Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Pastor gets threatened for couging and urging congregants to get COVID-19

 
Pastor gets threatened for couging and urging congregants to get COVID-19

A Michigan pastor who went viral for coughing and telling congregants to get COVID-19 and "get it over with," says he and his family are now being threatened.

Pastor Bart Spencer, who leads Lighthouse Baptist Church in Holland, insisted he will not be bullied into wearing a mask.

“Just respect my choice and I will respect yours. I don’t ask you to take off your mask, don’t ask me to put one on. That’s legit. You wouldn’t believe the names that I’ve been called, the threats that I’ve received for something as simple as that,” Spencer said in his sermon on Sunday.

The preacher, who is an Air Force veteran, told The Sentinel that he and several of his family members, including older adults, have already been infected with the virus and recovered.

“It’s not fun, I lost my sense of taste and smell, but my bout with the flu was worse,” he said.

He explained that he has been doing in-person services since the spring with some people social distancing and wearing a mask and so far no one has died.

“We trust our people to make their own decisions,” he said. “We respect one another’s positions.”

Spencer began making headlines after a clip from a Nov. 14 sermon of him doling out his public health advice went viral.

“It’s all good, several people have had COVID. None have died yet. It’s OK. Get it. Get it over with. Press on,” he said in the middle of his coughing fit at the pulpit.

Health officials have called it a “bad idea” to deliberately get infected with the virus.

In his sermon on Sunday, Spencer said he wished the Gospel spread as quickly around the world as his clip on coronavirus did.

“Wouldn’t it be wonderful if the Gospel had that impact worldwide?” he asked.

Preaching on sin and death, he said, “The argument is not you might die. The reality is, you’re going to. I’m not a fatalist at all but I am a realist. When God said ‘it’s appointed unto man once to die’ that’s what He meant. Do you die from a heart attack? No. Do you die from cancer? Uh-uh. Do you die from COVID? Nope. Everybody dies from the same thing — sin. That’s it.”

Spencer, who graduated from Mountain States Baptist College in May 1995, said he and his wife, Suzan, started Lighthouse Baptist Church in 1997 after a career in the United States Air Force.

“We are conservative (singing from the hymn book) yet spirited in our music employing traditional style accompaniment. The salvation of the lost is the focus of our ministry with the teaching and training of the saved an inseparable part of our mission,” Spencer says on the church’s website.

Source

The saddest verse in the Bible

 

The saddest verse in the Bible

Allow me to set the stage for what I think is the saddest verse in all of Scripture.

The second coming of Christ has taken place as has the Millennial reign of Jesus – 1,000 years of perfect rule under the only perfect ruler that has ever existed. In addition, Satan, the great deceiver of humanity, has been banished and forbidden to interact with those alive in the world, making for a first-ever safe spiritual environment (Rev. 19-20).

I get chills just thinking about it.

But what’s also happened is that the planet has been populated by the offspring of those who were alive during Jesus’ second coming and who entered into His Millennial kingdom. All of them have been face to face with the King of kings and eyewitnesses to Jesus’ righteous rule.

But then it happens.

The devil is released by God and, true to his nature, works to deceive humanity just as he did in the garden of Eden (Gen. 3). He gathers the nations together to fight against Jesus in some kind of crazed, last-ditch effort to supplant the Son of God.

After 1,000 years of seeing Jesus’ picture-perfect reign, you would think that the number of those involved in the conflict would be infinitesimally small. But no, actually the reverse is true.

This leads me to what is in my opinion the saddest verse in all the Bible – it’s Rev. 20:8. Let’s read it in context with verse 7:

“When the thousand years are completed, Satan will be released from his prison, and will come out to deceive the nations which are at the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together for the war; the number of them is like the sand of the seashore” (Rev. 20:7-8, my emphasis).

That particular revelation from the Apocalypse is beyond depressing to read. It’s not just a few of those alive during the Millennium that rebel against Jesus, but so many that you can’t count them. How awful is that?

Nothing new

It doesn’t matter which media group computes the numbers, when all is said and done, no one comes close to Jesus of Nazareth in terms of historic popularity or influence. Even leading figures of competing religions like Hinduism’s Gandhi acknowledge the unique beauty and perfection of Christ among other world leaders, religious or not.  

And yet, both Revelation and the gospels tell us that Jesus’ popularity with certain people is something that can change in the blink of an eye.

Jesus’ biographies tell us that there were many who were face-to-face with Christ back in His day that appeared to love Him. Right from the start we read, “And the news about Him spread throughout Syria; and they brought to Him all who were ill, those suffering with various diseases and severe pain, demon-possessed, people with epilepsy, and people who were paralyzed; and He healed them. Large crowds followed Him from Galilee and the Decapolis, and Jerusalem, and Judea, and from beyond the Jordan” (Matt. 4:25, my emphasis).

Large crowds following Jesus are also mentioned in Matt. 5:1, 8:1, 12:15, 13:2, 15:30, 19:2; Mark 3:7; Luke 5:15, 6:17, 6:19, 14:25. Further, let’s not forget the feeding of the 5,000 men that is chronicled in all gospels (Matt. 14; Mark 6; Luke 9; John 6), whose number can easily be expanded to double or triple when women and children are counted. The same goes for the 4,000 fed, which are recorded in Matthew and Mark.  

They loved Him when He was doling out free food, healings, deliverance from Satan, and even were left breathless from His powerful and poignant teaching. But when it came to His preaching on repentance and change of lifestyle, that’s when things took a different turn.

In Matthew 11:20-24, Christ rebukes the cities of Chorazin and Capernaum because, even though they had witnessed His miracles first-hand, they would not submit to Him and His preaching of sin. In fact, that aspect of Him got under their skin so much, that they made it a point to be at His crucifixion and mock Him while He was on the cross (Matt. 27:39).

That’s a whole different level of nasty.  

But, sadly, it’s nothing new. It’s the same type of behavior we see in those who will one day live with Jesus for 1,000 years and then turn on Him.

The devil made me do it

But wait, you say, we’re told in Rev. 20 that Satan is the one who goes out to deceive the people of the Millennium. Surely, it’s his fault and not theirs, right?

Nope, it’s theirs.

While the devil supplies a push in the wrong direction, ultimately the people make the choice. It’s what they want to do.

Those that enter the Millennium after Jesus’ second coming are just like we are right now: people without a glorified body and not free from sinful imperfections. And, just as Adam fathered children “in his own likeness, according to his image” and not in God’s image (Gen. 5:3), they will do the same, which produces a set of sinful humanity ripe to hear what they want to where Jesus is concerned.

The sad thing is, it doesn’t matter whether you can’t see or touch Jesus, like the situation we find ourselves in today, or one where you’re literally face to face with Him in an impeccable environment, sin still makes rebellion possible.

Even one where, after 1,000 years of perfection, the number of rebels is like the sand of the seashore. 

Source

Monday, December 7, 2020

Christian woman killed for refusing marriage proposal and conversion to Islam

Christian devotees attend a Palm Sunday service at the Sacred Heart Cathedral church during the government-imposed nationwide lockdown as a preventive measure against the COVID-19 coronavirus, in Lahore on April 5, 2020.

A young Christian woman was shot dead in public after she rejected unwanted physical advances, a marriage proposal and invitation to convert to Islam by a Muslim man in Pakistan’s Punjab province.

The Muslim man, identified as Muhammad Shehzad, murdered the 24-year-old Christian woman, identified only as Sonia, a resident of Fazaia Colony in Rawalpindi area, on Nov. 11 but the incident was reported only on Sunday by Pakistan’s The Express Tribune newspaper.

Sonia was killed in public while she was returning from work at a garment factory.

The victim’s family has said the accused had been harassing Sonia for the last six months and had tried to force a physical relationship with her, according to the U.S.-based persecution watchdog International Christian Concern, which said that Sonia refused these advances due to the difference in faith backgrounds.

As a “solution,” Shehzad proposed that Sonia should marry him and convert to Islam. Shehzad’s mother also met with Sonia’s family to negotiate an arranged marriage. But the family also refused the marriage.

“A few days before the incident, Sonia was again harassed by Shehzad,” Allah Rakha, Sonia’s father, told ICC. “Since she was a committed Christian she did not betray Jesus and sacrificed her life for her faith. We are being harassed and pressurized to withdraw the case against culprits. However, I want culprits brought to justice.”

Police have said a preliminary investigation suggests that the killing was carried due to personal resentment.

According to the Pakistani daily, another young Christian girl, Arzoo Raja, was reportedly abducted, forced to convert and marry a 44-year-old Muslim man in Karachi city in the province of Sindh.

A 2014 study by The Movement for Solidarity and Peace Pakistan estimated that about 1,000 women and girls from Pakistan’s Hindu and Christian community were abducted, forcibly married to their captor, and forcibly converted to Islam every year.

The issue of religion is also often injected into cases of sexual assault to place religious minority victims at a disadvantage, ICC said earlier. Playing upon religious biases, perpetrators know they can cover up and justify their crimes by introducing an element of religion.

Last month, U.K.-based Catholic charity Aid to Church in Need called on British Prime Minister Boris Johnson to grant asylum to a 14-year-old Christian girl, Maira Shahbaz, who was abducted at gunpoint during the COVID-19 lockdown and forcibly married and converted to Islam by a Muslim married man, Mohamad Nakash.

The Catholic teenager was abducted in April by Nakash and two accomplices while she was walking home in the Madina Town area in Punjab’s Faisalabad district. According to witnesses, the abductors forced the girl into a car and fired gunshots into the air as they fled the scene.

In August, Maira fled the home of her alleged husband, Nakash, weeks after the Lahore High Court ordered her to return to her abductor and ruled that she was legally married to the Muslim man.

The Lahore high court had ordered Maira to return to her abductor although Nakash was accused of presenting a false marriage certificate to the lower court that said Maira was 19 years old and they had wed in October 2019. The document not only failed to provide proof of consent from Nakash’s first wife, with whom he has two children, but the Muslim cleric whose name is listed on the certificate had denied involvement in the sham marriage.

The U.S. State Department has designated Pakistan as a “country of particular concern” for engaging in or tolerating egregious and systemic abuses of religious freedom. Pakistan has also been ranked as the fifth worst country in the world when it comes to Christian persecution on Open Doors USA’s 2020 World Watch List.

Source

What the Bible says about Santa Claus

What the Bible says about Santa Claus

In 1897, eight-year-old Virginia O’Hanlon wrote a letter to the editor of New York City’s The Sun newspaper. She asked, “Please tell me the truth, is there a Santa Claus?” 

News writer Francis Pharcellus Church soon responded in the newspaper’s editorial section with one of history’s most reprinted newspaper editorials: “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus.” 

He went on to explain “the existence” of Santa Claus in terms of the love and generosity that Christmas ushers in every December. He encouraged her not to be swayed by the skepticism of the age.

If only the answer were that simple. 

As with many holidays, there is history and myth intertwined in the traditions and origins of Christmas. But, for Christians, the most important, valid information comes from God’s word.

What does the Bible say about the jolly old man we see every Christmas in malls and store advertisements and for whom small children await in eager anticipation on Christmas Eve? The figure we know as Santa Claus who brings gifts piled up on a sleigh pulled by reindeer all the way from his home at the North Pole?  

The short answer, of course, is nothing. 

But there’s more to the story about Santa. 

There really was a St. Nick, and we can learn so much from his life. 

If practiced as first intended, Christmas traditions can convey spiritual truth and joy. And the purpose of this paper is to examine God’s word to find that truth and joy. 

Christmas is not just a holiday. It’s a holy day. It’s not a myth. It’s a fact.  

Let’s navigate the traditions and embrace the wonderful truth of the living Savior we celebrate this holy season.

Is Santa Claus real?

There’s reality behind the story and history of Santa Claus. 

There actually was a man known as Nicholas who was born in AD 280 in Asia Minor, which is modern-day Turkey. He was bishop of the church in Myra, participated in the First Council of Nicaea, and helped the church find the best language to describe the Incarnation of Jesus.  

St. Nicholas was beloved because he spent his life helping the poor and underprivileged. He was the first to initiate programs for mentally challenged children. His love for children led him to visit their homes at night disguised in a red-and-white hooded robe to leave gifts of money, clothing, and food in their windows or around their fireplaces. 

After his death, he was made the patron saint of sailors since his church was located in a port city and had an extensive ministry to those who traveled the sea. He was later named the patron saint of Russia. Nicholas was one of history’s most venerated saints, with more than five hundred songs and hymns written in his honor. Christopher Columbus arrived in Haiti in 1492 and named the port after him. By the year 1500, more than seven hundred churches in Britain were dedicated to him. 

The Dutch especially appreciated his life. They spelled his name Sint Nikolass, which, in America, became Sinterklass, or Santa Claus. 

His popularity grew through a poem written by Dr. Clement Clark Moore, a theology and classics professor at Union Seminary in New York. In 1822, he penned the classic, “A Visit from St. Nicholas,” better known today as “The Night Before Christmas.” Artist Thomas Nast illustrated the book, creating the figure we now know as the jolly Santa Claus. 

That’s the reality behind the story of Santa Claus. St. Nicholas’ selfless lifestyle was based on his love for God and people.

Now, let’s look at the actual Christmas story and why it should matter so much to our lives. 

Christmas nativity scenes all over the Christian world will once again be unpacked and displayed to relate the story of that glorious first Christmas: a beautiful young woman protected by her equally attractive young husband, adoring shepherds with their sheep, and three majestic kings from the Orient bearing their magnificent gifts for the baby lying in a manger.

But very little that blessed night happened the way our decorations depict it. Let’s discover why.

Why do we celebrate Christmas on December 25? 

According to our traditions, Santa Claus visits our homes on December 24, Christmas Eve. And we celebrate Jesus’ birth on December 25. But, do we know why we observe Christmas on that day? 

The night Jesus was born, the Bible tells us that the shepherds were in the fields tending their sheep (Luke 2:8), something they did not do in the winter. The Roman census, which brought Joseph and Mary to Bethlehem, would not have been possible in winter either.  

It is most likely Jesus was born in the springtime. Early scholars estimate the time around March 25 or sometime in April. But Christmas was not celebrated as a holiday for nearly four centuries.  

For many years, the Romans had celebrated the “birthday” of the sun each year on December 25 since that date is near the winter solstice in the Northern Hemisphere. It’s the beginning of the winter season. Pagan festivals marked the occasion for centuries before Christians began using the “birthday” of the sun as the birthday of the Son. 

By 1038, the Mass of Christ was called Cristes Maesse, from which we get the word “Christmas.” In 1223, St. Francis of Assisi assembled the first nativity scene.  

And so Jesus’ birthday is celebrated on December 25, and St. Nicholas is the “patron saint” of the holiday. 

And we give gifts to celebrate the greatest Gift. 

Where was Jesus born? 

Christmas actually began centuries before that blessed night in Bethlehem, as we will see later when we examine Old Testament prophecies.  

The little town’s greatest claim to fame before the birth of Jesus was the fact that King David grew up there, just outside of Jerusalem. He tended his flocks there as a boy and called Bethlehem his home, so that is why it is known as the “City of David” to this day. 

For centuries, wandering tribes used caves in this mountainous area as temporary shelters from the elements. And they were often used as homes for gypsies, nomads, and their families and animals. 

In time, people settled there, establishing the town they called Bethlehem, or “house of bread,” so named for the fertile fields amidst surrounding valleys. A road linking Jerusalem with Hebron to the north and Egypt to the south gave the area significance.  

Bethlehem’s location on this well-traveled route made it the perfect location for an inn, which was built near a cave and the hill later known as Golgotha. The cave was used as a stable for the innkeeper’s animals. The average cave size in the area was about thirty-nine feet long, eleven feet wide, low at the entrance, and nine feet high at the highest point. 

Our modern-day nativity scenes depict Jesus and his family and worshippers surrounded by beauty and serenity. They are lovely, but they are not the way it all was. If you have been in a cave, you know why. There’s no light except the fire one lights inside, and then the smoke stings the eyes and fills the lungs. There’s no air circulation, so it feels damp and musty.  

And animals were stabled here. Imagine the odors of a barn, multiplied many times. This was the scene where Jesus was born. He was placed, not in a wooden crib lined with hay, but on a feed stone feed trough chiseled out of a rocky platform, two feet off the ground. The Lord of the universe was placed where donkeys, mules, and sheep had been licking up barley and oats. 

But don’t see this as mistreatment or a lack of compassion. The innkeeper offered what he had on a busy night during the census when every room in the inn was full.

The wonder of it all is that Jesus chose to be born here. He was the only baby ever to choose his birthplace. He could have chosen Jerusalem, or Athens, or Rome, but he chose Bethlehem. He could have chosen a palace, but he chose to be born in a cave. 

Over time, the Romans attempted to eliminate the memory of Jesus’ birth here by planting a grove dedicated to their pagan god Adonis, the lover of Venus.  

But when Constantine the Great became a Christian, he and his mother began to build churches to commemorate holy sites and cleared away all pagan rituals. In AD 330, they constructed the oldest church building in Christendom, the Church of the Nativity, commemorating what is believed to be the site of Jesus’ birth. It is the most visited site in all of Israel, bringing millions of pilgrims from across the world to the place of our Lord’s birth. 

Why was it so important that all this happen in a cave? Not a house, or a palace, or a field, but a cave? For this simple reason: you enter a cave with low ceilings bowed down or on your knees. You come in humility. 

That’s how the shepherds came in worship. They entered on their knees. Eventually, the door to the Church of the Nativity was lowered as well, with the result that even today pilgrims must enter it stooped down, in humility. And this is as it should be. 

Christ before Christmas 

The cave where Jesus was born is the only earthly element of the Christmas miracle that existed across the centuries as all the preparations for Jesus’ birth were being made. Once you’ve learned all that Jesus did to prepare the world for his first coming, you’ll be sufficiently grateful. And you’ll be prepared for his return—not as a baby in a secluded cave, but as the Conqueror and King of the universe. 

Let’s begin at the beginning. According to God’s word, “All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made” (John 1:3). The baby whose birth we celebrate at Christmas “made the universe” (Hebrews 1:2), for “by him all things were created” (Colossians 1:16). He now “upholds the universe by the word of his power” (Hebrews 1:3). He is “before all things, and in him all things hold together” (Colossians 1:17). 

Think of it—a newborn baby created the mother who gave him birth and the shepherds who came to wonder and worship. He created the wise men who came eventually to celebrate his birth and the star that guided them to him. At the beginning of the Old Testament in the creation story, Jesus Christ himself created, and still sustains, all that is.  

Even before time began, God knew that he would bring the Messiah (Hebrew for “Chosen One”) to die for our sins, to take our place and punishment, to purchase our salvation. And, step by step, the Old Testament revealed this Messiah: the Lamb slain from the creation of the world (Revelation 13:8). 

Scriptures made clear his story in advance of his advent. He would be 

Descended from the line of Abraham (Genesis 12:2), Jacob (Numbers 24:17), Judah (Genesis 49:10), Jesse (Isaiah 11:1), and David (2 Samuel 7:12) 

Born of a virgin (Isaiah 7:14) in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2) 

Eventually rejected by his own people (Isaiah 53:3)

Sold for thirty shekels (Zechariah 11:12)

Forsaken by his disciples (Zechariah 13:7)

Silent before his accusers (Isaiah 53:7)

No detail was left unaddressed: 

At his death, his hands and feet would be pierced (Psalm 22:16).

He would be crucified with thieves (Isaiah 53:12).

No bones would be broken (Psalm 34:20).

The soldiers would gamble for his clothes (Psalm 22:18). 

He would suffer thirst (Psalm 69:21). 

He would be buried in a rich man’s tomb (Isaiah 53:9).

He would be resurrected (Psalm 16:10).

He would ascend (Psalm 68:18). 

And he now sits at the right hand of God (Psalm 110:1). 

All this was revealed centuries before it came to pass. And provisions for the spread of the gospel were being established too. All the preparation didn’t end with Jesus’ birth. 

It was only just beginning.  

A yearning for the Messiah 

The Old Testament closes with the Persian Empire firmly in control. They have defeated the Babylonians and allowed the Jews to return home. Cyrus and his Persians dominate the world. But when the New Testament opens, the Romans rule the world. What happened? 

In 332 BC, the Greek Empire under Alexander the Great defeated the Persians. The Jews overthrew Greek rule in 167 BC under Judas Maccabeus. But, in 63 BC, the Pharisees and Sadducees began a civil war that eventually destroyed the Jewish kingdom and led to Roman control. By the time the New Testament opens, the hated Romans had enslaved the Jews, and all the nation cried out for a Messiah, the One who would free them and save their people. There was a national yearning for the Messiah. 

A common language for the gospel 

By the first century, for the first time in western history, one language dominated the surrounding culture: koine or “common” Greek. If the letters/epistles of the New Testament were written today, Galatians and Ephesians would have to be written in Turkish, the Corinthian and Thessalonian letters in Greek, Romans in Italian, and Hebrews in Hebrew. But when the first Christmas came, everyone in the region understood Greek. The first Christian missionaries needed no language schools or interpreters. They could preach and write the gospel for everyone in a common language. 

A universal peace for the church 

Caesar Augustus brought political stability to the Roman Empire and ended the disastrous civil wars that had followed the assassination of Julius Caesar in 44 BC. Thus, the first Christian missionaries could move about the known region in relative peace. Today, it would require moving freely from Israel through Syria and Jordan, across Iraq and Iran, through Turkey and Greece, and across Serbia and Montenegro (formerly Yugoslavia), Croatia, Bosnia, Egypt, Libya, and Algeria. It couldn’t be done today. But they could. 

And there was a highly developed road system upon which these travels could be made. Augustus had developed the most comprehensive system of transportation the world had seen until our generation. Some of the roads built by him are still in use today.  

The early Christian missionaries traveled with relative ease to any part of the known world. All the while, God had been scattering the Jewish people across the world to provide beachheads for preaching the gospel. These scattered Jews brought their message of one God and his promised Messiah. The Romans had exempted them from Caesar worship and allowed them religious freedom as a “religio licita,” a legal religion. The Romans would eventually apply this freedom to Christianity as a Jewish sect until the faith had gained a foothold across the Empire. 

For centuries, God prepared the world for the coming of his Son. God did this because he could. And he rules on the throne of our world still today. 

Mary: The mother of Jesus and “the servant of the Lord” 

He also prepared the parents of Jesus for his birth.

Micah 5:2 announced the Messiah would come from Bethlehem. But Mary lived in Nazareth, some eighty miles away, a very long distance in those days of travel by foot or donkey.

So God prompted Augustus to take a census so as to make taxation more efficient and effective. And God had Augustus decree that each man or woman of the entire Empire must return to the city or village which was their ancestral home, where their family originated. And so millions of men and women and boys and girls rode and walked across the entire Empire to cities and villages across the known world, all so one young village girl could fulfill prophecy.

Mary was likely twelve or thirteen years old when the angel Gabriel visited her with the news that she would become the mother of the Messiah. 

She was “greatly troubled” by the news, as she later told Luke when he was writing his gospel (1:29). She certainly didn’t understand how she could be the mother of the Messiah and yet a virgin (Luke 1:34). Yet, she yielded in obedience to God’s plan: “Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word” (Luke 1:38). She called herself the Lord’s “servant,” a handmaid or slave girl, one who must do the bidding of her owner and master. She yielded her life completely to God that day. And history would forever be different because she did. 

Why Mary? Think of all the women God could have chosen to be the mother of his Son: a daughter of the high priest or a member of the Sanhedrin, or one of the families of wealth and influence in Judah. Why her? Why was this peasant girl so highly favored (v. 28)? And how did God know she would submit to his will in this way? 

She had already surrendered her body to God. She was indeed a “virgin,” as she claimed to be (v. 34). This was a surprising fact in first-century Nazareth. The village was constructed on a hillside, with a populous trade route below. This road, which connected Tyre and Sidon with Jerusalem, was populated with Roman soldiers, Greek merchants, and travelers from around the world. Many of the village girls dressed and acted so as to attract the men traveling along this route, seeing them as their way out of Nazareth to the larger world. But not Mary—she kept herself pure. 

She had surrendered her mind to God as well. Do you remember the song she sang upon meeting Elizabeth after the Messiah had been conceived in her womb? (vv. 46–56). It is one of the finest psalms of praise in all of God’s word. And it is composed from passages in 1 Samuel, Psalms, Isaiah, Micah, and Exodus.  

This girl (who would be considered a seventh-grader today) had memorized these parts of the word of God. And so she used them to worship her Lord and God. She knew the word and will of the Lord through years of study and devotion. She had surrendered her mind to God.  

And now she would surrender her future to God also. To become pregnant when she was only engaged could cost her everything. Who would believe her story about an angel and a Son of God? 

She was willing to give up her parents and family, to be abandoned by them. To give up Joseph, the man who would be her husband for life. To give up her future and even her life, as she could be stoned to death as an adulteress (cf. Deuteronomy 22:23–24). As long as she and the child lived, people would question her morals. And yet she was willing to do the Lord’s bidding, to surrender her future and all her ambitions to God. 

And she would surrender life itself to his will. She would stand helpless and watch her boy die with nails in his hands and feet, a spear in his side. Those nails would pierce her own soul and that spear her own heart.  

She would gather with her son’s disciples at Pentecost and receive his Holy Spirit. She would serve this child as her Lord the rest of her days on earth, and then in heaven. 

Joseph: The earthly father of Jesus and the “forgotten man of Christmas” 

Joseph was a carpenter from Nazareth who was betrothed to Mary when she became pregnant with the Messiah. He was descended from King David and is the only man in the New Testament besides Jesus to be called the “son of David” (Matthew 1:20). And so Bethlehem was his hometown as well. 

Although carpentry was an honorable trade, a carpenter depended on the payment of his townspeople, and Nazareth was a very poor village. Joseph would later teach his craft to Jesus as he grew up (Mark 6:3).

As was the custom of the day, Joseph followed the normal three steps in making Mary his wife. First came the arrangement, made many years earlier. Her father agreed that, when she came of age, she and Joseph would be married. 

Next came the engagement, when Mary turned twelve years of age and Joseph was in his thirties, as was the custom of the day. For an entire year, they were married legally but not sexually. Mary continued to live in her parents’ home while Joseph lived in his house. If Joseph had died during this year, Mary would have been called “the virgin who is a widow.” 

Then finally would come the completion, when he took her from her parents’ home into his and they became husband and wife. 

In his gospel, Matthew calls Joseph “just” or righteous (Matthew 1:19), which means “one who keeps the law.” As a result, he would not be able to wed a pregnant Mary. The rabbis forbade it. God’s law was clear. 

This fact left Joseph with two options: 

He could divorce Mary publicly by calling her and her family before the entire town, accuse her of adultery, and divorce her before everyone. In fact, he could have her stoned as an adulteress (Deuteronomy 22:13–21; Leviticus 20:10). 

Or he could divorce her privately. With just two witnesses, he could go to her house and declare them divorced, pay the fine to the priest, and be done with her. 

Either way, she would be destitute. Her own family would probably disown her, she would raise her child on her own, and she would live in shame. He saw those as his only options. 

But God had another plan. 

After Joseph had decided to divorce Mary privately, as the kindest thing for her, an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream, telling him, “Joseph, son of David, do not fear to take Mary as your wife, for that which is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 1:20). 

He staked his life and future on this word from God, taking Mary as his wife and adopting Jesus as his own, thus making him legally a “son of David,” as he was. 

The ancient prophet had announced that the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2). And so God moved the entire Roman Empire to force her subjects to return to their hometowns for a census so that Mary and Joseph would be made to return to Bethlehem, their family home. All so Jesus could be born there. 

Joseph has been called the “forgotten man of Christmas,” but we can know he was obedient when it was difficult.  

In the year 747 by the Roman calendar, or 6 BC by ours, the Roman Emperor had issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire world. This was so he could list everyone on his tax rolls, organized by towns of birth.  

Everyone in all of Israel who was descended from David was forced to come to Bethlehem, with one inn available. When Mary and Joseph arrived, it was late at night. Due to the crowds, the innkeeper had already put out a sign: “No room.” But, he could not turn away a young woman who was great with child and ready to give birth. 

He took them to the cave used as a stable, no place for a mother-to-be, but a shelter when nothing else was available.  

And there the Son of God was born. 

How many wise men were there? And when did the magi visit Jesus?

Nearly all of our traditions about the magi who visited Jesus are erroneous. 

Our nativity scenes have three wise men since they brought three gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh. But the magi usually traveled in groups of twelve or more for safety. 

They are often depicted as kings, although they were not. Psalm 72:8–10 speaks of kings from Tarshish, Sheba, Seba, and distant shores bringing tributes and gifts. However, Tarshish was a distant Mediterranean seaport located as far west as Spain. Sheba was in southwest Arabia, where Yemen is today, and Seba was south of Egypt, where Sudan is located today. The context of the psalm states that all nations and their rulers will worship the Messiah. The same is true of Isaiah 60:6.

As Matthew recorded, the magi, or wise men, came from the east (v. 2:1), likely Persia, which is Iran today. It is believed that invading Persians spared the Church of the Nativity in AD 614 because they saw a golden mosaic over the doorway which depicted the magi in Persian headdress and clothing.

Like the shepherds who were visited by the angel as they attended sheep, they were not welcomed in Jewish worship.

They were known as wise men as they were the most learned people of their society, scholars in philosophy, medicine, and science. And they were religious men. Their background gave them the necessary skills for following a star to find the Christ child, and their religious training gave them the expectations of an upcoming Messiah. 

For centuries, wise men of the East had watched the stars as windows into the future, believing that they announced the birth of those destined for greatness. And so they believed the advent of a special star would announce the long-awaited arrival of the King of the Jews. 

Unlike what many of us have been taught, the wise men did not follow the star to Bethlehem; they saw the star, then went to Jerusalem in search of the Messiah. There, the star appeared again: “The star they had seen in the east went ahead of them until it stopped over the place where the child was” (Matthew 2:9).

To this point, the star could be a natural phenomenon, but nothing in the skies had ever pointed travelers to a specific house. But, that is what happened.

While our manger scenes depict the wise men at the birth of Jesus, that is not the case. They traveled over nine hundred miles to find the King of the Jews, which meant completing their journey took them several months from the time they first saw the star. It is more likely the Christ child was around two years old when they arrived with their gifts.

As we set up our nativity scenes this year, may we remember the real story of Christmas and how much planning our God put into sending his Son into our lives that we might know his Father.

Transform traditions into truth

When the angels of heaven appeared to the bewildered shepherds on the first Christmas night, “the glory of the Lord shone around them” (Luke 2:9). God’s messengers brought his light to our dark world. The candle lit on that first Christmas has never gone out. And it never will. 

Light a candle

One of the earliest Christmas traditions was lighting candles to symbolize this coming of the Light of God. Believers often still light candles in their places of worship and put them on their window sills at home.  

Wherever they were lit, they brought the light of Jesus into a dark room and soul. In the medieval world, the tradition grew. Fathers told their children that the Christ Child returns to earth each Christmas Eve, hoping to find a home and heart open to him. They placed candles in their windows to tell Jesus that he was welcome in their home. 

Such a tradition is worth repeating in our culture today. When Jesus first visited our planet, he fulfilled the promise made seven centuries earlier: “The people dwelling in darkness have seen a great light, and for those dwelling in the region and shadow of death, on them a light has dawned” (Matthew 4:16; Isaiah 9:2).  

Christ was the first candle of Christmas. 

His best friend, John, perhaps saw the effect of Jesus’ life and ministry more than any other person. Sixty years later, he would explain his Lord’s impact this way: “In him was life, and the life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.” (John 1:4–5). The candle he lit on the first Christmas shines still today. 

Jesus spent his years on earth bringing the light of his love to our dark world. The first Candle of Christmas enlightens every soul that welcomes the glow of his grace. 

When Jesus returned to his Father, he did not take his light with him. Instead, he handed it to you and me. Like Olympic torchbearers, we have been handed his flame. It now rests in your hands. It will spread through the world to the degree you give it to those you can. 

Jesus was clear about this responsibility and privilege: “You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden. Nor do people light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on a stand, and it gives light to all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven” (Matthew 5:14–16). “You” is plural in the Greek. Every believer is the custodian of the candle of Christmas. 

If Jesus is your Lord, his light is in your hands. 

Many of our other Christmas traditions are equally spiritually significant. When we learn their history, we can find ways to relate their meaning to our lives and to the Christmas season. 

Decorate a Christmas tree 

From Christmas candles we turn to Christmas trees. According to tradition, the first led to the second.  

Martin Luther, the great German reformer, was walking in a forest toward his home one clear evening. He looked around and was struck by the beauty of the stars shining through the trees. Determined that his family would share this beauty with him, he decided to cut down a small tree and bring it home. 

He hung candles on its branches, signifying the stars twinkling through the tree’s branches. His fellow Germans picked up the custom and later brought it to our country. Now, 25–30 million real Christmas trees are bought each year. 

The tree reminds us of the beauty of the world Jesus brought into being. And it also foreshadows the tree of Calvary upon which he died for us. 

Now he calls us to take up his cross in our lives (Matthew 10:38). When last did it cost you something to follow Jesus? 

Whenever you see a Christmas tree this year, think of the One who died on the first “tree of Christ” and be grateful. Then determine to pay any price to follow him. 

Adorn your door with a wreath

The Christmas wreath predates Christianity. 

In Roman times, and in Greek culture before them, a wreath signified victory in an athletic competition. Much like your Olympic gold medals, wreaths woven of leaves or made of gold were given to the winners of significant races and contests. 

In the same way, you and I wear the wreath of eternal victory in Jesus. He has won the battle against sin and Satan. If he is your Lord, eternal security is yours. You are in his hand, and no one can take you from his protection and care (John 10:28). 

When you see a wreath this Christmas season, pause to give thanks for the victory won for you by Jesus. 

Plant a poinsettia

The Honorable Joel Poinsett was a member of President Van Buren’s cabinet and minister to Mexico. While traveling in the Mexican countryside, he was attracted to a beautiful plant he found growing there. Upon his return to South Carolina, he brought the plant with him and began growing it. It is named for him today. 

The beautiful red leaves of the poinsettia plant, blooming especially during our Christmas season, remind us of the blood of Jesus, shed on the cross for us all. 

When you set out these plants this year, pause to remember the fact that Jesus was born to die. We could not climb up to God, so he climbed down to us. He is the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world (Revelation 13:8). 

Hang mistletoe 

Mistletoe is another ancient Christmas custom. 

The medieval English believed that mistletoe possessed medicinal qualities and magical powers. They thought that when two enemies met under the mistletoe, a magical spell would cause them to lay down their arms and embrace. From that time to this, young men have hoped that the magic of mistletoe would help them with young ladies as well. 

The mistletoe reminds us that Jesus is the Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6). He alone can bring lasting peace between nations and souls. 

Is there someone with whom you’re at odds this Christmas season? A person who needs your forgiveness? A person who needs to forgive you? 

Mistletoe won’t help much, but the Messiah will. 

Send a Christmas card 

We will each send and receive Christmas cards (or emails) again this year.

The practice was introduced to England in the 1840s, as schoolboys sent cards to their parents for Christmas. The custom was exported to America in the 1870s.  

When you receive a card in the mail, by email or in person this season, stop to pray for the one who gave it. When you send a card, pray for the one who will read it. And you will make the Christ of Christmas more real than any card ever could. 

Turn holidays into Holy Days 

Each of these Christmas traditions has a spiritual story to tell. 

Each can draw you closer to the One whose birthday you celebrate this season. 

Will your season be a passing holiday or full of life-changing holy days? 

How do believers not get swept into the near-frantic atmosphere of modern-day Christmas? So many parties to attend, gifts to buy, and a big meal to prepare. Not to participate at all seems extreme and almost surrenders to the culture’s propensity to leave Jesus out of it. 

While there are many ways to keep Jesus’ birth at the center of this season, let me offer some ideas that you might use or adapt to your Christmas observance to keep it holy. The term holy simply means set apart or different. How can your observance of Christmas be set apart or different from the culture’s gift-giving frenzy?

Observe Advent

The word advent comes from Latin and means arrival. While often ascribed to more liturgical church traditions, Advent counts down the days to Christmas in a way that builds anticipation and instills the story of Christmas in our children and grandchildren. 

Advent calendars are widely available, but be sure it’s observing Christmas as Jesus’ birth, not a more secular approach. You and your family could also have an Advent wreath observance. 

Give to missions

Have a discussion with your family about ministry or mission opportunities that you could support as a family. Many denominations and churches have special offerings this time of the year in support of missions. Many have community or missions projects to help meet local or global needs.

Perhaps your largest gift financially this year could be to missions. Make the gift a family decision. Allow your children or grandchildren not only to participate in the decisions but also to divide your gift among family members so that everyone gives. As a family, you could commit to praying or volunteering with ministries.  

Bring your nativity scene to life

In recent years, “The Elf on the Shelf” has become a popular tradition. But I recently heard of a variation of that idea with a nativity scene. 

Mary and Joseph and the shepherds could be scattered around your home and moved daily in search of a place for baby Jesus to be born. The baby does not appear until Christmas morning, when Mary, Joseph, and the shepherds all arrive at the manger scene. Maybe the wise men could still be traveling from the East. 

There are a variety of ways to make the Christmas holidays holy days. Discover what works best for your family. 

Conclusion  

I might answer Virginia O’Hanlon’s question about Santa Claus differently than Francis Pharcellus Church did. 

But I would not want to take the imagination, joy, love, or generosity out of it. 

Rather, I would want to show little Virginia how so many of the ways we observe Christmas today tie us back to the first Christmas.  

We don’t want to lose sight of the real story of Christmas.

And, yes, Virginia, there is a real Jesus.

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Making Christmas only about Jesus Christ

 

Baby born at 28 years old from a frozen embryo sets record

Who will succeed Alex Trebek as the host of Jeopardy!, one of the longest-running shows on television?

Trebek filmed enough episodes to go through Christmas, but the producers will have a decision to make in 2021. Former champion Ken Jennings, who begins filming future shows today as the interim host, may be the front-runner. Journalists Anderson Cooper and George Stephanopoulos may be on the shortlist. Trebek himself nominated Betty White in a 2018 interview, but the ninety-eight-year-old actress might be a bit of a stretch. 

Here’s what the host, whoever he or she may be, will need to do to succeed like Alex Trebek: imitate his humility. 

Trebek once told an interviewer, “You have to set your ego aside. The stars of the show are the contestants and the game itself. That’s why I’ve always insisted that I be introduced as the host and not the star. And if you want to be a good host, you have to figure out a way to get the contestants to—as in the old television commercial about the military—’be all you can be.'” 

The host and not the star 

This is a Christmas season like no other in living memory. Time reports that “the US COVID-19 outbreak is worse than it’s ever been.” Dr. Anthony Fauci warned in an interview yesterday that, following Thanksgiving travel, the US could see “a surge upon a surge.” 

But even amidst the pain and tragedies of the pandemic and the uncertainties of our political future, the essential truth of Christmas remains unchanged. Jesus is still Immanuel, “God with us” (Matthew 1:23). It is still true that he was born that we might be born again (John 3:7). He came to die so that, as he promised, “everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die” (John 11:26). 

Christmas is about Christ. And Christ does not change: he is “the same yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8). He was the same during the Civil War, the 1918 pandemic, World War I, the Great Depression, and World War II. He was the same on September 10, 2001 that he was on September 12, 2001. 

If we would experience the abundant life that Christ came at Christmas to provide (John 10:10), the key is to be the host of this season and not its star. 

“With joy you will draw water” 

Alex Trebek knew that the success of Jeopardy! depended not on him but on the contestants. Paradoxically, the show’s success resulting from his humility made him one of television’s greatest success stories. 

If you want to experience the hope, peace, and joy of Christmas, make this season about Christ. Isaiah invited us to declare: “Behold, God is my salvation; I will trust, and will not be afraid; for the Lord God is my strength and my song, and he has become my salvation” (Isaiah 12:2).

If Christ is your Christmas “song,” this will be the result: “With joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation” (v. 3). And you will “host” the Christmas season by helping others share the joy you have experienced: “You will say in that day, ‘Give thanks to the Lord, call upon his name, make known his deeds among the peoples, proclaim that his name is exalted. Sing praises to the Lord, for he has done gloriously; let this be made known in all the earth'” (vv. 4–5). 

Our problem is that our culture makes the birthday of Jesus about anything but Jesus. Imagine attending a birthday party at which the guests gave presents to each other, but no one acknowledged the one whose birth made the party possible. Or celebrating the gifts Jesus came to give rather than the One who gives them.

In The Problem of Pain, C. S. Lewis described the fall of the first humans and the self-idolatry to which we are tempted as a result: “They desired to be on their own, to take care for their own future, to plan for pleasure and for security, to have a meum from which, no doubt, they would pay some reasonable tribute to God in the way of time, attention, and love, but which, nevertheless, was theirs not his. They wanted, as we say, to ‘call their souls their own.’ 

“But that means to live a lie, for our souls are not, in fact, our own. They wanted some corner in the universe of which they could say to God, ‘This is our business, not yours.’ But there is no such corner. They wanted to be nouns, but they were, and eternally must be, mere adjectives.” 

“There is only one relationship that matters” 

How can we make this Christmas season about Christ? 

We will focus this week on practical ways to experience the power and joy of Jesus as we celebrate his birth. For today, let’s decide that we want to know Christ more intimately than ever before, that we want to experience his transcendent and transforming presence in ways we never have. Let’s reject the temptation to “call our souls our own” and refuse to make Christmas about us rather than about our Lord. 

In other words, let’s make Jesus the star of the season. 

In today’s My Utmost for His Highest, we find my favorite paragraph in all of Oswald Chambers’ writings: “There is only one relationship that matters, and that is your personal relationship to a personal redeemer and Lord. Let everything else go, but maintain that at all costs, and God will fulfill his purpose through your life.”

Will God “fulfill his purpose through your life” today?

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Baby born at 28 years old from a frozen embryo sets record

 
Baby born at 28 years old from a frozen embryo sets record

Molly Everette Gibson is the first baby born at 28 years old, but she won’t be the last, according to Mark Mellinger of the National Embryo Donation Center. 

Before she was born, Molly was frozen by her genetic parents for more than 27 years. They donated her (as an embryo) to the NEDC so she could be born to another set of parents, Mellinger, marketing director for the NEDC, told The Christian Post.

Molly is described as a healthy infant who weighed 6 pounds, 13 ounces and measured 19 inches long at birth. Based on her embryonic age, she is 28, since her embryo was frozen on Oct. 14, 1992. 

“[Her parents, Ben and Tina Gibson, are] doing really well. I still think they’re in a little bit of amazement. This was a couple who, if you had asked them five years ago if they could have a baby, they probably would have laughed at you,” said Mellinger. “They’re just exhausted by media interviews. They’ve just run out of things to say.”

To help couples who are unable to conceive, doctors unite the eggs and sperm of couples in laboratories to create embryos. Often, they try to conceive as many embryos as possible to make the treatment efficient, he said. The remaining embryos are then frozen and stored after the parents give birth to their desired number of children.

Molly’s birth beats the odds in multiple ways. Miscarriages among babies born using in vitro fertilization are slightly more likely than with natural pregnancies. The numbers for known miscarriages suggest that IVF results in 2% higher miscarriage rates than natural pregnancy, verywellfamily.com reported.

Roughly 1 million embryos wait frozen across the United States, according to the NEDC website. Few statistics on these tiny lives exist, but Mellinger estimates that only 40,000 to 60,000 ever grow up. Some parents destroy their embryos, and others donate them to be used in science experiments, but the majority leave them frozen because they don’t know what to do with them.

“As a pro-life organization, we believe that what [Molly’s birth] shows, first of all, is God’s heart for life,” Mellinger said. “The freezing techniques back then [were] not as good as they are now. However, if embryos were frozen properly and cared for properly in the interim, they can come to birth and be perfectly normal, happy children. The shelf life of frozen embryos might be infinite.”

Molly’s older biological sister, Emma Wren Gibson, was also frozen before her birth. Born three years before Molly, she was frozen for over 24 years.

Embryologists at NEDC say it’s likely an embryo will soon be born after 30 years frozen, Mellinger said. Molly is the oldest known baby born. Statistics on frozen embryos are uncommon, but no one seems able to show an older baby, he added.

In the U.S., there are no laws that forbid the creation of excess embryos using IVF, Mellinger told CP. 

“There are actually very few laws governing reproductive medicine. In America, there just are not a lot of regulations concerning the practice,” he said. 

U.S. law considers embryos property, not people, Mellinger said. The word "adoption" applies to them because it fits the circumstance. When couples adopt one, it’s considered a property transfer, and the baby has the names of the birth parents, not the genetic parents, on the birth certificate.

“The genetic parents relinquish all rights and claims of ownership when we take custody of the embryos,” he said. “They are Ben and Tina’s from the moment of birth and before.”

NEDC leads the world in births facilitated through embryo adoption, with 1,013 births to its record, its website reads. Working to thaw embryos and place them in women allows embryologists to hold life in their hands, Mellinger said.

“I’ve heard our embryologist Carol Sommerfelt talk about how extremely humbling it is,” he said. “She has a real heart for this. She has said many times, ‘I see miracles happen every day.’”

Mellinger said that pro-life and pro-adoption people should find common ground in supporting the embryo adoption movement. Although many Christians question the ethics of IVF, it’s clear that embryos need parents, he added.

“Each believer has to carefully consider where he or she falls on [the morality of IVF]. It’s not something that the Bible obviously addresses in an explicit way. It’s a matter of conscience. I think embryo adoption is a needed practice. The bottom line is, the lives are here. These tiny, frozen lives are here.”

Friday, December 4, 2020

Pastor Establishes First Church for Transgender People in Pakistan


A pastor has established the first transgender exclusive church for professing Christians who otherwise feel rejected from traditional Christian churches in Pakistan.

Ghazala Shafique, a rare female pastor in the country, explained to the Associated Press that she named the church the “First Church for Eunuchs” as scripture shows that eunuchs are favored by God. The term is reportedly used for transgender women in South Asia, even though some find it to be derogatory.

According to Christian News, biblical commentaries assert that the term “eunuch” actually refers to men who choose to remain single and not take a wife because of “physical circumstances” or because of their devout commitment to serving God (see Matthew 19:12).

Shafique was given the idea for the church by Neesha Rao, the country’s only transgender lawyer. Rao, who is a Muslim, lamented as to how her Christian transgender friends have struggled to announce their faith while fearing criticism from other Christians because of their lifestyle.

“I am a Muslim child and a Muslim transgender, but I had a pain in my heart for the Christian transgenders,” the Rao explained. She added that she attends Shafique church on a weekly basis.

She also criticized clerics for their treatment of their transgender congregants as well as parents for their rejection of transgender children.

In Pakistani churches, transgender people are told to sit in the back and males are instructed not to dress as women.

Arsoo, a biological man who identifies as a woman, explained that he had a rough time finding a place to sit in a church where men and women are seated in separate sections.  He explained that he was told by the women to sit with the men while the men told him to sit with the women.

Additionally, churches where Arsoo attended told him not to sing as they considered it a “dishonor” for transgender people to partake in a worship service.

Video footage posted by the AP shows transgender people and children singing and playing instruments during a service in Shafique’s church.

A sign behind the podium features the name of the church and the term “khwaja siras,” which translates to “transgender.”

The Church of Pakistan, the denomination Shafique serves under, has refused her attempts to get the church recognized.

“I asked the bishop of the Church of Pakistan. He said, ‘Oh, there are some theological issues,’” she explained. “I am still waiting to hear what are those theological issues which cannot be resolved when they are accepted in the Bible.”

While Pakistan is an overly conservative country, transgender people were officially recognized as a third gender.

Source

Christmas now an annual holiday in Iraq