ECFA Announces New ‘Affiliate’ Membership

The Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability (ECFA), an oversight and accreditation organization with more than 2,000 Christian nonprofit organization members, today announced the creation of a new “affiliate membership,” which will greatly benefit smaller ministries and churches.

ChristiaNet Poll: Prayer in Public Schools Should Be Allowed

ChristiaNet.com, the world’s largest Christian portal with twelve million monthly page loads, in a recent poll asked the question “Should prayer be allowed in public schools?” Out of 1,545 participants, 95% responded with a resounding “Yes”. The majority of those polled feel that school prayer should be allowed, but not mandatory. Bill Cooper, President of ChristiaNet.com, states, “Daily prayer is very integral to a Christian’s walk.”

Trouble in Vietnam

Recently, the police in “B T” made a veiled threat to all new believers who would not deny Christ. Police said they could not protect new Christians from being beaten. Earlier this week unknown men badly beat a man disabled from polio. The victim allowed Christians to meet in his house.

North Cleveland To Host Farewell Concert of Crabb Family

Cleveland, TN–From a church in rural Kentucky to an annual concert audience of 800,000, the Crabb Family has managed to break through musical genre barriers to reach people from all walks of life with the message of the gospel. From the beginning of their musical ministry nearly 10 years ago, they had no way of knowing just what was in store.

Church, City of Detroit Fight Atheist Suit Over Funds

By Ed Thomas, OneNewsNow.com

A church that was denied reimbursement through a Detroit city program for its building renovations because of a legal challenge by atheists, has appeared before a judge asking for summary judgment in the case filed by the atheists against the city.

St. John’s Episcopal Church, the church denied the reimbursement, was allowed entrance by the court as an intervenor in the case in December, becoming a defendant. Church legal counsel Dale Schowengerdt of Alliance Defense Fund says St. John’s made $180,000 in renovations to its exterior after contracting for 50 percent reimbursement through a Detroit Development Authority program designed to help enhance the appearance of city buildings and lots ahead of the 2006 Super Bowl. Nine of the 91 properties which were eligible participants were churches or church-owned properties.

Schowengerdt explains that “because of that, a group called American Atheists sued to have this plan declared unconstitutional.” After American Atheists v. City of Detroit was filed, the city withheld reimbursement funds to St. John’s and other church participants.

Schowengerdt and the church are out to prove the discrimination against religious organizations contradicts the Establishment Clause found in the First Amendment to the Constitution.

“The counterpart to that is the free exercise clause,” he explains, “and the [U.S.] Supreme Court has held numerous times that if you exclude religious organizations, [if] you exclude churches from a neutral program, that [is] evidence [of] hostility to religion, not neutrality.”

The ADF attorney says the atheist group’s argument is based on a “cramped interpretation” of the First Amendment. He states that reimbursement promised to a church for non-religious purposes is no more an establishment of religion than the reimbursement promised to non-religious groups.

(Source: OneNewsNow.com)

DISCLAIMER: Church of God and Faith News does not necessarily endorse or sanction all or any part of this news item.

Northern Luzon School Certified Level Two

A site visit team from the Division of Education and Church of God World Missions recently traveled to the Philippines for an evaluation visit to the Church of God Theological College in Cauayan, Isabela Province, Northern Luzon.

« Older Entries   Newer Entries »