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Missão Cristolândia Atua Retirando Viciados do Mundo das Drogas

 

Por Jussara Teixeira|Correspondente do The Christian Post

A entidade cristã Missões Nacionais inaugurou a Missão Batista Cristolândia, um projeto que visa levar a Palavra de Deus em plena zona de consumo de drogas em são Paulo, região conhecida como Cracolândia.

Neste espaço, onde já atua o Projeto Radical Brasil A Missão, passou a funcionar 24h por dia e tem sido “um pronto-socorro para os que buscam libertação”, e tenta realizar ações que façam valer o Evangelho Integral, ou seja, influenciar o homem com o amor de Cristo, afetando corpo, mente e espírito.

A missão é coordenada pelos missionários Humberto e Soraya Machado e apoiada pelos voluntários do projeto Radical Brasil. A equipe de apoio é renovada constantemente, fruto do despertar de mais jovens que aceitam o chamado missionário.

O projeto é sustentado pelas ofertas de igrejas, associações e parceiros da Junta de Missões Nacionais.

A missão, que está localizada na região central da cidade de São Paulo, conhecida por ser um reduto da marginalidade, sem-teto e viciados, oferece refeições diárias aos carentes, e ainda um espaço para banho, lavanderia e também doações de calçados e roupas.

Os missionários voluntários realizam cultos diários nos períodos da manhã, tarde, noite e até madrugada.

Cada vida alcançada é acompanha de perto, com discipulado, sendo praticamente “adotada” pelos missionários, que podem assim multiplicar uma vida com características de acordo com os propósitos de Deus.

Os novos convertidos são batizados nas águas e se tornam membros da Primeira Igreja Batista de São Paulo.

Um ex-viciado declarou: “cheguei a buscar drogas aqui (na carcolândia) mas fui batizado e agora sirvo a Deus. Eu tinha ido para o mundo das drogas e minha vida se tornou uma destruição total, um caos. Era para eu estar casado, com casa, mas fui para o mundo das drogas. Hoje estou me reconciliando com Deus”, disse.

Outro liberto das drogas contou que dormia nas ruas e ouvia os louvores vindos do projeto Cristolândia. “Eu era atraído por aquele lugar, por aqueles louvores, aquele lugar era uma luz no meio da escuridão. Dormi em frente à Cristolândia, e um dia o pastor chamor para tomar café, no que entrei imediatamente”. Ele conta que assistiu o culto e os louvores, e a partir daquele momento sua vida sofreu uma transformação, quando o pastor fez o apelo, ele se reconciliou com Jesus.

Quem estiver interessado em ajudar o projeto pode preencher uma ficha de adesão, contribuindo para o sustento dos obreiros e manutenção do projeto em www.missoesnacionais.org.br.

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Author: God Does Not Exist for Our Self-Gratification

 

By Mark Hensch | CP Contributor

 Peter Rollins hopes his writings inspire a revolution in religion.

  • Peter Rollins

    (Photo: Howard Books)

    Author Peter Rollins argues in his new bookInsurrection that Christians need to reinterpret their faith.

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Born in Belfast, the Irish author grew up in the shadow of "The Troubles," Ireland’s civil strife between Protestants and Catholics. The uprising he advocates in his new work Insurrection: To Believe Is Human – To Doubt, Divine, however, is spiritual rather than physical. Believers have commodified Christ, he argues, and it must stop.

In an interview with The Christian Post, Rollins reveals the trajectory he says Christians must follow to transform their faith. He also gives a word of warning – it’s going to be a bumpy ride.

CP: You were born and educated in Ireland but now live in the United States. How do you feel about America?

Rollins: I’ve been traveling to America for many years. It’s been a home away from home. The East and West Coasts and the center of the country all have different vibes and atmospheres. Despite this, people’s demeanors are kind and generous everywhere. Coming to America has thus been very refreshing.

CP: You have an extensive background in philosophy. Why do you enjoy it and how does it relate to Christianity?

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Rollins: The reason I started training in philosophy was because I thought I knew all the answers and wanted evidence for my conclusions. As I studied it, it critiqued me instead. Many philosophers from hundreds of years earlier had asked the same questions and arrived at different conclusions than me. In much the same way, the Christian tradition has always had a relationship with serious thinkers and serious questions.

CP: Who are some philosophers you’d recommend? Why?

Rollins: I started a group called Atheism for Lent a few years ago. We started reading the great critics of religion and philosophy for all 40 days of Lent. There is something powerful about people like Nietzsche, Marx and the like critiquing my position.

What I love about philosophy is reading a philosopher which causes me to question myself and look deeply into my own heart and ask why I’m a Christian and why it matters to me. Some of these teachers have important things to say about the church.

CP: Your latest book, Insurrection, argues that doubt is an essential element of Christianity. Why should Christians lack certainty?

Rollins: I’m not about getting people to doubt but see what they really believe.

Our real beliefs aren’t intellectual but seen in our actions. If you want to know somebody, you look at their actions more than their thoughts and words. What I’m trying to do is get people to question, critique and examine themselves about the beliefs they think they have. We question the intellectual to see how we live in our daily existence. Christianity is not intellectual, but material. It transforms material life.

CP: The skepticism Insurrection advocates questioning established church tradition and dogma. What’s wrong with the modern church?

Rollins: One of the problems I see is how we treat God as a product. If you imagine the world as a big vending machine, we’ve added God to things like cars and houses to make people happier. God does not exist for our self-gratification. God exists in the love we have for each other and when we are committed to acts of grace.

Alcoholics Anonymous is a great example of this. It starts with admitting your material reality is that of an alcoholic. From there, people accept you for that reality, which is an act of grace. The moment you enter into a community where you are loved for who you are, you’re free to change who you are.

CP: Insurrection criticizes Christians who use God solely for understanding and comfort. Why is this kind of relationship bad for Christians?

Rollins: If God is an object that makes life meaningful or happy, three things can happen.

Life can be robbed of beauty and become like a waiting room as we expect to interact with God only in the afterlife. Others say you can have God here and now but the problem with that is that there’s always the next day following a spiritual experience. Everything between praying and sermons becomes gray and you can’t wait for it. The third option is having the capability to experience God and never having it while others around you do.

All three of these options rob life of its vibrancy and joy and leave it in depressing shape. God is not an object to love but present in love itself. The more we love our reality as we experience it the more God is present.

CP: How should Christians relate to Christ every day?

Rollins: At its most basic we should become the place where God is born within us with our words and actions. Christianity to me is about life before death rather than just life after death. When we embrace the reality of life and its beauty we embrace the passion of Christ. The act of sheer love for the other is related to Christ himself.

CP: You envision a world where Christianity exists free of the trappings of organized religion. What would that look like?

Rollins: We all want something that will make us happy. It might be pop music or movies or God. I don’t think that tendency will diminish in humanity.

There is something traumatic about life. Even without external trauma, there is suffering implicit in life. It can come from death, meaninglessness or guilt. We need church communities like singer-songwriters. When a singer-songwriter sings, he sings about loneliness and brokenness and makes us confront those issues in our life. We try to cover up darkness rather than embrace it. Only by facing it do we remove its sting.

CP: Experience seems crucial to your worldview. Why is it so integral to living for Christ in the here and now?

Rollins: If we do not confront our ambiguity and doubt it will come out in other ways. It will manifest in self-harm, anger, self-hate, overeating, substance abuse and many other ways.

My wager is that when we have communities where people hear and embrace each other, we’ll find that this is where salvation and healing are. We’ll find peace and happiness.

CP: What do you hope to accomplish with Insurrection?

Rollins: I hope Insurrection ruptures what readers think and gets them to approach faith in a different way. We think that eternal life is a continuation of this life into the next and living forever. Eternal life starts now. It’s time to change how we live and participate in this world here and now.

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Egito fecha pirâmide por temor a festas esotéricas no 11/11/11

 

Pirâmide de Quéops, considerada uma das sete maravilhas, foi fechada.
Alguns esotéricos reverenciam o ‘alinhamento numérico’ da data.

Da AFP

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A pirâmide de Quéops, a maior do Egito, será fechada nesta sexta-feira, devido a rumores de celebrações esotéricas por ocasião do 11/11/11 (11 de novembro de 2011), um número raro que, para os adeptos das ciências ocultas, pode indicar a ocorrência de eventos incomuns, anunciou o Conselho Supremo de Antiguidades (CSA).

A decisão foi tomada após uma troca de mensagens entre internautas egípcios organizando celebrações de caráter para marcar a data, no entorno da pirâmide", declarou à AFP Atef Abu Zahab, diretor do Departamento de Arqueologia faraônica.

O CSA confirmou oficialmente em comunicado o fechamento do célebre sítio turístico, citando, no entanto, a necessidade de realizar trabalhos de manutenção, após uma grande presença, durante a festa muçulmana de Eid al-Adha.

Turista posa em frente à esfinge das pirâmides de Giza, também no Egito. A pirâmide de Quéops é a que permanece em melhor estado de conservação (Foto: Reuters)Turista posa em frente à esfinge das pirâmides de Giza, também no Egito. A pirâmide de Quéops é a que permanece em melhor estado de conservação (Foto: Reuters)

Situada em Gizé, na proximidade da capital egípcia, o túmulo do faraó Quéops, de mais de 4.500 anos, é uma das sete maravilhas do mundo antigo, e a única ainda preservada.

Para os esotéricos, um alinhamento numérico raro acontecerá nesta sexta-feira, 11 de novembro de 2011 às 11h11, e poderá causar eventos excepcionais.

Milhares de adeptos preveem realizar cerimônias e danças e várias páginas consagradas ao assunto estão sendo divulgadas no Facebook.

Alguns atribuem ao número onze poderes paranormais, que oferecem um canal de comunicação com o subconsciente; outros veem nele um caráter místico, regularmente ligados a catástrofes, como os ataques de 11 de setembro de 2001 nos Estados Unidos.