Virginia Governor Announces Day of Mourning and Prayer

The governor asked the entire country to hold prayer services in their states at noon for the victims of Monday's Virginia Tech shootings.
 
Virginia Governor Announces Day of Mourning and Prayer
Friday, the eighth anniversary of the Columbine High School tragedy,  Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine declared a statewide day of mourning for the victims and families of the Virginia Tech shootings. At noon a interfaith prayer service was held on the campus of Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. “I ask that everyone in Virginia pause at noon on Friday to offer prayers of support for the victims, their families, and for all those affected by this tragedy,” Kaine said. The governor also asked the entire country to hold services in their states at noon and to memorialize the victims by ringing  bells simultaneously at noon. On April 17 President George W. Bush encouraged the Virginia Tech community by telling them that many are praying for them. “All across America, houses of worship from every faith have opened their doors and have lifted you up in prayer,” the president said. “People who have never met you are praying for you; they're praying for your friends who have fallen and who are injured. There's a power in these prayers, real power. In times like this, we can find comfort in the grace and guidance of a loving God. As the Scriptures tell us, 'Don't be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.'”



Evangelical Appointed to U.S. Commission On Int'l Religious Freedom

Don Argue, a former president of the National Association of Evangelicals, will serve the Commission for two years.
 
Evangelical Appointed to U.S. Commission On Int'l Religious Freedom
Don Argue, president of Northwest University in Kirkland, Wash., and a former president of the National Association of Evangelicals, has been appointed to serve on the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom. Created by the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998, the commission is an independent, bipartisan government agency that monitors international religious freedom and gives policy recommendations to the president, Secretary of State and Congress.  “Dr. Argue is a leading expert in religious freedom. His dedication to the right of worship and opposition to intolerance and persecution are inspiring,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who with Sen.  Hillary Rodham  Clinton, D-N.Y., announced Argue's appointment Tuesday. “He will bring a valuable perspective to the Commission's work.” Considered an authority on international religious freedom and human rights, Argue previously was appointed by President Clinton and Secretary of State Madeline Albright to the President’s Advisory Committee on Religious Freedom. President Clinton also invited Argue to serve as part of the first official delegation of U.S. religious leaders to visit China and challenge its leaders about religious freedom and religious persecution.  “Don will bring a critically needed voice to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom,” Sen. Clinton said. “His expertise is surpassed only by his dedication to achieving the goal of religious freedom for people around the world.  I’m proud to recommend such a respected and valued leader and proud to call him a friend. He will be an invaluable member of the Commission.” Argue will serve a two-year term.



U.S. Supreme Court Outlaws Partial Birth Abortion

On Wednesday the Supreme Court upheld a federal ban on partial birth abortion, a highly controversial late-term abortion procedure.
 
U.S. Supreme Court Outlaws Partial Birth Abortion
The Supreme Court upheld in April a federal ban on partial birth abortion, the highly controversial late-term abortion procedure that involves partially removing the fetus and crushing its skull. The court’s majority opinion stated: “The law need not give abortion doctors unfettered choice in the course of their medical practice,” The Associated Press reported. The 5-4 ruling by America’s more conservative bench preserved the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act that Congress passed and President Bush signed into law in 2003. “This is the first legal crack in the crumbling Roe v. Wade foundation,” said Operation Rescue President Troy Newman. “If partial birth abortions are unconstitutional, then all abortion should be as well,” he added, describing “suction abortions” as even “more gruesome” than partial birth abortion.



Charisma News –

After a shooting rampage on the Virginia Tech campus Monday, Christian ministries already have plans for prayer events and crisis counseling.
 
Christians Are Reaching Out to Victims of the Recent Shooting
Christians are reaching out to the victims of the recent shooting at Virginia Tech. The gunman, identified by police as a 23-year-old Virginia Tech senior from South Korea,  killed 33 including himself during a shooting spree at the school Monday. InterVarsity Christian Fellowship (IVF) campus staff and students met for prayer Monday night at Virginia and were planning a campuswide prayer event on Wednesday at noon. “Our thoughts and our prayers are with the students of Virginia Tech and their families,” IVF President Alec Hill said Monday. “Events such as today’s tragic shooting bring students to an abrupt confrontation with their own mortality. InterVarsity staff are trained to help students face life’s issues and find their hope in the promises of Jesus Christ. Our staff members, Wes Barts, Lindsey Jones and Robert Howe, ask for your prayers as they and their students deal with the impact of this tragedy.” In a statement released the day of the shooting, Franklin Graham, president and CEO of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, said his organization has offered the community of Blacksburg, Va., where the school is located, the resources of its Rapid Response Team, which sends chaplains trained in crisis counseling. “Sadly, we have once again been reminded of the evil that people can perpetrate on others; and while many theories will surface in the coming days and weeks about how such a terrible act occurs, I believe what we’ve seen here is ultimately a reflection of the condition of the human heart,” Graham said. “My prayer in this time of tragedy is that it will pull us together as a nation and focus our attention on those families who have suffered great loss and turn our eyes to the Prince of all peace, Jesus Christ.”



Humans Are Built to Serve God, Scientist Says

A neuroscientist at the University of Pennsylvania, said humans may be wired to believe in a higher power.
 
Humans Are Built to Serve God, Scientist Says
Dr. Andrew Newberg, a neuroscientist at the University of Pennsylvania, said humans may be wired to believe in a higher power. Newberg and his research team studied Franciscan nuns, Tibetan Buddhists and Pentecostal Christians speaking in tongues and found that similar parts of the brain are always activated when participants think about religious activities, CNN reported. “When we think of religious and spiritual beliefs and practices, we see a tremendous similarity across practices and across tradition,” said Newberg, who once studied the brain from a neurological and psychiatric perspective. Because the same areas of the brain are affected during prayer and meditation, he says humans are built to believe in God. Some Christians have said Newberg’s research confirms what was already believed and that it would only make sense that God would create humans with a way to communicate with Him. Newberg's work to track the relationship between the human brain and spirituality is part of a new field that is being called neurotheology.



Rick Warren Publicly Debates Renowned Atheist

Earlier this month 'Newsweek' magazine moderated a four-hour debate between Rick Warren and Sam Harris, a prominent atheist and doctoral student in neuroscience.
 
Rick Warren Publicly Debates Atheist
Newsweek magazine moderated a four-hour debate at Saddleback Church in early April between Rick Warren and Sam Harris, a prominent atheist and doctoral student in neuroscience whose latest book, The End of Faith, argues for a world based on reason. “Every specific science … has surpassed and superseded what the Bible tells us is true about our world,” Harris said in his opening  remarks.  When Newsweek asked  him which secular source provides an acceptable moral code, Harris  rejected all sacred texts and pointed to the “ethical impulses” of human empathy and compassion found in an atheistic experience. But Warren, mentioning the Inquisition, Mao Zedong, Joseph Stalin and Pol Pot, countered: “Far more people have been killed through atheists than through all the religious wars put together.” Harris criticized “faith-based altruism” for being “contaminated with religious ideas that have nothing to do with the relief of human suffering.” Warren struck a pseudo-conciliatory note with Harris to end the debate: “You’re more spiritual than you think,” the pastor said. “You [just] don’t want a God who tells you what to do.” In May Ray Comfort and Kirk Cameron, from the popular evangelism show The Way of the Master, will debate two atheists about the existence of God. The debate will be moderated by Martin Bashire, streamed live on ABC's Web site and aired on  Nightline.



Washington Lawmakers Call for Prayer

The Congressional Prayer Caucus is asking Americans to commit to five minutes of prayer for the nation so that someone is praying  24-7.
 
Washington Lawmakers Call for Prayer

Last week lawmakers renewed a 2005 call asking Americans to pray for God to heal the country. “Prayer is good for the soul,” said Rep. Tim Walberg, R-Mich., Gannet News Service reported. “It forces us to lean on the One who is greater than us.” Walberg and other members of the Congressional Prayer Caucus are asking Americans to visit their Web site prayercaucus.org to sign up for a five minute slot so that someone is praying for America 24-7. “[We want to] build a spiritual prayer wall around America until God heals our land,” said caucus leader J. Randy Forbes, a Republican congressman from Virginia. In 2005 Forbes began a prayer meeting in the 219th room of Capitol Hill. The congressional prayer meeting eventually grew into the Congressional Prayer Caucus Inc., a nonprofit organization formed to call individuals as well as local “219 Groups” across the country to pray without ceasing. Many lawmakers believe prayer can help change the U.S. “I’m driven to prayer many, many times every day,” Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., told Gannet. “Sometimes on my knees, sometimes just walking to meetings. I believe prayer can change things.”




China’s Brave Witness

Brother Yun has been beaten, shocked and imprisoned for his faith. But he
survived to tell the amazing story of New Testament-style revival in China.

Liu Zhenying fell to the floor convulsing, his frail body coursing with electricity. Prison guards, electric-shock batons in hand, stepped back unashamedly as he lost consciousness.


Inside Nanyang Prison, located in China’s Henan Province, 25-year-old Liu was beginning the 75th day of his fast from both food and water. Although he was 5 feet 5 inches, he weighed less than 70 pounds and had to be carried to a room where officials had arranged for his family to see him. The Public Security Bureau (PSB), China’s secret police, was hoping Liu’s wife and mother would convince him to renounce his “superstitious” beliefs and reveal the identities and locations of his unregistered house-church contacts.


When Liu regained consciousness, his head was in his mother’s lap. She was sobbing. His young wife and sister peered at him in horror. He was an unsightly pile of skin and bones, covered in crusty blood and filth. His ears were shriveled like raisins, and portions of his scalp were exposed because the prison guards had ripped his hair out.


Only a birthmark convinced Liu’s mother that the man she was holding was her son. Soon they all were crying. Liu broke his fast by sharing communion with his family. Then he cried, “I will see you all in heaven!”


That was April 7, 1984. Liu believed he would soon die for the Lord in that prison, but God had other plans. He was released four years later but imprisoned and tortured twice more before escaping China in 1997.


Today, Liu Zhenying, 49, is known to Christians around the world as Brother Yun (pronounced “Yoon”), a name Chinese believers gave him to protect his identity. Thousands have been inspired by his account of supernatural intervention and miraculous survival, which he detailed in his autobiography, The Heavenly Man (Piquant Editions and Monarch Books).


Co-authored by Paul Hattaway, the book has been translated into 33 languages and has sold more than 800,000 copies. In 2003 it won the United Kingdom’s Christian Booksellers’ Book of the Year Award.


But more than being a testimony of one man’s spiritual journey, The Heavenly Man offers a glimpse inside the underground house-church movement in China, a Christian community that is poised to reach the world with the gospel.


China’s Christian Awakening


Although the numbers vary, observers estimate between 100 million and 130 million Christians live in China, an indication that nearly 10 percent of the nation’s 1.3 billion people may be believers.

Protestant missionary work to the Orient began exactly 200 years ago when Robert Morrison landed in Macao in 1807. The Scottish missionary eventually translated the Bible into Chinese from his base in the coastal city of Guangzhou. Later, missionaries such as Hudson Taylor, who founded the China Inland Mission in 1865, carried the gospel into interior provinces such as Henan.

There were roughly 1 million Christians living in China when Mao Zedong’s communist army took over in 1949. But Mao’s regime looked to turn back the tide. “The first thing Mao did was expel all missionaries, throw pastors in prison or labor camps where most of them died, destroy church buildings, and burn Bibles,” Yun says. “By the 1970s it was said the only Bibles left in China were in history museums in Beijing.”

Yet when Mao’s bloody Cultural Revolution ended with his death in 1976, an underground Christian movement erupted. It was around this time that a proselytizing 17-year-old Yun first became a wanted criminal in China, having led 2,000 people to Christ in his native Henan Province during his first year as a Christian.

He says his zeal came from his mother, a poor and backslidden woman who, while caring for her cancer-stricken husband and near suicide herself, tearfully turned back to God one night in 1974. The prodigal gathered her five children (Yun was the fourth of five) and told them Jesus would save them. They prayed all night for their father, and he was healed. Yun says God then told him to be His witness “to the south and the west.”


The young evangelist continued to preach despite the constant threat of arrest. Even after Mao’s brutal reign ended, Chinese authorities continued to persecute Christians. In 1983 after a secret house-church meeting in a village, PSB officers arrested Yun.


As he was being kicked and dragged through the snow, Yun feigned insanity to warn other believers to run, shouting: “I am a heavenly man! I live in Gospel Village! My father’s name is Abundant Blessing! My mother’s name is Faith, Hope and Love!”


One of several Christians to be arrested that night, Yun spent four years in Nanyang Prison. There he rejected numerous enticements to join the government-sanctioned Three-Self Church, as do most Christians in China. Members of the Three-Self Patriotic Movement or the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association face legal restrictions on core Christian practices, including evangelism, youth outreach and home groups.


Because Yun refused to conform, prison officials resorted to beatings and electric shocks in an attempt to penetrate his house-church connections. “They wanted me to reveal names of co-workers and meeting places,” Yun told Charisma. “With thick needles they squeezed acid under my nails, and I fainted from the pain. I woke up and told them nothing.”


Unlike many Western teachers who equate Christianity with comfort and abundance, Yun preaches a gospel that emphasizes suffering and ruin. He sees affliction as a way to commune with God.


“I did not really suffer for Jesus while in prison—I was with Jesus,” he writes in his book. “The ones who really suffer are those who never experience God’s presence.”
Revivalist Rolland Baker—who with his wife, Heidi, ministers among the poorest of Africa—says Yun’s life is one “so totally captured by [Jesus] that no imaginable hardship or persecution can stop him from being more than a conqueror.”


Yun says there was a time when he allowed ministry “to become an idol.” After being released from Nanyang Prison in 1988, Yun says he temporarily lost sight of God and became overzealous and obstinate. He ministered around China at a breakneck pace, ignoring his wife’s pleas to slow down.


Yun later admitted that he had forgotten his “first love.” Of his second imprisonment in 1991, he says, “The Lord graciously allowed me to rest in Him behind bars.”


Released in 1993, Yun says he soon developed a burden to see unity among China’s house churches, a passion he shared with his mentor, Peter Xu Yongze, who at that time led China’s largest house church, the Born Again Movement.


The unity movement, later named Sinim Fellowship, spread so quickly that by early 1997 word of it reached the offices of high-level communist officials in Beijing. Subsequently, the PSB raided a clandestine Sinim meeting in Henan’s provincial capital of Zhengzhou.


Trying to avoid arrest, Yun leaped from the second-floor window but fractured his leg. He was met on the ground by the PSB, who beat him and issued electric shocks. Sharing a wall between their cells, Yun and Xu, who also was arrested during the raid, were tortured for several days at Zhengzhou’s Number One Maximum Security Prison. Yun’s legs were beaten with clubs to rule out an escape attempt.


Yun says torture taught him an important lesson: “Even though God did not speak a word to me, no matter how much I cried; even though God didn’t immediately set me free from the pain and terror; I have come to understand that He was there.”


After six weeks on the prison’s third floor, Brother Yun believed God wanted him to escape. So on the morning of May 5, 1997, after his wife in a vision that morning told him to “open the iron door” and after Xu whispered to him that the time had come, Yun asked the guard for permission to use the bathroom.


Although he barely could stand on his battered legs, when the iron door opened Yun says he suddenly was able to walk on his own, which he did, right past the first guard. On the stairwell he says he grabbed a broom to pretend he was tidying up the place, then proceeded past the second guard, who looked straight through him.


Praying with every step, Yun says he reached ground level and found the third iron door open as well. Stepping onto the courtyard and into broad daylight Yun thought he would be shot in the back at any moment.


But amazingly, when he reached the prison’s main gate, it was open too. He walked onto the busy Zhengzhou streets and a taxi pulled up. The driver asked, “Where to?”


Controlling the Uncontrollable


Yun later learned that no one had ever escaped from Zhengzhou Prison. The facility has since closed, and Yun’s breakout is considered an unsolved mystery.


Today Chinese authorities continue to hunt down unregistered Christians. In parts of the Henan countryside, signs offer rewards of up to 50,000 renminbi, or roughly $6,400—a fortune for working-class Chinese—to anyone who reports Christian meetings.


Yet clandestine worship services continue. When Charisma visited one such meeting in Henan Province in December, 200 leaders, most of them young women, sat crammed in a second-story room of an old industrial building where they listened to a minister from the West. Four believers positioned themselves in the hall to watch for the PSB. The preaching lasted for hours. At dusk, the windows were shaded and overhead lights came on.


Because meetings like this one are hundreds of miles away from Beijing and Shanghai—Westernized cities often visited by tourists—crackdowns are routine. In Henan last year, 174 Christians were arrested, more than in any other province, China Aid Association reported.


Human rights experts say a Chinese law called the Regulation on Religious Affairs—which the government-monitored China Daily newspaper heralded in 2005 as “a significant step forward in the protection of Chinese citizens’ religious freedom”—actually helps facilitate heavier house-church crackdowns. “The situation is not getting any better,” Amnesty International’s Mark Allison told USA Today that year. The new law is “more an attempt to control religious groups than to loosen restrictions,” he said.


“There’s no question that the absolute biggest threat to the [Chinese] Communist Party is Christianity,” says China missionary Daniel Powers (not his real name), a former U.S. Marine sniper. He says the rise of the government-backed Three-Self Church is China’s way of “controlling something they can’t control.”


In this same area of Henan last summer, Zhang Rongliang, leader of the 10 million-strong China for Christ Church, was sentenced to seven years in prison after the PSB went house-to-house in his Zhengzhou village, confiscating Christian materials they believed linked him to Western organizations.


The leader who replaced Zhang is in hiding and told Charisma he feared Zhang was being tortured and that treatment for his diabetes was being withheld.


During the 1980s, Brother Yun ministered several times with Zhang. They once hid from the PSB huddled together all night in a field under freezing rain. They were also at the same meeting on the night Yun was arrested in 1983 and sent to Nanyang Prison.


“In prison we were put in separate cells,” Zhang says in Yun’s autobiography. “But we cried out along the prison corridors, hoping our voices would [encourage] each other.”


Like other house-church leaders, Yun went into hiding after his 1997 escape from Zhengzhou Prison. A few months later Yun and his wife, Deling, believed God was saying Yun needed to leave China and seek political asylum in Germany. Deling and their two children, Isaac and Yilin, could follow later.


With nowhere safe to hide in Henan—and after frightened hosts in Hubei Province asked him to leave—Yun and his family took refuge with Christians 400 miles away in the coastal province of Shandong. “We all cried and prayed in the Beijing hotel room the night before he flew out,” a member of the Shandong family who drove Yun to Beijing airport in September 1997 told Charisma. “He was about to use a false passport … so we prayed for protection.”


Airport officials laughed at the glaring discrepancy between Yun’s appearance and the passport photo, but cleared him to board Air China’s nonstop flight to Frankfurt. After in-depth investigations in Germany, Yun received a high-level refugee status and began sharing his testimony in churches.


Yet Yun continued to face opposition. Two years after fleeing to Germany, he learned that a Hong Kong-based ministry leader was accusing him of exploiting Western churches for financial gain.


“In hindsight, this was an ideal time to observe Yun’s life, as he ministered under this tremendous cloak of accusation,” says Dale Hiscock, executive director of AsiaLink Ministries. “Not once did I ever hear one negative comment from Yun. He knew he was under attack and simply trusted God.”


After Yun responded to the accusations, the controversy began to quiet. But several months later Yun faced the kind of persecution he had always known in China. While he was in Myanmar in 2001, trying to help his family escape to Germany, Yun was arrested, tortured and beaten for seven months in a squalid Yangon prison.


With parasitic worms visibly crawling beneath his skin Yun sought to share the gospel with other inmates, and many made decisions for Christ. He says it was God’s will for him to be “a seed buried in that prison”—where in a cesspool of disease and unimaginable pain revival began breaking out.


His seven-year prison sentence was reduced to seven months and seven days—roughly the time it takes for a seed of wheat to sprout, Yun says. After his release in September 2001 from his final imprisonment to date, Yun once again faced accusation from fellow Christians.


Led by a Germany-based Vietnamese-Chinese businessman who helped in Yun’s 1997 escape from China by giving him a passport, several Chinese church leaders issued an open letter denouncing Yun as a fraud. The group claimed his testimony of supernatural intervention was false, that he exaggerated his influence among China’s house churches and that he was exploiting Western Christians.


“I have been challenged many times with this,” Yun told Charisma, his eyes welling with tears. “But when I’m before the Lord in prayer, the Lord has never allowed me to say anything negative. I have just been blessing them, each one of them, in the name of Jesus.”


Hattaway says a group of Chinese house-church leaders investigated the charges against Yun and found his story reliable. Other Christian leaders also have publicly come to Yun’s defense.


“I’ve known Yun very well since the early 1980s,” Dennis Balcombe, senior pastor at Revival Christian Church in Hong Kong for almost 40 years, says in an open letter posted at Asia Harvest’s Web site. “I have seen closely his ministry and traveled with him on many occasions [while he was still in] China. He has my total support as a man of God with high integrity, who has in the past and is presently making a great contribution to the kingdom of God.”


Bob Fu, president of U.S.-based China Aid Association and a former Chinese prisoner of conscience himself, told Charisma: “I think Yun is a genuine servant of God who is very sincere and full of passion for the gospel.”


Persecution has made Yun “even more fervent and fiery for Jesus,” evangelist Reinhard Bonnke told Charisma. “I am sure that he will be among the Lord’s anointed of the next generation, who build the kingdom of God in the toughest places on earth. I appreciate and honor this great servant of God.”


Back to Jerusalem


Today in his ministry worldwide Yun clings to the calling he received as a teen, to be a witness for the Lord “to the south and the west.” But Yun senses that beyond just sharing his testimony, he also carries a burden.


While still in China, Yun had a powerful encounter in 1995 with Simon Zhao. It was at a meeting where Yun sang an old Chinese hymn, a death-defying anthem to preach the gospel westward, “marching toward Jerusalem.” Through tears Zhao told Yun he had written the song 50 years before.


During the 1940s, Zhao had led a mission called the Northwest Spiritual Movement. The group had its roots in Shandong Province, where a Christian clan called the Jesus Family lived by the slogan “Sacrifice, Abandonment, Poverty, Suffering, Death.”


The vision for both groups was to move the gospel into the regions of western China and beyond. By 1949 Zhao and his missionary band were arrested in a remote area of China. For his radical faith, Zhao endured beatings in a communist labor camp for nearly 40 years.


Yun promised Zhao that he would help carry on that missionary vision, which is today known as Back to Jerusalem. The campaign aims to spread the gospel from China to every Hindu, Buddhist and Muslim nation across the 10/40 Window, a region from West Africa to East Asia.


Yun believes many of China’s Christians, refined in the fires of persecution, are now ready to lose their lives to reach the lost. “I feel very strongly that the time has already come for the church in China to bring the gospel back to Jerusalem,” says Yun, who like others believes the Back to Jerusalem vision could be the “last leg” of fulfilling the Great Commission.


“The greatest change will come in the Middle East not when more soldiers go there to die. It will take messengers of Jesus Christ proclaiming the gospel. When they start to die, real change will take place.”


Pelle Karlsson, president of Back to Jerusalem Inc., an organization with which Yun is affiliated, believes Yun’s testimony is “an alarm clock to the church in the West, off and sleeping. It calls the church back to that deeper level of commitment—to take the cross for real.”


Ironically, it was China that for centuries was thought to be sleeping. Napoleon Bonaparte, the French emperor who was conquering Europe while missionary Robert Morrison was sailing for China, once said: “Let China sleep. For when she wakes, she will shake the world.”


Many would say it is a prophecy now being fulfilled in China’s powerful economy. But others believe a spiritual force is emerging in China—an underground church poised to evangelize the world. “The vision the Lord has given the Chinese church is to bring Jesus to every people group—from the Great Wall of China to the Eastern Wall of Jerusalem,” Yun says.


It may not be the kind of awakening Napolean once envisioned. But today, in clandestine house churches across China, a revival generation is stirring.


Paul Steven Ghiringhelli is assistant news editor of Charisma. He traveled to China in November to file this report.
To read Brother Yun’s thoughts on American Christianity, log on to Charismamag.comonline.



From China to Jerusalem


Chinese Christians are driven by a heavenly vision to take the gospel westward.


On a cold December morning in northern China, a group of college-age young adults shuffle through barely heated halls, their murmurs echoing through an old building.


Looking at their cheery faces, one would never imagine the students and staff at this Back to Jerusalem (BTJ) School face the threat of imprisonment on a daily basis. But for more than two years the Christian training school has operated under the radar to prepare Chinese missionaries to evangelize the most populated nations of the world to China’s south and west, all the way to Jerusalem.


The school instructs students in scriptural doctrine, foreign languages, cultural sensitivity and practical living skills. When they leave their homes to attend this training, they commit to the “underground” Christian life and have no way of supporting themselves besides missions work.


“There’s no future in this world for these students,” says school director Michael Biscaye*, a Canadian missionary who once ministered in the Middle East. “Traveling here and doing what they’re doing means they’ve sacrificed everything for the gospel.”


The fire of the BTJ vision flickered underground in China through many decades of persecution. But today, a rekindling appears to be taking place.


“The youth are catching the vision mostly through Chinese church hymns, but also through teaching,” says Brother Gan*, a 21-year-old staff member from Henan who was one of the first to receive cross-cultural training at BTJ. He believes he’ll one day evangelize the poor Buddhist nation of Myanmar.


Sister Jin*, also from Henan, wants to minister in the Muslim world. “Even though I think I’m too small in my own mind, in my heart I feel called,” she says.


Sister Yu*, a tiny 23-year-old from Xinjiang who was once arrested for her underground church activities, says she has a deep burden for Arab children. “I have shared the vision with children in my home fellowship,” she says.


The home fellowships, or house churches, are the backbone of China’s Christian movement. Students say the gospel spreads mostly through relationships—developed on school campuses, at factories, in neighborhoods and with relatives.


Rare opportunities for overt evangelism have cropped up during the Chinese New Year, also called the Spring Festival, which lasts for several weeks between late January and mid-February. Gan says while growing up he remembers riding around the festival in a large tractor, banging cymbals, beating drums, and handing out hundreds of bags of candies, sunflower seeds and gospel pamphlets.


The danger of arrest was diminished, Gan says, because the police were often off duty. He notes that evangelism opportunities also arise during Christmas and Easter, and at social events such as weddings and funerals.


But despite those windows of opportunity, China’s emerging leaders know too well the risks surrounding evangelism and the BTJ vision. Brother Meng*, a popular 22-year-old from Zhejiang, was arrested for the first time at age 17 after he inadvertently evangelized a local politician. “I just kept singing gospel songs in prison,” he says.


“The foreman beat me. He asked why was I so happy. I just kept singing and preaching to those who would listen.”


“Many in this young generation have a proven level of dedication and devotion to the Lord,” Biscaye says. “The [Back to Jerusalem] vision will only go ahead with the kind of flexibility they have in them.”


Indeed that flexibility may soon land many thousands of young Chinese Christians in the 10/40 Window, where BTJ workers predict that the spiritual strongholds of Hinduism, Buddhism and Islam will be broken. Leaders say there are BTJ missionaries currently operating in nearly every Asian nation.


“The persecution is very strong against the Back to Jerusalem vision because Satan strongly opposes it,” says Sister Kang*, who is from Xinjiang, a remote province in northwest China where persecution is commonplace. She mentioned Saudi Arabia and Egypt as her potential “gospel field.”


Sister Shan*, a 22-year-old whose marriage to Brother Meng was prearranged, says her father first shared the BTJ vision with her at age 13. One of her desires is to bring the gospel to isolated Muslim minority groups living in China.


“Foreign visas are restricted to many areas of China,” Biscaye says. “Our goal is to have way stations that become self-sustaining so others can be sent even farther out.


“To build the kingdom of God in this earth there’s a new wave coming with a fresh way of doing things,” he adds. “The Chinese understand suffering in a way that we don’t—they are willing to go out and die.”


An Online Campaign


Brother Yun no longer lives in China, but he continues to face opposition.


The man who once gave Brother Yun a passport to escape China and then served as his translator and handler is now his most ardent critic.


Since 2004, Germany-based businessman Lin Mushi, also known as Titus Pan, has been operating a Web site dedicated to discrediting Yun. Mushi and a group of Chinese church leaders say Yun has exaggerated his experiences in prison and his influence among China’s house churches, and seeks to exploit Western Christians for personal gain.


“Accusations, including from a handful of church leaders in China, all spring from this man,” Pelle Karlsson, president of Back to Jerusalem Inc., says of Mushi.


Karlsson says Mushi lodged Yun in his home in Germany through 1998 and handled all of his business affairs. But he says Mushi increasingly exerted control over Yun, who at the time spoke only Chinese. Hong Kong-based missionary Brother Ren, a longtime friend of Yun’s who is now his translator, says he flew to Germany in early 1999 to “rescue” Yun from Mushi’s custody. “Yun was in a state of shock,” Ren says. “He couldn’t sleep at all and was desperate to be free.”


Mushi did not respond to Charisma’s request for comment.


Karlsson says Mushi began dis­crediting Yun through faxes and emails after Yun left him. Eventually Mushi launched a Web site. On the homepage he posted a letter denouncing Yun, which is signed by respected veteran Chinese house church leaders such as Samuel Lamb. “According to some objective investigation … the Heavenly Man, Liu Zhenying, is a man who makes false testimony and deceives Western churches,” the letter states.


In an article posted on Mushi’s site, Lamb calls Yun “a big con man.” Among other criticisms, he questions Yun’s claim that he fasted 74 days, saying that would have been impossible.


Dennis Balcombe, who has been pastor of Hong Kong-based Revival Christian Church for nearly 40 years, says Lamb has long been critical of many charismatic teachings. He believes the attacks against Yun stem from jealousy.


“The root is jealousy and competition that is so common today in Christian ministry,” says Balcombe, noting his longtime friendship with Mushi ended when he began denouncing Yun. “Many people and organizations are going after missions support from the West.”


Several Christians have come to Yun’s defense. A Christian couple from Hamburg—who were friends to both Yun and Mushi before they parted ways—say Yun has had a consistent witness.


“During our whole time in Hamburg, we have yet met anyone who does not love Yun,” said Mr. and Mrs. Zhou Yu Bin in a statement released last year by Zhang Kai Bing, chairman of Shen Jie Chinese Church in Nuremburg, Germany. “People are attracted to the godliness and Christ-likeness in him.”


After Mushi posted the accusations against Yun online, eight Chinese church leaders issued an open letter stating that they had investigated the claims “thoroughly and found [them] to be false.”


Those close to Yun have encouraged him to defend himself, but he has so far refused. In a statement posted on Asia Harvest’s Web site, Yun says he holds nothing against his accusers.


“[The letter] did not reduce the deep respect I have in my heart towards these men,” he states. “I know that one day we will embrace before our Father in heaven, and any misunderstanding will be forgotten as we worship the Lamb of God together.”


A Reluctant Leader


Like many Chinese, Brother Yun is embarrassed by publicity and shuns the spotlight.


Although he is an internationally known speaker and the author of a best-selling book, Brother Yun is uncomfortable in the spotlight.


When people walk up to him after speaking engagements requesting prayer, Yun is known to get on his knees and ask them for prayer. “Brother Yun doesn’t want the megastar status so common in the West,” says Pelle Karlsson, president of Back to Jerusalem Inc. “He actually fights against it.”


In Chinese culture, a flashy appearance is viewed with disdain, says Michael Biscaye (not his real name), a missionary in China. “The success of Yun is kind of ironic,” he says. “It’s the very opposite of what he is—humble.


“In China there are no lights, no cameras. It would be real easy for someone here to say: ‘Look at him. He’s proud.'”


Although Yun is an honorary board member of Back to Jerusalem, those who know him say he doesn’t view himself as a prominent leader, Karlsson says, noting that Back to Jerusalem is an indigenous movement and Yun is “just one voice God has sent to the West.”


“Yun’s testimony is not of a great man with tremendous faith and power, but of a great God using a weak man,” Karlsson says.


Brother Ren, who has known Yun since the 1980s and is today his translator, says Yun’s testimony isn’t so special in the grand scheme of things. “He’s just one of many other brothers in China, I have to be honest,” he says.


“There are 10,000 other testimonies as [remarkable] as his. The only difference is the Lord took Yun out of China.”




Vibes


Cracking the Communication Code
By Emerson Eggerichs,
Integrity Publishers, hardcover, 304 pages, $22.99.


In his latest book, Cracking the Communication Code: The Secret to Speaking Your Mate’s Language, Emerson Eggerichs enthusiastically explains how husbands and wives can learn to live in harmony and even become positively energized by each other. The author, who has a master’s in communication, a master of divinity and a Ph.D. in child and family ecology, uses the principles from his book Love and Respect to provide a successful communication approach for any couple. Eggerichs’ overview of the principles in this follow-up release serves as a refresher for those who have read the previous title, but also gets new readers up to speed. Eggerichs explains the God-designed differences between men and women. He also describes the responsibilities each gender has to show unconditional love or respect for the other. With the lessons gleaned from Eggerichs’ book, couples will find themselves one—or even two—steps closer to cracking the communication code.
Kristi Shores


BOOKS


Delivering the Captives

By Alice Smith, Bethany House, softcover, 192 pages, $14.99.


Strategically getting to the root of a problem is the main theme in Delivering the Captives: Understanding the Strongman and How to Defeat Him by Alice Smith. “Whatever God hasn’t planted must be uprooted,” Smith says, “which will require our renouncing evil connections that would otherwise limit our liberty in Christ.” By recognizing where in our lives we have opened a door to evil influences, we can take responsibility for the ungodly things in our lives. When we see that we have allowed a stronghold to be built, we then have the authority to tear it down. The message in this book bypasses the symptoms of evil and gets right to the root—the strongman. Through personal stories of her ministry experience, Smith illustrates and teaches us how to unravel the power of the strongman and defeat him for good! Delivering the Captives is stocked with prayers and spiritual tools that will effectively set you on a path of freedom and victory.
JEVON BOLDEN


Breaking the Bonds of Evil
By Rebecca Greenwood, Chosen, softcover, 208 pages, $12.99.


In Breaking the Bonds of Evil: How to Set People Free From Demonic Oppression, Rebecca Greenwood offers an essential weapon for the arsenal of any believer looking to live out the full gospel of Jesus Christ. The author takes the reader step by step through defining and teaching what it means to be delivered to how to bring deliverance or freedom to those who are held captive by evil forces. She declares that through the cross we have authority to live a life free from the influence and control of our enemy, Satan. Greenwood also answers many questions that seem to go unresolved such as “Can Christians have demons?” Breaking the Bonds of Evil is an atlas of sorts, mapping the way to freedom for so many who lost their way and became entangled in Satan’s grasp.
JEVON BOLDEN


Defiant Joy!
By Carol McLeod, Vision Imprints Publishing, softcover, 208 pages, $13.99.


Carol McLeod thinks many Christians are like whiny, spoiled brats, acting as if the world revolves around them. Instead they could be experiencing joy—a joy that doesn’t come cheap, but gets you through the worst of times. McLeod, a pastor’s wife, mother of five, and a speaker at women’s conferences and retreats, challenges Christian women in her book, Defiant Joy!, to rise to the challenge: “Joy is not a spin-off of obedience to God, but joy is obedience to God.” The price to pay is daily quiet time, reading the Bible, and being on guard against emotional diversions such as bitterness and worry. McLeod writes that instead of letting emotions rule, women desperate for God’s joy can just choose to have it.
MARSHA GALLARDO


Redefine
By Thomas Nelson Inc., softcover,
416 pages, $16.99.


BibleZines are Bibles formatted as magazines with articles interspersed with Scripture. Redefine is the BibleZine for baby boomers, those born between 1940 and 1960. This New Century Version of the New Testament flows around articles by Chuck Swindoll, Max Lucado and others, and covers topics such as relating to adult children, missions trips, health and other issues relevant for this age group. BibleZines might not become Bibles used for everyday study, especially after the articles have been read. But the articles are likely to bring the
Scriptures to life in a whole new way, enhancing readers’ lives and relationships with the Lord.
LEIGH DEVORE


MUSIC


Return

By The Anointed Pace Sisters, Tyscot Records.


The Anointed Pace Sisters have spent decades creating soul-stirring gospel music. Return is no exception. The eight sisters jump-start the CD with the get-your-praise-on “High Praise.” And cuts such as “Reign Forever,” “Strategically Ordered,” “Contentment,” “The Words U Said,” “Hold On” and “Rescue” create a sense of joy or surrender as the group shuffles between Pentecostal praise and radical worship. Known for their testimonial-style singing, the sisters deliver strong messages of victory and assurance with cuts that include “It’s Already Done,” “God’s World” and “He’s Here,” featuring LaShun Pace. The project concludes with a message of hope and everlasting life with “Return.” Listeners who enjoy gospel music that stirs the soul and reaches the heart won’t be disappointed with this CD.

FAITH LOWE


Holy!
By Terry MacAlmon,

Terry MacAlmon Ministries.


On his latest CD, Holy!, Terry MacAlmon is accompanied by the Prague Symphony Orchestra as he leads listeners through an hour of instrumental praise comprised of two classically arranged suites. Each suite starts gently, interweaving MacAlmon’s soothing piano artistry with solo performances by David Cleveland (acoustic guitar), Kevin Burns (flugelhorn), Lucie Svehlova (violin), Roger Martin (flute) and Roger Weismeyer (oboe). As each suite builds, MacAlmon’s performance becomes more complex, though avoiding the keyboard “gymnastics” that often transform musical exaltation into unnecessary showmanship. Many of the songs are original compositions by MacAlmon. Yet, the musical sense of awe and praise they convey easily transcends their unfamiliarity. This and the printed lyrics on the CD’s inlay, provide further insight into MacAlmon’s anointing to magnify God’s glory and holiness. The bonus track “Love Theme (A Wedding Song)” gently provides the perfect ending to this stirring collection of worship songs.
RANDY WRIGHT


Portable Sounds
By TobyMac, Forefront Records.


In a musical age known for its over-produced, ultra studio-generated sound, TobyMac’s third studio release, Portable Sounds, stands apart as a perfect combination of pure musicality and fresh, new melodies. TobyMac continues with the unique blend of rock and hip-hop that has landed him a spot as one of Christian music’s most successful artists, while adding more soul singing than on previous albums. Collaborations with artists such as Kirk Franklin, Joanna Valencia, and American Idol finalist Mandisa, help add strength of vocals, allowing TobyMac to showcase his creativity and signature style. Starting off with the already popular “Made to Love,” TobyMac showcases what is to come on Portable Sounds, with the ever-present live instrumentals and gritty, grass-roots sound that is his own. Other highlights include the funk infused “Boomin,” the reggae-esque “No Ordinary Love” and the CD-closing “Lose My Soul,” which brings personal honesty from TobyMac in a prayer-like anthem.
ELISABETH BURNS


TELEVISION


Planet Earth

Discovery Channel.


Descend 1,300 feet in the Cave of Swallows in Mexico. See the courtship ritual of Pink River dolphins. Watch more than 100 sailfish hunt together.


Discovery Channel’s new series Planet Earth offers numerous breath-taking images of places and animals rarely seen. The 11, hour-long episodes took more than five years and 2,000 hours to create. Filmmakers used highly sophisticated technology and occasionally had to wait many hours to capture the rare images.


The first episode, “Pole to Pole,” takes viewers to both extremes. Travel to the frigid plains of the North Pole and visit the emperor penguins.


While the female penguins leave to hunt for food, the males stay behind to incubate their eggs. The group lives in a massive rotating huddle to protect one another from the harsh winter.


Then travel to the Kalahari Desert in Africa as elephants, buffalo, baboons and other animals travel hundreds of miles through sand storms and glaring heat to reach the Okavango Swamp for water. Dive underwater and watch a young elephant swim.


In nature there is always danger and some animals die. But the scenes are not overly gruesome and should not be disturbing to most ages.
Viewers will be even more keenly aware of God’s amazing plan and realize that everything works together. God is a meticulous creator and the earth showcases His creativity.
LEIGH DEVORE


SUSPENSE


No Legal Grounds

By James Scott Bell, Zondervan,
softcover, 352 pages, $13.99.


Sam Trask is a successful attorney who is finally living for Christ, has a great marriage and has balance in his life. But someone threatens to divulge secrets from his checkered past that could ruin everything. Sam and his family are in danger, but it seems the law can’t help. He has a choice: do nothing or take the law into his own hands.


MYSTERY


Deception

By Randy Alcorn, Multnomah, hardcover, 432 pages, $19.99.


While working a case of a murdered professor, homicide detective Ollie Chandler concludes that the perpetrator might have been another homicide detective. In the process of this investigation, a detective is murdered. Ollie is determined to dig through the mess of lies and secrets to find the truth.


HISTORICAL


Bittersweet

By Cathy Marie Hake, Bethany House, softcover, 384 pages, $13.99.


Just as Galen O’Sullivan begins to think of Laney McCain as more than just his best friend’s little sister, he is forced into a shotgun wedding—with another woman. Even though Galen is innocent, he is bound to his word and his new wife. Laney and Galen must let go of their love and trust God no matter the outcome.


New On DVD


The Nativity Story

New Line
Home Entertainment
$28.98


The Nativity Story showcases the cultural difficulties Joseph and Mary faced as they prepared to become parents to God’s only Son. This young couple was challenged to remain faithful to each other and to God. This film is rated PG for some violent content. Download resources at nativityresources.com.


Moe and the Big Exit
Big Idea Inc.
$14.99


Moe and the Big Exit is based on the story of Moses. Cowboy Moe (Larry the Cucumber) lives a fine life in Dodgeball City, but his kinfolk have to work hard. The mayor refuses Moe’s request to set his family free, so this cowboy does what has to be done. This DVD includes commentary, a discussion guide and additional fun features.


Flicka
Fox Home
Entertainment
$29.98


Katy McLaughlin wants to prove that she can train the wild stallion Flicka. Based on the classic novel My Friend Flicka by Mary O’Hara, this film displays breath-taking scenery and beautiful horses. Flicka is rated PG for mild language. The somewhat tense father-daughter relationship could serve as a catalyst for dialogue.




Buzz


SPOTLIGHT

Grace Awakening


When preparing for her latest release, Waking Up, singer-songwriter Bethany Dillon found inspiration in the simplest of places. During a brief break, the 19-year-old writer of hit singles such as “Beautiful” and “All I Need” woke up one morning “overwhelmed in a good way by the reality of Jesus in my life,” she says. “I’ve grown up in the church and I feel like I’m constantly reciting and believing these things. But that morning was one of the first times it really hit me, like a kick in the stomach, that I have something I didn’t earn.” Dillon says she wrote a song about her grace awakening as a way of saying thanks. “I didn’t intend it to be on the record. I was just freaking out over Jesus.”
DeWayne Hamby


Prayer Point


Millions of people worldwide struggle with addiction, and this month Just Pray No (www.justprayno.org) is hosting its 17th annual weekend of prayer for the addicted April 14-15 to intercede for them. They are praying that:


  • The Holy Spirit will convict those bound by addiction
  • The addicted will seek God with all of their hearts and trust Christ as their Savior
  • Addicts will be set free from substance abuse and hunger and thirst for the Word of God.


    Counter Culture


    Thousands of students are expected to participate in the third annual
    Day of Truth, a national student-led event to be held April 19 that
    seeks to counter the promotion of the “homosexual agenda.” Sponsored by the Alliance Defense Fund (ADF), the event was launched in 2005 after school officials disciplined San Diego student Chase Harper for wearing a T-shirt condemning homosexuality during the school’s observance of the gay-affirming Day of Silence. Last year’s Day of Truth drew nearly 3,000 students, and ADF expects more participation this year. Harper’s case awaits action by the U.S. Supreme Court.
    Paul Steven Ghiringhelli


    FAITH & POLITICS


    Under Fire


    A charismatic chaplain is the latest Christian embroiled in legal battles with the U.S. Navy, which is contesting allegations of discrimination in its chaplain corps. Lt. Gordon Klingenschmitt was forced out of the service in January after being court-martialed last fall for praying in front of the White House in uniform. His ouster became official on March 1 after an appeals court reviewed the case. Klingenschmitt has long advocated that chaplains be allowed to pray in Jesus’ name. Formerly endorsed by the Evangelical Episcopal Church, Klingenschmitt is now affiliated with the Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches. The Dallas-based organization has eight chaplains among 66 involved in a series of lawsuits stretching back to 1999. The Rutherford Institute is representing Klingenschmitt, saying the military violated his First Amendment rights.
    Ken Walker


    Together Again


    Mario and Mechelle Murillo remarried after 14 years apart


    He calls it the greatest miracle in the 38-year history of his ministry—a story of “love lost and reborn.” California-based evangelist Mario Murillo has renewed his wedding vows with his former wife, Mechelle, after a 1992 divorce and 14 years spent apart. “This entire experience has been heaven on earth,” he told Charisma in January, one year after his remarriage. “We are still walking in a sort of dream state.”


    Murillo says he brought “the stress of success” home and took it out on his wife. She eventually “ran for her life,” he says, taking their 4-year-old son and eventually marrying a man Murillo calls a “false prophet.”


    Meanwhile, after gaining primary custody of their son, Murillo also remarried. But his new wife eventually left him to marry another man. After the divorce, Murillo says the Holy Spirit gave him a burden to pray every day for Mechelle. “I saw how deeply I failed Mechelle,” he says. “I only prayed for a chance to say that I was sorry and to encourage her to be with her son.”


    When the man Mechelle married abruptly died of a stroke, Murillo says, “the scales fell off Mechelle’s eyes.” Months later, he and Mechelle went on a date. The couple moved slowly, submitted to premarital counseling, and once remarried kept news of it low-key in order to protect their “tender love,” Murillo says.


    Murillo says he and his wife are “stunned by the sovereign power of God.” Today he urges Christians to “call for a red alert” when their marriages are under attack. “You take drastic action to shut everything down to get to the root of what is threatening your marriage,” he says. “No amount of money, time or reputation spent on rescuing your marriage can compare to the horrors of divorce.”
    Paul Steven Ghiringhelli