News

News Briefs: July 15, 1996

  • Russian patriarch Alexi II and Constantinople patriarch Bartholomew I have mended a rift and prevented a full schism. Alexi suspended relations in February over the Orthodox church in Estonia (CT, April 29, 1996, p. 55). In a joint statement issued May 16, the patriarchs said they would use “extreme dispensation” and “allow the Estonian Orthodox the freedom to choose to which ecclesiastical jurisdiction they wish to belong.”
  • The city of Kharkov in Ukraine canceled an international festival of Jewish music and dance May 24 to 26, causing Messianic Jewish organizers Hear O Israel Ministries of Rochester, New York, to lose $250,000. Militia surrounded the football stadium where the festival was to be held and told Hear O Israel executive director Jonathan Bernis he needed government religious affairs approval to stage the event. Seventy Christians from the United States had paid their own way to participate in the festival.
  • Three Muslim extremists accused of murdering a Pakistani Christian outside a Lahore courtroom in 1994 (CT, May 16, 1994, p. 48) have been acquitted due to a lack of evidence. One of the three, Muslim cleric Maulvi Fazl-e-Haq, had been a plaintiff in a case accusing 20-year-old Manzoor Masih of blaspheming the prophet Muhammad. Masih died from a head wound, while the other two Christians were wounded. The Christians were later acquitted of blasphemy.
  • Art Gay, 59, is stepping down after five years as president of the Wheaton, Illinois-based World Relief (WR) July 19 to return to parish ministry in the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference. During Gay’s tenure, WR began relief-and-development work in Rwanda, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Myanmar, Yugoslavia, Croatia, and Bosnia and Herzegovinia.
  • Thomas R. Koch is the new general director of BCM International (formerly Bible Club Movement), an Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, organization with more than 700 missionaries in 45 countries. Koch served as founder and director of Serving Other Servants Ministries from 1989 to 1995.

Copyright © 1996 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Persecuted: A crisis for the contemporary church

Christians, Jews Form Coalition

Lutheran, Catholic, and Black Churches Join Graham Effort

1,800 Churches Participating in Olympic Outreach

Gayle White in Atlanta

YANCEY: Confessions of a Spiritual Amnesiac

Why the Psalms Scare Us

Kathleen Norris

From the Fringe to the Fold

Ruth Tucker

ARTS: Messiaen’s Complicated Contemplations

Karen L. Mulder

NORTH AMERICAN SCENE: Arsons Continue, Frustration Sets In

Foes, Backers Seeks Common Ground

Ross Pavlac in Madison, Wisconsin

Congressmen Focus on Persecuted Believers

Bishops Propose Chastity Canon

Women Become 'Promise Keepers'

WORLD SCENE: Abducted SIL Missionary Freed

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OBITUARY: Ex-Fuller President David Hubbard Dies

Palau Preached to a Preoccupied Metropolis

John W. Kennedy in Chicago, with reports from Bradley Baurain and Christian Coon

Evangelist Sets Sights on U.S. Latinos

By Andres T. Tapia in Chicago

The Suffering Church

Kim A. Lawton

SIDEBAR: Forgive Us Our Trespasses

News

News Briefs: July 15, 1996

Wire Story

SBC Targets Clinton, Disney, Jews

Timothy C. Morgan in New Orleans, with reports from Baptist Press

Risky Business

LETTERS: No Middle Ground

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Ministry in the Real World Order

Robert A. Seiple, president of World Vision U.S

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Burned, but Not Consumed

Richard A. Kauffman

ARTICLE: Saving the Safety Net

Everett L. Wilson

SIDEBAR: When Your Church Says It’s Wrong

Camilla F. Kleindienst, who lives in Fulton, Missouri.

ARTICLE: Tolerance Without Compromise

Richard J. Mouw

BOOKS: Getting Evangelicals into the Church

Robert W. Patterson

BOOKS: Wesley on CD

BOOKS: Hymns for the Politically Correct

Donald G. Bloesch

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from July 15, 1996

SIDEBAR: Escaping Martyrdom in Saudi Arabia

SIDEBAR: Help for the Persecuted

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