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IN THE NEWS

Jihadists Connect Globally, Act Locally →

August 04, 2009

A group of fundamentalist Somali-Australian Muslims were foiled in their recent terrorist plot against Sydney's Holsworthy Barracks, but they demonstrate the global nature of modern terrorism. "One of the key questions would be if there was any suggestion of direction coming from the leadership in Somalia, or indeed whether they were self-motivated to plan this type of operation."
- BrisbaneTimes.co.au

Teach Our Children: In Favor of Abstinence →

August 04, 2009

If the truth is ever accepted, abstinence is really the only way to prevent pregnancy, teen or otherwise. Sex education, whatever it is deemed to be, might slow the pace, but not kill the root. And the root cause is not lack of information...
- The Clarion-Ledger

Al Qaeda's Plan To Destroy Israel →

August 04, 2009

An Al-Qaeda-centered three-stage plan for the encircling and destruction of Israel has been shared and discussed over the course of the past week among global jihadists. On Monday, Al-Qaeda's number two terrorist released a lengthy video that also focused, in part, on destroying Israel. The plans include promoting jihad and, "Spreading great fear in the hearts of the Crusader enemy."
- Arutz Sheva

China Makes Sure UN Rejects Christian NGO →

August 04, 2009

The United Nations has rejected a Christian Ministry's application for official status because it refused to produce names and addresses of its members in China, citing religious freedom concerns. A UN watchdog said the move set a dangerous precedent, enabling "repressive regimes" to sideline critics.
- CNSNews

Christians Burned To Death In Pakistan  →

August 03, 2009

Hundreds of armed supporters of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, an outlawed Islamic militant group, set alight dozens of Christian homes in Gojra town at the weekend after allegations that a copy of the Koran had been defiled. Police and local officials said that at least eight people, including four women and a child, were killed in the fires. Two others died of gunshot wounds. Residents said that the casualties were much higher...
- The Times of London

Iran Nukes Hinge On Ayatollah's Nod →

August 03, 2009

Iran has perfected the technology to create and detonate a nuclear warhead and is merely awaiting the word from its Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to produce its first bomb, Western intelligence sources have told The Times. The sources said that Iran completed a research program to create weaponized uranium in the summer of 2003 and that it could feasibly make a bomb within a year of an order from its Supreme Leader.
- The Times of London

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ARTICLES AND COMMENTARY

MS PATIENT FOMENTS ASSISTED SUICIDE DEBATE IN BRITAIN - (Print)

Assisted suicide has bubbled back to the top of the pot of controversy in Britain this week after the Law Lords ruled on July 30 that the nation's assisted-suicide law must be clarified. The question at hand is, should Britons be prosecuted for going abroad to help loved ones medically end their lives, and will assisted suicide be legalized in Britain itself?

Right now, British law forbids assisted suicide. According to Britain's Suicide Act of 1961, "a person who aids, abets, counsels or procures the suicide of another" could be sent to prison for 14 years. The law has not prevented Britons from prematurely ending their lives. Instead, 115 determined people have traveled to Zurich, Switzerland, to receive deadly medications at the Dignitas clinic there – 23 people in just the past year. British authorities have not bothered to prosecute any of the friends or family members who have accompanied them.

Debbie Purdy, a British woman suffering from multiple sclerosis, has pushed the issue. Before going to Zurich herself, she wanted to know if her husband Omar would be prosecuted for accompanying her. She said she needed to know, because if he would not be bothered, she could allow the disease to progress further before ending her life. If he was in danger of prosecution, though, she would have to go soon while she could still make the trip on her own. 

The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) has not chased down any helpers of the 115 Britons who have made their fatal journeys to Zurich, and there was therefore little chance that Omar would have been prosecuted. Debbie Purdy received support in her case from the organization Dignity in Dying, which promotes legalizing assisted suicide. Bryan Appleyard suggests in The Times that Purdy's real struggle was not about keeping Omar out of jail. "No, the real fight was for the full legalisation of assisted suicide in Britain. Indeed, Purdy said she would ‘prefer to be able to have an assisted death in this country and not to have to travel,'" writes Appleyard.

Britain's highest court reviewed Purdy's case and ruled on July 30 that the assisted-suicide law was simply just too vague. Director of Public Prosecutions Keir Starmer is now under the gun to clarify the law and describe specifically which situations will be excused and which will be condemned by the British justice system. The clarification won't just affect those traveling to Zurich, though. Mr. Starmer has made sure everybody knows the guidelines will affect everybody, including those who want to end their lives in Britain itself.

That means the new guidelines could go either way. The DPP most likely does not want to go out and prosecute those hundreds of friends and relatives that have so far escaped the law because they flew to Zurich. Yet, the DPP still wants to protect the vulnerable against relatives who might be overly eager to help patients commit suicide. The government does not want Grandma pressured into ending her life, or even more frightening, to be "suicided."

The Muddy Hill:
There is also concern over the "slippery slope" effect of legalizing assisted-suicide. If Mrs. Purdy can end her life early because she's suffering from MS, what about those people who suffer from some dreadful, but not terminal, disease? What about people who want to die because they are weary of dealing with terrible, daily depression? In the 1990s, the Dutch courts ruled a woman could receive the help to end her life because her two children had died and she didn't want to deal with the grief anymore. Once a society decides that the value of human life is dependant on "quality" of life, it is hard to stand firm on any ground.

Michael Smythe, head of public policy at law firm Clifford Chance LLP in London, noted that the DPP will need to be specific. "You can imagine the public brouhaha if the guidelines permitted those who were temporarily ill or not very ill to be assisted in their premature passing without any sanctions for those assisting them," he said.

Assisted-suicide advocates argue that we have far more power to keep people alive than in the past. Hearts don't just stop and people don't just die. We can resuscitate people and restart their hearts and keep them alive on ventilators. We can't hold off death forever, but we can prolong life. This, they argue, makes the question of "when to die" more confusing.  Either way, that's not a good argument for assisted-suicide; a person who has to take an airplane to Zurich to take life-ending drugs is obviously not on life-support.

My Life Is Not My Own:
Nigel Biggar, an Oxford theology professor, makes the argument that the issue of assisted-suicide is not just one of personal choice. Each human life has value, not just to the individual, but to society as a whole. If we tell people not to interfere with our death because it's our business alone, we deny the greater significance of our lives. Biggar says, "The problem is that what fends off interference also generates indifference and carelessness," he said. "If my life only has the worth that I accord it, then it has no objective value; and if it has no objective value, then why should anyone else care for it?"

Yet, we do care for the lives of others. We don't stand by while they drown - in water or in debt or in depression. We don't let people end their lives arbitrarily because human life has value even when the living one doesn't want to go on any longer. It's dangerous to equate the worth of a life with some subjective idea of "quality" because it denies that life itself is intrinsically valuable. That understanding is even more pronounced when we realize that God has a purpose in our lives, even when we can't see that purpose. We do not know what God is doing in the hearts and souls even of those suffering near the ends of their lives. We don't know what lives can still be touched and eternal purposes can be accomplished through the woman with MS or the man on his deathbed with bone cancer.

It is a dreadful thing to watch loved ones struggle with pain day after day and feel helpless to ease their agony. We all want to end the suffering of those we love. Yet, if we really truly believed that God loves these precious people, far more than we do, would we find the willingness to trust Him and put the situation fully into His hands? The world does not know how to do that. How can we help the world learn, unless we first learn ourselves?

"What is my strength, that I should hope? and what is mine end, that I should prolong my life?" - Job 6:11

"He said to me, 'My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.'" - 1 Cor 12:9

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ENGINEERING THE BEASTS OF THE EARTH - (Print)

In the newer generation Batman shows, genetic engineering has developed to the point where human DNA can be spliced with animal DNA, creating people (usually teenagers) that look and act like a human-animal hybrids. In real life, genetic engineering cannot go quite that far. These days, scientists are excited when they can program bacteria to produce large amounts of lycopene or to glow at a specific time. Yet, while the power to manipulate and synthesize new genes isn't producing hyena men, it still excites those who hope these technologies will create new therapies to fight disease. Others worry bio-terrorists could use these technologies to develop newer and more powerful super bugs.

Researchers at Harvard Medical School have recently revolutionized the field of genetic engineering. Traditionally, scientists have had to use a labor-intensive process to break up, reassemble, and reinsert genes. Cutting up genes and gluing in new strands of DNA, one by one, takes time. Besides that, the researchers don't know what gene combination is going to produce the desired or best results. Scientists have therefore had to painstakingly go through millions or billions of efforts before they find the one that works. Programming bacteria to, say, fight cancer, can therefore take years.

"It's nearly impossible to predict which combinations of mutations will confer the desired behavior," explains postdoctoral researcher Farren Isaacs. "Biology is so complex that we don't know the optimal solution."

Harris Wang, Isaacs and other researchers at Professor George Church's lab at Harvard Medical School have found a way to speed things up. Through a process called multiplex automated genome engineering (MAGE), they generated 15 billion different genomic patterns in just three days. As a result, they developed an E coli strain that could produce five times the normal amount of lycopene, an antioxidant that is believed to hold back the onset of cancer.

Harris said, "Can you imagine how long it would take to generate 15 billion genetic variants with traditional cloning techniques? It would take years."

MAGE takes single strands of DNA that are synthesized to fit on specific sections of the genome. The target cell gets a blast of energy, which opens it up so the DNA can slide in and reproduce itself. The prototype MAGE machines at Harvard automate this process, doing it over and over with different gene combinations.

Through this process, the Harvard researchers were able to develop tiny E coli factories for lycopene in just three days. The success has created hope that other bacterial factories for proteins or drugs or fuel can be developed quickly.

"Automated sequencing really advanced the way we can read genetic information. We hope automated genome engineering will advance the way we write genetic information," said Wang.

Because the MAGE process allows researchers to quickly produce genetic variants, it may be useful in creating treatments for drug-resistant bacteria. It may anticipate possible mutations and strains of diseases in advance. At the same time, it could be used to develop extremely deadly diseases and infections that potentially be used against the world populations.

Even without the threat of bio-terrorists, genetic engineering presents tremendous ethical questions. The ability to engineer DNA, to create genetically novel bacteria, plants or animals, steps us up onto seriously precarious ground. Biology is indeed extremely complex and the genetic code is not fully understood. It is a fascinating field, certainly. But the prospect of creating new microscopic creatures without knowing the full impact of the effects of gene restructuring… well… we can't even imagine what accidental destruction might result. With great power… comes great responsibility.

Related Links:

 

YOUNG PEOPLE, SERVICE AND X GAMES - (Print)

Teens and young adults are often associated with rebellion, drugs, sex, and rock and roll. The rock-n-roll might remain, but plenty of young people across America can put those negative pictures to shame. From X-Games tough guys to Christian kids who descend on New Orleans for Jazz and Jesus, energetic young people, pumped with the love of God, present a Christianity that is full of life.

New Orleans:
Some 30,000 teenagers gathered in New Orleans in late July to offer their help in service projects across the city. With a theme of "Jesus, Justice, Jazz," the kids, who had paid their own ways to get there, got involved in any of 150 community service projects. They helped clean up neighborhoods and painted schools, rebuilt homes and ran day camps for kids, racking up over 250,000 hours of community service. They also spent time in worship and Bible study in the process.

Michigan:
While not as loud as the thousands in New Orleans, 412 teens and their leaders gathered in Clare County, Michigan in late July to help the elderly and disabled by repairing or renovating their homes. Six-group crews of young people, supervised by adults, did work on 55 house sites. Clare County Enterprise Community Director Jerry Burger said, "I have been to several of the sites and can say I am extremely pleased with the high caliber of work that these young people have done."

X Games:
Acts of service are great, but young people can glorify Christ in everything they do. The X Games were held in LA this weekend, and even in this tough guy arena, Jesus is being made famous.

Skateboarders and freestyle motocross riders live their lives on the edge, and in the past they've been known for being rebels and general bad boys. Within the past decade, a number of these radical young men have given their lives to Christ, and the mood about religion in extreme sports is shifting because of them.

Famous old-school skater Christian Hosoi (41) dominated in the Legends competition at the X Games competition in LA on Sunday. He was in his prime in the 1980s until drugs nearly destroyed his life. He spent five years in prison on crystal meth possession with intent to distribute. There, he gave his life to Christ and now travels the world as an evangelist.

"I was such a rebel against conforming to government or society because we skateboarders were so radical and we wanted to be outlaws." Now, Hosoi says, "I'm using my popularity, the history, my image and my accomplishments to preach the gospel."

He's not alone. A freestyle motorcross riders group calling themselves the Metal Mulisha is heavy with born-again Christians. Brian Deegan – who has won more X Games freestyle motorcross metals than anybody - nearly killed himself in 2005 by crashing while attempting a back flip. After that gave his life to God. Pretty soon buddies from the Metal Mulisha were joining him for Bible studies. Deegan's not afraid to talk about it either.

"In the end I said, who's more radical than us?" Deegan said. "Everything we do is full-on. Once we went to church, we were full-on Christians, too. And we're going to go for it. On the mic, I'll say it. On TV, say it. The next thing you know, I have way more people pumped on me."

Not all Christians in X Games are so bold, but ESPN a few years ago started receiving requests for clergy members to get the credentials required to accompany athletes into the games.

God is still at work in the hearts of young and old alike, and we need to remember to invest in our young people, to diligently disciple them and believe in God's desire to work His power through them. This world desperately needs their enthusiasm; we all do.

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ISRAEL TOURS

The Issachar Tour

Nov 23rd–Dec 2nd, 2011

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The Berean Tour

Apr 26th–May 4th, 2012

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The Selah Tour

May 6th–14th, 2012

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