Faith
A Christian Lens on Migration and Creation
Faith Facts
- Arctic Terns fly up to 90,000 km yearly in global migrations.
- A Bar-tailed Godwit flew a record-breaking 13,560 kilometers nonstop from Alaska to Australia.
- By 2024, international migration in the Americas grew from 34.8 million to 78.7 million since 1990, reflecting both opportunity and hardship.
God’s creation reveals remarkable stories, such as birds and butterflies traveling vast distances that stir wonder and awe. These natural migrations point to God’s sovereignty over all creation and remind us that change and movement are part of His design.
The Bible teaches compassion and welcome for the vulnerable, including migrants, as seen in Leviticus 19:34:
“The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself.”
Many migrants—both human and animal—face serious dangers and hardships, highlighting the need for Christian concern grounded in biblical teachings. Jesus Himself called us to hospitality and practical care, declaring in Matthew 25:35:
“For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in.”
As people of faith, we are urged to foster wonder at God’s world, offer lament for its brokenness, and open our hearts and communities in welcome to those in need.
Let us strive, as Jeremiah urged, to understand God’s requirements for love and generosity, using our blessings to create homes for both people and God’s creatures.
Faith
New Healing Center Offers Hope to Persecuted Believers in Africa’s Sahel Region
Faith Facts
- A new Christian healing center in the Sahel region provides trauma recovery for persecuted believers
- The center focuses on Christ-centered healing of mind, body, spirit, and soul
- Survivors of persecution are responding with forgiveness and a desire to share the Gospel with their abusers
In one of the world’s most dangerous regions for Christians, a beacon of hope has emerged for believers enduring persecution and abuse. The Sahel—a vast semi-arid region stretching across Africa from Senegal to Sudan—has become increasingly hostile to Christian communities in recent years.
A newly established healing center is now offering traumatized believers a pathway to recovery, placing Jesus Christ at the center of the healing process. The facility provides comprehensive care that addresses the full scope of trauma—mental, physical, spiritual, and emotional.
The center’s approach differs from secular trauma care by recognizing that true wholeness comes through faith in Christ. Survivors receive counseling, medical care, and biblical teaching designed to restore what violence and persecution have damaged.
Perhaps most remarkably, those who find healing at the center are demonstrating the transformative power of the Gospel in an unexpected way. Rather than harboring bitterness toward those who harmed them, healed believers are expressing a desire to share the love of Christ with their former persecutors.
This Christ-like response mirrors Jesus’ own words from the cross: “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” The willingness of persecution survivors to extend grace to their abusers stands as powerful testimony to the genuine nature of their healing.
The Sahel region has experienced escalating violence against Christians, with Islamic extremist groups gaining ground in countries including Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger. Churches have been burned, believers killed, and entire communities displaced.
Despite these challenges, the establishment of this healing center demonstrates that the Church continues to advance even in places where faith carries a tremendous cost. The center represents not just a place of physical refuge, but a demonstration that Christ’s power to heal and restore transcends even the most severe trauma.
The ministry serves as a reminder that where darkness seems overwhelming, God continues to work through His people to bring light, hope, and redemption.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
Faith
Former Tarot Card Reader Abandons Occult After Encountering Christ
Faith Facts
- A popular online tarot card reader has completely abandoned her occult practice after accepting Jesus Christ as her Savior
- The influencer deleted all of her previous tarot-related content and started fresh with a Christian testimony
- Her transformation demonstrates the power of the Gospel to reach those trapped in New Age practices
A well-known TikTok tarot card reader has made a dramatic turn away from the occult after encountering Jesus Christ. The influencer, who had built a substantial following through her tarot readings, has deleted all of her previous content and created a new account dedicated to sharing her Christian faith.
In her testimony, she declared that Christ has completely transformed her life and saved her from her former spiritual practices. The decision represents a complete break from her past involvement in divination and the occult.
Her story serves as a powerful reminder that no one is beyond the reach of God’s grace. The Bible clearly warns against practices like tarot reading and divination, which the Lord condemns as detestable in Deuteronomy 18:10-12.
This young woman’s transformation shows the stark difference between the empty promises of New Age spirituality and the genuine hope found only in Jesus Christ. While tarot cards and other occult practices may seem harmless to some, they represent a dangerous spiritual counterfeit that leads people away from God.
Her willingness to completely abandon her previous platform and start over demonstrates the sincerity of her conversion. Many new believers struggle with what to do about their past, but she made the bold choice to leave it all behind and follow Christ wholeheartedly.
The explosion of tarot reading and other occult practices on social media platforms has concerned many Christian leaders. Young people especially are being exposed to these dangerous spiritual practices disguised as entertainment or self-help tools.
This testimony provides hope that even those deeply involved in the occult can be reached with the Gospel. It also serves as an encouragement for believers to continue praying for and witnessing to those caught up in New Age spirituality.
Her story joins countless others throughout history of people who have found freedom from spiritual bondage through faith in Jesus Christ. From former witches to New Age practitioners, the power of the Gospel continues to set captives free.
Christians should celebrate this woman’s courage while also remaining vigilant about the spiritual dangers present in our culture. The increasing normalization of occult practices makes bold testimonies like this one all the more important.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
Faith
What a Church Built on Love Can Teach America About Unity
Faith Facts
- Inner-city New Orleans congregations demonstrate authentic Christian fellowship through warm hospitality and soul-stirring worship that transcends denominational backgrounds
- Ministers preach powerful biblical messages about overcoming sin’s separation from God and building strong spiritual foundations in the community
- Long-married couples and multigenerational families testify to God’s transforming power in their lives and neighborhoods
NEW ORLEANS — It wasn’t one of those side hugs, a “Hi, nice to meet you” hug. When I walked into the Hollygrove Church of Christ for Sunday worship, Willie Marsalis gave me a rib-crushing hug as if he were reuniting with a long-lost brother.
And I’d never met the guy. I did, however, feel like I knew the family, especially Willie’s brother and sister-in-law, Charles and Angela Marsalis, and their son, also named Willie.
The family’s incredible journey spans more than two decades — from surviving Hurricane Katrina to planting the Hollygrove church in the inner-city neighborhood where they grew up. So, when my wife, a pediatric endocrinologist, told me that this year’s American Diabetes Association conference was in The Big Easy, I burned a few sky miles to join her.
Hollygrove, I learned, has brought in several souls who don’t hail from our fellowship. One of them, Kim King, told me she was just “driving around” when she found the church, and she hasn’t left since.
Shirley Reeder moved here from Savannah, Georgia, and a friend invited her to church. There were only about 20 of us there for Sunday worship, but it sounded like 200. They sing like the redeemed.
My favorite was a hymn I’d never heard before, “Two Wings,” taken from the description of the seraphim in Isaiah 6:2.
“Two wings to veil my feet. Two wings to veil my face. Two wings to fly away. And the world can’t do me no harm.”
Charles Marsalis preached from later in Isaiah, chapter 59 and verse 2: “But your iniquities have separated you from your God; your sins have hidden his face from you, so that he will not hear.”
“What is blocking you from your blessing?”
Charles asked. “I can’t receive God’s blessing when I’m weighed down with sin.”
He demonstrated this by having Willie stand on stage representing God. The church’s assistant minister, Andrew Thomas, played the devil, and he physically blocked Charles from getting to his brother.
“If we don’t learn the lessons, we won’t get to the blessings.”
But we’re not in this struggle alone, he added.
“If we learn how to hold on to each other in here, we can do it out there.”
Thomas, after relinquishing the role of the devil, echoed Charles’ sentiments in his closing prayer.
“This is the foundation. Let’s learn how to build the foundation in here so we can build homes out there.”
On Sunday night I visited the Louisa Street Church of Christ, a long-established congregation that meets in part of New Orleans known as Desire. Once again, I was welcomed like an old friend by people I met for the first time, including Malachi Hull, a police officer and Bible class teacher.
I also met a gentleman who introduced himself as brother Branch Sr. I noticed that his shirt pocket was stuffed with what looked like old-time gospel tracts.
He said he keeps them at the ready to hand out. It reminded me of 1 Peter 3:15: “Be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear.”
Preston Olive, the church’s pulpit minister since 2008, spoke on Psalm 131, a three-verse hymn about putting aside pride and distractions and finding humble contentment in God.
“O Israel, put your hope in the LORD, both now and forevermore.”
The minister said, quoting the psalm’s final verse. That means “hope in God until we die,” he said.
“We don’t have time to make a pit stop. Death might find you if you make a pit stop. The devil is after our hope in God. When others are sinking in doubt and you’re standing tall, it’s because they’re standing on the wrong foundation. Make sure we’re standing on the rock.”
He concluded:
“Leave here tonight continuing to be humble, no matter where you are. Leave here tonight leaning on God. Leave here tonight remembering this hymn: ‘My hope is built on nothing less than Jesus’ love and righteousness.'”
One of the church’s elders, Frank Harden, and his wife Anna were kind enough to give me a ride back to the hotel. They’ve been married for 55 years.
Frank got baptized in 1987. Anna, who grew up Methodist, took a little longer to persuade. She was baptized in 1991.
“God changed us all.”
The next morning I went back to Hollygrove to see some of the first-day activities at Camp Water Tower Academy, a summer program for kids overseen by Willie Marsalis (the younger one). Charles bought me the best shrimp po boy I’ve had in my life from a place called Manos.
That evening, I headed back to Oklahoma — and saw Andrew Thomas yet again. When he’s not ministering at Hollygrove (or pretending to be the devil), he works curbside check-in for United Airlines.
I took a selfie with brother Thomas and sent it to the Marsalises. “Ran into the devil at the airport,” I texted, “and I told him to STOP BLOCKING ME FROM MY BLESSING!”
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
-
Self-Reliance1 year agoTrump’s Bold Move Uncovers Massive Social Security Fraud
-
Faith1 year agoNew Clues Emerge in Noah’s Ark Mystery
-
News1 year agoGovernor Walz’s Rhetoric Sparks National Controversy
-
News1 year agoMel Gibson’s ‘The Passion of the Christ’ Sequel Title Announced
-
Family1 year agoTexas Lawmaker Targets Furries in Schools
-
Freedom1 year agoMaine Lawmaker Challenges Sports Fairness Controversy
-
Family1 year agoCanada’s Controversial Policy Sparks Ethical Debate
-
Faith7 months ago
Congress Hears Pleas for Nigerian Christians
