed home-cooked meals to the elderly and widows.
*Names changed to protect identities

STANDING STRONG THROUGH THE STORM - OpenDoorsUSA.org
 At my first defense, no one came to my support, but everyone deserted me. May it not be held against them.- 2 Tim. 4:16                                               
SPEAK ON BEHALF OF THOSE WHO SUFFER
The Apostle Paul knew exactly what it was like to be alone, to be deserted by all who called themselves “brothers” and “sisters.” A former colleague who has done considerable travel among the persecuted says, “It is hard to believe that Christians are the largest persecuted group in the world today. But it is even more difficult to believe that this is so seldom mentioned in our gatherings and church services. More Christians know the names of their favorite actors than their fellow believers who are in prison.”
He continues, “With every trip something in my heart breaks as I hear the echoes of suffering:
I remember the echoes of an Egyptian mother as she shared how her young boy was stuck in a haystack because she refused to deny Jesus.
I remember the sounds of weeping as fellow students in Indonesia shared how Sariman, their co-student, was hacked to death.
I remember the cries of anguish as we walked from church to church that was burned to the ground on the island of Lombok.
I remember the tears of Rebecca in Iran as she showed the picture of her father who was stabbed to death for sharing the gospel.
I remember the voice of Pastor Daniel in Vietnam as he shared how he was chained to the ground for six months.
I remember the fear of Grace from Sudan as she shared how her church was attacked and her friend was shot through the head.
Oh, I remember the cries of Caleb in Eritrea as he shared with tears how two dear friends were executed in front of him because of their faith.
And I remember the tears of Joy in the southern Philippines as she shared how her fiancĂ© was shot to death in their church in Mindanao.
But, most all, I remember the deafening sounds of silence every time I return home.
RESPONSE
How can I be silent today? How can I not speak on behalf of those who suffer? How can I desert those that belong to the same body that I belong to and who desperately need the encouragement of my intervention?

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

#2777 (8/28) "How Unthinkable Became Unquestionable - New Study on the Collapse of Moral Consensus"

"HOW THE UNTHINKABLE BECAME UNQUESTIONABLE - NEW STUDY ON THE COLLAPSE OF MORAL CONCENSUS" - by John Stonestreet and Roberto Rivera, Breakpoint.org, August 28, 2019; http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/08/breakpoint-how-unthinkable-became-unquestionable/
      Anyone else dizzy by how quickly some things went from being unthinkable to unquestionable? Just in the last few years? Although the most recent demands of the Sexual Revolution are more radical than ever, people seem to be embracing them more quickly than ever.

   For example, when Andrew Sullivan first made the case for same-sex marriage in the New Republic back in 1989, the very notion was considered to be beyond the fringe, and it stayed that way for about two decades. Then, suddenly, it wasn’t beyond the fringe anymore. By 2012, a majority of Americans favored same-sex marriage, and three years later, it became a constitutional right. Today, opposition or even ambivalence to same-sex marriage is regarded as beyond the fringe.
   And the pace of change on sexual issues has only accelerated. Transgenderism was considered beyond the fringe when same-sex marriage was legalized, and I predict the acceptance of polyamory could happen even faster.

   So what explains this quick and thorough collapse of the old moral consensus? 
    That’s what I talk about on the BreakPoint Podcast this week with sociologist Mark Regnerus of the University of Texas. Our conversation dug into a recent Public Discourse article he wrote: “How the Rise in Unreligious Americans affects Sex and Marriage: Comparative Evidence from New Survey Data.”

   Just after the midterm elections in November 2018, Mark Regnerus asked three groups—Catholics, Evangelical Protestants, and the non-religious—about their opinions relating to marriage, family, and sexuality. He compared their responses with those from a survey he conducted three years prior. What Regnerus found was that the nonreligious are now even more likely to hold “progressive” views on marriage, family, and sexuality, especially when compared to self-identified Catholics and Evangelicals.

   For instance, 24 percent of the non-religious agreed with the statement “marriage is outdated,” compared to just 10 percent of Catholics and 2 percent of Evangelicals. Similarly, the non-religious were three times more likely to say that polyamorous relations were okay compared to Catholics and ten times more likely compared to Evangelicals. And, the non-religious were eight times as likely as Evangelicals to say that “sometimes extra-marital sex can be okay.”

   Of course, the strong relationship between one’s religious observance and their view on marriage, family, and sex is no surprise. What makes Regnerus’ study so revealing is how rapidly the number of those who self-identify as non-religious has increased. In 2015, they made up 15 percent of the respondents. Four years later, they made up twenty percent, a one-third increase in only four years.

   The non-religious are often called the “nones,” and it’s important to remember that relatively few of them are atheists or agnostics. Many believe in things like astrology and witchcraft and many consider themselves quite spiritual. But they reject authoritative religious traditions and institutions, and increasingly embrace progressive views on social issues.

   But the even more “ominous” trend from this study is that even though there exists a significant disparity in views between the religious and non-religious, the religious are displaying trends of increasing liberalization too. “Catholics… have witnessed liberalization in attitudes,” Mark says, though “Evangelical numbers display a more modest uptick.” Regnerus concludes that Christians seem to be growing more complicit in the Sexual Revolution, or at least more quiet about their misgivings, year by year.

   Don’t miss this important discussion with Mark Regnerus on the BreakPoint Podcast. [ http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/08/podcast-the-impact-of-the-nones-on-sex-and-marriage/] It’s a conversation that will help you prepare when the next previously-unthinkable thing becomes conventional wisdom, which, at the rate we’re going, could be next week.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

RESOURCES
"How the Rise in Unreligious Americans affects Sex and Marriage: Comparative Evidence from New Survey Data" Mark Regnerus The Public Discourse August 19, 2019; https://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2019/08/55179/
"Here Comes The Groom"Andrew Sullivan The New Republic August 28, 1989; https://newrepublic.com/article/79054/here-comes-the-groom


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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | INDIA - For the first time, India entered the top 10 on the 2019 World Watch List. Research indicates that in 2018, more than 12,000 attacks on Christians were reported  (many go unreported). This month, we invite you to pray with us for our Indian brothers and sisters.
August 28 | IRAQ - Today marks five years since ISIS militants invaded Qaraqosh, Iraq’s largest Christian town. The towns were freed two years later. Pray as returning Christians rebuild their homes, communities and lives
*Names changed to protect identities

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

#2776 (8/27) "5 Reasons Why Planned Parenthood Is Fake Feminism"

"5 REASONS WHY PLANNED PARENTHOOD IS FAKE FEMINISM" Ryan Bomberger : Aug 21, 2019; https://townhall.com/columnists/ryanbomberger/2019/08/21/5-reasons-why-planned-parenthood-is-fake-feminism-n2551930
Source: AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

     Ok. I realize that listing only five points eliminates thousands of other really good reasons, they serve as powerful reminders. 

     Planned Parenthood, contrary to their victimhood tweets, opted out of #TitleX funding because abortion is more important to them than their “family planning” patients. Planned Parenthood President, Alexis McGill Johnson, confirmed with CBS (prior to the defunding) that she voted along with the organization’s board to “ensure that abortion was one of our core services that every center affiliated with Planned Parenthood would provide.” CBS then asked, regarding Title-X funding: “Is there a scenario where you would discontinue abortion services in order to make everything else you do easier, better funded, and just easier for your patients?” McGill Johnson answered: “Absolutely not.”

    Planned Parenthood is the embodiment of fake feminism, a term (like many others) they’ve decided to reinvent. The dictionary defines it as “the theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the sexes [of which there are only two]” and “organized activity on behalf of women's rights and interests.” Planned Parenthood does not fight for women’s rights, but their own right to harm and kill females in and out of the womb.

   So, let’s run down this short, but significant, list.
     1.  Planned Parenthood believes that killing innocent humans makes others equal.
     If violence is what makes us equal, then why don’t we advocate it as a means to achieve equality for everyone? Fake feminists protest violence against women (well, except in the form of abortion, of course). If selective violence elevates your equality under the euphemism of “choice," then why doesn’t all violence under the same one-sided euphemism? Certainly, in a violent act, there is always a victim who never gets to choose whether or not to be the recipient of an attack. It’s no different with abortion.  

   2.  Planned Parenthood doesn’t believe that women exist.
   You can’t have it both ways. Either women exist, wholly distinct from men, or they don’t. The word feminism stems from the Latin word femina which means…woman. You can’t have feminism without women. It’s like abolitionism without abolitionists. It’s why Planned Parenthood refers to “pregnant people” on their website and in their social media rhetoric. If anyone can be a woman, then anyone can be a man. And equality simply comes down to self-identification, right? If you search for the word “feminism” on Planned Parenthood’s website, there are only three entries—the first two dealing with “transitioning” to another gender and the third affirming that feminism is no longer about “women’s rights” but “all people of all genders’ rights.” 

  3. Planned Parenthood doesn’t believe in women’s rights…to know. 
  An organization that claims to fight for “women’s rights” spends millions preventing women from the right to know medical truths about abortion. I’ll never forget speaking on behalf of a proposal, at the Virginia Assembly, to support adding facts about medically-proven increased risks of preterm births from previous induced abortions to the state’s current Right-to-Know bill. Planned Parenthood representatives and their abortion allies provided nothing scientific but regurgitated every fake feminist talking point possible. They prevailed that day and celebrated as the truth was aborted by a GOP-led committee that wouldn’t even allow the proposal to come to a vote!

  The federal National Cancer Institute study found that induced abortions increase the risk of triple negative breast cancer. A meta-analysis of 49 studies, published in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, shows a “statistically significant increase in PTB [preterm birth] risk in women with a history of IA [induced abortion].” Preterm births are a leading cause of birth defects and infant mortality. Yet, in typical fake feminist fashion, Planned Parenthood falsely asserts on their website: “Having an abortion doesn’t increase your risk for breast cancer or affect your fertility. It doesn’t cause problems for future pregnancies like birth defects, premature birth or low birth weight, ectopic pregnancy, miscarriage, or infant death.”
Abortion is fake health. Period. 

  4. Planned Parenthood exploits women for profit.
  Founding feminist, Alice Paul, called abortion the “ultimate exploitation of women.” She never could’ve imagined that a mostly women-led organization would become a billion-dollar exploiter of females in and out of the womb. Planned Parenthood has defended abortionists like Gittler, Rho, Karpen, Carhart, Malloy, Gluck and so many other present-day abortionists who still operate the back alley. Planned Parenthood in Pennsylvania announced that they knew about Gosnell’s squalid abortion mill from their patients, yet they did absolutely nothing. They have a $1.7 billion revenue stream to protect. Abortion is big busine$$. They must convince women of their victimhood status while making actual victims out of over 330,000 human beings every year.

  5. Planned Parenthood is the leading killer of black lives. 
  Sure. Big Abortion pretends to fight for justice and equality. Pandering has become their specialty. They equate their fight for abortion with the fight for civil rights. But their narrative, spawned in the racism and elitism of eugenics, has always been—how shall I say, colored. Historically, poorer black communities have always been disproportionately targeted since the abortion giant was birthed in NYC over 100 years ago. This is the city where more black babies have been aborted than born alive for decades. Today, an estimated 247 black lives are killed every day by Planned Parenthood which lies to black women, saying “it’s statistically safer to have an abortion than to carry a pregnancy to term or give birth.” I shred this dangerous rhetoric here. They say they “Stand with Black Women.” What they mean is that they stand with those black women who will shill for their billion-dollar biz. They’ll stand with black girls until they show them the exit door after the—kaching!—abortion. They don’t stand with pro-life black women like Dr. Alveda King, Candace Owens, Rachel Citak, or Star Parker. Noooooooo. Like Fannie Lou Hamer, who denounced Planned Parenthood and abortion (as genocide), these women know the difference between being empowered and being fooled by those in power.

[italics, underline, and colored emphasis mine]

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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | INDIA - For the first time, India entered the top 10 on the 2019 World Watch List. Research indicates that in 2018, more than 12,000 attacks on Christians were reported  (many go unreported). This month, we invite you to pray with us for our Indian brothers and sisters.
August 27 | DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO - Pray with Christians whose village was attacked. Six Christians, including three women and a 9-year-old child, were killed. Pray they would sense the prayers of the global body of Christ.
*Names changed to protect identities

Monday, August 26, 2019

#2775 (8/26) "Excessive Smartphone Use is Dehumanizing Us"

"EXCESSUVE SMARTPHONE USE IS DEHUMANIZING US" - by Daniel Hart, Aug. 23, 2019; https://www.frcblog.com/2019/08/excessive-smartphone-use-dehumanizing-us/ [AS I SEE IT: It has been frustrating at my workplace to see young people - and even adults - immediately pulling out their smartphones when they walk into our breakroom (and even betweeen  tasks on the job) rather than engage in conversation. Am I just too old to understand how important it is to know the latest news or watch the latest on-screen distraction? Or have people simply forgotten the importance of human interation and simply chosen to lose themselves in a private world? I for one can live without one of these "smart" phones. - Stan]
    Much has been written about how our society’s addiction to our smartphones, particularly among young people, is worsening our quality of life. I’ve lost count of the number of stories I’ve read about how our culture seems to have tiny attention spans due to social media addiction and about how kids these days don’t make eye contact anymore due to the smartphones that seem to be physically attached to their hands.
   Recently, a friend described to me how during an orientation session for his new job, he sat next to two twenty-something fellow new hires who spent the entire time on their smartphones, only occasionally looking up at their supervisor who was giving the orientation.

   While worrisome anecdotal stories like these abound, hard data is now emerging that only confirms these fears. In a sobering article at Family Life, Clay Routledge cites recent studies that show that extensive time spent on smartphones is leading to a host of alarming deficiencies in basic human relationships and interactions:
     For example, in a field experiment, researchers found that having cellphones present during a meal with family or friends decreased enjoyment of that social experience. Another experiment that involved pairs of college students waiting together with or without their cellphones found that those who were phoneless were far more likely to smile at and interact with one another than those with cellphones. And one study found that having college students severely limit their daily social media use over a three-week period decreased both loneliness and depression. In short, a growing body of experimental research is providing empirical evidence that cellphones distract us from fully experiencing the real world.

   Of particular concern are new findings that show that excessive smartphone use is negatively affecting the very fabric of family life. Routledge referenced another recent experiment involving parents and their interactions with their children at a museum in which “[t]he researchers found that parents in the high-use condition [of smartphones], compared to those in the low-use condition, reported feeling less attentive and less socially connected, and reported lower meaning in life while with their children at the museum.”
   Perhaps most frightening is a Pew survey cited by Routledge:
     Regarding smartphones and family life specifically, a Pew survey found that around half of teenagers say their parents are distracted by their phones when they are trying to talk to them, and over 70% of parents report that their teenagers are distracted when they are trying to have a conversation with them.

   When screen addiction worsens even the most basic form of relational activity—talking to our family members—you know we have a serious problem. What Routledge alludes to, and what FRC has emphasized for years, is that family provides the most basic form of meaning in a person’s life through the love they receive, which in turn forms our core sense of self-worth. When this most fundamental source of meaning in our lives is compromised through the breakdown of familial communication and relationships, bad things happen.

   A convincing argument has been made that the release of the iPhone in 2007 marked the beginning of a disturbing trend of mental health crisis in the post-Millennial generation. Indeed, a glut of mental health problems have sharply risen among young people since then, including rising rates of depression, anxiety, and suicide.

Less Screen Time, More Fulfillment
    There’s no question that smartphones, tablets, and other internet-enabled portable devices have enhanced our lives in many ways. But as with any technology (or any worldly good, for that matter), believers know that moderation is key. In order to form healthy habits of technology use, we must see smartphones for what they are: a tool, not a necessity.

   The primary way we can avoid smartphone addiction for our children and future generations is to limit the amount of time they spend looking at screens. How do we do this? Simply put, if they are out of sight, they are out of mind. If we diligently cultivate our homes as a place where learning and authentic leisure are the primary focus, the need for screens will rarely arise. This can also set an expectation of healthy use of screens that can enhance family life, like for communal viewing of movies or sporting events, for example.
   
  At a certain point in a child’s life, they will see that their peers have smartphones, and they will naturally want to fit in. But if we raise our children with the understanding that they do not need a smartphone, and instead grow up with an expectation that they can work for and earn money to buy one at the age that they can get a job, they will be more likely to see smartphones not as necessities but as tools.
   With this healthy perspective from a young age, it is far less likely that kids will form a smartphone addiction when they are older and have free access to them. As the emerging data suggests, and as we inherently know deep down, we are happier and more fulfilled when we spend less time engaging a screen and more time engaging each other.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | INDIA - For the first time, India entered the top 10 on the 2019 World Watch List. Research indicates that in 2018, more than 12,000 attacks on Christians were reported  (many go unreported). This month, we invite you to pray with us for our Indian brothers and sisters.
August 26 | SOUTH ASIA - Today, pray with two brothers sentenced to death for blasphemy. God, we boldly ask for the release of these men and pray with their families.
*Names changed to protect identities

Sunday, August 25, 2019

#2774 (8/25) SUNDAY SPECIAL: "People without a Purpose - Why Young Brits Have Lost Hope"

"PEOPLE WITHOUT A PURPOSE - WHY YOUNG BRITS HAVE LOST HOPE" - by John Stonestreet and G. Shane Morris, Breakpoint.org, August 23, 2019; http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/08/breakpoint-people-without-purpose/ [AS I SEE IT: It's tempting for Christians in America to say, "Well, their youth are struggling. Too bad for them." But honestly, can we really say that today's Millennials and Gen-Z youth in America are not just as without purpose? What does it mean, for instance, that more and more of our youth see no reason to stand up for their country, to be willing to put their lives on the line to defend it? Can America's youth not be that far behind those of Britain? Is it not possible they too lack purpose more and more?  Think about it. -Stan]
      Few things will bring on the goosebumps like listening to Winston Churchill’s 1940 “fight them on the beaches” speech, easily one of the strongest statements of national unity and patriotic defiance in all of human history. The prime minister spoke for a people who, as he said, would “never surrender,” and he was right. Even with London smoldering from the Blitz and the nation standing virtually alone against Hitler’s war machine, they didn’t break. And their persistence eventually saw the tide turn and Europe liberated.

   The secret to their endurance is really not a secret at all. The British in Churchill’s day were a people with a purpose. Churchill called what they faced a fight against tyranny, and the nation believed him. As C. S. Lewis observed in his wartime radio addresses, some of which later became part of his book “Mere Christianity,” the Nazis really were wrong, and the Allies really were right. Good and evil exist and can be known. That, Lewis observed, was a signpost to the meaning of life.

Britain has undergone quite a transformation since Churchill’s speech. Last week, the Sun reported on a new, nationwide survey that plied 1,500 Brits of all ages with a variety of questions about their attitudes and beliefs. Among the results: a stunning 89 percent of those aged 16 to 29 said their lives lack meaning and purpose.  In other words, Nihilism is running rampant among Millennial and Gen-Z Brits. Just half of those aged 60 and over gave similarly hopeless answers, which is still not a great result but certainly better than 89 percent. The Sun suggests this means people find purpose in life as they age. Or, it could mean that Brits are steadily losing a sense of meaning and purpose with each generation.

   Evidence for the latter interpretation comes from the answers participants gave to other questions: 84 percent of young people said they’re failing to “live their best life.” Nearly 40 percent also said they’d choose to re-do their lives if they could. And, what would they change if they could hit that “reset” button? Over half of Brits believe they were put on earth to be as happy as possible. Only 37 percent said their purpose is to make other people happy. Less than a third thought they exist to do as much good as possible.

   I can’t help wondering how different the results would be if this survey had been conducted in the middle of World War II. Would the British have been similarly aimless and preoccupied with personal happiness and fulfillment? Would almost 90 percent of young people, who bore the brunt of the war, say their lives lacked meaning? I doubt it. I don’t think a British population that hopeless would have had the resolve to withstand the Nazi assault and help lead the Allies to victory.

   So, what happened? How did the Brits, who out-lasted the Blitz, transform into people unsure of life’s very purpose? My colleague Shane Morris and I wrestled with this question on last week’s “BreakPoint This Week,” and we offered a number of related answers, all rooted in the power of ideas. [http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/08/bp-this-week-a-crisis-of-purpose-and-meaning/]
   When Churchill made those thundering moral pronouncements on behalf of his nation, he didn’t conduct a poll to find out who thought the Nazis were wrong or worth fighting. He didn’t ask each citizen to define their “best life.” And he certainly didn’t elevate individual happiness to the top of his wartime priorities.

   But in a world where meaning is up to us, where life supposedly means whatever we say it does, it ultimately comes to mean nothing. A culture that abandons any fixed reference point and instead tells its young people that truth, purpose, meaning, and morality are purely subjective, will only, in the end, rob them of any truth, purpose, meaning, or morality worth fighting for.
   Churchill rallied his nation to a “righteous cause.” That sort of call requires vertical thinking, a people who embrace a transcendent sense of meaning. And what the world saw were the storms a people like that could weather. Today, Britain and so much of the Western world is discovering that a people without a transcendent sense of meaning can’t even weather peacetime.

 [italics and colored emphasis mine]

RESOURCES
"MILLENNIAL MELANCHOLY Nine in ten young Brits believe their life lacks purpose, according to shocking new study" - The Sun August 1, 2019; https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/9637619/young-brits-life-lacks-purpose/
"BP This Week: A Crisis of Purpose and Meaning"John Stonestreet BreakPoint August 16, 2019;http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/08/bp-this-week-a-crisis-of-purpose-and-meaning/


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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
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Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | INDIA - For the first time, India entered the top 10 on the 2019 World Watch List. Research indicates that in 2018, more than 12,000 attacks on Christians were reported  (many go unreported). This month, we invite you to pray with us for our Indian brothers and sisters.
August 25 | EAST AFRICA Farah* is one of the few Somalis who has made the life-threatening choice to follow Jesus. He has lost the tribal community Somalis normally enjoy. Pray specifi cally for the Christian community in the Horn of Africa..
*Names changed to protect identities

Saturday, August 24, 2019

#2773 (8/24) PROI-LIFE SAT: "Millions of Frozen Embryos - An Ethical Blind Spot for Evangelicals"

"MILLIONS OF FROZEN EMBRYOSS - AN ETHICAL BLIND SPOT FOR EVANGELICALS"by John Stonestreet and G. Shane Morris, Breakpoint.org, August 21, 2019; http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/08/breakpoint-millions-of-frozen-embryos/
      I’m unapologetically Protestant but, as I’ve said for a while now, our Catholic friends have long led the way on many bioethical issues like abortion and assisted reproductive technologies. For example, back in 2008, the Vatican released a document called “Dignitatis personae,” which said that “The desire for a child, while good, cannot justify the ‘production’ of offspring, just as the desire to not have a child cannot justify the abandonment or destruction of a child once he or she has been conceived.”

Now, I recognize that Christians disagree about whether it’s intrinsically wrong to conceive children outside of the sexual union of husband and wife, including in vitro fertilization. Because God ordered the pleasure and intimacy of married sex toward procreation, I find the Catholic ethical teaching against IVF to be compelling.

Still, like I said, not all Christians agree. For example, several months ago, I had a robust discussion on this issue on the BreakPoint Podcast with my friend Dr. David Stevens. David has long led the Christian Medical and Dental Society and has been one of the great medical missionaries of our lifetime.

   What David and I did agree on, and what everyone should agree on (especially Christians), is that any fertility process that knowingly destroys or abandons human lives—including embryos—is immoral. And that’s what the debate over IVF must confront right now.

   Recently, NBC reported that frozen and abandoned embryos in U.S. fertility clinics may now number in the millions. Because of how IVF has been done for so long, we are facing a human rights crisis—namely, what should we do with these little abandoned lives?
   Throughout most of the history of the practice, in vitro fertilization has involved creating more embryos than any couple could ever bring to term. Standard practice is to retrieve scores of eggs per cycle from women and to fertilize all of them. A few of the resulting embryos are transferred one at a time to the gestational mother. Some may not implant. Some others may even be intentionally killed in reductive abortions. In other words, all-to-often this process involves destruction in the name of reproduction, justified because of efficiency.
   And, what happens to the embryos not transferred? These human individuals are suspended in the earliest stage of development within tanks of super-cooled nitrogen. With modern techniques, they can survive this way for a long time. But for many of their parents, life moves on while storage fees add up. Once they have the children they want, their embryos are abandoned, to either sit indefinitely in the freezer or to die.
   At one fertility clinic in Florida, a third of stored embryos face this fate. Because the CDC doesn’t require clinics to report the number of abandoned embryos, we have good reason to believe this is the case at clinics across the country.

   Now, let’s be clear. By every scientific standard, embryos are living, genetically-distinct human individuals that just need the right environment, nourishment, and time to develop.Given the scale of this overwhelming human rights crisis, the near silence about IVF in evangelical churches is inexcusable. How many pastors ever address this issue from the pulpit, or approach it in premarital counseling? How many uninformed Christian couples, in their laudable desire to have children, are using methods to create life that also destroy life?
   There are clinics that use IVF methods that only involve fertilizing and implanting one embryo at a time. This type of IVF doesn’t result in excess embryos, and so it doesn’t destroy life. But how many Christian couples even understand the difference in these procedures?

   Protestant pastors, this is a softball: It’s objectively wrong to bring human beings into existence knowing they’ll languish in a freezer or be discarded. In many cases, these embryos can be adopted. Google the Snowflakes Adoption Program to learn more.
   Christians will have different answers to questions about the ethics of IVF. But in order to answer them, we first have to ask them. If we really believe that all human life is sacred, the technology behind this excess can’t remain a taboo subject, especially for the church.


[italics and colored emphasis mine]
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"At Fertility Clinics, Abandoned Human Embryos Could Number in the Millions"National Catholic Register August 14, 2019; http://www.ncregister.com/daily-news/at-fertility-clinics-abandoned-human-embryos-could-number-in-the-millions


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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | INDIA - For the first time, India entered the top 10 on the 2019 World Watch List. Research indicates that in 2018, more than 12,000 attacks on Christians were reported  (many go unreported). This month, we invite you to pray with us for our Indian brothers and sisters.
August 24 | EGYPT - Mohammed* and Mostafa* are two cousins who escaped their family to secretly follow Jesus. Pray with them as they connect with other Christians online and visit secret meetings.
*Names changed to protect identities