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Just In: Minnesota Council Of Churches Embarks On Education On Racism

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With 25 denominations representing some one million adherents, the Minnesota Council of Churches has embarked on a 10-year plan to tell the truth and educate about racism in Minnesota and offer reparations to black and indigenous communities harmed by it.

According to president of the National Council of Churches, Jim Winkler, he has never seen an anti-racism plan like the one laid out by the MCC.

The statewide “truth and reparation” plan, first announced in October, is modeled on the principles of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in post-apartheid South Africa.

The Rev. Curtiss DeYoung, CEO of the MCC and also a former professor of reconciliation studies who traveled frequently to South Africa to study its Truth and Reconciliation Commission, also said the plan is unprecedented.

In a document on the plan presented by the council, they explain that the truth telling process will start with acknowledging the complicity of faith communities in racial injustice and disparities.

The process will emerge in various contexts statewide and across local governments addressing issues such as policing, land, and racial equity in health, education, wealth, employment and housing.

Denominations will be allowed to pursue their own educational process for racial justice and equity work in conversation with MCC, which could include anti-racism training or other efforts like cultural competency development.

Church Attendance: France’s State Council Orders Review Of Limitation

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France will have to review the restrictions it created for worship attendance to combat the spread of the coronavirus, according to the Western European nation’s highest court.

France’s State Council ordered the government on Sunday to review a law that limited church attendance to 30 in-person attendees in response to Catholic groups challenging the law.

The religious groups wanted the standard to be changed to allow 30% capacity for houses of worship, arguing that secular businesses are given looser standards during the lockdown.

On Oct. 30, in response to a new wave of COVID-19 infections, France instituted a national lockdown whose restrictions began to be eased this past weekend.

French Catholic bishops took issue with the 30-person limit for worship, releasing a statement last week saying that they were “disappointed and surprised” by the restriction.

God Has ‘Softened Hearts,’ More People Receiving Christ During Covid-19: Franklin Graham

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The Gospel has advanced powerfully in 2020, Samaritan’s Purse and the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association President Franklin Graham told The Christian Post.

In 2019, 1.3 million people gave their lives to Christ through online ministries, Graham said. In 2020, 1.7 million people did.

“I try to shy away from the questions on numbers. God’s the one who gives the increase. It’s not Franklin Graham and it’s not the institution,” he said.

The pandemic meant that Graham had to cancel evangelistic crusades and concentrate on using new ways to spread the Gospel. Situations might change but the call to preach the Gospel faithfully always remains, Graham emphasized.

We’ve never gone through a pandemic in my lifetime. The world has never been locked down before,” he said. “It’s God who touches people’s hearts and opens up people’s eyes. The pandemic hasn’t stopped it. If anything, it’s advanced it.”

For the first time, the BGEA operated a 24/7 Gospel call hotline and bought ads on television. In a 60-second ad spot, Graham can engage viewers, ask them about the condition of their souls and pray a quick prayer. The glory for the Gospel’s spread this year goes to God, Graham said.

“The people’s hearts have been softened a little bit. People who have not listened before are listening now. For evangelism, it may be one of the better years we’ve had,” he said.

People haven’t changed their attitudes toward the Gospel, the evangelist noted. Instead, it’s their attitude toward the rest of life that changed as people fear the pandemic and feel near to death. People have reacted in panic toward the coronavirus and their fear leaves them yearning for a message of hope.

“I think they’re willing to listen to the Gospel. People are scared and afraid. When you give them the hope we have in Jesus Christ, they’re eager to accept that. When the world turns upside down is when they’re eager to listen,” Graham, who’s the son of the late evangelist Billy Graham, said.

Hong Kong Retail Slump Eases as New Virus Wave Threat Looms

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Hong Kong’s subdued retail environment showed signs of improvement in October, though a new wave of virus cases threatens that progress as the city tightened social-distancing rules again.

Retail sales by value fell 8.8% from a year earlier to HK$27.4 billion ($3.5 billion), better than the median forecast of -10.3% in a Bloomberg survey of economists, and compared with a revised -12.8% in September. Sales by volume fell 9.3%.

A resurgent wave of infections and new social-distancing restrictions, however, threaten to upend the nascent signs of an economic recovery. The new virus cases have already forced Hong Kong to delay a travel bubble with Singapore and worsens pressure on retailers ahead of the critical December shopping season.

Sales by value of electrical goods and other consumer durables dropped almost 25% from a year ago, while food, alcohol and tobacco sales declined 6.5%. On the other hand, sales of goods in supermarkets rose 2.6%.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam this week announced further mobility restrictions, including reducing public gatherings to two people, closing nightclubs and karaoke parlors and cracking down on parties aboard yachts in order to bring the latest virus wave under control. Schools will shut again from Wednesday.

With assistance by Matt Turner

CAFCC: Missed chances affected us vs Futuro Kings – Rivers United boss

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Rivers United coach Stanley Eguma says his strikers’ wastefulness in front of goal affected his side psychologically in the Confederations Cup loss to Futuro Kings.

Eguma speaking after the team arrived in Nigeria that, the inability of his strikers to convert their chances even affected them psychologically in the fixture.

Obviously not pleased with the outcome of the encounter, Eguma, whose side won the Gov. Wike preseason Tournament and also reached the semi-finals of the Dapo Abiodun competition, says the result does not reflect their preparation.

Rivers United, who reached the group stages of the competition in 2017, is expected to advance to the first round despite the 2-1 loss to Futuro Kings.

Mirae Asset wins U.S. lawsuit against China’s Anbang on scrapped $5.8 billion hotel deal

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South Korean investment bank Mirae Asset Daewoo Co Ltd and affiliates won a U.S. court case against Anbang Insurance Group, a court document showed, after Mirae scrapped a $5.8 billion deal after the start of the pandemic to buy 15 U.S. hotels from Anbang.

The case in Delaware, where many companies are registered, could set a precedent for deals that have seen valuations drop since the COVID-19 pandemic, as buyers no longer want to buy assets under the terms of agreements reached before.

A consortium led by Mirae agreed last year to buy the hotels from Anbang, which had been selling some of its overseas assets after the Chinese government took control of the troubled insurer in 2018.

But Mirae did not close the deal on the scheduled April 2020 date, saying that Anbang’s representations and warranties were inaccurate and failed to satisfy conditions, which led Anbang to file the suit saying Mirae must fulfil its promised payment, the court document showed.

The Delaware Court of Chancery, presided by Vice Chancellor Travis Laster, found that the Anbang company that owns the hotels made extensive changes to its business because of COVID-19, such as employee layoffs, furloughs and closing amenities.

This led to a failure to meet a condition that business be “conducted in the ordinary course of business” and allowed Mirae to terminate the agreement, the court document said.

Mirae said in a regulatory filing on Tuesday that depending on whether the plaintiff appeals, it will respond through its legal representative.

Moscow to ban state officials & military personnel from holding foreign citizenships & residence permits

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has introduced a new bill to ban civil servants and armed forces personnel from holding other allegiances. The measure is set to apply to around one million state employees.

They will be prohibited from holding foreign citizenships and residence permits under the plan, which has been published in the State Duma’s online database.

Last week, the State Duma waved through a similar bill banning members of the State Council from the same rights, as well as having accounts with foreign banks.

However, earlier this month, legislation was introduced to formally allow Russian spies and intelligence officers to take foreign citizenship and residence permits if required as part of their missions. Previously, this had been a sackable offense for the country’s spooks.

Supreme Court’s Ruling on Church gatherings Shows Religious Liberty Hangs by a Thread

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In totalitarian societies, governments suppress the church and religious worship. That’s because dictators think citizens should worship them as the highest authority—and not a Higher Authority, which they view as a threat to their power and position.

In the United States, religious liberty has been under siege for some time. Last week’s Thanksgiving gift to believers from the Supreme Court may be only a temporary reprieve from government’s assault on faith and conscience. The narrow 5-4 ruling serves as a warning the threat is not over.

The court majority ruled that Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York overstepped his authority and the Constitution when he arbitrarily declared that, during the COVID-19 pandemic, worship services must be limited to a number he created out of whole cloth.

What is it that causes so many Americans to place their faith in government over faith in God, or even faith in themselves? False gods of wood, iron, bronze, and gold could not answer the prayers of ancient peoples, so why, when government fails to answer the “prayers” of so many today, do people continue to put their faith in it? Indeed a sign of the times because the bible says in the last days men shall be lovers of themselves.

When government sets itself up as the ultimate authority on all things, including the right to gather and worship freely, other liberties can quickly be at risk and a sign that the Church must intensify its prayers to nip this vile trend opposed to the spread of the gospel in the bud.

If the First Amendment is to be challenged, even watered down when it comes to faith and practice, why not impose stricter controls on speech and the press, as is done in totalitarian states? Once the principle that government endows rights is established, it is a very short step for government to take them away.

In China and elsewhere around the globe, dictators view God as a challenge to their rule. They demand total fealty, or those who seek to go over their heads with appeals to heaven must be arrested, jailed, and in some instances killed, that the almighty state be preserved. Recently we have seen nations founded on democracy tilting towards the same model they have criticised and condemned.

One of the founding principles that brought Pilgrims from England to America was the freedom to worship God as their consciences dictated. The Constitution guarantees that right.

In more recent years, the term “separation between church and state,” penned by Thomas Jefferson in a private letter to a friend, has come to mean the right of the government to define the meaning of “church,” restricting the practice of faith to one hour on Sunday morning, and in the case of Cuomo and some other governors and mayors, dictating how many people can gather to worship someone other than them.

A Wall Street Journal editorial commenting on the court’s decision got it right: “The Court explains that New York’s order treats houses of worship more harshly than what Mr. Cuomo considers ‘essential’ businesses. Those include liquor stores, bike shops, acupuncturists, lawyers, accountants, and more.”

Sermons I have heard over the years have noted that in the eyes of God, when one has broken one of the Ten Commandments, one has broken them all. Breaking one law, they have noted, defines one as a lawbreaker.

It is a good analogy when considering our liberties. If one is threatened, all are potentially at risk.

Former Vice President Joe Biden has promised to name more liberal judges to federal benches. If he succeeds, expect more challenges to religious freedom and other constitutional rights, including the right to life. There is a saying that “the price for freedom is eternal vigilance”, so we must not rest on our oars as citizens.

By Cal Thomas

Social Welfare: National Assembly Moves To Regulate Investment Programmes

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The National Assembly has made good its promise to regulate the social welfare and intervention programmes of the Federal Government under the Muhammadu Buhari regime.

A bill seeking the regulation is already slated for second reading at the House of Representatives.

The proposal is titled, ‘A Bill for an Act to Establish National Social Investments Trust Fund to Alleviate Poverty among Vulnerable Nigerian Citizens through Targeted Programmes for the Aged, Infirmed, Unemployed and Students; and for Related Matters.’

The National Social Investment Programme is currently domiciled with the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development.

Though the bill was listed for a second reading on Wednesday, it was, along with other items on the Order Paper, stepped down till another legislative day.

The bill was sponsored by Mansur Soro, the 33-year-old lawmaker representing Darazo/Ganjuwa Federal Constituency in Bauchi State.

The Speaker, Femi Gbajabiamila, had earlier in May 2020 said the parliament would soon introduce a bill that would define who a poor Nigerian is and how to benefit from the Federal Government’s NSIPs.

He had stated that the move was to legalise the NSIPs and codify the programmes.

Gbajabiamila, while speaking at an online interactive session (webinar) organised by the Emmanuel Chapel on May 29, 2020, stated that the House was now ready to review the SIPs.

The legislative and executive arms of the Federal Government had clashed over how palliatives were being disbursed to Nigerians considered to be poor.

The leadership of the National Assembly on April 7, 2020, faulted the NSIPs and how it was implemented, noting that the conditions set by officials most times excluded poor Nigerians for which the initiative was intended.

JUST IN: FG Increases N-Power, School Feeding Beneficiaries

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President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered an increase in the number of beneficiaries for the National Social Investment Programmes.

Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, Sadiya Farouq revealed this on Monday at a ministerial press briefing to give account of her ministry in the last one year in Abuja.

The move, according to her, is to boost the present administration’s goal of lifting 100 million Nigerians out of poverty in the next 10 years.

She said the President directed the Ministry to increase the number of N-Power beneficiaries from 500,000 to 1,000,000.

President Buhari  also directed an increase in the number of beneficiaries of the Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP) by 1,000,000 and increase the beneficiaries of the Home-Grown School Feeding by 5,000,000.

 “In a bid to realise Mr. President’s commitment to lift 100 million Nigerians out of poverty in the next 10 years, the ministry places significant emphasis on youth empowerment by strategically ascertaining youth engagement as a foundational objective in implementing the following strategies: double the scope of the National Social Investment Programmes.

“Mr. President has graciously approved the expansion of all NSIP programmes. Such as increase of N-Power beneficiaries from 500,000 to 1,000,000, increase GEEP beneficiaries by 1,000,000 and increase of beneficiaries of Home-Grown School Feeding by 5,000,000,” she said.

About 3.7 million households comprising of more than 15.5 million individuals have been captured on the National Social Register, the Minister revealed, adding that the Ministry has developed a strategy for targeting the vulnerable in line with Buhari’s directive to expand the National Social Register.

“In championing Social Inclusion, deliberate efforts were made to capture vulnerable youth and groups which included Women, People with Special Needs, in the expansion of the National Social Register by one million households. Also, in the Economic Sustainability Plan, we have over 1,000,000 urban poor in the National Social Register.

“As of June 2020, 4.41 per cent of the total number of individuals captured in the National Social Register are recognised as persons with special needs. This comes to a total of 685,090 persons with special needs in the National Social Register.

“About 3.7 million households comprising of more than 15.5 million Individuals have been captured on the National Social Register. Of that number, over 2.8 million of the households which comprise of 13.5 million individuals are eligible for Conditional Cash Transfer. This numbers are spread across the 36 states and FCT. The numbers are further broken down to 7.6 million males and 7.9 million females as shown on the screen,” she said.