Prayer Hub
Tuesday, 01 February 2011 15:18

Christian GP appointed to Govt drugs panel

A Christian doctor who takes a firm line against drug use has been appointed to sit on the Government’s Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD). Dr Hans-Christian Raabe has said that children should simply be taught to say 'no' to drugs. The move is seen as a change in direction for the panel, which has focussed on a ‘harm reduction’ approach until now. Dr Raabe has preferred to focus on prevention and made his views clear in a briefing to MPs. ‘Harm reduction has its place’, the GP said, ‘but I’m concerned that it’s the only policy being advocated. In schools, for example, where the majority of children don’t take drugs, we still need a prevention approach.’ Dr Raabe has advocated that strong family life is key to addressing all these matters: ‘Marriage is associated with greater happiness, less depression, less alcohol abuse and less smoking’.

Pray: that objections to this appointment will be quietened and that Dr Raabe will be able to bring quality argument to the work of the ACMD. (Ex.23:21)

More: http://www.christian.org.uk/news/christian-gp-appointed-to-govt-drugs-panel/

Tuesday, 01 February 2011 15:16

Anti-Christian bias is OK at the BBC

Peter Sissons has revealed that the BBC has no qualms about insulting Christians. Mr Sissons, whose memoirs are being serialised in the Daily Mail, slammed the BBC for its bias. He said: ‘Islam must not be offended at any price, although Christians are fair game because they do nothing about it if they are offended.’ His comments are unlikely to surprise many Christians who have become increasingly concerned about a perceived anti-Christian bias at the public broadcaster. The veteran presenter, who fronted news and current affairs programmes at the BBC, also said that staff damage their careers if they don’t follow the BBC’s mindset. In 2010 Radio 2 host Simon Mayo warned that religion was ‘increasingly driven to the margin’ on the BBC. And in 2009 Jeremy Vine, another of the Corporation’s radio presenters, said he believed it had become ‘almost socially unacceptable to say you believe in God’.

Pray: that the anti-Christian bias in the BBC be halted and the agenda of secular religion be silenced. (Ps.31:18)

More: http://www.christian.org.uk/news/anti-christian-bias-is-ok-at-the-bbc-says-former-presenter/

Tuesday, 01 February 2011 15:14

Poll: Christian marginalisation on the rise

The majority of church-goers in the UK feel that Christians are being increasingly marginalised in public life, a new survey has revealed. Conducted by ComRes on behalf of Premier Christian Media, 81 per cent of church-goers think the marginalisation of Christians is happening more and more in the media and press. While 77 per cent thought it was growing in the public realm, two thirds said they believed it was increasing in the workplace and more than half said it was on the rise in Government. Peter Kerridge, Chief Executive of Premier Christian Media, said: ‘2011 presents a great opportunity for Christians to speak out and tackle the creeping marginalisation occurring in British society’. He added, ‘When three out of four Christians have reported an increased risk of discrimination in the UK over the last five years, the message is clear. As a country we need to do more to support Christians living out their faith’.

Pray: that as Christians we would speak out boldly about our faith led by the Holy Spirit. (Ac.4:29)

More: http://www.christian.org.uk/news/poll-christian-marginalisation-on-the-rise-say-uk-church-goers/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+christianinstitute+%28The+Christian+Institute%29&utm_content=Twitter

Tuesday, 01 February 2011 15:12

Whole-life discipleship may come at great cost

Being a whole-life disciple in Britain today may come at great cost to Christians', says Nigel Hopper of the London Institute of Contemporary Christianity. The lecturer in contemporary culture said the recent ruling against Christian B&B owners Peter and Hazelmary Bull raised the question of how Christians are to live out their faith in the context of a society where that faith is not shared by everyone. ‘It is a reminder, if one is needed, that it’s all too easy to talk up the ‘adventure,’ or the ‘journey’ of discipleship, and make no mention of the cost of discipleship,’ said Hopper. However, he added that the ruling alluded to the possibility of a greater cost for Christians of giving up their jobs if they cannot reconcile its legal obligations with the obligations they feel to their faith. He encouraged the church to look to the example of the first Christians and their obedience to God rather than people.

Pray: for a greater awareness by the Church of the need to support as well as disciple its members. (Job.4:4)

More: http://www.christianpost.com/article/20110122/whole-life-discipleship-may-come-at-great-cost-says-uk-christian/

Tuesday, 01 February 2011 15:11

'Gay lessons' in maths, geography and science

Children are to be taught about homosexuality in maths, geography and science lessons as part of a Government-backed drive to ‘celebrate the gay community’. Lesson plans have been drawn up for pupils as young as four, in a scheme funded with a £35,000 grant from an education quango, the Training and Development Agency for Schools. The initiative will be officially launched next month at the start of ‘LGBT History Month’, an initiative to encourage teaching about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual issues. The lesson plans, spread across the curriculum, will be offered to all schools, which can choose whether or not to make use of them. Craig Whittaker, Conservative MP for Calder Valley and a member of the Education Select Committee, criticised the scheme as a distraction from teaching 'core' subjects and a poor use of public money.

Pray: for schools to consider carefully how the minority nature of such material is out of proportion to the LGB community. (Jas.4:7)

More: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/8275937/Gay-lessons-in-maths-geography-and-science.html

Tuesday, 01 February 2011 15:09

Proposal for an English Baccalaureate and RE

Senior religious-education (RE) professionals are warning that their subject could disappear from the curriculum in community schools if the subject is not included among the humanities that qualify for the planned English Baccalaureate. The new qualification, which is to be introduced to ensure that pupils receive a more rounded education requires good passes in English, maths, science, a foreign language, and either history or geography. Religious studies (RS), currently a popular examination choice, is not included as a humanities option. Brian Lightman, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, which represents secondaryschool heads, says that his members believe that the proposed Baccalaureate is too narrow: ‘Religious studies, in particular, is glaringly absent. In the light of the global political situation, surely the objective study of religious issues should be encouraged,’ he said. A recent poll among 18 to 25-year-olds revealed that RE lessons were remembered as valuable for several years after leaving school.

Pray: that Christian teaching remains as a required element of schools’ curricula. (Ro.16:17)

More: http://www.churchtimes.co.uk/content.asp?id=106920

Tuesday, 01 February 2011 15:07

Russia: Airport bombing

The head of the Russian Orthodox Church addressed growing ethnic tensions in Russia after a suicide bomber killed 35 people and injured over 150 at Moscow’s busiest Airport. He denounced the attack as ‘the horrifying scowl of sin’ adding ‘actions once condemned even in war are today becoming a form of protest.’ No one has claimed responsibility but previous terrorist attacks in Russia originated from separatist movements in the troubled Northern Caucasus region. Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, backed by the Kremlin, has been accused of human rights abuses and crushing Islamic militants, while supporting his own form of Islamic fundamentalism. Ethnic tensions have grown in Moscow recently, including anger over plans to build a new mosque in a south-eastern district of the city. Muslim migrants from the Caucasus and Central Asia have emigrated to the Russian capital, fleeing wars in their home regions since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Pray: for the turmoil in Russia to usher in a timely Christian revival. (Is.14:26-27)

More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/25/russian-patriarch-denounc_n_814025.html

Tuesday, 01 February 2011 15:07

Russia: Airport bombing

The head of the Russian Orthodox Church addressed growing ethnic tensions in Russia after a suicide bomber killed 35 people and injured over 150 at Moscow’s busiest Airport. He denounced the attack as ‘the horrifying scowl of sin’ adding ‘actions once condemned even in war are today becoming a form of protest.’ No one has claimed responsibility but previous terrorist attacks in Russia originated from separatist movements in the troubled Northern Caucasus region. Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, backed by the Kremlin, has been accused of human rights abuses and crushing Islamic militants, while supporting his own form of Islamic fundamentalism. Ethnic tensions have grown in Moscow recently, including anger over plans to build a new mosque in a south-eastern district of the city. Muslim migrants from the Caucasus and Central Asia have emigrated to the Russian capital, fleeing wars in their home regions since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Pray: for the turmoil in Russia to usher in a timely Christian revival. (Is.14:26-27)

More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/25/russian-patriarch-denounc_n_814025.html

Tens of thousands of Belgians took to the streets on Sunday to shame political leaders who have failed to form a government more than seven months after an election and left the country at the mercy of financial markets. Organisers of the ‘Shame: no government, great country’ protest said up to 50,000 people had joined the march through the capital Brussels. Police put the figure at 34,000. Since the inconclusive June 2010 parliamentary vote, a caretaker administration has run the country while Dutch and French-speaking party leaders have argued over the degree to which powers and tax-raising rights should be transferred to regions of the linguistically divided country. ‘We are here because we want to show the political leaders that things must change. It's the politicians who are trying to split the country'.

Pray: that the government would listen to the people and work through their differences together. (Ep.4:2-4)

More: http:/ www.france24.com/en/20110123-thousands-rally-call-formation-government-belgium-french-dutch-brussels-political-deadlock

Tens of thousands of Belgians took to the streets on Sunday to shame political leaders who have failed to form a government more than seven months after an election and left the country at the mercy of financial markets. Organisers of the ‘Shame: no government, great country’ protest said up to 50,000 people had joined the march through the capital Brussels. Police put the figure at 34,000. Since the inconclusive June 2010 parliamentary vote, a caretaker administration has run the country while Dutch and French-speaking party leaders have argued over the degree to which powers and tax-raising rights should be transferred to regions of the linguistically divided country. ‘We are here because we want to show the political leaders that things must change. It's the politicians who are trying to split the country'.

Pray: that the government would listen to the people and work through their differences together. (Ep.4:2-4)

More: http:/ www.france24.com/en/20110123-thousands-rally-call-formation-government-belgium-french-dutch-brussels-political-deadlock

Copyright © 2017 World Prayer Centre / Prayer Hub Partners. All rights Reserved. The World Prayer Centre is a company limited by guarantee registered in England No.3601828. Registered Charity No. 1072222. Privacy Policy.