Saturday, April 04, 2026

Pr. Albert Fletcher - The Separation

 

Trump Admin Signals Clarity on Church Speech



By Charlie McCarthy | Friday, 03 April 2026 12:23 PM EDT


The Trump administration announced Friday that it will "provide additional clarity and guidance" to religious organizations after a federal judge's decision this week to dismiss a case seeking to overturn the 70-year-old ban on political activity by houses of worship.

The Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service issued a statement saying the move is aimed at reinforcing First Amendment protections while helping churches better understand how existing law applies to their communications.

"Religious liberty is foundational to our Constitution," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said, adding that the administration is committed to ensuring Americans can "practice one's faith openly and in community" while laws are applied fairly.

The new guidance will focus on clarifying how the Johnson Amendment, the 1954 law that restricts tax-exempt organizations from endorsing political candidates, applies in real-world settings, particularly within religious services.

According to Treasury, internal communications between houses of worship and their congregations, when delivered through customary religious channels and tied to matters of faith, may not constitute prohibited political activity under current interpretations of the law.

EASTER! The Truth They Don't Tell You.

Oil Crisis 2026 & Travel Chaos — How Should God’s People Respond? | Marko Kolic

 

Doug Hurley - Making Sense out of Chaos

Evangelicals Taken Captive by Roman Catholic Mysticism

Young people making return to Catholic Church

 

Full interview: U.S. Military Archbishop Timothy Broglio on Iran

 




‘Your hands are full of blood’: Pope Leo REBUKES Hegseth’s war prayers

Hegseth Says U.S. Troops Are Fighting for Jesus. The Pope Disagrees.

In sharp contrast to the Trump administration’s calls for Christian prayers for the war effort, Pope Leo XIV says military domination is “entirely foreign to the way of Jesus Christ.”


Pope Leo, during the Holy Thursday Mass in Rome, said the Christian mission had often been “distorted by a desire for domination.”Credit...Vincenzo Livieri/Reuters



By Motoko Rich

Reporting from Rome
April 3, 2026


Pete Hegseth, the U.S. defense secretary, has asked the American people to pray “every day, on bended knee” for a military victory in the Middle East “in the name of Jesus Christ.”

Pope Leo XIV, the first U.S.-born pontiff, has a starkly different take on what should be done in Jesus’s name.

In a homily during a Mass on Thursday morning before Easter, the pope said that the Christian mission has often been “distorted by a desire for domination, entirely foreign to the way of Jesus Christ.”

Since the United States and Israel began bombing Iran in late February, the pope has consistently called for an end to the violence and a return to dialogue to resolve the conflict. But without naming Mr. Hegseth, he has also pointed out the ways in which Christianity has been marshaled for purposes that the pope says do not align with Catholic teaching.

Thursday, April 02, 2026

JD Vance's New Memoir About His Conversion to Catholicism Shows a Methodist Church on the Cover


The vice president's upcoming second memoir details his return to religion as an adult

Published on April 1, 2026 03:31PM EDT


Vice President JD Vance; the 'Communion' cover, with a stock photo by Tim Pennington.Credit :
Courtesy of the White House; HarperCollins Publishers

NEED TO KNOW
  • Vice President JD Vance is releasing a new book about his return to religion as an adult
  • Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith will explore why the vice president initially left Christianity and how he returned to the church later in life by converting to Catholicism
  • The cover of the book features a photo of a Methodist church in rural Virginia, not a Catholic one
Vice President JD Vance is releasing a new memoir about his return to religion as an adult ahead of the midterm elections and a possible run for president in 2028.

On March 31, Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, announced the forthcoming publication of Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith, set to arrive this summer.

President Trump ousts Pam Bondi as U.S. Attorney General

The Third Temple: Christianity's Most Dangerous Lie

 

Georgetown Law Students Face National Security Crises in Simulation Exercise


‘The Sim’ Returns: Georgetown Law Students Face National Security Crises in Simulation Exercise


During the simulation, students navigated fast-moving national security crises and honed their legal reasoning and leadership skills.


For the students who took part in this year’s National Security Crisis Law: Edge Technologies Simulation (“Sim”), time was of the essence. A foreign actor had attacked a U.S. satellite fleet — with potentially dire consequences. Gathered for a National Security Council meeting, the group had to weigh options such as diplomatic protest, trade sanctions and cyberattacks in deciding how to respond.

Eighteen Georgetown Law students took part in this year’s Sim, the most in-depth offering of its kind among law schools and the capstone experience for those studying national security law at Georgetown.

Part of a semester-long course taught by Center on National Security (CNS) Director and Professor Laura K. Donohue, the Sim last took place in 2020. After campus closures during the COVID-19 pandemic forced a pause, Donohue took the opportunity to revamp her playbook and incorporate many of the tech advances — including satellite weaponry, virtual reality, blockchain and artificial intelligence — that preoccupy today’s national security experts.

In their assigned roles as agency heads and other federal and intelligence officials, students worked long hours over March 13 and 14 and honed their legal judgment, decision-making and communication skills under conditions that replicated real-world structures and limitations — an experience not otherwise found in a law classroom or textbook.

Oregon rally supports immigrants as birthright citizenship faces challenge

This Christian-Style Metro Station Isn’t in Europe… It’s in IRAN Among Muslims

 

ecum

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Trump addresses the nation on Iran

 

 

April 1, 2026 at 9:00 P.M.


Artemis II Moon Mission Launch

 

Martyrdom: The secret shield protecting Iran from collapse

Iran’s strength lies in belief—martyrdom turns suffering into power, making war strengthen resolve instead of breaking the system from within

Written By : Girish Linganna
Updated: Mar 30, 2026 12:21 IST



Highlights

Created by News24 AI • Verified by the editorial team

Understanding Iran's Resilience Amidst Conflict
  • Iran's identity is deeply rooted in Shia Islam, specifically the 1,400-year-old story of Imam Hussein's sacrifice at Karbala in 680 AD.
  • Shia belief teaches that suffering and dying for what is right is not defeat but a victory, a concept the Iranian government has used since 1979.
  • External attacks, such as missile strikes and leader killings, can inadvertently strengthen the Islamic Republic's narrative by validating its claims of oppression.

Impact of External Pressure
  • Demands for 'unconditional surrender' from the US, like those made by Donald Trump, are perceived by Iran as attempts to humiliate and erase them, turning even doubtful Iranians into defenders.
There is a war happening right now — America and Israel are attacking Iran with missiles, bombs, and strikes. Leaders have been killed. Buildings have been destroyed. And yet, something strange is happening. Instead of breaking down, many people inside Iran seem to be holding on even tighter to their beliefs. To understand why, we do not need to study military maps. We need to understand something much deeper — the power of faith, sacrifice, and what people believe they are fighting for.

This is the part that most news channels never explain to us.

Iran: A regime led by people whose purpose is to usher in the END OF THE WORLD

 

 



Tuesday, March 31, 2026

An Ecumenism of the Trenches

Christians are called to unity, but not at the expense of truth. In a divided age, what does faithful unity actually require?

03/25/26
John Stonestreet and Timothy D Padgett



John Stonestreet



Timothy D Padgett

Download/Print PDF

According to an article in Religion Unplugged, Roman Catholic officials are considering the Augsburg Confession as a basis for Christian unity. For those not up on their Church history, this was written in 1530 by Philip Melanchthon as a joint statement for Protestant leaders in Germany. The confession was rejected by the Emperor Charles V and the Vatican hierarchy, but it remains the fundamental doctrinal statement for Lutherans around the world and serves as a template for other Protestant confessions in the last five centuries.

The Vatican praising Augsburg is kind of like Pepsi telling customers to go try a Coke. A Jesuit scholar quoted in the article even said this,
Acknowledging the Reformation’s contributions and recognizing the Augsburg Confession as a paradigm for Christian unity would further the cause of mission and a unified Christian witness to a broken world that needs to hear the Gospel.”
Whether this move by the Vatican becomes more than just compliments, ecumenism has a complicated history. While most Christians recognize the need for greater unity, the devil is in the details. Bridge-building should never devolve into moral compromise or a denial of the Gospel.