• In the Kingdom: Jesus Is Lord!
  • Knowing Your Eternal Destiny
  • Three Components of Every Spiritual Battle
  • Top Ten Ways to Know You’re Growing
  • Why This Blog?

eisakouo

~ "Only by hearing will you hear"

eisakouo

Category Archives: News/Hot Topics

Youcef Still Alive Despite False Execution Rumors

29 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by eisakouo in News/Hot Topics

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

aclj org, human-rights, religion

aclj

 

The ACLJ (American Center for Law and Justice) has received confirmation that Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani is alive in Iran as of today, March 26, 2012.   New false reports about Pastor Youcef’s execution continue to surface – whether these reports originate from a misinformation campaign initiated by the Iranian regime or just uninformed sources is unknown.   Many of these false reports stem from an inaccurate image being circulated on various blogs and social media sites of an Iranian man of Pastor Youcef’s age standing bound in front of a gallows surrounded by two armed, masked Iranian guards. The image is not of Pastor Youcef and has been circulating since at least July 2011.   The ACLJ believes these demonstratively false rumors about Pastor Youcef’s death are detrimental to his freedom and potential release. It also causes unnecessary anxiety for the family members awaiting his release and the millions of people who are praying for him around the world.   Diplomatic efforts in Brazil and other nations around the world continue to proceed as international pressure on Iran increases. The ACLJ is reaching more than 1.3 million Twitter accounts every day with news and updates about Pastor Youcef through the Tweet for Youcef campaign. A companion Tweet for Youcef campaign in Portuguese is also reaching over 20,000 Twitter accounts each day. The Tweet for Youcef campaign is now reaching more than 90 percent of the world’s nations.

Reblogged from http://aclj.org/iran/youcef-still-alive-despite-false-execution-rumors

 

Blessings,

Pastor

 

Share this:

  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Pocket
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Tweet
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Tumblr
Like Loading...

Iran Admits Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani Convicted of Religious Charges

14 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by eisakouo in News/Hot Topics

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

apostasy, Christian faith, church in home, Iran, latest update, March 13, offending Islam, Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani, preaching to minors

 

    This is an update from Crosswalk and International Business Times.  It confirms what we all have known for a long time.  Pastor Youcef imprisonment and conviction was all about his Christian faith.  Continue to be in prayer for him and his family.

Blessings,

Pastor

For the first time since his arrest in 2009, Iranian authorities have admitted publicly that their case against Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani involves his Christian faith, the International Business Times reports. During a United Nations Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva on Monday, Iran said Nadarkhani — who has been sentenced to death — was found guilty of building a church in his home without government permission, preaching to minors without parental consent and offending Islam. Iran had previously claimed — as international pressure grew for Nadarkhani’s release — that he was charged with “security-related crimes,” including rape and spying, but leaked court documents signed by the Iranian Supreme Court indicate Nadarkhani was sentenced to death for apostasy and that he had refused to convert to Islam when repeatedly given the option by the court. Although apostasy isn’t a crime under Iran’s legal code, “insults” to “Islamic sanctities” are a crime under its religious codes. The latest update from Iranian sources confirmed Nadarkhani was still alive as of March 3, but Iran has a history of holding secret executions.

Share this:

  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Pocket
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Tweet
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Tumblr
Like Loading...

Youcef Still Alive But Execution Remains Imminent

27 Monday Feb 2012

Posted by eisakouo in News/Hot Topics

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

ACLJ, alive, Iran, Nadarkhani, petition, release, Tweet for Youcef, Youcef

Here is one of the latest updates from the ACLJ on Pastor Youcef.  If you get the opportunity please sign the petition for his release.

The White House has also been calling for his release.  PTL!!!

Blessings,

Pastor

Christian Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani
By Jordan Sekulow Filed in: Iran 7:33 PM Feb. 26, 2012
Our sources in Iran have confirmed to the ACLJ that Christian Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani is still alive as of earlier today.

We still believe that his execution has been ordered, but it is clear that renewed international pressure on Iran for Pastor Youcef’s release is having an impact.

It is this immense pressure that continues to keep Pastor Youcef alive.

In less than one week, more than 145,000 people have signed our petition calling for Pastor Youcef’s release. Congress is taking action scheduling a vote as early as Wednesday on H.Res. 556 condemning Iran and calling for Pastor Youcef’s immediate release.

Numerous human rights leaders, governmental officials, and international media from all across the globe have joined the effort for pastor Youcef’s release. The ACLJ’s Tweet for Youcef program is reaching nearly 750,000 Twitter accounts in over 86% of the world’s nations.

It is critical that we keep international pressure on Iran to spare this Christian pastor’s life. Please continue to pray and share his story, as we continue fighting to save his life.

Share this:

  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Pocket
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Tweet
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Tumblr
Like Loading...

Just What Should We be Focusing On?

26 Sunday Feb 2012

Posted by eisakouo in News/Hot Topics

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

1950s, expelled, school issues, school stats, shooting dice

 

 

In the fifties the major discipline problems in our public schools were cigarette smoking, skipping class, running in the halls, spit balls, chewing gum, and whispering in class.

Today – the major problems are deadly weapons – kids carrying guns, knifes, and even assault weapons. This is followed by arson, drugs, vandalism, drunkenness, and teenage pregnancy.

Recently in Florida a high school teacher observed a number of boys in the corner of the gymnasium on their hands and knees. Rushing up to the boys, the teacher demanded, ” What are you doing?”

One of the boys looked up and answered, ” We’re shooting dice!”

The teacher responded with, ” Oh, thank goodness. I thought you were praying.”

 

Every day over:

  • 1,000 unwed teenage girls become mothers;
  • 1,106 teenage girls get abortions;
  • 4,219 teenagers contract sexually transmitted diseases;
  • 500 adolescents begin using drugs;
  • 1,000 adolescents begin drinking alcohol;
  • 135,000 kids bring guns or other weapons to school;
  • 3,610 teens are assaulted;
  • 80 are raped;
  • 2,200 teens drop out of high school; and
  • six teens commit suicide.

None of the above will make it in the news, but praying in school or talking about Jesus will make the news and get the student expelled.  What should really be the focus in school?

I’m just saying………

Blessings,

Pastor

Share this:

  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Pocket
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Tweet
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Tumblr
Like Loading...

Final Execution Order – Please be in Prayer for Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani

23 Thursday Feb 2012

Posted by eisakouo in News/Hot Topics

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

ACLJ, apostasy, crisis of faith, final execution order, Iran, Jay Sekulow, Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani

 

A new execution order has come down for Iranian Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani.  If you have time to pray, please do so and pass his name along to other individuals and prayer groups. 

Below is a recent artcile about his current situation. 

Blessings,

Pastor

 

Iranian Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani Gets Final Execution Order

By Daniel Tovrov

February 22, 2012 3:12 PM EST

Iran has issued what could be the final execution order for Youcef Nadarkhani, the Christian pastor who was found guilty of renouncing Islam.

Nadarkhani has been waiting in limbo for this verdict for months. After turning down four separate chances to convert to Islam to save his life, Iranian officials delayed their sentencing, leaving the pastor to await his fate inside a cell in Iran’s Gilan province. But now, Nadarkhani could be executed within days.
//

  • (Photo: Buzzbox.com) Iranian pastor Youcef Nadarkhani could be hanged in a matter of days.
(Photo: Buzzbox.com) Iranian pastor Youcef Nadarkhani could be hanged in a matter of days.

“They are threatening to execute a pastor who is, in my opinion, totally innocent,” said U.S. Representative Joseph Pitts (R. – PA), who is sponsoring a congressional resolution to call for Nadarkhani’s freedom.

“He’s facing the threat of execution on false charges just because of his religious belief.  He’s willing to face the hangman’s noose over this.”

On Monday, the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), an international Christian and human rights organization, discovered that Nadarkhani’s “life is in imminent danger” and that “the situation has not been this dire” since the organization first learned of his arrest. While that first report did not go into specifics, the organization believes it has confirmed the execution order and that, at least as of Tuesday, Nadarkhani was still alive.

“Iran’s legal system is not like any legal system in the world. [The order] is still being kept secret. Even his legal team might not find out about the execution until the body is delivered to the family,” said Jordan Sekulow, executive director of the ACLJ.

Crisis of Faith

The pastor, who once led a small congregation of about 400 worshipers in the northwest part of the country, was originally arrested in 2009 for apostasy, the crime of abandoning one’s faith. Although apostasy is not a crime under Iran’s official legal code, it is punishable by death according to Ayatollah Khomeini’s fatwas and religious decrees, thereby bringing Nadarkhani’s trial through Iran’s special Revolutionary Court.

Under Iranian law, anyone born to Muslim parents is a Muslim.  Nadarkhani claimed in his defense that he never accepted the Islamic faith and that he became a Christian before 15, the age of religious maturity in Iran. And while Christianity is a protected religion under Iran’s constitution, Nadarkhani was also charged with converting other Muslims to Christianity through his evangelism, which is a crime.

A year after his arrest Nadarkhani, was “convicted of turning his back on Islam, the greatest religion of the prophesy of Mohammad, at the age of 19,” according to a court ruling from December, 2010. That’s when the first death sentence was handed out. After many attempts to get the pastor to repent, the case eventually made it to the Supreme Court and then to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who is still the final judge.

If the order goes through, it will be the first time that anyone has been officially hanged for apostasy in Iran in over 20 years.

(However, the legal system allows Iran to publish charges after a criminal has been executed, meaning that the court can mask an apostasy execution after the fact by changing the conviction. Iran has already made claims that Nadarkhani was arrested for “security-related crimes” like Zionism and spying — claims which court documents refuted but were made nonetheless.)

Final Plea

Along with Pitts, who is co-sponsoring the bill with Rep. Keith Ellison (D. – Minn), the White House, UK Foreign Secretary William Hague, the Archbishop of Canterbury and the European Union have also condemned Iran for breaking with the Universal Declaration of Human rights, of which Iran is a signatory.

But these official censures may be too little too late. Iran’s execution orders are kept private, so the details are unclear and the execution order could be carried out at any time.

In Iran, those sentenced to death generally don’t wait long for execution. Alireza Molla-Soltani, a teenager convicted of the murder of “Iran’s strongest man,” was sentenced to death on Aug. 20, 2011, denied appeal on Sept. 11, and then hanged on Sept. 21. Thus, Nadarkhani could be hanged in a matter of days.

“There are grave concerns that the death sentence could be carried out at any time without prior notification and that the authorities will merely announce it later, a practice that is not uncommon in Iran,” activist group Christian Solidarity Worldwide stated.

If the execution is held publicly, it will have to be approved by Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani. But if it’s done in private, which most hangings in Iran are, it may not be known about until days or weeks after it occurs, the ACLJ points out.

Still, Pitts and Sekulow believe that if enough international attention on the issue is brought quickly to the fore, the pressure will be enough change the minds of Iranian leadership, at least for the time being.

“It’s not there’s no hope, because Iran knows it’s being watched,” said Sekulow.  “The only hope for [Nadarkhani] right now is that one of the ayatollahs steps in.” [Because of the secrecy surrounding the case,] “we won’t know who stepped in or how, but it will still be a victory.”

“I hope people will pray for him and for the Iranian authorities and that the right thing will be done. It’s the only thing that some of us can do,” said Pitts.

 

Oringinal article at http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/303034/20120222/iranian-pastor-yousef-nadarkhani-execution.htm

 

Share this:

  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Pocket
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Tweet
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Tumblr
Like Loading...

Why Young Christians Are Leaving the Church…

08 Saturday Oct 2011

Posted by eisakouo in News/Hot Topics

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

against science, church is boring, exclusivity, judgmental, overprotective, shallow, unfriendly to those who doubt, Why young people are leaven the church

      Greetings.  In my message this weekend, I am using this illustration from the Christian Post.  I was so distrubed by these recent satistics, I thought I would pass them along.  I have highlighted the six major points. 

Pastor…. 

 

     Nearly three out of every five young Christians disconnect from their churches after the age of 15, but why? A new research study released by the Barna Group points to six different reasons as to why young people aren’t staying in their pews.

  • harvest crusade
    (Photo: Harvest)
 

     The results of this study come from the interviews of teenagers, young adults, youth pastors, senior pastors and parents that were taken over the course of five years.

     First, the study says, churches appear to be overprotective. Nearly one-fourth of the 18- to 29-year-olds interviewed said “Christians demonize everything outside of the church” most of the time. Twenty-two percent also said the church ignores real-world problems and 18 percent said that their church was too concerned about the negative impact of movies, music and video games.

      Many young adults also feel that their experience of Christianity was shallow. One-third of survey participants felt that “church is boring.” Twenty percent of those who attended as a teenager said that God appeared to be missing from their experience of church.

      The study also found many young adults do not like the way churches appear to be against science. Over one-third of young adults said that “Christians are too confident they know all the answers” and one-fourth of them said that “Christianity is anti-science.”

      Some also feel that churches are too simple or too judgmental when it comes to issues of sexuality. Seventeen percent of young Christians say they’ve “made mistakes and feel judged in church because of them.” Two out of five young adult Catholics said that the church’s teachings on birth control and sex are “out of date.”

      The fifth reason the study gives for such an exodus from churches is many young adults struggle with the exclusivity of Christianity. Twenty-nine percent of young Christians said “churches are afraid of the beliefs of other faiths” and feel they have to choose between their friends and their faith.

      The last reason the study gives for young people leaving the church is they feel it is “unfriendly to those who doubt.” Over one-third of young adults said they feel like they can’t ask life’s most pressing questions in church and 23 percent said they had “significant intellectual doubts” about their faith.

      David Kinnaman, Barna Group president and author of the book on these findings, You Lost Me: Why Young Christians are Leaving Church and Rethinking Church, said part of the problem may be that many churches are geared toward “traditional” young adults.

       “But most young adults no longer follow the typical path of leaving home, getting and education, finding a job, getting married and having kids – all before the age of 30,” he said. “These life events are being delayed, reordered, and sometimes pushed completely off the radar among today’s young adults.”

      The Barna Update that highlights this study also says that today’s young adults are heavily influenced by the major social, spiritual and technological changes that have occurred in the last quarter century.

      Dan Smith, pastor of Momentum Christian Church in Cleveland, Ohio, told The Christian Post in an email that the six points “resonate” with him.  “I feel like part of God’s calling on my life is to reach those 85 percent (made-up stat) who want to connect with God … but don’t feel like the typical church is helping with that,” he said.

     “Most of our church is made up of 20s, 30s, and 40s – younger people – because our leaders have the same mindset as some of the younger people do – we won’t tolerate inauthenicity ‘on stage,’ trite answers, anti-scientific discussion, etc. As Scripture says, we believe that if Jesus is lifted up, young people should also be drawn to him … so we try to lift him up in a way they can participate.”

      Instead of overreacting to these statistics (by gearing churches specifically toward young people) or remaining indifferent to them, Kinnaman suggests that churches should cultivate “intergenerational relationships” within their congregations.

      “In many churches, this means changing the metaphor from simply passing the baton to the next generation to a more functional, biblical picture of a body – that is, the entire community of faith, across the entire lifespan, working together to fulfill God’s purposes.”

Share this:

  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Pocket
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Tweet
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Tumblr
Like Loading...
Newer posts →

Categories

  • Abraham: Life of Faith
  • Christmas
  • Daniel – No Compromise
  • Discipletips
  • Dying to Self
  • Holidays and Special Events
  • How God Creates a Man or Woman He Can Use
  • How to Receive an Answer from God
  • Humor/Reaping and Sowing
  • Illustrations/Cartoons/Etc.
  • Kingdom of God
  • Living In Uncertain Times
  • Luke
  • News/Hot Topics
  • Our Journey Into The Promised Land
  • Our Spiritual Process
  • Portraits of the Blessed
  • Quotes
  • Receiving Revelation
  • Servanthood
  • The Lord's Return
  • The Strange & Unusual Voice of God
  • Times of Testing
  • Uncategorized
  • When the Holy Spirit Comes

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 235 other subscribers
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Cats of the Web's avatar
  • Tabitha's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar

Archives

Blog Stats

  • 261,527 hits

Eisakouo

Eisakouo

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Top Rated

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • eisakouo
    • Join 177 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • eisakouo
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d