This Week’s Good News: Justice for Renisha McBride, Black Cinderella and More

Keke Palmer is on a roll this year. First she made history as the youngest TV personality with her talk show ‘Just Keke,’ and now she will be Broadway’s first black Cinderella. (timesunion)

Palmer is proof of an article that supports the success of millennials (those born between 1980 and 1999). Older generations often view them as lazy, careless, and disrespectful, with little to no ambition but this article proves that they are doing just fine. (TheRoot)

The diploma of first black Harvard graduate will be auctioned this week. (BET)

Justice is served for 19-year-old Renisha McBride. Her killer was found guilty and faces life in prison, possibly without parole. (NBC)

Morehouse’s New Professor, an HIV cure, and Brazil in This Week’s Good News

Are you a black business owner? If so, you might want to consider moving to Brazil. Yes, Brazil. A recent study from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics shows the profound increase in entrepreneurship among blacks in Brazil since 2001. (blacknews.com)

After you have been diligently running your business or – perhaps – have endured a long, hard week at the office, read about 4 ways to manage your work-related stress. (JET)

Congratulations to Jedidah Isler! She recently became the first black woman to receive a PhD in Astronomy from Yale University. (Facebook)

There’s also good news not just for the Ivy League, but also for the ‘Black Ivy League.’ One of nation’s most influential and youngest black media professionals, Marc Lamont Hill is leaving his position as professor at Columbia University to teach at Morehouse in the fall. (diverseeducation.com)

Temple University (which happens to be Hill’s alma mater) has witnessed, what could be considered, a miracle. Researchers have successfully eliminated the HIV Virus from human cells. (CBS Philly)

Actress Regina King is participating in the upcoming season of Scandal…as a director! King will prove that she possesses strengths behind the scenes as she works with Shonda Rhimes on the 16th episode of the 4th season of everyone’s “favorite” Thursday night show. (Centric)

The Annual Legacy Conference Begins

The Legacy conference is known as a safe-haven for like-minded Christian people to educate and learn from others who are accepting their call to “urban ministry” – whether it be through writing, spoken-word, or preaching.

A writer’s panel will take place today which includes well-known writers in the African-American faith community such as: Jemar Tisby, Trillia Newbell, and even Urban Faith’s very own John Richards.

During the conference, attendees have an opportunity to obtain spiritual growth through 20 workshop tracks that will include 2-hour workshops, entertainment through hip-hop concerts and spoken word events, and community service projects that will take place throughout Chicago. All activities are based on this year’s theme: Imago Dei (Image of God)

The conference lasts for three days, ending on Saturday July 26. If you are in the Chicago area this week, join the legacy and visit www.legacymovement.org to register.

Meriam Ibrahim Released from Death Row in Sudan

(RNS) Meriam Yahya Ibrahim, the Sudanese Christian doctor sentenced to death for apostasy, has been set free after an appeal court canceled the death sentence, according to the state-run news agency SUNA.

ibrahim-resize

Meriam Ibrahim and her husband, Daniel Wani

Ibrahim, a 27-year-old Roman Catholic and mother of two, had been sentenced to hang in April for abandoning her Muslim faith, triggering global outrage and condemnation, including a campaign with more than 1 million signatures.

“This clearly shows that the path of martyrdom is still there,” said Agnes Abuom, an Anglican theologian from Kenya who is the moderator of the Geneva-based World Council Churches.

“It is a huge, huge testimony of encouragement for the church and Christians in Sudan, who feel they are a minority.”

Before the release, Ibrahim had continued to breastfeed her 1-month-old baby in chains at the Omdurman Women’s Prison in Khartoum, while caring for her 20-month-old son, Martin. The latest verdict is a result of an appeal instituted by her legal team on May 22.

Many in the Muslim-majority nation held that Ibrahim, who married Daniel Bicensio Wani, an American citizen of South Sudan origin, should never have become a Christian because her father was a Muslim.

The couple was arrested in September for adultery, after men claiming to be Ibrahim’s relatives complained to authorities that she had broken Shariah, or Islamic law, by marrying a Christian man. The charges were dropped last year, but an appeal overturned the ruling, bringing in the more serious charge of apostasy.

Abuom said international pressure helped bring her release. The churches insisted her sentence contravened the 2005 interim constitution, which allows freedom of religion, she said.

“I think Sudan felt it did not have a case against her,” Abuom said. “I think Sudan also feared the case will jeopardize its diplomatic engagements globally.”

In Sudan, where Christians and churches are often persecuted through arrests and frequent interrogation of church leaders, clerics had come out boldly to demand her release.

“Never in her life did she embrace the Islamic religion nor renounce it,” said the Rev. Mussa Timothy Kacho, vicar general for the Khartoum Roman Catholic Archdiocese, in a statement.

Ibrahim and her brother Hassan, according to the cleric, were probably born out of wedlock. Their father, Yahya Ibrahim Ishag, abandoned the late Zahra Tesfai, an Ethiopian from the Orthodox Church, when Meriam Ibrahim was 5 years old.

Ibrahim never saw her father, according to the cleric, grew up under the care of her Orthodox Christian mother and was admitted into the Catholic Church before she could marry her husband.

“The Catholic Church expresses deep regret over the way the case is being handled in the court in disregard” of Ibrahim’s “moral and religious belief,” said Kacho.

For her freedom, the courts had earlier demanded she recant her Christian faith and end the marriage to her Christian husband, but Ibrahim kept her faith and remained married.

Ibrahim’s lawyer confirmed her release from jail.

Copyright 2014 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be reproduced without written permission.

Deadly Isolation: The Benefits of Dating in Community

Books have been written about it. Podcasts have been dedicated to it. Sermons have been preached on it. It seems evangelicals looking to mingle are obsessed with the topic of “dating” or “courtship” and understandably so. Unless one is called to singleness, most Christians have to wrestle with the topic.

On this particular topic, the Bible is silent. What I mean by this is you won’t find a passage in the Bible that mentions “dating” or “courtship.” This is largely due to the fact that in ancient societies parents arranged virtually all marriages. So how should well-meaning brothers and sisters find a “boo” in a society far removed from those types of cultural practices?

Perform a quick Google search and you’ll soon discover that almost everyone has an opinion on how one should pursue a spouse. Although Scripture is silent on “dating” specifically, it is not silent on relationships and how we should engage our brothers or sisters. I’m no expert on dating and relationships. My résumé isn’t very impressive. But what I’ve learned from years of mistakes and errors is this: Dating decisions made in isolation and haste are dangerous and often unloving to those involved. Anything done in isolation and haste is often reckless, especially when circumstances don’t demand it and wisdom is screaming patience. This led to the majority of my bad relationships in years past.

Community Matters

I can’t help but ask: Why is it that so many Christians are dating without the benefit and gift of community? Perhaps it’s because we are taking plays out of the wrong playbook. Maybe mainstream pop culture is shaping the minds of many professing believers rather than the Gospel.

Proverbs 18:1 says, “Whoever isolates himself seeks his own desire; he breaks out against all sound judgment” (ESV). It is selfish to date and keep the relationship just focused on the two of you. When you’re dating in isolation, you make all of your decisions based on what you perceive. However, what you perceive is completely based on what you feel. And that’s the problem. Just because something feels “true” doesn’t mean it is. God has given us Scripture, and if Scripture is silent, He’s given us the church.

Sadly, we have been hoodwinked and bamboozled into thinking that society’s way of relating to the opposite sex is not just the best way, but also the only way. But I want to propose a wiser way to handle dating relationships. I am not only submitting to you that this way is right, but I think it’s safer and more loving toward all of those involved. It protects your heart as well as the heart of the one you’re spending time with. I believe it is the wisest way to go about dating; that is, dating in community. Here are some reasons dating in community is wise.

Perspective

Most have experienced the feeling of infatuation. You meet someone and they seem so legit. For a while, it’s like they can do no wrong. You love everything about them, from the way they smile to how cute they are when they get upset. The things they do that would normally annoy you don’t really bother you at all. They’re different. This person is “the one.” You’re done looking.

Unfortunately for all those involved, this lasts for about 1–3 months. Suddenly reality hits you like a ton of bricks and you’re saying stuff like, “This person isn’t the person I fell for.” Did they change? I don’t think so. In the words of that great singer songwriter, “Love is blind and it will take over your mind. What you think is love, is truly not…” You know the rest. Blind love formed in isolation leads to false promises and a lot of bad decisions.
This is where the perspective of community comes in. Christian friends and elders are able to provide wise words like, “Slow down,” or, “You realize this person is only human, right?” They’re able to do what you’re unable to do. They’re able to remain neutral. They care about you and have your best interest in mind. You should seek this from those in the life of your local church and your family if they’re Christian. You and the person you’re dating need the perspective of others.

Accountability

This is important in our overly sexualized culture, a culture that’s moving away from traditional marriage and pushing young men and women toward extended adolescence. The culture dictates we linger in the dating season all the while wanting the benefits of marriage like commitment and sex. Christians are not immune to this type of activity.
Isolation is the gateway drug to sexual immorality for dating couples. Accountability allows for hard questions to be asked and asked continuously. However, singles need Christian community to hold them accountable not only on sexual purity, but also on dating for the sake of dating. Dating is a means to an ends, and the end goal relationally is marriage. It’s also important that the people who are holding you accountable are people you love and trust.

At the end of the day, accountability is useless to liars. Everyone who is seeking accountability must be prepared to admit that they have a problem. This is hard because it’s risky. But dating relationships are risky, and we take that risk over and over for the possibility of a momentary marriage. Consider what the relational risk of accountability provides. We get Jesus. We get an eternal marriage that fulfills our every need. This is the promise of the Gospel. The risk of exposing sickness to the rest of the body actually reveals that you are trusting in the Gospel. It shows that you trust the Gospel to cover your sins as well as heal them.

Death by Desolation

We were designed for community. It is in our nature as humans whether we are Christian or not. No one was designed to live on an island. The Christian has been uniquely designed to be a part of a community that will one day reign with Christ. We have been rewired for and grafted into the body of Christ.

Consider what happens to a limb that is removed from the body. Does it live? No, it dies. First, it becomes numb and then stops moving. Lastly it grows cold and dies. This is very similar to what happens to the Christian when he or she is separated from the family.
Dating in isolation may not kill you, but it can kill you. If it doesn’t, we should count it as grace and grace alone. The church is a precious gift from God that He uses to sustain those connected to it. Don’t neglect her; instead cling to her.