Faith
Faith’s Triumph: Bible Reaches Greenland
Faith Facts
- Norse settlers established Christianity in Greenland by 1000 AD, building a cathedral in 1126.
- Rev. Hans Egede’s 1721 mission reintroduced faith to Inuit, inventing their alphabet.
- Kleinschmidt Bible, first full version in Greenlandic, published in 1900.
Christian presence flickered across Greenland’s icy vastness for centuries since Viking longboats arrived with Erik the Red.
Norse explorers from there carried the Gospel to North America’s shores, marking earliest continental witness.
Rumors of lost Catholics spurred Egede’s quest under Denmark’s king, shifting to Inuit evangelism amid ruins.
Moravians, Poul Egede, Otto Fabricius, and Danish Bible Society persisted through fires and revisions, spreading the Good News.
Celebrate this legacy, patriots: champion Bible missions to defend faith, family, and freedom worldwide.
Faith
Disturbing Display Outside Parliament Reveals What Late-Term Abortion Really Looks Like
Faith Facts
- Pro-life advocates displayed graphic images outside Parliament showing the reality of late-term abortion procedures
- New legislation removes criminal penalties for women who self-terminate pregnancies after 24 weeks
- The demonstration aimed to expose the physical truth of abortion up to birth that lawmakers are now permitting without legal consequence
Pro-life advocates took a bold stand outside Parliament, confronting lawmakers and the public with the stark reality of what abortion up to birth truly means. The demonstration comes as legislative changes remove criminal sanctions for women who terminate their own pregnancies after the 24-week limit.
The visual presentation challenged the sanitized language often used in abortion debates, forcing passersby to confront the physical truth of late-term procedures. Advocates argue that when society discusses “reproductive rights,” it must also acknowledge what those procedures actually involve — particularly when performed on viable, developed babies.
Under the new legal framework, women who self-terminate pregnancies beyond 24 weeks will face no criminal penalties whatsoever. Pro-life groups warn this creates a legal vacuum that fails to protect the most vulnerable — babies capable of surviving outside the womb with medical support.
The demonstration underscores a fundamental divide in how different groups view unborn life. For Christians and those who hold traditional values, life is sacred from conception, and late-term abortion represents a grave moral crisis that demands public awareness and legislative protection.
Critics of the law change argue that removing penalties effectively normalizes late-term abortion and sends a message that viable unborn children have no legal standing or right to protection. They contend that civilized societies have historically recognized the need to protect innocent life, particularly as babies develop and approach viability.
The graphic nature of the pro-life display reflects a strategic decision to break through what advocates see as deliberate obscuring of abortion’s reality. By showing what abortion procedures actually do to developing babies, they hope to pierce the abstract rhetoric and awaken consciences to the human cost of permissive abortion laws.
Faith communities have long stood at the forefront of defending the unborn, grounding their advocacy in biblical teaching about the sanctity of life and God’s intimate knowledge of children even in the womb. This demonstration represents that continuing commitment to speak truth, however uncomfortable, in defense of those who cannot speak for themselves.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
Faith
Erdogan’s Israel Threats Draw Netanyahu’s Forceful Response
Faith Facts
- Believers are called to support the nation of Israel and pray for the peace of Jerusalem, as the Bible promises blessings to those who bless the descendants of Abraham.
- The use of inflammatory and false rhetoric to stir up hatred is contrary to the Christian call to speak truth and seek righteousness in international relations.
- Justice and sovereignty belong to the Lord, and nations must be wary of leaders who display imperialist ambitions and disregard the sanctity of life.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has escalated his verbal assaults on the Jewish state, notoriously comparing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to a historical tyrant while threatening military intervention.
These hostile remarks were delivered during a conference in Istanbul, where the Turkish leader repeated unverified casualty figures and accused Israel of carrying out genocidal policies.
Erdogan further alleged that Israel’s anti-terrorism laws constitute a form of apartheid, even as his own nation faces scrutiny for its treatment of Kurdish citizens.
He suggested Turkey might enter Israeli territory just as they have previously intervened in Karabakh and Libya.
Prime Minister Netanyahu responded firmly to these provocations, noting that Israel will continue to defend itself against those who accommodate terror regimes like Iran.
“Israel under my leadership will continue to fight Iran’s terror regime and its proxies, unlike Erdogan, who accommodates them and massacred his own Kurdish citizens.”
As threats against the Holy Land continue to rise, we must remain steadfast in our support for those defending freedom and faith against authoritarian aggression.
Faith
Trump’s Deleted Image Sparks Faith Concern Among Conservatives
Faith Facts
- President Donald Trump addressed a deleted social media post featuring an AI-generated image of him in a healing role.
- Trump said he intended the image to present him as a medical professional, not a religious figure.
- Faith leaders and former supporters said the comparison to Christ crossed a spiritual line and called for humility.
President Donald Trump recently addressed a deleted social media post that featured an AI-generated image of him in a healing role.
The image depicted the former president in robes touching a bedridden man, flanked by symbols of American liberty and individuals in prayer.
Trump explained that his intention was to portray himself as a medical professional rather than a religious figure.
He noted that he believed the image represented him as a doctor supporting efforts like the Red Cross to make people better.
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