From Focus on the Family <[email protected]>
Subject Should You Go to Church on Christmas Day? We GET to Go to Church this Sunday!
Date December 23, 2022 5:01 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Should You Go to Church on Christmas Day? We GET to Go to Church this Sunday!







[link removed]






[link removed]
Should You Go to Church on Christmas Day? We GET to Go to Church this Sunday!

By: Paul Batura




By the rotation of the calendar, Christmas Day falls on Sunday this year – an occurrence that because of Leap Year, won’t happen again until 2033.


Will you be attending services at your local church?


Debate has been heating up online the last few days and weeks about whether or not churches will be holding services at all, and who will be attending &mdash; or not.


Over the years, Christmas Eve has evolved into a major event on the church calendar. Larger churches have been known to pull out all the stops, with a service schedule resembling a bus or train schedule. Congregations have been known to rent heaters for the sidewalk, set up hot chocolate and coffee stands and even put out platters of colorful cookies. Extra musicians are hired, books and ornaments are given away. It’s a big Yuletide deal.


[link removed]
Read More ...



For more articles, follow The Daily Citizen on
[link removed]
Facebook,
[link removed]
Twitter and
[link removed]
Youtube !



[link removed]





[link removed]
Why Our Annual Family Christmas Letter is Different This Year From All The Other Years



By: Timothy S. Goeglein







During our honeymoon 31 years ago, while in Oxford England, Jenny and I spent a couple of hours at one of the most famous bookstores in England.


I remember the large oak table near the entryway which featured a number of classic novels for purchase.


I had been a lifelong devotee of the great theologian and writer John Henry Newman, and I had never read his novel Loss and Gain.


I had wanted to do so for years and so made my purchase and sat down three weeks later upon our return to the states to read it.


It is one of only a handful of books that I have read at one sitting, but it made an indelible impression upon me, his golden narrative catalyzed by a young man’s search for truth, which can be both exhilarating and painful.


The theme of loss and gain can sometimes define a year too.


I thought of that novel a couple of evenings ago when Jenny and I were discussing the final edits of our annual one-page Christmas letter which we share with a few family and friends.


In this calendar year, our family has lost no less than seven dear friends who were not only special to us but also particularly close to us at foundational hinge-moments in the various and changing chapters of our lives.






[link removed]





[link removed]
Exclusive: Interview with Rachel Day Hughes, Star of &lsquo;I HEARD THE BELLS&rsquo; &mdash; a New Christ-Honoring Christmas Movie



By: Paul Batura







I had the privilege of speaking with Rachel Day Hughes, one of the leading actors in “I Heard the Bells.” A 2013 graduate of Liberty University, Rachel played the role of Fanny Longfellow, the beloved wife of Henry:


Paul: Can you tell us about your childhood and family?


Rachel: I was very blessed to grow up in a wonderful Christian home. My dad is a worship pastor and served at First Baptist Dallas. That’s the first church I remember. Then we moved on to serve in churches in Branson, Missouri, and then Richmond, Virginia. That’s where my family is now, where my dad is serving at North Run Baptist Church. God was so faithful to me throughout my childhood. I’m the oldest of three kids. My brother is three years younger than me, and he’s now an Air Force pilot. My sister is six years younger than me, and she’s a music teacher.


The Lord brought me to Liberty University, which is where I studied acting and received my degree and then went on to performance at Sight and Sound for a number of years.


Paul: How much of a role did music and acting play in your family? A lot of singing and instruments?


Rachel: Oh, I wish there were more instruments! There was a lot of music, a lot of theater, a lot of worship.







[link removed]





[link removed]
Pastor Repents of Arrogance Toward &ldquo;Uneducated, Backwoods Fundies&rdquo; &mdash; Like His Grandfather and Great Grandfather.




By: Jeff Johnston







A Twitter thread from Cincinnati pastor Michael Clary is gaining attention, as he publicly repented of his condescending attitude toward “conservative, uneducated, backwoods fundies who still read the KJV.”


Clary underwent a change of heart, as he realized that his “spirit of elitism” was toward his own forebears – like his grandfather and great grandfather who were country preachers in Appalachia, in “the hills of West Virginia.” He began to see that he was “standing on the shoulders of giants,” men who “stayed true to the Lord and his calling” for decades.


Clary, who is a church planter and the pastor of Christ the King Church, starts out with these tweets that describe his condescending sense of superiority because of his education and “ministry success.”


Though he came from the hills of West Virginia, “Appalachian, born and bred,” Clary felt he “had moved on” and “was better than them.” He wrote, “I was more learned and cultured. I had ‘seen the world’ and they hadn’t.”


Clary’s heart began to change, however, as he realized the character and scriptural depth of his grandfather. Similarly, he describes the commitment and endurance of his great grandfather. Clary saw the faithfulness, generosity, commitment to God’s people, and love for Scripture that was deeply rooted in these men.





[link removed]





[link removed]
Why Are Americans Not Having Babies? Surprisingly, Leading Scholars Cite Changing Values



By: Daily Citizen Staff








Even as the world recently welcomed its 8 billionth newest citizen, fertility across the globe is plummeting. And dramatically so.


Though many assume overpopulation is an issue, the opposite is actually true. Declining population is a more pressing issue. The United Nations tells us that the number of nations around the world actively developing policies to kickstart their national fertility has risen from 19 to 55 since 1986. Why? Because they realize more people are essential for a better way of living.


Fertility has taken a nosedive in the United States for well over a decade now, marked by an extremely concerning trend line. It is obvious to anyone. Logic does not get any more basic. You cannot sustain a nation that chooses not to create its next generation of citizens.


A major academic study appeared earlier this year in the Journal of Economic Perspectives exploring the reasons behind this precipitous decline in babies in the United States. These findings are extremely interesting and support the perspective we have taken at Focus on the Family, that personal values, and the culture that drives them, matter. This study was written jointly by highly respected demographers from the University of Maryland and Wellesley College. Two of the lead authors are research associates at the prestigious National Bureau of Economic Research, the leading intellectual community of economists and demographers in the U.S.







[link removed]





SHARE THIS EMAIL &emsp;
[link removed]

[link removed] You Go to Church on Christmas Day? We GET to Go to Church this Sunday! [link removed]

mailto:?Subject=Check out this email from Focus on the Family&Body=I saw this and thought of you! [link removed]

[link removed]
Marriage |
[link removed]
Parenting |
[link removed]
Today's Broadcast |
[link removed]
Family Store |
[link removed]
Focus Careers

You are subscribed as [email protected]
.
We apologize if someone else has submitted your address without your permission. Make sure you receive Focus emails &#8212; add [email protected] to your address book.


This is the Daily Citizen e-newsletter.

[link removed]
Unsubscribe All |
[link removed]
Manage Preferences |
mailto:[email protected]
Contact Us


(c) 2022 Focus on the Family,
[link removed]
8605 Explorer Dr Colorado Springs, CO, 80920-1051

tel:8002326459
1-800-A-FAMILY (232-6459)


Source Code: 1588602






This email was sent by: Focus on the Family
8605 Explorer Dr Colorado Springs, CO, 80920-1051, US

[link removed]
Update Profile
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Focus on the Family
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: United States
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • Salesforce Email Studio (ExactTarget)