ORU Accepts Donation, New Direction
Oral Roberts will continue as ORU’s chancellor, and will also be named a lifetime trustee.
Oral Roberts will continue as ORU’s chancellor, and will also be named a lifetime trustee.
A Chinese Christian bookstore owner and two-dozen people associated with his case were released on bail Jan. 4, according to China Aid Association (CAA). Chinese officials have decided against a trial for Shi Weihan, dismissing criminal charges against him.
In late November, Weihan, 37, was arrested in his bookstore near the Olympics Village in Beijing along with his younger brother and his wife, Jin Zhang, who were released after questioning, CAA said.
Weihan and the others were charged with illegal printing and distribution of Christian literature. According to Chinese law, a formal arrest warrant must be issued or the accused must be released after 37 days of administrative detention. Chinese authorities were unable to proceed with charges against Weihan due to “insufficient evidence,” CAA said.
Meanwhile, Zhou Heng, a house church leader in Xinjiang who was arrested Aug. 31 for receiving three tons of “illegally printed” Bibles, remains in jail despite being arraigned on the same charges as Weihan, CAA said.
Worship in China, which is atheist, is allowed only in party-controlled churches, and organizers of home churches face harassment, arrest and terms in labor camps or prison. Though Christian retailers can now legally operate, they are prohibited from selling Bibles.
The film—which was not previewed to newspaper movie critics—represents a remarkable turnaround for Big Idea, which went bankrupt in 2003 and was bought by Classic Media LLC, after the release of Jonah: A VeggieTales Movie, according to The (Nashville) Tennessean.
After major studios turned it down, Big Idea self-financed Jonah, which made more than $25 million in its theatrical run, according to . “We could barely get a meeting for Jonah,” Mike Nawrocki, who directed the Pirates movie, told the newspaper.
The film—which was not previewed to newspaper movie critics—represents a remarkable turnaround for Big Idea, which went bankrupt in 2003 and was bought by Classic Media LLC, after the release of Jonah: A VeggieTales Movie, according to The (Nashville) Tennessean.
After major studios turned it down, Big Idea self-financed Jonah, which made more than $25 million in its theatrical run, according to . “We could barely get a meeting for Jonah,” Mike Nawrocki, who directed the Pirates movie, told the newspaper.
But after the blockbusters The Passion of The Christ and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, doors began to open, Nawrocki said. Before those two films, “it was unheard of” for a studio to invest heavily in faith-based movies, he added.
Now, studios have embraced the potential of faith-based films. “If you can tell a story with a biblical world view well, I think there is a big audience for that,” Nawrocki, the voice of Larry the Cucumber, told The Tennessean. “In a country where 90% of the people believe God exists, you are going to strike a chord.”
In the summer of 2006, Universal Studios agreed to fund the new VeggieTales movie, which stars Larry the Cucumber, Mr. Lunt and Pa Grape (Elliot, Sedgewick and George) as three wannabe heroes.
Universal is also promoting Pirates heavily, which includes spots on network television and ads on billboards. “It's fun to make a movie when your house is not on the line,” Phil Vischer, co-creator of VeggieTales and the voice of Bob the Tomato, told the newspaper.
Karis Community Church in downtown Columbia, Mo., recently lost $6,000 in funding from the Missouri Baptist Convention because the church’s pastor, Kevin Larson, refuses to forbid members from drinking the occasional brew.
In December, the Columbia Tribune reported that the executive board of the convention voted 28-10 to cut funding for all Acts 29 churches (a church-planting network) because of what the board viewed as an abuse of Christian liberty by Acts 29 members.
Larson denounced the decision, adding, “They are shooting themselves in the foot because they are cutting ties with the most successful church-planting organization out there.
Photo Credit: Louise Clarke
According to a study by Christian Research, attendance at Church of England services fell by 20 percent from 2000 to 2006, and the denomination is now almost half the size it was a generation ago reports the U. K. newspaper the Telegraph.
Likewise, Methodist congregations have dipped 33 percent over a 10-year period, and Baptist churches are seeing similar results.
Meanwhile, Pentecostal congregations have grown a whopping 23 percent since the new millennium, with more expected as the immigrant community expands.
“We are growing at such a fast pace that our only problem is finding enough places to worship,” says Tunji Adebayo, a property consultant for numerous Pentecostal churches told the Telegraph. “People tend to focus on the decline of other churches and have been largely unaware of our success. But that is beginning to change.”