Faith
Jordanian Christians Celebrate Century-Old Legacy Under Growing Regional Pressures
Faith Facts
- Churches in Jordan gathered on May 29 to commemorate 100 years of organized evangelical ministry in the nation
- The World Evangelical Alliance’s secretary general urged Arab leaders to strengthen relationships with global evangelical movements
- The celebration at Amman Baptist School highlighted the perseverance of Christian witness in a predominantly Muslim Middle Eastern nation
Faith communities across Jordan united at the Amman Baptist School on May 29 to celebrate a remarkable milestone: one hundred years of organized evangelical ministry in the Hashemite Kingdom. The gathering brought together believers who have maintained their Christian witness despite decades of regional upheaval and the challenges facing religious minorities throughout the Middle East.
The centennial celebration served as both a commemoration of past faithfulness and a call to action for the future. The secretary general of the World Evangelical Alliance seized the opportunity to address Arab leadership directly, encouraging them to engage more deeply with the global evangelical Church and recognize the value Christian communities bring to their nations.
Jordan has long stood as a relative beacon of religious tolerance in a turbulent region, allowing Christian communities to worship and organize more freely than in many neighboring countries. Yet the pressures facing believers remain real, with Christian populations across the Middle East declining significantly over the past century due to persecution, economic hardship, and emigration.
The evangelical movement in Jordan traces its organized roots back a full century, when missionaries and local believers established formal structures for worship, education, and outreach. The Amman Baptist School itself stands as a testament to this legacy, having educated generations of Jordanian students in an environment that honors both academic excellence and Christian values.
For American Christians, the perseverance of Jordanian believers offers both inspiration and a sobering reminder of the cost of discipleship in regions where faith can mean social marginalization or worse. While believers in the United States enjoy constitutional protections that are the envy of Christians worldwide, our brothers and sisters in Jordan must navigate complex political and social realities to maintain their witness.
The call from the World Evangelical Alliance for Arab leaders to engage the global Church recognizes a strategic reality: Christian communities have historically contributed to social stability, educational advancement, and humanitarian service far beyond their numbers. Countries that protect and partner with their Christian minorities often find them to be bridge-builders between East and West, agents of reconciliation, and sources of moral clarity in divided societies.
Jordan’s King Abdullah II has periodically spoken in defense of Christian minorities, recognizing their importance to Jordan’s national fabric. Yet the broader trend across the Middle East remains troubling, with ancient Christian communities facing existential threats in Iraq, Syria, and Egypt.
The centennial celebration in Amman should encourage American evangelicals to strengthen their support for persecuted believers worldwide. This includes prayer, advocacy with our own government to prioritize religious freedom in foreign policy, and direct partnership with churches and ministries serving in challenging environments.
As we reflect on a century of evangelical witness in Jordan, we’re reminded that the Church has always thrived not despite opposition but often because of it. The faithfulness of Jordanian believers across ten decades testifies to the enduring power of the Gospel and the courage required to live out Christian conviction in cultures that do not always welcome it.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
Faith
The Celebration That Can’t Deliver What It Promises
Faith Facts
- Christianity offers the only worldview that truly explains the existence and purpose of pleasure
- A culture fixated on immediate gratification consistently fails to provide lasting fulfillment
- Biblical wisdom reveals that true joy comes through honoring God’s design for human flourishing
The Christian worldview is not hostile to pleasure. In fact, Christianity is the only worldview that can truly explain why pleasure exists at all.
While our culture celebrates various forms of self-gratification, particularly during designated months of recognition, it consistently fails to deliver on its central promise: genuine happiness and fulfillment. This represents one of the great ironies of our time — a society obsessed with pleasure finds itself increasingly empty.
Scripture teaches that God created pleasure for our good, but within a framework of purpose and design. When we pursue pleasure as an end in itself, disconnected from the Creator who fashioned it, we find only temporary satisfaction that quickly fades.
The Christian understanding recognizes that human beings are made for something greater than momentary gratification. We are created in God’s image with eternal souls, designed for relationship with our Maker and with one another in ways that honor His design.
True pleasure — the kind that satisfies deeply and endures — comes not from rebellion against God’s standards but from aligning our lives with His purposes. This is the path to genuine joy that our culture, in its pursuit of autonomy, has abandoned.
When we reject God’s design for human sexuality, marriage, and family, we don’t liberate ourselves into greater pleasure. Instead, we cut ourselves off from the very source of lasting joy.
The answer to our culture’s emptiness isn’t more celebration of self-directed desire, but a return to the wisdom of our Creator. Only in Him do we find the abundant life He promises — a life where pleasure finds its proper place within His good design.
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Faith
Historic Dallas Church Rises from the Ashes with New Sanctuary
Faith Facts
- First Baptist Dallas broke ground on a new sanctuary nearly two years after a devastating fire destroyed their historic building
- The congregation is targeting Easter 2028 for the debut of the new sanctuary
- The groundbreaking ceremony marks a milestone of faith and resilience for one of America’s most prominent evangelical churches
In a powerful display of faith and determination, First Baptist Dallas held a groundbreaking ceremony marking the official start of their rebuilding process. The historic church was devastated by fire nearly two years ago, but the congregation has remained steadfast in their commitment to restore their spiritual home.
The new sanctuary represents more than just bricks and mortar—it symbolizes the unwavering spirit of a Christian community that refused to be defeated by tragedy. Church leaders and members gathered to celebrate this significant milestone in their journey of restoration.
First Baptist Dallas has long stood as a beacon of evangelical Christianity in America, known for its bold proclamation of biblical truth and traditional values. The congregation’s resilience in the face of this devastating loss demonstrates the enduring power of faith and community.
The ambitious timeline targets Easter 2028 for the debut of the new sanctuary, a fitting resurrection timeline that mirrors the hope and renewal central to the Christian faith. This sacred deadline gives special meaning to the rebuilding effort, connecting the physical restoration of the church building to the spiritual renewal celebrated at Easter.
The groundbreaking ceremony brought together church members who have weathered this storm together, maintaining their worship and fellowship despite the loss of their historic sanctuary. Their perseverance serves as an inspiration to Christian communities across the nation facing their own challenges.
As construction begins, the project stands as a testament to what can be accomplished when a faith community remains united in purpose and committed to their mission. The new sanctuary will continue First Baptist Dallas’s legacy of proclaiming the Gospel and upholding Christian values in an increasingly secular culture.
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Faith
A Convention Reborn: Why This Pastor Sees Hope for Southern Baptists After 50 Years
Faith Facts
- A veteran Southern Baptist pastor reports the 2024 SBC Annual Meeting showed renewed unity and optimism after years of division
- Attendees displayed noticeably higher morale and excitement about the convention’s future direction
- The gathering marked a potential turning point for America’s largest Protestant denomination amid cultural challenges
After five decades of attending Southern Baptist Convention Annual Meetings, one seasoned pastor says the 2024 gathering offered something increasingly rare in recent years: genuine hope.
The mood shift was unmistakable. People were happier than in recent years and, most importantly, were anticipating the SBC’s future with both encouragement and excitement.
For an observer who has witnessed half a century of convention politics, theological debates, and institutional struggles, the change in atmosphere represents more than just improved sentiment. It signals a potential turning point for the nation’s largest Protestant denomination at a time when faithful witness has never been more critical.
The Southern Baptist Convention has weathered significant storms in recent years, from internal divisions over race and politics to high-profile scandals that tested member loyalty. Yet the 2024 meeting suggested the denomination may be finding its footing again, returning to core mission priorities that first united its churches.
What made this particular gathering stand out was not any single decision or resolution, but rather the collective spirit of messengers who seemed ready to move forward together. The divisions that had characterized recent meetings appeared to give way to a renewed sense of common purpose centered on the Great Commission.
For those who care deeply about the future of evangelical Christianity in America, the health of the SBC matters enormously. With over 47,000 churches and 13 million members, the convention’s direction influences not just Southern communities but the broader conservative Protestant witness nationwide.
The improved morale at the convention reflects what many pastors are seeing at the local church level: believers hungry for unity around biblical truth rather than endless infighting. In an age of cultural confusion, Christians are rediscovering the power of standing together on essentials while extending grace on secondary matters.
This shift toward encouragement and forward-looking vision couldn’t come at a better time. American culture desperately needs the moral clarity and compassionate ministry that faithful Southern Baptist churches have historically provided to their communities.
As the convention moves forward from this encouraging meeting, the challenge will be maintaining this renewed sense of purpose and translating positive sentiment into effective ministry. The test of any annual meeting is not the feelings it generates but the fruit it produces in local churches doing the work of the gospel.
Still, after 50 years of conventions, this veteran observer knows that momentum matters. When God’s people gather with genuine excitement about serving Him together, remarkable things become possible. That’s reason enough for encouragement.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
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