Indiana abortion, Freedom March, tiniest baby By CP Editors |
Emmanuel Church/Kevin SchneiderInmates at Brown County Jail in Indiana pray after receiving care kits given to them by Emmanuel Church. |
|
We've compiled the top stories of the week. Here's what you need to know: |
Supreme Court upholds Indiana’s fetal burial mandate |
The U.S. Supreme Court decided not to take up Indiana’s appeal of a lower court ruling that blocked a ban on abortions based on sex, race, ancestry or disability. |
The high court did, however, uphold the state’s mandate that fetal remains be buried or cremated. |
In the court’s opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas said he believes “the court will soon need to confront the constitutionality of laws like Indiana’s” because of “the potential for abortion to become a tool of eugenic manipulation.” |
In another decision this week, the Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge to a Pennsylvania school district’s policy of allowing students to use bathrooms and locker rooms that correspond with their gender identity rather than their biological sex. |
Former LGBT persons declare freedom at Freedom March |
Former LGBT-identified persons, including survivors of the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting, shared their testimonies of finding Jesus during the second Freedom March in Washington, D.C., last weekend. |
They emphasized that their transformation was not a “gay to straight thing.” |
“We have learned what true love is in Jesus Christ, that our identity is not in our sexuality but it is in Jesus.” Angel Colon, Pulse shooting survivor |
Those leading the march also asked the LGBT community for forgiveness for the way the Church has treated them. |
World’s smallest surviving baby released from hospital |
Saybie, who was born at 23 weeks weighing just 8.6 ounces, is being dubbed a miracle. |
She was able to go home in good health this month and now weighs over 6 pounds. |
“There’s no denying her humanity. These medical miracles are why Americans are rethinking the abortion debate.” — Rachel Campos-Duffy, author |
Franklin Graham calls for special day of prayer for Trump |
A “special day of prayer” for President Donald Trump is scheduled for Sunday, June 2. |
Evangelist Franklin Graham, who is leading the day of prayer, clarified that it is not an endorsement of Trump but a way of encouraging the president especially as “enemies” are “trying to destroy” him. |
“If the president was brought down for whatever reason, it could lead to a civil war. There are millions of people out there that voted for President Trump that are behind him that are angry and they are mad. We are just living a very dangerous territory and we need God’s help.” — Franklin Graham |
Indiana megachurch opens ‘microsite’ inside jail |
Emmanuel Church in Greenwood, Indiana, has multiple campuses, including in Johnson County Jail and Johnson County Community Corrections work-release center. |
The new microsites were launched early this year and over a dozen have come to Christ. |
“The way that we view it is that they can't come to Christ inside these dark places without someone having the courage to go in.” — Rachel Long, executive pastor of multisites and families |
Check out our latest podcast: Calif. pastor tackles increasing Bible illiteracy, a generation that doesn't know Jesus |
Pray for |
Families of four choir members killed in a van crash in Virginia |
Christians facing extinction in Iraq |
New releases |
Albums: |
The AftersThe Afters latest album" Fear No More" drops May 31, 2019. |
|
Fear No More by The Afters (May 31) |
Long Live Love by Kirk Franklin (May 31) |
Books: |
God and Galileo: What a 400-Year-Old Letter Teaches Us about Faith and Science by David L. Block and Kenneth C. Freeman (May 31) |
Transformed: A Navy SEAL’s Unlikely Journey from the Throne of Africa, to the Streets of the Bronx, to Defying All Odds by Remi Adeleke (May 14) |