Persecution Watch


Pakistani Pastor Released on Bail


A Pakistani pastor imprisoned on blasphemy charges since December has been released on bail, Christian Solidarity International (CSI) reported. Jailed in Lahore, Pakistan, Anwar Masih was accused of insulting various prophets. His accuser, Nasser Ahmed, a recent convert to Islam, is said to have a grudge against Masih and previously was accused of severely beating a neighbor. In a May 28 letter to Pakistan President, General Pervez Musharraf, the Rev. Hans Stuckelberger, president and founder of CSI, called for a broader review of the blasphemy law, calling it an open incitement to violence.


Christian Children Lured To Buddhist Monasteries


Children from Christian families in Myanmar are being lured from their homes and placed in Buddhist monasteries. According to Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), the children between the ages of 5 and 10 reportedly have their heads shaved and are trained as novice monks, never to see their parents again. During a visit with Chin and Kachin refugees in India in March, CSW officials also heard other accounts of persecution and discrimination. The government of the Southeast Asian nation, located between India and Thailand, offers incentives to impoverished villagers to convert from Christianity to Buddhism in Chin state, an area that is 90 percent Christian.


At least 350 People Die in Religious Clash in Nigeria


Two months after Muslim militants killed a pastor and 48 members of his church, fresh religious violence has erupted in the town of Yelwa in the central state of Plateau. The Muslim-Christian clash in May resulted in the deaths of at least 350 people, Compass Direct reported. Elsewhere, more than 120 people were killed and thousands more displaced when inter-religious violence erupted in Sarkin Kudu and Dampar villages in the northern state of Taraba in April. The skirmishes followed the murder earlier this year of a Church of Christ in Nigeria pastor and members of his congregation. Samson Bukar died on Feb. 23 when Muslim militants attacked his church in Yelwa.




Pentecostal Pastor Mediates Riot

Authorities credit Marcos Pereira da Silva with bringing an end to a three-day prison revolt in Brazil that left 31 dead

A controversial Pentecostal pastor is credited with ending a three-day riot at the Benfica detention center in Rio de Janeiro that left at least 30 inmates and one guard dead in late May, the Associated Press (AP) reported.


After calling in representatives from the Roman Catholic Church to negotiate peace, police allowed in Marcos Pereira da Silva, pastor of the Assembly of God of the Last Days, located outside Rio de Janeiro, three days after the riot began.


Popular among gangs and known for mediating riots, Da Silva persuaded inmates to release the remaining hostages in exchange for a promise that prison guards would separate detainees from rival gangs, the New York Times said.


“If the pastor didn’t resolve this, the police would have stormed the place … and the tragedy would have been much greater,” Astirio Pereira dos Santos, the head of Rio’s prison authority, told GloboNews, the Times reported.


The uprising began May 29 when inmates attempted to escape. When authorities tried to stop them, prisoners attacked the guards, took their guns and held 26 guards and staff hostage. Authorities said bodies were decapitated, mutilated and burned, the Times reported.


Rebellions are common in Brazilian prisons, which are often criticized for overcrowding and abuse, the AP said. The bloodshed at Benfica marked the worst prison riot since 1992, when police killed more than 100 inmates at Carandiru prison in Sao Paulo, the Times said.




Thailand Missionary Visits Bars to Reach Prostitutes

Nella Davidse says desperate women come to the popular resort town looking for opportunity
Three nights a week, missionary Nella Davidse goes to bars and hangs out with prostitutes.


She lives in Pattaya, a popular resort town on the coast of Thailand, where an estimated 20,000 women work as prostitutes. Most are lured by the promise of big money and the hopes of meeting a rich, foreign husband. Many are raising children in extreme poverty. Most loathe their jobs, but feel they have no choice.


It’s not an easy place to be. But, Davidse says, it’s where God wants her.


“I needed perseverance,” said Davidse, 42, who left her native Holland to join Youth With A Mission (YWAM) in Thailand nine years ago. “For a long time we didn’t see much fruit. I felt like I had my feet in the door, and if I pulled back, it would smash. … I had to say … ‘God, I trust in You and not in people.'”


Davidse first trained with YWAM in northern Thailand. While still taking language lessons, she found herself on a short outreach to Pattaya. She walked the streets and knew God had called her here.


In 1999 Davidse founded the Tamar Center, a downtown mission offering English lessons, job training and discipleship to the bar girls of Pattaya. “We came with an invasion of eight people, all committed for five years,” she said. “After a year, only I was left. That was hard.”


One by one, life circumstances and discouragement took Davidse’s team away. But she stayed, focusing at first on relationship-building and daily intercession, adding English lessons and job opportunities and finally moving the center into an old school building.


From there, she and seven other single women counsel, give health-care advice and teach regular language classes. Lessons are preceded by a short devotional and usually close with worship in English and Thai.


Many at the center make greeting cards as a means of alternate income; the cards are sold on the Internet at . Training in sewing or hairstyling is also offered annually.


“God told us we shouldn’t call this place Sodom anymore,” Davidse said. “We should call it Nineveh because this is the city that will come to the Lord.”


The center joined with an American missions team in March to host two dinners for bar-girls. Almost 50 were invited the first night; on the second, that number more than doubled. Tamar staff reported several healings and say even the local teenagers hired to serve dinner came forward at the evening’s close and asked to receive Christ.


“Revival is on the way,” said Surapon Yuthiwattana, who pastors New Vision Christian Fellowship in Pattaya. “We believe that God will revive Pattaya city–every ministry and church and government and business.”


But things are still hard for Davidse. Part of the trouble is the culture. Thais profess Christ with ease, she says–tell them He is something good, and they want Him. But without a clear understanding of who God is or what He requires, they falter.


“We see girls coming to the Lord and really excited, but to really persevere and be changed–we haven’t seen it,” she said.


Among other things, she’s praying that the Holy Spirit will convict the city of its sin. “They come to Jesus because they want something,” Davidse said. “It feels so different sometimes, me living my life for God, making sacrifices for Him–and here are people who only want something from Him.”


Still, it’s clear God is working here–even in unexpected ways. The U.S. Navy visits Pattaya each year, dropping off 3,000 sailors for a little R&R. When that happens, Davidse and her staff join sailors and local churches in a worship service at a local hotel. Not long ago, Davidse met an American couple whose son had become a Christian in a Pattaya hotel room while there with the Navy.


For Davidse, the incident was further proof that God works in mysterious ways. “When we came here, we felt God saying: ‘Don’t focus on the darkness. Focus on Me,'” she said. “It’s like the seed in the ground–dying to self and trusting God. I just want to be obedient.”
Benjie Hughes in Pattaya, Thailand




Sight and Sound


BOOKS


Discover the Book God Wrote

By Bill Bright, Tyndale House
hardcover, 256 pages, $.


Campus Crusade for Christ founder and president, the late Bill Bright, hands readers a map to discover the treasure of the Bible. Discover the Book God Wrote is Bright’s magnum opus. In it, he leaves no doubt that he cherished every verse in the Bible as a rare gem.


New and old converts will appreciate the clarity and passion with which Bright wrote. Although the book could be adapted for group study, it is meant for private devotional time. The 18 chapters are divided into four parts: Why Should I Believe the Bible? How Can I Understand the Bible? What Is the Bible About? How Does the Bible Change My Life?


As the reader and completes the “Discover the Treasure” section at the end of each chapter, an intimacy with the Bible bonds him to God on a deeply personal level. He truly develops a right relationship with God as He reveals Himself in His Word. Even the four appendices coach him in developing intimate friendship with God, offering summaries of the books of the Bible, a one-year Bible-reading plan and two methods of Bible study.


Those looking for an informal companion to the Bible will find Bright’s book extremely useful. The book should be on every bedside table, along with a well-thumbed Bible.
Pamela Robinson


Drawing Near

By John Bevere, Thomas Nelson
Publishers, hardcover, 224 pages, $.


Three years removed from the success of his last book, Under Cover, the question for John Bevere has been “What’s next?”


What’s next is Drawing Near: A Life of Intimacy With God, an explosive inspection of Scripture, leading to the very center of the “heart of God.” New and longtime believers will find this message instrumental in helping them develop a close relationship with the One who is “passionate” for us.


Early on we discover that God sent Moses to deliver His people so that they could come to Himself and “worship in the desert”–outside the routine of Egypt–a step that is not only before, but also above entrance into the promised land.


As we delve deeper, so does Bevere, describing three distinct levels in both communication and relationship. Ultimately, we come away knowing what is essential for reaching and remaining in a place of intimacy with Him.
J. James Estrada


Changing Church

By C. Peter Wagner, Regal Books,
softcover, 248 pages, $.


Wow! This is a book that will blow readers’ minds. C. Peter Wagner is known as an authority on spiritual warfare and church growth and movements within the body of Christ.


In Changing Church: How God Is Leading His Church Into the Future, a follow-up to Churchquake, Wagner takes a look at the diminishing old wineskins of denominational Christianity and the vibrant uprising of the new wineskins of nondenominational, independent charismatic and/or evangelical churches.


Wagner cites the impetus for this movement as the resurgence of the office of apostle in what he is naming the Second Apostolic Age. It is proving to be extremely timely considering the crises that are occurring in some denominations today. Some readers will no doubt be going through the transitions of wineskins while others may be angered by Wagner’s conclusions about denominational structures.


This author does not pull any punches and is not afraid to tackle controversial topics within the body of Christ. In fact, there is enough controversy to almost ensure the reader may question or take exception to one point or another. Yet, Wagner’s remarkable ability to bring perspective to these momentous changes makes this a must-read for all leaders–old wineskin and new wineskin alike.
Deborah L. Delk


MUSIC


Facedown

By Matt Redman, Sixstepsrecords.


Singer-songwriter Matt Redman, known for his Passion conferences worship duties and penning new classic worship tunes (“The Heart of Worship,” “Let My Words Be Few” and “Better Is One Day”), is regarded as a pioneer in the modern worship movement. For his Sixstepsrecords debut, he delivers 13 new songs recorded live at the Facedown songwriters conference in Atlanta.


Standout tracks include the celebration of “Praise Awaits You,” the solemn piano praise of “Pure Light,” the worship ballad “Breathing the Breath” and the challenging prayer of “If I Have Not Love.” With “Nothing But the Blood,” Redman takes an opportunity to rework the classic hymn with fresh verses, which blends
perfectly with the newer songs.


With the continued popularity of the modern worship movement, Facedown should certainly generate interest from the masses enjoying the rock-flavored praise of Delirious, Passion and Redman’s labelmates Chris Tomlin and David Crowder Band.
Natalie Nichols Gillespie


Upstairs

By Shane & Shane, Inpop.


Shane Bernard and Shane Everett are two guys in the Christian music business that are almost impossible not to like. Their songs are quiet masterpieces, and the talented duo demonstrates their musical prowess once again on the unadorned Upstairs, a collection of six new songs and four old favorites.


Even better, the disc is actually a CD-ROM, with 20 minutes of video footage and chord charts for a few songs. Shane and Shane do it all here (with production, percussion, and piano help from Will Hunt).


Barnard wrote the songs, sings and plays acoustic guitar, mandolin and accordion; Everett sings and adds banjo and acoustic guitar. Both also get production credit.


The result is a collection of Scripture-based worship songs filled with pleading, longing and pure desire to draw closer to the Creator. “I Miss You” is a perfect example, stating: “Oh, I miss you so / The feel of forever / Oh, that taste I know / It hurts to remember. … ” The upbeat “May the Few” exalts the Lord, and “Yearn” begs for more of Him. “Still at Shore” is the only departure from a heavenly focus, a delicate love song that somehow still fits.
Natalie Nichols Gillespie


Hold You High

By By the Tree, Fervent.


With its fourth album in four years, Hold You High, By the Tree returns firmly to its roots in the arena of modern worship, leaving rock ‘n’ roll to some of the band’s other albums. After several departures from the band, rumors at the beginning of the year were that By the Tree was breaking up. Instead, the group is back with a new project that is atmospheric, sometimes ethereal (the remake of the classic hymn “It Is Well With My Soul” is a good example) and definitely vertical.


Produced by band frontman Chuck Dennie, Hold You High remains planted in the middle of the modern worship sound, breaking little new ground but covering familiar territory adequately. One misstep is the cover of “God of Wonders.” When the original of a song is nearly perfect (as is the Caedmon’s Call/Mac Powell version), it’s best to leave it alone.


By the Tree is at its best on its own turf, with highlights including the rhythmic, poetic “Jesus Washed” and the new version of the band’s hit “Reveal” from its 2001 Dove Award-winning debut album.
Natalie Nichols Gillespie


Even More

By Anthony Evans,
INO Records.


Anthony Evans’ debut release, Even More, is a rarity. He manages to do what few have done before him: strike that delicate balance between adult and urban contemporary styles without seeming overzealous or alienating committed fans of those genres.


Son of Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship Church pastor Tony Evans, Anthony pulls from his own varied experience. He got his start singing in church, then in college as part of Liberty University’s Sounds of Liberty. Later, he did a two-year stint with the group Truth.


Today, at the ripe old age of 25, Evans has toured with Kirk Franklin, Evans’ mentor and an Oak Cliff member, and has performed with Franklin at such high-profile venues as The Tonight Show.


Franklin makes appearances on two tracks, “Incredible” and “Unity (We Stand),” which features the soulful vocals of Crystal Lewis. But Evans also will win fans of Christian Top 40 artists such as Ginny Owens and MercyMe. Though “I Love You” has a smooth, urban feel, the opener, “You Know My Name,” and “Here’s My Life” are clearly pop.


Evans has production assistance from the likes of Pete Kipley (MercyMe), Dan Muckala (Aaron Neville, Mandy Moore), Shaun Shankel (Point of Grace, Kimberley Locke) and Greg Bieck (Joey McIntyre). But what makes Even More stand out is Evans’ gentle, sincere vocals. He shines on the soft, mellow ballads, namely “The One” and “Come Home.”


Lyrically, Evans pulls from personal experience, telling his own story between the lines. He honors his dad on “Just Like You,” on which he sings, “All that I desire is to follow your footsteps for the rest of my life / So one day when I have a son of my own / I pray that he will see in me all I see in you.”


And on “Restore Me,” he sings of those times when he’d like God to let him just start over: “Restore me / I need Your mercy / Take me to the place I used to be / Use all the pain and the hurt to do a greater work / And restore me.”


This is not one of those CDs a person buys for just one or two standout songs. It’s the sort of release that can be played from start to finish, over and over, simply because Evans makes it so pleasant to listen to.
Adrienne S. Gaines


MUSIC SPOTLIGHT


Jeremy Camp: He Knows God Is Faithful


For Jeremy Camp, the 26-year-old musician with two CDs and a new DVD, worship has become a way to share with others that God remains faithful.


He started playing guitar after he went to college in 1997. Soon he was writing songs and leading others in worship in Southern California venues.


In the midst of this, tragedy struck. In February of 2000, his wife of two months died of cancer. Camp then remembered a pastor at a youth camp who shared about the death of his own wife. After that sermon, Camp, then 16, decided to become a Christian.


When Michelle died, Camp contacted this man. He says: “This pastor prayed for me. He began to share how God had been faithful in his life, despite losing his wife. He said: ‘Go out and minister. Even if you don’t understand. Know that you will reach many people. Know that you will see their lives changed for eternity.'”


Camp took his advice and continues to proclaim God’s faithfulness. He also enjoys spending time with his new wife, Adrienne. They were married in December of 2003.


Camp’s music is often overshadowed by his testimony but that doesn’t bother him. As a result of last year’s shows, more than 500 people made commitments to Christ.


Camp has responded to tragedy in his life by forging new songs of worship, expressions of his faith in God’s bigger plan. He next recording, Restored (BEC Recordings), will release in November.
Jonathon Heide


CHARISMATIC TOP SELLERS


1. A Divine Revelation of Hell

Mary K. Baxter (Whitaker House)


2. Pigs in the Parlor
Frank and Ida Mae Hammond
(Impact Christian Books)


3. Total Forgiveness
R.T. Kendall (Charisma House)


4. Matters of the Heart

Juanita Bynum (Charisma House)


5. The Three Battlegrounds
Francis Frangipane (Arrow Publications)


6. The Tongue
Charles Capps (Harrison House)


7. Prison to Praise
Merlin R. Carothers (Merlin R. Carothers)


8. Pathways to Spiritual Understanding
Richard Powers (Hensley Publishing)


9. A Divine Revelation of the Spirit Realm
Mary K. Baxter with T.L. Lowery

(Whitaker House)


10. The Believer’s Authority
Kenneth E. Hagin
(Faith Library Publications)




Pray for Africa


Of the 43 million people in the world with HIV or AIDS, 70 percent live in Africa. I was aware of the problem because we’ve reported on it in Charisma and because I serve on the board of World Relief, an organization that helps persons with AIDS. But I had to see it for myself to get the full impact of the heartbreak it causes and to see what Christians are doing to make a difference.


In early June I traveled with my 17-year-old son, Chandler, to Kenya, Rwanda, Malawi and Mozambique, where I saw some of the worst poverty I’ve ever seen. The people live on an average income of $40 per year. The grinding poverty contributes to the spread of AIDS.


But I was impressed by what World Relief is doing. This organization has mobilized churches from many denominations to help prevent AIDS and to care for those dying of AIDS and for orphans (one in 12 children in Africa is orphaned because of AIDS).


“It’s not just a government problem,” one pastor in Rwanda told me. “It’s a problem of all the people. Satan brought HIV/AIDS because of the sin of fornication, and the church must respond.”


World Relief works through churches to foster awareness of how HIV is transmitted, to teach people how to care for and support those who have the virus, and to strengthen families economically through microeconomic development. In many places the programs are working. I was told that in the early ’90s 30 percent of the population of Uganda had HIV. Now it’s only 6 percent.


But the statistics don’t reveal the human side of the story as visiting does.


In Kware, a slum outside Nairobi, Chandler and I visited the home of Milka, who learned last November that she has AIDS. She got HIV from her husband, who left her to raise two daughters alone.


Milka is getting treatment and is still able to function, but she worries about the day when she can no longer work. She wants to live long enough for her 6-year-old to finish school. Chances are, she won’t last that long.


Milka became a Christian after being helped by World Relief. That’s the story we heard over and over. Though the AIDS- prevention training and care of the sick are not specifically evangelistic, the people being helped are prompted to ask about becoming a Christian because of the love of those who are reaching out to them.


While we were there, we also saw more evangelistic programs, such as youth clubs organized by World Relief in Malawi. In Rwanda, we saw a microeconomic development program that has provided $35 loans to 17,000 desperately poor people. The people meet weekly in groups of 35 to repay the loans, encourage one another and learn business principles.


The seemingly small amount of money allowed one woman to buy an electric razor and set up a barbershop in the local marketplace. Another woman bought a sewing machine and does mending and tailoring. She has earned enough to send her children to school, repay her loan and buy a goat–a highly prized possession in Rwanda.


What impressed me most was seeing the church be what it is supposed to be–the hands of Christ extended to the desperately poor. It helped me understand why the church in Africa is growing in spite of the increasing pressure of Islam.


I returned from Africa determined to focus more on helping the poor and encouraging others to do the same.


Toward the end of my trip I asked pastors in Mozambique what message I should bring back to America. One Assemblies of God pastor stood and spoke for the group:


“Pray God will give us strength, and pray the AIDS patients who aren’t saved will be saved,” he said. “And pray we will find homes for the orphans.”


He reiterated: “Ask them to pray for us. Their prayers can reach across the sea to help find a cure for AIDS.”


Stephen Strang, publisher of Charisma, invites you to support the work of World Relief through a tax-deductible gift to Christian Life Missions, our nonprofit partner. You can send it to P.O. Box 952248, Lake Mary, FL 32795-2248.




Faith Under Fire

President Bush talks with Charisma publisher Stephen Strang and other journalists about the war, the election and his prayer life.

Charisma publisher Stephen Strang and eight other journalists representing religious publications interviewed President Bush at the White House on May 26. Bush talked candidly about the Iraq war, his views on Islam, same-sex marriage and his personal Christian faith.

Bush primed the interview with a lengthy opening statement and then allowed reporters to ask questions. Besides Charisma, the publications invited to the interview included Christianity Today, World, Touchstone, Lutheran Witness and Reporter, Good News and First Things. The following is an edited transcript of the interview’s highlights.

President Bush’s opening remarks: Let me tell you a little bit about what’s on my mind. Obviously, Iraq is on my mind. We are in the process of transferring full sovereignty and eventual freedom to the Iraqi people as they head toward free elections. It’s a historic opportunity to bring peace to the world.


It’s not going to be easy. These are people who have lived in tyranny. America must be firm in our resolve and confident in our belief that freedom is the Almighty’s gift to every person in the world and that free societies will be peaceful societies.


In the short run we will use every asset to prevent an enemy from attacking us again. I believe they want to do it because they want to sow discord, distrust and fear at home so we will begin to withdraw from parts of the world where they would like to have influence to spread their Taliban-like vision–the corruption of religion–to suit their purposes.


I will not yield to them–to their blackmail, their murder, their death or the fear that they would try to cause through death.


Here at home, the job of a president is to help culture change. I call it changing the culture from one that says, “If it feels good, do it” and “If you’ve got a problem, blame somebody else,” to a culture in which each of us understands we are responsible for the decisions we make in life. I call it a responsibility era.


Part of the responsibility era is promoting a culture of life. Father Richard John Neuhaus helped me craft what is still the integral part of my position on abortion, which is: Every child welcomed to life and protected by law. That is the goal of this administration.


Part of the government’s role is to foster responsibility by standing with those who have heard a call to love a neighbor, which is the center point of the faith-based initiative–one of the most important domestic initiatives I have pushed. It recognizes the right relationship between hearts and souls and government. Here’s the way I put it: “Government can hand out money, but it cannot put love in people’s hearts or sense of purpose in people’s lives.”


Government must recognize that those heart-changers are an important part of changing society one soul at a time. And government has a responsibility to support and nurture institutions that provide hope and stability. That’s why I took the position I took on the sanctity of marriage. I believe that it’s a very important issue for America.


I think marriage has worked. It’s the commitment between a man and a woman. That shared responsibility has been the cornerstone for civilization, and any erosion of that definition will weaken civilization as we have known it.


I call for a constitutional [marriage] amendment, and I want the American people participating in the process. I don’t want this decided by judges. It’s too big an issue, and the constitutional process is a sure enough way to get people involved through the amendment process.


And finally, I say to the people all the time, “Thank you for your prayers.” Something is happening in America. When I’m walking the rope line, people say things different than they did four years ago.


The thing that they say different is, “Mr. President, we pray for you.” I’ll bet you every other person or maybe every third person says, “Mr. President, my family prays for you.”


It’s not, “Good luck, I hope you tear down your opponent.” It is, “My family prays for you.” And that is the incredibly sustaining part of the job as president.


Just an aside on a more personal perspective in case you are interested. I read Oswald Chambers every morning. He helps me understand how far I am on my walk. He’s a great Christian writer.


Then I’m reading a devotional by the former chaplain of the Senate, Lloyd John Olgilvie. And next year I will read The One-Year Bible again. I read it every other year and a half.


People say, “When you do you pray?” I pray all the time. You don’t need a chapel to pray. Whether it is in the Oval Office … you just do it. That’s just me. I don’t say that to try to get votes. I’m just sharing that experience with you.


Q: A lot of people are taking potshots at you for being a man of faith and expressing it in the public square, especially in Europe on the BBC. France seems to be bewildered by you. How do you feel when you hear that?


A: I think I have a fantastic opportunity to let the light shine, and I will do so as a secular politician. My job is not to promote a religion but to promote the ability of people to worship as they see fit.


There’s nothing more powerful than this country saying you can worship any way you want or not worship at all. On the other hand, I can’t hide the fact that I am influenced personally.


Every day that I go to a town, I meet someone who has done something in their community to love a neighbor. And every time I get in front of a microphone and one of those people is in the audience, I herald their accomplishment. It’s amazing the public interest in those stories. It is an easy way to lift the sights of the country by showing examples of people who love.


Q: You are quoted as saying, “I don’t do nuance,” in the context of war.


A: Can I explain that? When you’re trying to lead the world in a war that I view as being between the forces of good and the forces of evil, you have to speak clearly. There can’t be any doubt. When you say you are going to do something, you’ve got to do it. Otherwise there will be confusion.


It is incumbent upon this powerful, rich nation to lead–not only lead in taking on the enemies of freedom, but lead in taking on those elements of life that prevent free people from emerging from disease and hunger.


And we are. We feed the world more than any other country. We’re providing more money for HIV-AIDS in the world. We are a compassionate country.


Q: You have at times described Islam as a religion of peace. You’ve caught flak for perhaps overdoing that a little bit. Then in London you said that [Christians and Muslims] worship the same God. A lot of our evangelical friends criticized that. Is it possible that there is … within Islam … something inherently evil that stands in the way of freedom?


A: We are dealing with extreme, radical people who have a deep desire to spread an ideology that is anti-women, anti-free thought, and anti-art and science. They couch their language in religious terms, but that doesn’t make them religious people. I think they conveniently use religion to kill.


The religion I know is not one that encourages killing. I think they want to drive us out of parts of the world so that they are better able to have a base from which to operate.


I think it’s very much more like a coming “ism” … like communism. It knows no boundaries. I see their ambition as finding safe haven, and I know that they want to create power vacuums into which they are able to flow.


I think they have a perverted view of what religion should be, and it is not based upon peace, love and compassion–quite the opposite. These are people who will kill at the drop of a hat, and they will kill anybody, which means there are no rules. And that is not my view of religion.


Q: What are you willing and able to do to defend marriage and stop the gay-marriage movement?


A: I took a strong stand publicly and laid out a constitutional amendment, which in itself becomes a benchmark for people to rally around. It was a statement from the presidency that says the country has an alternative to [what] they’re seeing on their TV screens.


But in order for a constitutional amendment to go forward, the people have to speak. Now, I’ll be glad to lend my voice, but it’s going to require more than one voice. And it’s going to require people from around the country to insist to the members of Congress that the constitutional amendment process is necessary for the country.


The idea of giving people a chance to express themselves is a very important part of the constitutional process. I will tell you the prairie fire necessary to get an amendment passed is simmering at best. I think it’s an accurate way of describing it.


It’s essential that those who articulate the position that defends traditional marriage as the only definition of marriage do so in a compassionate way. I like to quote [the Gospel of] Matthew: I’m not going to try to take a speck out of your eye when I have a log in my own.


Therefore, this dialog needs to be a dialog worthy of the nation and worthy of a debate over a constitutional amendment. It’s a very important discussion and one that should not be politicized.


Q: The 2000 election was one of the most unusual in American history. Some would say you are lucky. But in light of your faith, how do you analyze what happened in the election?


A: The closeness of the election was due to the fact that it didn’t end election night. It was an interesting test of patience. It’s like a marathon runner who has given it his all and is depleted and worn out, and the guys forgot to tell you that it’s not 26 miles but 29 miles. You never really get to finish.


But I did get to finish in a way.


Laura and I went to our ranch and just said, “You put the best people in place to help on the vote count down there, and be prepared for the presidency if it happens.” I was quite calm during that period. I really was.


I was spending a lot of time out of doors. I was tired. I was worn out. I had really given it my best shot and obviously I wanted to win.


But it was a different feeling because you know it was a legal thing at that point. It was a confusing period for the American people as well. It obviously got settled but it was just part of my presidency.


A president shouldn’t worry about how history will judge him. I know how short-term history will judge me. If I were to read the editorial pages, I’d figure it out because they’re the ones who write the history.


It’s going to take a while for history to really judge the accomplishments of a president. Maybe 20 years from now we’ll be able to figure out how I fit in. But the big things are going to take a while. When you hear this thing about being worried about my standing in history, I’m not. Most short-term history is written about people who particularly don’t want me to be president to begin with.


Q: At the United Methodist general conference we passed a resolution that’s not gotten a lot of press, urging civil legislation affirming marriage as between a man and woman. That passed by 77 percent, to the consternation of a lot of folks. That’s very significant. I think we’re the first mainline church to be on record supporting the Federal Marriage Amendment. Chuck Colson said there doesn’t seem to be a sense of urgency from folks in the churches across the country. It sounds like we need to somehow ratchet up the energy in that concern. Is that what you are saying?


A: People have got to understand that the definition of marriage is being changed. The reason I thought that a constitutional amendment was the right avenue on this issue was because it would reaffirm the current definition of marriage and prevent it from being changed decision by decision or act by act.


Q: You said something to the effect that your job is not to promote a particular religion, but you can’t help but be influenced by your personal faith.


A: My job is to make sure, as president, that people understand that in this country you can worship any way you choose. You can be a patriot if you don’t believe in the Almighty. You can honor your country by being as patriotic as your neighbor.


Q: You have had strong support from Christians who believe, like


Pat Robertson and others, that Israel is promised its land by God and that religious conviction motivates their political conviction. I’m wondering to what extent you think along those lines.


A: I view Israel as a friend and ally in democracy who is in a rough neighborhood. And therefore, step one, I made the commitment that our government will stand side by side with Israel against anybody who tries to annihilate her.


Secondly, I believe the best solution for peace in that part of the world is for there to be a peaceful democratic Palestinian state on her border. It should be run by men and women who hold the aspirations and hopes of the Palestinian people dear to their hearts, not their own corrupt aspirations. I believe it’s possible.


I see development of a Palestinian state as a major change agent, along with a free Iraq, in a part of the world that desperately needs free societies. Out of this will come the ability for people to worship as they see fit, the ability for people to raise their kids as any human parent desires. Out of it will come the ability for people who have entrepreneurial instincts to realize their hopes.


I’ve been to Israel and I view it as the Holy Land as well. I view it as a precious piece of ground and as an important part of our history. I also understand that my job is to use the prestige and power of America to try to bring peace.


In my position I can’t help but be a practical person when you see the pressures that are put on the world through conflict, violence and terror. So that’s why I took the position I took. I took it from a perspective of seizing this moment in history and leaving behind a more peaceful world for the good of all.


Q: What is the hardest aspect of the [Iraq] war for you personally, and how has your Christian faith affected your perception of the war?


A: The death. That’s the hardest part of any war. Knowing that a mother, father, husband, wife, son or daughter is lonely and sad and grieves because of the loss of a loved one.


My faith sustains me because I ask for God’s blessings, strength, forgiveness and love. Part of my job is to comfort as best I can.


And interestingly enough I also get sustained by the loved ones. To walk into a room full of people–or maybe a room with one person–who has lost a loved one and hug them and laugh with them, cry with them, hold them, whatever I can do to add a moment of inspiration in their life.


After most of those encounters I’m the one who gets inspired. The person who is supposed to be inspired does the inspiring. And you can attribute anything you want to it. But I can just tell you the practical effects of being with people of such strength.


And you know you hear the amazing statements from the mouths of these grieving souls that many times they are inspired by the Almighty. It’s a powerful reaffirmation of faith—how from the grief comes such hopeful words and such sustaining words.


I think a person’s faith helps keep perspective in the midst of noise, pressure, sound–all the stuff that goes on in Washington. A person’s faith helps you to keep vision. In fact it helps clear your vision. One of the prayers I ask is that God’s light shines through me as best as possible, no matter how opaque the window.


I’m in a world of fakery, obfuscation and political back-shots. So I’m very mindful about the proper use of faith in this process. You can’t fake your faith nor can you use your faith as a shallow attempt to garner votes. Otherwise you will receive the ultimate condemnation. Therefore the best way for faith to operate in somebody is to let the light shine–as opposed to trying to get my job mixed up with the preacher’s job.


And the only way that you can do that is just be yourself without crossing any lines of politics and religion. Separation of church and state is important in America. And by that I mean that people of faith should participate in the state.




News Briefs


BUSH CAMPAIGN CRITICIZED FOR CHURCH SOLICITATION


The Bush campaign has been accused of manipulating religion for political gain. The flap started after Bush opponents got wind of an e-mail Luke Bernstein, a Bush campaign coordinator in Pennsylvania, sent out June 1. In the message Bernstein said he hoped to enlist 1,600 Pennsylvania churches to help pass out campaign information to churchgoers, encourage voter registration and serve as a gathering place for voters “friendly to President Bush,” the New York Times reported. Steve Schmidt, a campaign spokesman, said the e-mail was meant to “build the most sophisticated grass-roots presidential campaign in the country’s history,” the Times said. Critics said the message blatantly violated the separation of church and state.




SUPREME COURT DISMISSES PLEDGE CASE ON TECHNICALITY


On June 14, the Supreme Court dismissed Michael Newdow’s case challenging the constitutionality of the phrase “one nation, under God.” An atheist, Newdow sued to ban the Pledge of Allegiance from his daughter’s school, saying it violated the separation of church and state. But in their ruling, eight members of the court agreed that Newdow, who is in a custody battle with his daughter’s mother, did not have sufficient custody of the child to claim legal authority to speak for her. Several Christian groups praised the decision, but expressed concern that the pledge remained intact because of a technicality. “Instead of settling this question once and for all, the Court has left the nation to wonder if God’s name will be found unconstitutional if another challenge is brought in a procedurally correct fashion,” said Focus on the Family founder James Dobson.


ROD PARSLEY LAUNCHES ‘CENTER FOR MORAL CLARITY’


Pastor Rod Parsley will be touring Ohio through the month of September encouraging people to register to vote. The campaign is part of a new initiative he launched called the Center for Moral Clarity (), which is aimed at mobilizing Christians to engage in public policy issues. Senior pastor of World Harvest Church in Columbus, Ohio, Parsley said he wants to “be an agent of change who will help drive America into a paradigm shift that will bring us back to the discarded values of the past.” Saying prayer, information and activation are the primary means he will use to shape the culture, grow healthy families and strengthen the nation’s moral base, Parsley began his campaign in July, urging Christians to write their senators asking them to support the Federal Marriage Amendment.


CHRISTIANS SEEK TO DEBUNK THE DA VINCI CODE


Several Christian authors are taking on Dan Brown’s best-selling novel, The Da Vinci Code, which claims Jesus Christ impregnated Mary Magdalene and married her. In Breaking the Da Vinci Code (Thomas Nelson), Dallas Theological Seminary professor Darrell Bock argues against the history presented in Brown’s novel. Harvest House recently released The Truth Behind the Da Vinci Code by Richard Abanes to help Christians answer questions raised in the book, a spokesman for the company said. For similar reasons, Cook Communications released Cracking Da Vinci’s Code, co-authored by James Garlow and Peter Jones. Meanwhile, the Oscar-winning duo of Ron Howard and Brian Grazer (A Beautiful Mind) recently announced plans to produce a film version of the book, which has sold more than 6 million copies.


Black Baptist Groups to Meet in Show of Unity


After more than 100 years apart, the leaders of the National Baptist Convention USA (NBC), the National Baptist Convention of America, the Progressive National Baptist Convention and the National Missionary Baptist Convention of America will meet in Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 23-28 to discuss issues facing the nation and their organizations, the Tennessean reported. The idea started with William J. Shaw, president of the NBC, the oldest of the four denominations. He said one of the meeting’s goals is to send the message to politicians that there are Christian viewpoints besides conservative evangelical perspectives, the Tennessean said.


Movie Chain Sued Over Passion Film Sales


Mel Gibson’s Icon Distribution is suing Regal Entertainment Group for at least $40 million, claiming the nation’s largest movie chain withheld revenue from The Passion of the Christ, the Associated Press (AP) said. An attorney for Icon said Regal agreed to pay Gibson’s company 55 percent of the profit from the receipts, but reneged in May and offered only 34 percent, the AP said. Icon filed suit June 7. Regal, owned by Christian billionaire Philip Anschutz, would not discuss the lawsuit.


Jesus Film Mailing Under Way in California


Churches across the nation are raising money to distribute copies of the Jesus film to their communities. Recently digitally remastered and released on DVD, the Jesus film is being mailed to homes in California this month as part of a project the late Bill Bright initiated in 1992 (). Since then, almost 20 million videos have been mailed to homes across the country.




Buddhism Spreads in North America

The Dalai Lama’s recent visit spotlighted the religion’s popularity in the U.S. and Canada
The highly-publicized visit in April of Tibetan Buddhism’s leader, the Dalai Lama, to Pasadena, Calif., and three major Canadian cities motivated some Christians to pray and raised others’ awareness of the growing presence of a previously ignored religion.


When he landed in Los Angeles, the Dalai Lama was met by Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky and later whisked away to host three days of Buddhist teaching at the sold-out, 3,000-seat Pasadena Civic Auditorium. He also spoke to 4,500 school children, lectured 5,000 university students and dispensed advice–at $100 a head–to a crowd of business executives.


James Stephens, a doctoral student at Fuller Theological Seminary who was a devout Buddhist for 14 years, says the spiritual threat of Buddhism influencing unsuspecting “seekers,” even some who consider themselves Christians, is very real.


“I call [the Dalai Lama] the ‘pluralist pope’ because he advocates exploring Buddhism while staying within the security of your professed religion. And he attracts huge crowds and all kinds of funding from movie stars, teaching institutions, governments and churches,” said Stephens, who leads the Sonrise Center for Buddhist Studies, which teaches Christians how to evangelize Buddhists.


Tibetan Buddhism, one of four main types of Buddhism, has almost 4 million adherents in that portion of China commonly known as Tibet, and 135,000 followers outside the region. Tibetan Buddhists in North America are clustered on California’s north coast and farther up into Vancouver, British Colombia, eastward into Toronto, and along the northeastern seaboard of the United States.


Despite the Dalai Lama’s immense popularity, he is spiritual leader to Tibetan Buddhists only. The Kalachakra, or initiation ceremony to allow one to practice the tenets of the religion, is often the Dalai Lama’s core teaching when he is on foreign turf.


Known as the “wheel of time,” the Kalachakra introduces people to a unique way of seeing cycles of time or multiple reincarnations, which the religion’s adherents claim is the basis of its system of liberation and enlightenment. Sand mandalas, or spirit houses made of finely painted sand crystals where area spirits are invited to enter, are usually constructed during the Kalachakra.


There are an estimated 10 million Buddhists in the United States and 305,000 in Canada, according to the latest figures from Statistics Canada.


While in Canada, where the Dalai Lama presided over the first Kalachakra initiation ceremony ever to be performed in the country, the Tibetan leader-in-exile was warmly received by Prime Minister Paul Martin and presented with an honorary degree of laws from the University of Toronto. Despite pouring rain, a sold-out crowd of 30,000 packed Toronto’s SkyDome arena for a teaching on compassion, and thousands of others attended 10 days of Kalachakra teaching at the city’s National Trade Centre and a Tibetan cultural festival on Toronto’s waterfront.


A mandala, constructed during the 10 days of Kalachakra teaching, was then ritually destroyed and its contents poured into nearby Lake Ontario, two acts that symbolize a release of the mandala’s spiritual powers into the surrounding land and waters.


“When the mandala’s sand was poured into Lake Ontario, the spiritual forces contained within it flowed through the Great Lakes and, eventually, to all the waterways of North America,” said David Carson, director of Intercessors for Canada, which is based in Vancouver. “Those spirits carry a spiritual contamination wherever they go. The only way to contend with them is to increase the forces of God through intercession and praise.”


House of the King, a Toronto-based prayer and worship movement of almost 2,500 intercessors and volunteers, was set up specifically for the Dalai Lama’s 12-day visit. Supported by a variety of Toronto churches and denominations, the focus of the event was 24-hour worship and praise held at Agape Ministries, a small, west-end charismatic church.


House of the King commissioned shifts of prayer-walkers to intercede at key spiritual locations around the city, while friendship evangelists were posted in a Tibetan teahouse and art gallery set up inside a downtown church.


“The Dalai Lama’s visit gave us a chance to represent Jesus to the visiting Tibetans, who responded very positively,” said Hany Boghossian, communications coordinator for House of the King. “Tibetans usually get saved relationally, and the average length of time for one to convert is eight or nine years.”


While visiting Vancouver, the Dalai Lama was feted by Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell, residents of Vancouver and self-proclaimed Buddhists, at the Orpheum Concert Hall, and received an honorary doctorate from two Vancouver universities. He also taught tenets of his religion to 16,000 attendees at the Vancouver Coliseum, presided over an interfaith service at a congregation affiliated with the United Church of Canada and engaged in an interfaith dialogue panel at an Anglican cathedral.


A 16-story temple with a 150-foot statue of the Buddha in front is slated for construction in the Vancouver suburb of Richmond. The structure is rumored to be destined as a world center for Buddhism, Carson said.


Elaine Robson, a Christian advocate of inter-religious dialogue between Christians and Tibetan Buddhists and a post-graduate student at the University of London in England, spent several years working with Tibetan Buddhists in northern India. She was invited by House of the King to be an adviser during the 12 days the Dalai Lama spent in Toronto.


Tibetan Buddhism has made inroads to North American culture partly because its “freedom of absolutes … has greatly appealed to a lot of seekers from the 1960s on,” said Robson, editor of . “They saw Christianity and its perceived narrowness and moral imperatives as a killjoy.”


She said Tibetan Buddhists use “skillful means” to draw the curious into their religion. One such technique is the Dalai Lama’s advice even to curious Christians to begin meditating on what’s familiar–like a statue of a saint or Jesus on the cross. “Once a person goes further into Tibetan Buddhism, though, they meditate on that religion’s deities and visualize themselves as one with those deities. They draw closer to the enlightened state … where all creatures and objects are one [energy] force,” Robson said. “The problem with this is that person can then open themselves up to any variety of spiritual forces.”


Called His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama, 69-year-old Tenzin Gyatso was crowned as spiritual leader at 5 years old. When China began occupation of Tibet in 1959, he fled to northern India where, to this day, he has led a Tibetan government-in-exile. The recipient of almost 60 honorary doctorates and awards, including the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, the Dalai Lama is renowned for cultivating relationships with key world leaders, an activity some critics view as a ploy to help free Tibet from Chinese occupation.
Josie Newman in Toronto




Charisma Event to Shift Focus to Equipping Women for Ministry

The most recent Charisma Women’s Conference drew almost 8,000, but organizer Joy Strang says it’s time for a change

Nearly 8,000 women convened in Daytona Beach, Fla., April 22-24 for what turned out to be the final Charisma Women’s Conference in the city’s 10,000-seat Ocean Center arena.


Conference host Joy Strang announced on the last day of the event that she believes God is initiating a change of seasons that will shift her focus from inspiring spiritual hunger in women and urging them to embrace their freedom in Christ, to training and equipping them for more effective service.


“God has a role for women to play in the harvest, but so many feel inadequate,” said Strang, co-owner of Strang Communications, publisher of Charisma and SpiritLed Woman, the magazines that sponsored the conference. “We want to see them rise up in power to fulfill His strategy for this hour.”


For the last 10 years, the Charisma Women’s Conference has offered extended periods of worship, personal ministry and teaching from a diverse gallery of speakers, including Cindy Jacobs, Apostle John Eckhardt, Betty Freidzon and the late Fuchsia Pickett.


The conference began in 1995 at the Sheraton World Resort in Orlando, Fla., with about 1,200 registrants but doubled in attendance the second and third years. In 1998, the conference was moved to the 10,000-seat Ocean Center in Daytona Beach, where it was held the final seven years.


The 2004 event boasted nearly 8,000 attendees of diverse ethnic and denominational backgrounds. Main sessions were translated into Spanish for the more than 2,000 women who participated in the Spanish-language track.


After each conference, Strang received numerous testimonies, many from women who claim they will never be the same. “The description we have heard most often is ‘life-changing,'” Strang said.


Laurie Melton of Charlotte, N.C., wrote in a Strang Communications online forum that she had been in constant pain on her left side as a result of a car accident five years ago. “I was totally healed from pain on Friday, April 23, 2004,” she said.


Kay Nelson wrote in the same forum that she was healed of fibromyalgia and migraine headaches at this year’s event. “I have not taken any pain medicine since I have come home,” she said.


Mary Jo Clouse, conference prayer team coordinator for all 10 years, said miracles have marked the events since the beginning. “I’ve seen more miracles than I could even think about–people coming out of wheelchairs, blind eyes being opened, marriages healed and women who had had abortions [released] from guilt and shame,” she told Charisma.


Yet to Strang, the most significant result of the conferences is that “thousands … have been saved, healed, baptized in the Holy Spirit, set free and [have] received new vision for their lives,” she said. “Many ministries have been established as the women put into effect what God showed them He had for [them].”


One example is the ministry of Roxana Perez of El Salvador. During the 2000 event, Perez heard minister Nola Warren say that God was prompting someone to publish a magazine similar to Spirit-Led Woman in Spanish. Perez said she understood God wanted her to do it, and within a year, she had launched a women’s magazine in her own country.


Florida pastor Shirley Arnold, a 10-time minister at the Charisma Women’s Conference, said testimonies such as Perez’s reflect the primary purpose of the event. “These 10 years have been about raising women to the place that God has called them,” she told Charisma.


Evangelist Joyce Rodgers, who spoke at the conference for three years, agrees. “I’ve seen the Charisma conference serve as a vehicle to empower women … to do what God has called them to do.”


More than one of the 2004 conference speakers confirmed Strang’s new focus by declaring that now is the season for women to move into their God-given purposes. In one session prophetic minister Chuck Pierce declared: “God is doing a new thing among women. … It is time for them to come out and find their place of influence.”


Charisma editor J. Lee Grady told the women God was commissioning them to take what they had received–salvation, empowering, healing, deliverance and refreshing–to those who don’t have it.


Strang said she will host a smaller women’s event sometime in 2005. Many Charisma Women’s Conference veterans have already told her they plan to attend. One of them, Doris Huff of Deltona, Fla., declared in a letter to Strang: “Wherever Charisma goes next, I will be there.”
Maureen D. Eha




Black Pentecostal Group Denounces Carlton Pearson as a Heretic

The Oklahoma-based pastor said he will continue teaching his gospel of inclusion and plans to write a related book

After fielding questions about his controversial “gospel of inclusion,” Bishop Carlton Pearson has been officially denounced as a heretic by a group of African-American Pentecostal bishops.


In a 17-page paper released in March and written by the group’s doctrinal commission chairman, Bishop Clifford L. Frazier, the Joint College of African-American Pentecostal Bishops’ Congress said it “will no longer offer to Bishop Pearson our hand of fellowship. We will strongly urge all of our fellows to refuse Bishop Carlton Pearson access to their pulpits.”


Headed by Bishop J. Delano Ellis, senior pastor of Pentecostal Church of Christ in Cleveland, the Joint College was founded in 1995 to provide training for ministry leaders within the African-American Pentecostal-charismatic community. Today it has more than 700 affiliated ministers and represents more than 100 independent black churches.


The group invited Pearson to its annual meeting in 2003 to present his doctrine, which promotes the idea that confession of Jesus as Savior is not a requirement to go to heaven. “Our hope was to appeal to him to abandon his teaching,” Frazier told Charisma. “We tried to respect his position as a bishop and … as a child of God.”


But when Pearson didn’t recant his position, “we felt that it was important for us to say something in light of the fact that this young man is of tremendous influence in the Pentecostal-charismatic community,” Ellis said. “We felt that if we were to keep quiet it would be like tacit approval of his error. And since so many of our people have been subscribers of his ministry, as good stewards of God’s mysteries and shepherds of the flock, we felt to say nothing would be like turning our people over to error.”


In a response posted on his ministry Web site, Pearson reiterated his views that all people, not just Christians, are saved, and he cast himself as a prophet ahead of his time. He added that he plans to soon release a book titled God Is Not a
Christian.


“I happen to believe in the God who is big enough to save an entire world from perceived, ultimate destruction and spiritual death and that, in fact, He has done so,” Pearson wrote. “All that’s needed now, is for people to be informed–to know and enjoy this powerful and liberating Truth. Therefore I am committed to the proclamation of the ‘Gospel of Inclusion.'”


Since Pearson began teaching universalism, attendance at his Azusa Conference has declined, and insiders say his Tulsa, Higher Dimensions Family Church now hosts just one Sunday morning service instead of two and has roughly 600 people attending. Though several Christian leaders, including the members of the Joint College, say they are praying for Pearson and do not want to disparage him as a person, many have distanced themselves from him.


“I grieve over Carlton Pearson’s drift toward shipwrecking his faith and endangering others,” said Foursquare leader Jack W. Hayford, chancellor of The King’s College and Seminary in Los Angeles. “The danger of isolation from accountability and from interaction that can adjust any of us from vain suppositions is the reason I have implored greater accountability among all leaders–especially in these last days so filled with deception, delusion and departure from God’s Word.”


Ted Haggard, pastor of New Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colo., and president of the National Association of Evangelicals, described Pearson’s teaching as “inaccurate and counterproductive to the cause of Christ.”


He said because Pearson has rejected calls from Christian leaders to return to orthodox teaching, “the body of Christ at large should now ignore him. Don’t support him, don’t acknowledge him, don’t attend his events and don’t dignify his position with time and attention. And, where necessary, protect the unaware from his teaching.”
Adrienne S. Gaines