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Religion Today Summaries � September 22, 2004
Compiled & Edited by Crosswalk News Staff
http://link.crosswalk.com/UM/T.asp?A1.15.26601.1.1698058

Daily briefs of the top news stories impacting Christians around the
world.� In today's edition:

> After Ivan, Churches Shine Light Amid Storm's Destruction 
> L.A. Episcopal Diocese Sues Breakaway Conservative Parishes
> Russian Immigrants' Prayer Group Impacts Oregon Community 
> Initiative on the Display of Ten Commandments Will Appear on Idaho
Election Ballot


>>  After Ivan, Churches Shine Light Amid Storm's Destruction
Sherri Brown, Baptist Press

Churches across damaged communities are finding opportunities to
minister in the midst of the tragedy caused by Hurricane Ivan.  Ron
Lentine, pastor of Myrtle Grove Baptist Church, had been working with a
team of church members preparing to travel to south Florida to help
victims of Hurricanes Charley and Frances. They never made it. "I guess
God had other plans for us. Now we're helping our own community," he
said. "If through this disaster we can reach people who otherwise have
hardened their hearts toward God, then God has made this redemptive."
Wind damage and flooding from Hurricane Ivan left much of the Florida
Panhandle in pieces. Further north, tornadoes were spawned by the storm.
More than 500,000 people have no power, no water and no phone service.
Disaster relief teams from 13 state Baptist conventions have been
deployed to Florida and Alabama, including feeding units, chainsaw crews
and communication teams. Their presence is making a difference.
"Believers have an opportunity to share this peace. The witness that you
are in caring for the needs of others is going to be a witness for the
Lord. The best thing we can do as a church is volunteer in the community
and use this opportunity to share Jesus Christ with others,� said Pastor
Tim McKnight of First Baptist Church in Flomaton, Ala.

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>>  L.A. Episcopal Diocese Sues Breakaway Conservative Parishes
Jim Brown, AgapePress

The Episcopal Church USA is retaliating against three conservative
Anglican parishes in Southern California that left the denomination over
its disregard for scripture. These churches abandoned the local diocese
in mid-August, aligning themselves with an Anglican diocese in Uganda
instead. In response, late last month lawyers for the Episcopal Diocese
of Los Angeles sent angry demand letters to St. James, All Saints, and
St. David's Anglican churches, insisting that they return all of their
Bibles and hymnals to the diocese, stop worshipping, and vacate the
church property. A week and a half later, the diocese filed lawsuits
against the three breakaway congregations. The Episcopal Diocese of Los
Angeles claims the properties owned by the breakaway churches are owned
in trust by the Episcopal Church USA. Attorney Eric Sohlgren, a legal
spokesperson for all three California parishes, believes the diocese's
lawsuit is financially motivated and completely unfounded. Speaking on
behalf of the conservative Anglican churches, Sohlgren notes, "we just
don't see any basis for the diocese and Bishop Bruno to be filing a
lawsuit, trying to throw people out of church and take their bibles. It
seems to violate some of the scriptural prohibitions against suing one's
brother." Sohlgren says California courts will likely treat the three
churches as separate corporate entities and allow them to keep their
property. 


>>  Russian Immigrants' Prayer Group Impacts Oregon Community
Charisma News Service

A prayer group made up of a dozen elderly Russian immigrants is touching
lives in Portland, Ore., interceding for any and all who ask. Employees
of the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization (IRCO), where
Ukranians and Russians gathered for senior citizens' services, noticed
how fervently the group prayed, "The Oregonian" reported. Through
word-of-mouth, the prayer group took on a life of its own. The members,
who belong to Ukraine Bible Church, Solamita Church and other
Russian-speaking churches in Portland, regularly honor outside prayer
requests, said Lisa Buffington, IRCO's senior and specialized services
manager. Years ago in Russia and Ukraine, the Pentecostal Christians
were fined, ostracized and threatened with prison because they prayed.
They gathered secretly in houses or remote rural areas, but still
communist police found them. Vasiliy Bosovik, 73, said that as a former
pastor he had to keep a low profile back home. But Bosovik and others
found refuge in Portland about a decade ago. The prayer group's leader,
Sergey Safonov, 73, learned to say "God bless America" in English so he
could say it to every American he met. "This country gave us bread and
salt," said Safonov, referring to a familiar Russian expression.
(http://www.charismanow.com)


>>  Initiative on the Display of Ten Commandments Will Appear on Idaho
Election Ballot
AgapePress

The United States' first-ever initiative on the display of the Ten
Commandments will appear on the Idaho election ballot this November. Pat
Mahoney of the Christian Defense Coalition says the measure could launch
substantial similar activity in other states, where so many Christians
are wondering how they can respond to "this erosion of religious freedom
and the removal of God's name from the public square." In the Idaho
state capital of Boise, Mahoney says, the lawmakers and citizens are
"giving inspiration and hope to millions of Americans -- they're doing
something. And we hope next year to have 50 of these initiatives across
the country." However, if the initiative succeeds, supporters of the
ballot measure are anticipating court challenges.


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