07A-07 Christian More News

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Excerpt from news.google.com

Abdulbaqi Saeed Abdo is behind bars for something many do every day: he posted on Facebook.

Abdo, a Yemini asylum seeker, has been in prison for two-and-a-half years because — after converting from Islam to Christianity — he began discussing theological matters in a private Facebook group with other recent converts to Christianity.

The Alliance Defending Freedom International, the religious liberty advocacy group representing Abdo, recently announced the persecuted believer has declared a hunger strike in a recent letter sent to his wife and family.

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Excerpt from NY Post

A Kentucky high school allegedly held a graduate’s diploma when the student went off script during his graduation speech to preach his belief in Jesus.

Micah Price received the green light to praise Jesus Christ in his commencement speech at Campbell County High School in Alexandria, KY on May 24, but followed his address with “urging other Christians to stand up.”

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Excerpt from www.washingtonexaminer.com

More Christian migrants have resettled in the United States and Canada than any other religious group over the past three decades, according to a new analysis by an American think tank.

A Pew Research Center study released on Monday found that 7 in 10 international migrants living in the U.S. or Canada identify as Christian, a category that includes Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, Eastern Orthodoxy, Oriental Orthodoxy, Restorationism, and the Church of the East.

The Christian immigrant population grew from 72.7 million in 1990 to 130.9 million in 2020.

The 59 million total immigrants who have resettled in the two North American countries make up 16% of their combined populations. Pew did not include Mexico in the North American figures.

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Excerpt from news.google.com

A Ninth Circuit panel found Monday that a Christian ministry in Washington state had standing on its claims that the state’s anti-discrimination law may potentially unconstitutionally restrict its decisions on hiring employees.

The three-judge panel determined a federal judge in 2023 improperly dismissed a Christian ministry’s lawsuit against Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson and other state representatives and reverses that ruling. The panel held that the Union Gospel Mission of Yakima, a Christian organization in central Washington, had standing for its claims under Article III, in a case questioning the constitutionality of the Washington Law Against Discrimination.

The Washington Law Against Discrimination prohibits religious organizations from exclusively hiring employees of a certain faith unless the position is ministerial.

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Excerpt from www.lifenews.com

With the world focused on the Olympics, the American elections, the war in Gaza, and the shifting balance of war in Ukraine, the topic of assisted dying is flying under the radar.

But in the United Kingdom, it is high up on the political agenda. Lord Falconer, a former Lord Chancellor who has been lobbying for legalisation of assisted dying for years, says that with Sir Keir Starmer as Prime Minister, Britons have a once-in-a-lifetime chance to change the law.

“This is such an opportunity,” he told The Observer. “The last time this was voted upon, there was a clear vote against it in the Commons. But of the 650 MPs who were present in 2015, 477 of them have gone. It’s a completely new House of Commons with a wholly new atmosphere, with a prime minister who is saying: ‘You must decide as a free vote – and if you decide in favour, the government will make sure that procedural stratagems don’t doom the bill.’”

As columnist Polly Toynbee, an ever-reliable voice for progressive policies, put it: “It will join the roll call of great liberal reforms that only happen under Labour.” (These include abortion and divorce reform, gay rights, ending the death penalty, decriminalising suicide, and reform of obscenity laws.)

 

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Excerpt from www.westernjournal.com

At its core, professing the Christian faith means believing with all our heart that God brings light out of darkness.

Thus, it should not surprise us when we see it happen, but it still has the power to amaze.

At a press conference on Friday at the woke and blasphemous Olympics in Paris, gold medalist Yemisi Ogunleye of Germany responded to a moderator’s question by breaking into a gospel song in praise of Jesus.

To his credit, the moderator prompted Ogunleye with a question seemingly designed to call forth a worshipful hymn.

“Yemi, is it true you sing in the gospel choir?” he asked.

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Excerpt from news.google.com

The U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Justice Department have struck a deal with the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction (NCDAC) to expand religious freedoms for those within the state’s prison system. This arrangement will allow increased access to group worship and kosher-for-Passover meals, ensuring observance opportunities for religious holidays like Passover, according to a statement by the Justice Department.

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Excerpt from Muslim Mirror

More than 300 Christian leaders in the United States, including denominational heads, are calling on the U.S. State Department to designate India as a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC) due to escalating violations of religious freedoms, particularly against Christians. The leaders, representing a wide range of denominations and Christian organizations, have expressed concern over the increasing violence and “systemic persecution under the Hindu nationalist government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi”.

In a letter sent earlier this month, the leaders, including 18 bishops, three archbishops, and numerous clergy, highlighted the worsening situation for religious minorities in India since Modi’s government came to power in 2014. The letter, organized by the Federation of Indian-American Christian Organizations in North America, is the first concerted effort by U.S. Christian leaders to address religious persecution in India.

The letter attributes the surge in violence to a “Hindu ethno-nationalist or Hindutva supremacist political ideology,” which it claims has distorted both the Hindu religion and India’s constitutional secular democracy. This has led to state-sanctioned violence against Christians, Dalits, and other religious minorities, both in public and within state institutions.