Organization Helps Rebuild Quake-Damaged Nepal Radio Station

Despite border delays and monsoon-drenched roads, Reach Beyond workers are succeeding in their efforts to rebuild a Christian radio station in the isolated Nepal village of Harmi, allowing thousands to hear both the good news of Jesus Christ and vital community information each day.

How This Classic Prayer Connects Jews and Gentiles

When Jesus taught His disciples the Our Father prayer, how did He intend for them to use it? When should we pray the Our Father, and how should we pray it?

Sonbranch Music Releases Music of Healing

Sonbranch Music is pleased to announce the worldwide digital release of Restored on iTunes, Amazon Music, Apple Music, Google Play, and other fine digital retailers. The ten songs of Restored are a contemplative journey of prayer and invitation for God’s presence, a cry from the heart for healing and wholeness, the reassurance of God’s love, and a bold proclamation to live life for Christ no matter what.

Churches Embrace Olympic Refugee Team, Other Athletes

As many in the world observed and cheered the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, church leaders spoke out in support of the Olympic refugee team and the place of public honor it offered for refugees competing in the games.

In the United States, the Presbyterian Mission Agency, a ministry and mission arm of the Presbyterian Church (USA), a World Council of Churches (WCC) member church, called on the membership of the church to support “Team Refugees.”

“The life of a refugee during these times is scary. They’ve lost their homes, their countries and live in this kind of limbo existence,” said Susan Krehbiel, associate with Presbyterian Disaster Assistance.

“This is a very big deal. As people of faith, we understand our connection as one human family,” said Krehbiel. “Until now, this group has not been represented in one of the most unifying events in the world.”

The Olympic refugee team marched with the Olympic flag immediately before host nation Brazil during the opening ceremony. The team had its own entourage including five coaches and five team officials. The group is staying in the Olympic Village alongside all of the competing athletes.

As the Olympic games have commenced, the personal stories of refugee team members have inspired people all over the world. Kenyan world-record-winning runner Tegla Loroupe was selected by the International Olympic Committee to head the refugee team.

While refugees shared their stories of triumph over adversity, many also said they still hoped to represent their home countries someday, and called for an end to the conflicts and humanitarian crises that caused them to flee their homes.

Several church leaders expressed hope that the team’s participation in the games would only be uplifting to refugees but would also inspire people to open their hearts and home countries to refugees, as well as support peace-building efforts to create a world in which refugees could return home.

In Leeds, United Kingdom, a congregation of another WCC member church, the Church of England, promoted a recording with almost 200 singers of an unofficial Olympic anthem for Team Refugees called “The World Is Our Song.”

Churches provide welcoming spaces

The presence of WCC member churches in Rio during the Olympics is very diverse. In Copacabana, Rio’s most famous beach, a Norwegian-Swedish Christian venue was created to not only welcome church members but to foster dialogue about refugees and bridging cultures.

As the Olympic games started on 5 August, the Seaman’s Church and the Church of Sweden opened the doors of a joint Scandinavian meeting place in the Olympic city, inspired by previous experiences at the Olympic games in Sydney, Athens and Beijing.

Besides creating a space for welcoming church members, and encouraged by the need for reflection and dialogue about the current refugee crisis in Europe, the Seaman’s Church is organizing seminars at the Norwegian Consul General on the subject “When our values meet a foreign culture.”

The Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD) also offered a spirit of accompaniment for athletes and spectators. The EKD co-sponsored the presence of an ecumenical delegation formed by ministers from both the EKD and the Roman Catholic Church in Rio to accompany the German delegation. Since 1972, Catholic and Protestant churches have appointed pastors to the Olympic games.

For Rev. Rolf Rieck, pastor of a small congregation of the Evangelical Church of the Lutheran Confession in Brazil (IECLB) in downtown Rio, “the Olympic values prevail when we show ourselves open to welcome our neighbors and we act as God’s instruments for transformation and new hope for all,” he said.

The Primate of the Episcopal Anglican Church of Brazil gave a warm welcome to Olympic athletes and visitors in Rio, at the same time criticizing the games’ administrators for what he called “serious mismanagement.”

Archbishop Francisco de Assis da Silva said that the Olympic games “bring together the peoples of the world through healthy competition in several individual and team sports” and provide the opportunity to “encounter, learn, and share the world’s diversity.”

However, da Silva also said that the “serious mismanagement” of the construction of the Olympic Village and the very tight security surrounding the games had caused “additional social concerns” arising from popular discontent and demonstrations on top of the pre-existing political tensions in the country.

The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world.

(Source: Christian Newswire)

‘Church Finance Today:’ Ways Churches Can Help Pastors

A survey by the National Association of Evangelicals reveals that the majority of pastors lack confidence when dealing with church finances, have no formal financial training, and many have little money set aside in personal savings.

Four Basic People Needs the Church Must Meet

Jesus told us that He came so that we would have “life to the fullest” (John 10:10). If that was Jesus’ goal while He was on Earth, don’t you think that should be a goal of the church?

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