News

News Briefs: December 12, 1994

* The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld the conviction and five-month jail sentence of Operation Rescue founder Randall Terry on a contempt-of-court conviction. The charge stems from pro-lifer Harley Belew showing a 20-week-old human fetus to Bill Clinton at the 1992 Democratic National Convention in New York. Even though Terry was not at the scene, he was convicted of “aiding and abetting” Belew. Prosecutors said Terry, who began serving the sentence November 9, had been responsible for allowing his followers to disobey a federal injunction barring Operation Rescue from “presenting or confronting” Clinton “with any fetus or fetuses or fetal remains.”

* Tony Alamo, a 59-year-old evangelist with a ministry to drug abusers and the homeless, has been fined $210,000 and sentenced to up to six years in prison following his conviction by a federal jury in Memphis for understating his income for 1985 and failure to file tax returns for 1986 through 1988.

* C. Charles Van Ness, president and chief operating officer of Cook Communications Ministries International (formerly David C. Cook Foundation), will retire January 1. Van Ness, who has been with the Elgin, Illinois-based company since 1962, became president in 1989 when David C. Cook III retired. He will continue as a trustee, a post he has held since 1967.

* A federal court decision requiring several ministries to return money donated by an insolvent benefactor has forced one of the groups, Proclamation International (PI), to cease operations. The Pensacola-based mission to developing countries, which was ordered to return $51,228, will retain its corporate status while its lawyer appeals the ruling. “We’re not totally out of existence,” says Don Dunkerley, pi’s executive director. “If we preserve the corpse, it can be resurrected if the appeal is won.” Meanwhile, Dunkerley says he is continuing his “personal ministry” through a local church.

* William “Mike” Henning, an influential voice for renewal in the Episcopal Church, died September 6 of stomach cancer. Henning, 45, had been immediate past board chair of Episcopalians United. He was rector at Saint Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Sewickley, Pennsylvania, for the past seven years and a dean and professor at Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry in Ambridge, Pennsylvania, for ten years previous.

* A Pensacola, Florida, jury deliberated only 20 minutes November 2 before convicting Paul Hill of the July 29 shotgun slayings of abortionist John Bayard Britton and bodyguard James Barrett (CT, Sept. 12, 1994, p. 56). The following day the jury recommended that Hill be sentenced to death in the electric chair. Hill, acting as his own attorney, called no witnesses during a three-day trial. Judge Frank Bell had prevented the former minister from using a “justifiable homicide” defense.

* In the wake of a plethora of new angel books on the shelves of both Christian and secular stores, readers now may subscribe to Angel Times, “the first national magazine completely devoted and dedicated to the angelic realm.” Linda Vephula is publisher of the Atlanta-based bimonthly periodical, which hit newsstands in October. The magazine promises to feature the nation’s “foremost” angel experts.

* Bryan Chapell was elected president of Saint Louis-based Covenant Theological Seminary, the national seminary of the 200,000-member Presbyterian Church in America, September 24. He joined the school’s faculty in 1986 and became academic dean in 1988, helping Covenant to grow to 730 students from 151. Chapell succeeds Paul Kooistra, who is the new chief executive officer of Mission to the World.

Copyright © 1994 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Cosmic Combat: Philip Yancey explores themes not often captured on Christmas cards

Cover Story

The Other Side of Christmas, Part 2

Cover Story

The Other Side of Christmas

Do We Still Need the Reformation? Part 1

By Alister E. McGrath

Pentecostals Renounce Racism

J. Lee Grady

Graham Preaches Reconciliation in Atlanta

John W. Kennedy

Alabama Pastor's Murder Prompts Unity

Ken Walker

Episcopal Bishop Joins Others on Road to Rome

Rebekah Scott Schreffler

Should Expectant Mothers Be Tested for HIV?

Thomas S. Giles

The Lost Sex Study

Religious Schools Fear Accreditation Changes

Thomas S. Giles with K.L. Billingsley

Do We Still Need the Reformation? Part 2

Why I Signed ‘Evangelicals and Catholics Together’

J. I. Packer

BOOKS: Modern Wise Men Encounter Jesus. Part 1

BOOKS: Modern Wise Men Encounter Jesus. Part 2

Abstinence - Chic, Like a Virgin

Russian Orthodox Church's Influence Expands

Will Rwanda Be Rebuilt?

Rachel Saint Dies

Editorial

EDITORIAL: For Whom the Bell Curves

Lisa Graham McMinn, sociologist, and Mark R. McMinn, psychologist, both at Wheaton College

News

Pope Lands on Bestseller List

News

Close Encounters Across Cultures

Dale Buss

News

Michael English Launches Second Career

Well-Swilled and Stinking No More

LETTERS: The Population Problem

Fear of Looking Forward

J.I. Packer

Why We Believe in the Virgin Birth

News

Schuller Seeks Theater Converts

ARTICLE: Cosmology’s Holy Grail By Hugh Ross

Hugh Ross, president of Reasons to Believe

BOOKS: Friends or Lovers?

Gerald Bray, Anglican prof at Samford U's Beeson Divinity School

BOOKS: Worth Mentioning

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from December 12, 1994

Conservatives Gain Upper Hand

Randy Frame

No Conservative Tide on Homosexual Rights

Steve Rabey

Michigan Judge Nixes 'Charter Schools'

Dale D. Buss

View issue

Our Latest

Analysis

Republicans and Democrats Clash on Epstein File Release

The Bulletin with Nicole Martin

The newest documents remind Christians to support sexual abuse victims.

Evangelicals Confront a Revolutionary Age

A Catholic on the campaign trail and the “possibly catastrophic character of what is happening under our eyes” caused deep concern in 1960.

News

Hindu Nationalists Attack Missionaries in Northern India

One victim describes the mob descending on their bus, a rare occurrence in Muslim-majority Jammu and Kashmir.

News

Armenia Holds Inaugural Prayer Breakfast Amid Church Arrests

Some see the crackdown as persecution, others challenge the national church’s ties to Russia.

Review

A New Jesus Horror Movie Wallows In Affliction

Peter T. Chattaway

“The Carpenter’s Son,” starring Nicolas Cage, is disconnected from biblical hope.

The Bulletin

Israeli Settler Violence, Epstein Emails, and BrinGing Back Purity

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

West Bank skirmishes, Congress releases Epstein documents mentioning Trump, and Gen Z reconsiders purity culture.

News

Kenya Clergy Oppose Bill Aimed at Regulating Churches

Moses Wasamu

Pastors say the proposed law could harm religious freedoms.

News

Christians from 45 Countries Call for Zion Church Pastor’s Release

Meanwhile in China, the house church continues to gather and baptize new believers.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube