Zprávy HCJB 6.6.2006

 NEPŘÁTELSKÉ TELEVIZNÍ ZPRÁVY ZTRPČUJÍ ŽIVOT CÍRKVÍM V KAZACHSTÁNU
   V rámci pokračující náboženské intolerance v dříve sovětském Kazachstánu byly k útokům na náboženskou menšinu a veřejnému posmívání tentokrát použity televizní zprávy spojené s nepřátelským komentářem. Pastor Andrej Grigorjev z baptistického sboru v Aktobe v severovýchodním Kavkazu řekl, že po nedávném policejním zátahu vysílala místní televizní stanice opakovaně reportáž o sboru s připojeným negativním komentářem, který sbor staví do „bezectného a ponižujícího postavení.“ Úřady nařídily, aby sbor, který z biblických důvodů odmítá úřední registraci, byl uzavřen. Ale členové sboru se brání tím, že Kazachstán podepsal mezinárodní úmluvu dávajícím církvím právo neregistrovat se. Soudní úředník Serožatdin Byryšev to zlehčoval tvrzením, že rozhodnout musí parlament. Kladl důraz na místní zákony, které registraci požadují slovy: „Ať tu baptisté, hinduisté, buddhisté existují, ale jejich činnost musí být v souladu se zákonem.“ (Forum 18 News Service)
 
 VŠECHNY ZPRÁVY V ANGLIČTINĚ
   MAF RELEASES 5-YEAR GLOBAL STUDY IDENTIFYING NEEDIEST AREAS

Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF) released a five-year global research project today called "Operation ACCESS" intended to help design mission strategy for the next 20 years. The study focuses on pockets of people that are forgotten or unreachable because of transportation, communications and technology barriers. The study also notes regions where sustained resources such as community development, healthcare and education are unavailable. Head of the project Ghislaine Benny says MAF is already using the study in its ministry, sharing it "across Christendom so that together we can all develop strategies that would be effective in reaching some vast areas with countless number of people." Sixty-six percent of the 364 sectors surveyed in 64 countries have no ministry in place. Five of the top 10 groups facing access barriers are in Myanmar and Nepal. MAF President Kevin Swanson added, "The apostle Paul in Romans 10:15 talked about the need to send preachers. But preachers can’t be sent unless the barriers that prevent their access and sustainability are overcome." (Mission Network News/Religion News Service)

UPDATE: RAPES IN INDIA FOLLOWED BELIEVER’S REFUSAL TO DENY CHRIST

Details are emerging following the brutal gang rape of two Christian women in a village in north-central India’s Madhya Pradesh more than a week ago. The incident began at 3 p.m. Sunday, May 28, after villagers assaulted Gokharya Barela, the husband of one of the victims, and forced him to appear in front of a village court that demanded he forsake Christianity. When he refused, the village head, Pandya Patel, forced him to drink wine and told villagers they were free to rape Christian women. Three men then gang-raped Barela’s wife, and another woman was dragged from her home and raped by two men on the veranda. Both women attend local Indian Evangelical Team (IET) meetings. In an apparent attempt to insulate the perpetrators from investigation, the Hindu fundamentalist organization Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) accused Christian missionaries and IET members of "forced conversions" the morning after the attacks. (Compass Direct)

‘HOSTILE TV FOOTAGE’ ADDS TO CHURCHES’ WOES IN KAZAKHSTAN

In continuing religious intolerance in the former soviet nation of Kazakhstan, recent attacks on religious minorities have used television coverage along with hostile commentary to publicly deride the groups. At a Baptist church in Aktobe in northwestern Kazakhstan, Pastor Andrei Grigoryev said that after a recent police raid, a local TV station has repeatedly shown footage of the church with negative commentary, putting it in a "dishonest and derogatory light." The congregation, which refuses to register with authorities on principle, has been ordered to shut down. However, church members point out that Kazakhstan has signed international agreements giving churches the right to not register. Justice official Serozhatdin Baryshev downplayed international policies that he claims are up to the parliament to decide. Emphasizing national laws requiring registration he said, "Let Baptists, Hindus, Buddhists exist here, but only if they function in accordance with the law." (Forum 18 News Service)

NEW DNA EVIDENCE GIVES SCIENTIFIC SUPPORT TO CREATION MODEL

Scientists at the recent Biology of Genomes meeting at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York reported on the first nuclear DNA sequences of a Neanderthal. Teams from the Max Plank Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and the Joint Genome Institute in Walnut Creek, Calif., have sequenced about 1 million base pairs (genetic letters) of the Neanderthal genome of a 45,000-year-old male specimen recovered from the Vindija Cave near Zagreb, Croatia. Dr. Fazale "Fuz" Rana, a biochemist and author of the popular book, Who Was Adam?, emphasized the importance of the research to his scientific creation model. "Our theory maintains that there is no evolutionary connection between Neanderthals and modern humans," he said. "If this is the case, then Neanderthals should prove to be genetically distinct from modern humans." Previous research suggested that Rana’s predictions about Neanderthals was correct. However, he hopes the full genome will give definitive evidence that humans did not evolve from Neanderthals. (Evangelical News Headlines/Christian Newswire)

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