News

Gleanings: October 2016

Important developments in the church and the world (as they appeared in our October issue).

How to govern your church effectively

For the first time, the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability surveyed leaders from more than 500 churches what makes their boards effective. Here’s what they said:

California accommodates Christian colleges

Faith-based schools like Biola University will be exempt from California’s proposed anti-discrimination law, Senate Bill 1146. Earlier versions of the bill would have prevented colleges that received state funds from enforcing codes of student conduct related to the school’s beliefs on sexual identity, including teaching that marriage is between a man and woman and organizing bathrooms by biological sex. A state lawmaker removed the most contentious aspect of the bill following outcry from religious leaders, saying schools instead must disclose their exemption when reporting expulsions related to morality codes.

Nigeria: Boko Haram split threatens Christians

A fracturing Boko Haram isn’t good news for the 218 mostly Christian Chibok schoolgirls who have been held captive since 2014. The Islamist group splintered when ISIS, to whom Boko Haram pledged loyalty in 2015, backed a new leader, who promptly promised to kill Christians and bomb churches. But the former Boko Haram leader, who retains control of the girls, refused to step down. A fresh video of the girls, along with a deadly attack on Chibok, returned international attention to their plight. Boko Haram has killed more than 20,000 people since 2009, making it the world’s deadliest terror group.

Israel: World Vision staffer accused of financing Hamas

A World Vision manager in the Gaza Strip has been accused of funneling millions in humanitarian aid to the Palestinian terror group Hamas. The Christian charity disputes the Israel Security Agency’s (ISA) allegations, based on its own budget numbers and audits. Mohammad El Halabi, who had worked for World Vision for six years, was arrested in June, six weeks before Israeli authorities revealed the allegations. His lawyer stated Halabi was looted by Hamas fighters; the ISA said its investigation found that he gave Hamas up to $50 million in cash and supplies.

India: Court orders more money for Orissa victims

India’s Supreme Court ruled in August that justice had not been served following the worst instance of anti-Christian violence in the country’s history. The 2008 attack, which followed the death of Hindu leader Swami Lakshmanananda Saraswati, killed about 100 Christians and damaged 300 churches and 6,000 homes in the Kandhamal district of the eastern coastal state of Orissa (now named Odisha). Of the 827 registered complaints, 315 were not pursued; in the 362 cases in which a verdict was given, only 78 resulted in a conviction, according to World Watch Monitor. Judges reopened cases for some of the perpetrators who had been acquitted and ordered additional compensation for victims and families whose homes had been destroyed.

Oklahoma Wesleyan sues over campus assault standards

Oklahoma Wesleyan University has become the first college to challenge the federal Title IX standards for sexual assault cases. The Bartlesville school is suing the Obama administration over lower standards for proving sexual assault, which it argues lead to punishing students without sufficient evidence. The Department of Education’s “preponderance of evidence” standards only require defendants be proven more likely to be guilty than innocent, rather than “clear and convicting” evidence against them, states the lawsuit. The college joined a suit brought by a former University of Virginia student.

Egypt: First ‘official’ Christian convert reverts to Islam

After nearly a decade, an Egyptian convert to Christianity has publicly given up on his unprecedented legal campaign to get his country’s Islamic government to change his name and affiliation on his identification card. Mohamed Hegazy faced harassment, torture, and multiple arrests for apostasy after leaving Islam, but still became the first Egyptian believer in 2007 to defend the right to change one’s religious identity. This year, Hegazy declared his return to Islam in a YouTube clip that his attorney believes was recorded in order to secure his release from prison.

Malaysia: Christians banned from working in Muslim homes

A new law issued by Malaysia’s immigration department bans non-Muslims from working in Muslim households, reports AsiaNews. The ruling mostly affects Christians, including from the nearby Philippines, who are employed as maids in the majority-Muslim country of 30 million. The policy follows Malaysia’s ongoing restrictions regarding conversion, religious language, and other religious freedom issues of its sizable Christian minority. Observers noted that other Islamic nations—specifically the Arab Gulf states—have not issued similar bans, and that Muslims hiring non-Muslim maids is in keeping with Islamic teaching.

US receives 10,000 Syrian refugees, 0.5% are Christian

Although Christians composed 10 percent of Syria’s pre-war population, less than 1 percent of the more than 10,000 Syrian refugees admitted to the United States this fiscal year are Christians. Some Christian advocates have argued that larger numbers of Syrian Christians—as a targeted minority—should be admitted. But World Relief explains that it’s too early for Christians displaced by ISIS to appear in the slow-moving UN resettlement pipeline, while many middle-class Christian refugees avail themselves of tourist visas to apply for asylum in Western nations instead.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

The World Is Yearning for Beautiful Orthodoxy

Putting Our Money Where Our Eyes Are

A Decade of Change

Where Kids Get Their Political Views

You Are the Manure of the Earth

The Other 'Christianity Today'

The New Baptist Covenant: Will It Work?

News

Charity Navigator's Overhead Overhaul

News

Manga Mania

‘Why Christianity Today’ Revisited

The Cosmos Is Vaster than the Ancients Imagined

The Future of the Church Is Analog, Not Digital

Do We Really Need More Breast Cancer ‘Awareness’?

Reply All

Art Advocates

Testimony

I Found the Gospel in Communist Romania

The Value of Friends Who Don’t Look, Think, or Vote Like You Do

Jimmy Carter: Pursuing an Arc of Reconciliation

Review

When Modern Medicine Becomes a False God

5 Books to Read Before Voting in a Presidential Election

New & Noteworthy Books

Excerpt

Why God Doesn’t Let Us In On Everything

Clinton, Trump, or Neither? 3 Views on the 2016 Presidential Election

James Dobson: Why I Am Voting for Donald Trump

Sho Baraka: Why I Can't Vote for Either Trump or Clinton

Ron Sider: Why I Am Voting for Hillary Clinton

View issue

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Play Those Chocolate Sprinkles, Rend Collective!

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Judge gives former billionaire Bill Hwang 18 years in prison for crimes that outweigh his “lifetime” of “charitable works.”

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How a Dark Sense of Humor Can Save You from Cynicism

A bit of gallows humor can remind us that death does not have the final word.

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The Brazilian founder of Bola de Neve Church, which attracted celebrities and catalyzed 500 congregations on six continents, faced accusations from family members and a former colleague.

Review

The Quiet Faith Behind Little House on the Prairie

How a sincere but reserved Christianity influenced the life and literature of Laura Ingalls Wilder.

‘Bonhoeffer’ Bears Little Resemblance to Reality

The new biopic from Angel Studios twists the theologian’s life and thought to make a political point.

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