Jeremiah 6:16

Thus saith the LORD, "Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls."

But they said, "We will not walk therein."

 

Home Marcia Segelstein Guest Columnist
Print E-mail

News From the Front

Chuck Colson, evangelical giant against ‘culture of death,’ dies at 80

by Kathleen Gilbert

FAIRFAX, Virginia, April 22, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Charles W. Colson, the Watergate felon who went on to become the voice of faith and reason for millions and to revolutionize prison ministry following his conversion to Christianity, died Saturday following a brain hemorrhage.

Colson, 80, died at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Virginia one week after emergency surgery for bleeding in the brain...

Chuck Colson
 
 

For many of the baby boomer generation, Colson, who rose to the level of captain in the Marine Corps, will primarily be remembered for his role in the Watergate scandal, for which he served seven months in prison and became a subject of national disdain. It was months before he began his sentence, however, that a friend handed him a copy of C.S. Lewis’ Mere Christianity, an event that changed Colson’s life forever.

In his memoir “Born Again,” Colson described his pivotal encounter with God through the ministry of a friend at a time when “my whole world [was] crashing down around me.” Colson prayed for the first time and began to meditate on the power of love before realizing he must come to terms with the material reality of Christianity, the crux of Lewis’ thesis, and to Colson, the “heart of the matter”: that Jesus Christ is God.

“The more I grappled with those words, the more they began to explode before my eyes, blowing into smithereens a lot of comfortable old notions I had floated through life with, without thinking much about them,” he wrote. “[Jesus] was either God or a raving lunatic. There was my choice, as simple, stark and frightening as that, no fine shadings, no gradations, no compromises.”

When Colson’s conversion became public, it was widely ridiculed as a ploy to reduce his prison term. But the event was destined to transform his incarceration experience in a far more profound way: Colson saw an urgent need to alleviate the plight of his fellow prisoners, whom he saw as victims of unjust treatment and lacking help towards finding a better path.

Colson was to begin a faith-based outreach to prisoners that now reaches 113 countries worldwide.

An outspoken critic of abortion, eugenicism, postmodernism, the homosexual lifestyle, no-fault divorce, and other aspects of modern sexual anarchy - phenomena he called the “culture of death,” a term coined by pope John Paul II - Colson founded The Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview, in hopes of fostering “The Movement” of Christians banding together to re-evangelize Western civilization.

Millions became familiar with Colson’s eloquent defense of Christian civilization through his daily radio commentary, BreakPoint, heard on more than 1,400 outlets across the United States, as well as his online writings at BreakPoint.org. Colson was co-author of the Manhattan Declaration.

Several conservative leaders on Saturday mourned the loss of a brilliant mind and astonishing witness to the reformative power of Christianity and the culture of life.

“At the heart of the pro-life movement is the certainty that one life can make a difference, and Chuck Colson is proof of that,” said Dr. Charmaine Yoest of Americans United for Life.

Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council remembered Colson for his indelible impact in the lives of countless prisoners through a Prison Fellowship “rooted in one man’s deliverance.”

“I have long admired Chuck Colson, because of his commitment to showing both the truth and the love of Jesus Christ.  By his example, he taught Christians how to fully integrate one’s Christian faith with a role in the public realm,” said Perkins. “He never compartmentalized his faith.  Chuck Colson challenged us to follow God’s instruction to be salt and light in every place that we set our feet.

“Chuck Colson finished the race of life strong, leaving a legacy that will continue to bring light to the darkened hearts of millions.  Well done.”

 

Numerous Planned Parenthoods close in wake of new Texas law

by Christine Dhanagom

TEXAS, August 18, 2011 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Still reeling from funding cuts in Texas, Planned Parenthood is closing clinics and merging affiliates throughout the state, Texas Right to Life reports.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


The national abortion giant received a major blow this summer when Texas Governor and presidential contender Rick Perry signed into law a bill that stripped the organization of its funding, and prohibited the state government from contracting with any organization that provides abortions. 

A July report in the Gainesville Daily Register confirmed the closure of a Planned Parenthood clinic in Gainesville as a direct result of these legislative developments.

“Like many healthcare providers facing funding cuts after this Texas Legislative session, Planned Parenthood is adjusting its business model to ensure that our mission of providing healthcare education and advocacy across Texas remains strong,” Ken Lambrecht, CEO of Planned Parenthood of North Texas, told the news service.  “We are in the process of reconstructing to ensure that we can continue to best serve communities throughout North Texas.”

Texas Right to Life Legislative Director John Seago told LifeSiteNews.com that his organization called over 70 Planned Parenthood clinics in Texas and confirmed six additional closures in Arlington, Mesquite, Plano, Sherman, Terrell, and Waxahachie. All seven locations are scheduled to be closed by the end of September.

Additionally, Planned Parenthood’s website indicates that a center in Groesbeck is “temporarily closed.”

“Even though these clinics are family planning clinics, so there’s not actually any abortions being provided at the clinics that are closing their doors, there’s no mistake that these are abortion-minded clinics that are sending women to abortion clinics,” Seago commented.

He also said that a planned merger between Planned Parenthood’s Waco affiliates in Central Texas and their Austin affiliates is believed to be related to budget cuts, based on press reports of layoffs related to the merger.

The organization has also announced a merger of Louisiana affiliates with affiliates in Houston and Southeast Texas.

Elizabeth Graham, Director of Texas Right to Life, called the developments “historic for the pro-life movement and the protection of women’s health.”

Pro-life advocates in the state are also celebrating an end to tax-funded abortions as a result of the new law, which denies state funds to county hospital districts that use local tax money to fund abortion services.

The Austin American-Statesman reports that the Central Health Board in Travis County, formerly the only county in the state financing abortions with tax revenue, voted unanimously last week to end publicly funded abortion services. 

As LifeSiteNews reported in April, funds stripped from family planning organizations have been re-allocated to pregnancy centers, among other programs. 

According to a recent Texas Tribune report, the Texas legislature allocated an additional $300,000 to the state’s Alternative to Abortion Services program, for a total of $8.3 million in state funding.

 



 
CovenantEyes.com

Christian News

News From the Front

Chuck Colson, evangelical giant against ‘culture of death,’ dies at 80

by Kathleen Gilbert

FAIRFAX, Virginia, April 22, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Charles W. Colson, the Watergate felon who went on to become the voice of faith and reason for millions and to revolutionize prison ministry following his conversion to Christianity, died Saturday following a brain hemorrhage.

Colson, 80, died at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Virginia one week after emergency surgery for bleeding in the brain...

Chuck Colson
 
 

For many of the baby boomer generation, Colson, who rose to the level of captain in the Marine Corps, will primarily be remembered for his role in the Watergate scandal, for which he served seven months in prison and became a subject of national disdain. It was months before he began his sentence, however, that a friend handed him a copy of C.S. Lewis’ Mere Christianity, an event that changed Colson’s life forever.

In his memoir “Born Again,” Colson described his pivotal encounter with God through the ministry of a friend at a time when “my whole world [was] crashing down around me.” Colson prayed for the first time and began to meditate on the power of love before realizing he must come to terms with the material reality of Christianity, the crux of Lewis’ thesis, and to Colson, the “heart of the matter”: that Jesus Christ is God.

“The more I grappled with those words, the more they began to explode before my eyes, blowing into smithereens a lot of comfortable old notions I had floated through life with, without thinking much about them,” he wrote. “[Jesus] was either God or a raving lunatic. There was my choice, as simple, stark and frightening as that, no fine shadings, no gradations, no compromises.”

When Colson’s conversion became public, it was widely ridiculed as a ploy to reduce his prison term. But the event was destined to transform his incarceration experience in a far more profound way: Colson saw an urgent need to alleviate the plight of his fellow prisoners, whom he saw as victims of unjust treatment and lacking help towards finding a better path.

Colson was to begin a faith-based outreach to prisoners that now reaches 113 countries worldwide.

An outspoken critic of abortion, eugenicism, postmodernism, the homosexual lifestyle, no-fault divorce, and other aspects of modern sexual anarchy - phenomena he called the “culture of death,” a term coined by pope John Paul II - Colson founded The Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview, in hopes of fostering “The Movement” of Christians banding together to re-evangelize Western civilization.

Millions became familiar with Colson’s eloquent defense of Christian civilization through his daily radio commentary, BreakPoint, heard on more than 1,400 outlets across the United States, as well as his online writings at BreakPoint.org. Colson was co-author of the Manhattan Declaration.

Several conservative leaders on Saturday mourned the loss of a brilliant mind and astonishing witness to the reformative power of Christianity and the culture of life.

“At the heart of the pro-life movement is the certainty that one life can make a difference, and Chuck Colson is proof of that,” said Dr. Charmaine Yoest of Americans United for Life.

Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council remembered Colson for his indelible impact in the lives of countless prisoners through a Prison Fellowship “rooted in one man’s deliverance.”

“I have long admired Chuck Colson, because of his commitment to showing both the truth and the love of Jesus Christ.  By his example, he taught Christians how to fully integrate one’s Christian faith with a role in the public realm,” said Perkins. “He never compartmentalized his faith.  Chuck Colson challenged us to follow God’s instruction to be salt and light in every place that we set our feet.

“Chuck Colson finished the race of life strong, leaving a legacy that will continue to bring light to the darkened hearts of millions.  Well done.”

 

Numerous Planned Parenthoods close in wake of new Texas law

by Christine Dhanagom

TEXAS, August 18, 2011 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Still reeling from funding cuts in Texas, Planned Parenthood is closing clinics and merging affiliates throughout the state, Texas Right to Life reports.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read more...

Morning and Evening Devotional

- Copyright © 2008, 2009 Founding Father's Faith Ministry -

- Website by: - Supernal Designs -