Keeping Christ in Christmas

How did Christmas become so commercialized and how can Believers make Christ the center of the holiday season.  Stand in the Gap Hosts Dave Kistler and Gary Dull discuss practical steps to remembering the true Gift of Christmas.

Stand in the Gap Today 12/23/16

 

Note: This  program is a replay of last week’s  12/16 broadcast about Christmas. 

“Religious discrimination towards Christians has become a holiday tradition of sorts among certain groups…” said Ken Paxton, TX attorney general. What’s happening in the Lone Star State and what we can do to keep Christ in the center of Christmas? Host: Dave Kistler

 

 

Stand in the Gap Today 12/22/16

What’s your priority in 2017? Are you planning on making any “New Year’s Resolutions”? #GeorgeBarna with the American Faith and Culture Institute joins the program to talk about the changes needed within the family, pulpit, and church if 2017 is going to be successful. Host: Sam Rohrer

Stand in the Gap Today 12/21/16

Leo Hohmann – World Net Daily News editor, investigative reporter, Islamic expert, and author joins the program to discuss his latest book “Stealth Invasion”. Host: Sam Rohrer

Stand in the Gap Today 12/20/16

It seems North Carolina’s HB2 (Bathroom Bill) is on the line again. Today’s program will urge listeners to engage on this issue and protect the privacy, dignity, and safety of all NC citizens. Other topics include updates on two recent terrorist attacks and the need to protect the electoral college. Host: Dave Kistler

Note: Contact names and numbers for House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate Leader Phil Berger are below:

House Speaker Tim Moore: 919-733-3451

Senate Leader Phil Berger: 919-733-5708

 

Stand in the Gap Today 12/19/16

Today 538 electors will go to their respective state capitols and cast their votes for the next President of the United States. Will the Clinton camp finally concede? Also, John Whaley of “The Rooftop” Ministries joins the program to talk about some exciting opportunities for the church to promote revival! Host: Dave Kistler

Why Just 53% of Americans Trust Religious Leaders

This fall, the Pew Research Center found that just over half of Americans trust religious leaders to do what’s in their best interest; 53 percent of survey respondents noted that they had “a great deal” or “a fair amount” of trust in faith leaders.

Only business leaders (41 percent), the news media (38 percent) and elected officials (27 percent) ranked lower, with the military and scientists topping the list.

Sam Rohrer, president of the American Pastors Network, recently talked about the study during an interview with host Perry Atkinson on “Focus Today” on The Dove TV and radio, which covers the Pacific Northwest and is also available to listeners online.

“Although this research shows that Americans trust religious leaders more than elected officials, the fact that just over half trust our faith leaders is a sorry statement,” said APN President Sam Rohrer. “One question is why. Why don’t more people trust religious leaders? In my opinion, it’s because, in some cases, the truth is not being fully told. A flat-out lie will certainly erode trust, but for many in the pulpit, it’s not that they are speaking falsehoods necessarily, but may be deceiving their congregations when it comes to the Gospel or faith in Jesus Christ as being the only way to heaven. Unfortunately, too many today do not preach the whole counsel of God, as the Bible instructs and as the American Pastors Network encourages.”

Rohrer added that this guilt comes by omission rather than commission, and that those in the pews want their church leaders to speak out on biblical issues and apply these principles to the matters of the day. In fact, a separate study found that while 90 percent of theologically conservative pastors believe the Bible speaks to societal issues, fewer than 10 percent of them are teaching people what the Bible says on these topics. (Read more here about the study from the American Culture and Faith Institute.)

“The trust factor, in large part, comes down to this point—if pastors won’t speak on these issues, their congregations may wonder what else their pastor is not telling them,” Rohrer continued. “There’s no substitute for the telling the truth all the time, exactly as God has laid it out. After all, that’s how He will measure us. There’s an old phrase that says the church follows the world by 10 steps. The reality is that the failure of the church to lead puts the world about 10 steps behind. The benchmark or standard for everything we do—culturally, in the family, financially or in anything else—is the biblical standard. That’s God’s standard.

Today, many would say that the culture is dragging down the church, but in reality, the church is dragging down the culture by failing to uphold the standards across the spectrum of cultural living,” he added. “That puts the burden on the church and, ultimately, on the pulpit. The failure to preach the whole gospel—where many pastors fall short—lies with refusing to speak biblical principles and truth to the issues of the day. In the end, churchgoers cannot blame any of this on the pastors; everyone is responsible for themselves. But as they lead at the pulpit, it is the responsibility of pastors to apply these biblical principles to everything and remind their people of God’s commands in all things. Once that happens—even though it may seem difficult, uncomfortable and controversial—faith in the church, as well as trust in our faith leaders, will be restored.”

2016 and Beyond

How do Conservative Christians view what happened this past election, and will they continue to support President Elect Donald Trump as he appoints cabinet members and navigates troubled waters in the wake of the Obama administration? George Barna, Executive Director of American Culture and Faith Institute, shares the latest research and challenge to Christians in 2017.