Magazine

Strength of heart

Barbara Edmonds, co-founder of Edmonds, Gallagher and McLaughlin Insurance Brokers Limited and Royal Lepage Edmonds and Associates Real Estate, Pembroke and life member of Petawawa Presbyterian passed away peacefully in a hospital, in March last year, at the age of 74.

A very brief history of Christianity in China

Four Christian movements were needed for Christianity to take hold in China. As a result of a colonial past, a Communist government, cultural revolution and a history of a patriarchal and culturally obedient society, Christianity has come and gone several times as the political and social contexts in China change. Below is a brief outline of major events in Chinese-Christian history:

A leading Christian in China

She grew up in China — her parents devoted members of the country's Communist Party and therefore unsupportive of her Christian faith. Rev. Ying Gao, recently appointed vice president of China's Nanjing Theological Seminary, remembers the roadblocks along her journey of faith. “My mother was so angry,” said Gao, about the day in 1980 when she told her family she became a Christian. “She conceptualized it as superstitious, backwards and counter-revolution, which was the perception of Christianity then.” Despite her mother's warnings that she would sever their relationship if she went through with it, Gao enrolled in seminary, following God's call to be ordained.

That wee small voice

During these past few weeks, my travels as moderator have taken me to Alberta, Nova Scotia, and British Columbia as well as to several places in Ontario. I have visited synods, presbyteries and congregations. I have participated in meetings of the national church and the Women's Missionary Society. I am encouraged by the life and vitality of our Church and its congregations; the faithfulness of our members, their warmth and their caring for each other. I have come away from each visit with a feeling of excitement about the health of the congregations within The Presbyterian Church in Canada.

Assisting the poor

The African drumbeat beckoned the delegates from the hallways of a Halifax convention centre in November into the large meeting room. As we followed the drumbeat, it drew us to an open area where African dancers were performing. Later I came to the conclusion that the passion and the power of their dance expressed the synergy that took place at the Summit. It was the kind of synergy that happens when people from around the world come together for a noble purpose — assisting the poor. The cynical were inspired by the idealists and the idealists (like myself) got a taste of reality and practicality.

The opinionated masses

I've stayed in some pits in my time but this place really takes the biscuit. Disgusting. I don't mind shabbyness but this place was just plain dirty. And the staff have a bad attitude to boot.”

Ecumenists urge peace

ENI – An east African church grouping has joined with an inter-religious council and a leading NGO to urge religious leaders from the Horn of Africa to help avert a looming regional military confrontation in Somalia.

We shall not see his like again

We met one another in 1962. It was not long before our two families became good friends. Raymond and Cindy lived on Isle Jesu in an area called Duvernay. He had been appointed the minister of St. John's there. The two families visited one another until Raymond and Cindy left Montreal for California.

Debating the virgin birth

It is interesting to reflect that faithful followers of both Islam and Christianity can confess that according to their scriptures Jesus was born of the Virgin Mary. But at that point their theology diverges. Orthodox Christians believe that the virgin birth, which is confessed in all the historic and widely used creeds, is a clear declaration that Jesus is not only Son of Man but Son of God — that Jesus has co-existing natures and that it is accurate to say he is truly human and at the same time truly God. Christians do not believe he is half God and half man, but as Living Faith tries to explain it: “God's nature is expressed in Jesus, the very Word of God … Jesus Christ is Lord. He is one with the Father and the Holy Spirit.”

Churches support change to let refugees appeal

A private member's bill that will grant appeals to refugees being sent back to their countries from Canada was slated for a second reading in the House of Commons in early December. Bill C-280 calls for the implementation of the Refugee Appeal Division, which was part of the 2001 Immigration and Refugee Act and would allow those who are denied refugee status to appeal the decision based on the merits of their case. This stipulation was intended to balance a previous government decision that reduced the number of adjudicators in a refugee hearing from two to one. The appeal process was never implemented, leaving life and death decisions up to a sole adjudicator. Then-Minister of Immigration Denis Coderre promised to implement the appeal process within one year, but so far this has failed to happen.

Standing up to bullies

Shaneil Keesic and her younger sister Desiree rescued a handicapped youth after bullies coerced a group of eight- to 12-year-old children to shut the youth into the shed and set it on fire. The sisters, unafraid of the bullies, tried to open the door. An adult heard their cries and helped. “Shaneil and Desiree had been taught that God would want them to help someone in trouble,” said Rev. Margaret Mullin, director of Anishinabe Fellowship Centre, which serves as one half of WICM along with Flora House. The girls attend WICM's Sunday School. In the photo, from left: Shaneil, Desiree, their brother Fred and mom Cher.