Thursday, May 30, 2013

The Mathematical Proof for Christianity Is Irrefutable

 
By Dan Delzell, Special to CP
May 28, 2013|6:58 am
 
It is impossible that Christianity is not God's revelation of truth to man. Simply impossible. The math proves it beyond question. It doesn't take faith to believe that one plus one equals two, and it doesn't take faith to identify the religion which has mathematical certainty in its corner.
 
God didn't have to give us mathematical proof of His existence, but He did it anyway. God didn't have to give us proof of Christianity, but He chose to do so. And God didn't have to give us proof of His love for us, but that is exactly what He did. The proof is irrefutable.
 
 

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

German Homeschool Family Loses Asylum Case; Home School Legal Defense Association Will Appeal

The Christian Post
By Napp Nazworth | Christian Post Reporter

 
A U.S. appeals court sided with the U.S. Justice Department on Tuesday and denied asylum for the Romeikes. They fled from Germany after they were threatened with the possibility of losing custody of their children when they decided to homeschool and refused to send their children to the German public schools.
 
The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with the Justice Department, in Romeike vs. Holder, that the freedom to homeschool one's children is not among the fundamental rights protected for asylum seekers. The Home School Legal Defense Association, which represented the Romeikes in the case, said it will appeal the decision.


The Rest of the Report

Related Story

Home Schooling Case Law

Update:  27 Congresspersons Ask AG Holder to Stop Deportation of German Homeschoolers

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Why Israel Bombed Syria: A Look At Reasons For Israeli Airstrikes

By KARIN LAUB 05/05/13 03:20 PM ET EDT AP




 

BEIRUT -- A look at the reasons for and possible implications of the escalation of Israel's involvement in Syria's civil war.
 
WHY NOW?
 
Israel has said repeatedly it does not want to get dragged into Syria's civil war but has also warned that it will not allow so-called "game-changing" sophisticated weapons to flow across the border to Lebanon's Hezbollah, an Islamic militant group allied with the Syrian regime.
 
Israeli defense officials believe Iran has stepped up shipments of weapons to Hezbollah through Syria, including accurate longer-range Iranian missiles, as President Bashar Assad's position weakens. This could help explain the back-to-back Israeli strikes on Friday and Sunday on alleged Hezbollah-bound weapons in Syria. Before this week, Israel aircraft had struck Syria only once, in January.
 
Analyst Paul Salem of the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut says Israel may simply be sending a stern warning to deter such weapons smuggling. Salem says Israel also appears to be increasingly concerned about Iranian and Hezbollah forces fighting alongside Assad's troops, close to Israel's borders.