Posts Tagged ‘Justice’

  • Design for Life {by Paulo}

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    {my dear husband wrote this, as we are in a time of asking God what he would have us do. this is what he felt. he’s the amazing webdesigner who designed my site, of course!}

    This is the sketch of what my heart burns for..

    I dream of night and day constant everlasting prayer and worship that will affect people, that will change hearts. Not a mega-maniac concept that sees the big and imagines nations changed, that will be a realistic outcome of our intimate prayer life, of hearts being touched by a passion that burns stronger by the day that it stays in the presence of the Holy.

    I want to rescue kids from prostitution and the streets, I want to grow old with them and walk and watch as Holy Spirit transforms their lives. I want to rescue teenagers away from drugs and teach them what I know, teach them what I have in my hand. Teach them how to translate their life story into design.

    I have a dream of forming a design agency made up of young adults rescued from the streets. We will serve the church and help NGO’s and institutions to create relevant and high quality design so that they can bring out their message and in partnership they’ll help us to train and develop more “life designers”, to rescue others from destitution. I want to design for life, to give them a future, to teach them that each line they draw, each typography they work on can mean a chain being broken, how it can mean a message of Hope being brought to the world.

    I want this agency to spread bringing future and proving that Design and Creation can truly announce our essence: that we were created to create, we were designed by God to design, to design life, to design hope, to create the Kingdom of Jesus in this world. Design as a lifestyle, as a fruit of constant worship. This is my dream, this is what I long for; serve the Church and strengthen our Message of Love and Hope by in return giving Hope to those who apparently have no future.

    This is what I’m walking towards, this is what I will look like when I go into full time ministry. I will design for hope, I will write code for the Body so that I can free others to code with me, so that through my art, through my sketches I can show others a way out of the streets, i can give them jobs, show them that they’re life story can be relevant to others around the globe, all they have to do is be willing to pick up a pencil and draw that first line, express who they are, simply design.

    Design for Life
    Pray for Change
    Live for Love

    -Paulo

  • The End.

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    To anyone who was following my blog of the Caleme, Rio calamity and the fabrications therein, this will come as a relief to all of the unanswered questions we had. And closure.

    I received 2 emails this evening upon arriving home from hearing Dwayne Roberts (of Ihop, live, and in person in Brasilia!!) speak. Which to say the least, we were excited about hearing him speak and I got to meet him, since my husband has talked about him and his heart for Brazil since they met in April.

    And I saw these emails and I was even more thrilled!! I’m copying and pasting them. This is the final word, the closure on an emotionally intense story that wreaked havoc on our emotions for a couple weeks. We love Brazil, I’ve loved Brazil for as long as I can remember, and anything that hurts My Nation hurts me too. So I cannot begin to describe what a RELIEF this is to read. Follow along. This was send from C & D who originally told the story at Bethel, and who maintained that it was true and their source was reliable. I want to thank C & D for their honesty, at long last. (we love you, and pray for your healing over all this too!). Read their email:

    Friends and loved ones,

    You are free to send the body of this email to anyone you’d like. In fact, we encourage you to send it to everyone who may have been previously informed about this story because we want the truth to be released. We simply ask that our email addresses remain confidential (which you can accomplish by copying everything below this paragraph and pasting into a new message). Please do NOT forward this email because our email addresses will remain in the header.

    Back in January, we released a story about a nurse friend of ours who was part of a team that traveled to Brazil on a medical missions trip and raised 16 people from the dead. At the time, we had every reason to believe the story was true because (like many of you) we are actively involved in a culture where the supernatural activities of God are a normal part of everyday life. Furthermore, we had been her pastors in San Francisco for over 10 years, had begun to interact over Facebook with other members of “the team”, and asked some of her other friends and pastors in SF for character references (which simply seemed like a wise thing to do given the nature of the story).
    In releasing the story, we had every intention of bringing glory to God while protecting the anonymity of the team (who, we were told, were fearful that their medical licenses would be jeopardized should their names be associated with such a fantastic miracle story). It all made sense to us at the time. We are still going to protect the identity of our nurse friend (however, now for very different reasons…read on).

    Late last week, we discovered some troubling information about her that casts a huge shadow of doubt over the Brazil dead raising story and everything she’s shared with us since we met her 12 years ago. This news came as a shock to us and to our friends in San Francisco who thought they knew her well. Essentially she has been lying to us about a great many things (her job, her credentials, her travels and missions work, her association with prominent world leaders, etc). She created fake Facebook profiles for all the members of “the Brazil team” and was personally managing them (fake check ins, wall posts, photoshopped pics and other pics downloaded from the internet and fake stories written about them). She had given each “person” a different role on “the team” and distinct personalities and managed them so well that they came to life for us. For months we have been interacting daily with many members of the team over email and FB (encouraging them, praying for them, giving them prophetic words), thinking all along that they were unique individuals with whom we had become very close. The deception was elaborate, and we’ve been deeply wounded by this revelation. Earlier this week, all those profiles were deactivated/disabled at the same time (presumably by her).

    We have amassed a great deal of evidence that we’ve made available to Bethel Church leaders since our nurse friend had personally met with several of them and since Bethel’s name was linked to the original story. We also released this evidence to a small group of friends from San Francisco who are in the best position to help her. We are NOT planning to release this information to the general public as it would only serve to defame our friend, and that is not our intention.

    Why has she done this? we aren’t completely sure. We think it’s in response to a painful break up she experienced last Christmas or possibly something much deeper.

    We’ve confronted her in love with the guidance of a licensed Christian psychologist and assembled a small team of her close friends in SF to support and encourage her to receive professional help. Unfortunately, at this time, she’s not admitting to any lies/deception, and she’s cut us off. We still love her very much, want to see her whole, and continue to reach out to her. Given her current condition and need for healing, we will not be releasing her name. There was so much controversy regarding the initial release of the story that revealing her name would draw attention that would undermine every effort to see her whole. We hope someday, when she’s ready, that she will choose to take responsibility for her actions and publicly apologize.

    Please accept our humblest apologies for our involvement in this story. We are so deeply sorry for the people that have been led astray or hurt. We have learned a very valuable lesson……Believe in the supernatural, trust your friends, but still do adequate due diligence (i.e. fact checking) when a story seems too good to be true.

    We believe in a great God who does amazing miracles, even if this one was a fabrication.

    Blessings,

    David and Claudia

    —————————–
    May the Lord bless you and protect you. May the Lord smile on you and be gracious to you. May the Lord show you His favor and give you His peace. – Numbers 6:24-26

  • {a start} On Poverty and Riches

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    Last Sunday’s newspaper had a shocking revelation about poverty in Brazil.  First, let me tell you a bit about our currency, so you have an idea of numbers.  One real (hey-ahl) is equal to about USD $0.61.  The minimum wage in Brazil is R$545/month.  That’s USD $334.

    Could you live on $334 per month?  I don’t think I could.  Not here, not there, not anywhere.

    The newspaper article basically had percentages of the households in Brazil, per state, and for the entire country, that had no income, less than one minimum wage, two minimum wages, three, four, and more than five minimum wages as income.  In all of Brazil, 5.1% of the population makes more than 5 minimum wages, or, roughly USD $1671/month.  That’s the TOP 5% of the population of the entire country!!  That’s not even that much money…  But in the DF (Distrito Federal, the “state” that Brasilia is located in) 19% of the population makes more than 5 minimum wages.

    Wait, so what you’re saying is??

    Out of all of Brazil, only 5.1% of the population makes more than $1671/month, and in the DF, a relatively small region, that number jumps to 19% of the population.  We live in a bubble here!

    Poverty is so widespread in Brazil.  We talk about Africa and development in Africa, when, in reality, parts of the northeast, are suffering under a huge burden of poverty that the politicians in Brasilia never see.

    Just so you have an idea, my monthly salary alone is about 3 minimum wages, and my husband’s is more than mine, even on a bad month.  We’re barely scraping by in Brasilia.  Cost of living here is so incredibly high, I don’t want to start on it.  But, there are some prices that are national, not regional.

    Gas, for instance, costs about USD$6.90/gallon.  That’s the national price.  What does a poor rural family from the northeast do?  Even if they had a car, they wouldn’t be able to fill the gas tank.  We spend just under one minimum wage per month on gas alone.

    Housing prices, fortunately or unfortunately, vary drastically from state to state.  For the price of our small house in the DF, we could rent a mansion in Tocantins (another state… get out your map!).  However, we have an incredibly cheap house, but still pay over one minimum wage on rent each month.

    What is poverty?  It seems to be relative in Brazil.  Two minimum wages in the DF wouldn’t cut it.  You could maybe buy groceries and pay for a small, dingy apartment.  But if you made two minimum wages in Piaui, you’d be rich. But if you went to the US and made only $660, you’d be below poverty level and getting social assistance.

    More and more, I feel like I’m not just to stay in Brasilia, but we’re to take our vision for sustainable development other places in Brazil.  We have friends who want to take projects up to Maranhao, I’m thinking here “Count me in!” but don’t know if that will work.  I’d love to do something about the great gaps in wealth and poverty here in Brazil.  I’d love to teach people how to sustainably get above poverty level and raise their living standard to human levels.  Let’s see where it goes!

  • In the Face of Questioning

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    What is true social transformation?  What will be the outward sign of true, deep, transformation in society?  Do social projects just serve our egos?  Does helping the poor only give us a pat on the back?  What are signs that what we do actually makes a difference?

    Is it enough to just visit a children’s home and play with the kids?  Is that social transformation?  What about when you find out dark secrets about the home?  Are you to continue in the name of “Social Justice” when, in reality, no one but the owner’s fat wallet is benefitted by the children’s home?  What would “Social Justice” look like when you find that a project is hiding a dark secret?  Do you stay?  Do you leave?

    What if you leave?  You are accused of leaving the poor and needy.

    What if you stay?  Well, we didn’t even want to think of the ramifications of staying, so we don’t know that outcome.  However, from friends in the legal world, I have heard that nothing good comes of being implicated with such a money-siphoning scheme.

    So we left.  We backed out.  Yes, we left the kids.  But, we decided to do things right.

    Before we start another project, we will either partner with an existing reputable organization or church, under which the project will be founded.  Or we will open our own project, officially, with all that 501c3 and CNPJ stuff.  Lots of paperwork.  It will be lots of red tape, many hours, much work, but we will do things correctly.

    As I am working at a non-profit educational institution now, I have the opportunity to learn some of the things that one must do to stay legal and operating, with transparency.  It is the long, hard road.  It will not be easy to do things correctly, its easy to just let things slip, but there must be checks and balances and transparency so that whoever is working with us, donating to us, or even praying for us, will know what is going on.

    Last year I spent quite a bit of time researching what I need to do in the US to get a non-profit started.  I began to gather paperwork and make contacts, but a wedding got in the way of that, and we decided it wasn’t quite time for us to do that yet.

    Now, a year later, its still not my time.  We wait patiently, even as people we know head back to the children’s home, even knowing full well of the administration problems there.  We get accused of giving up, we get told we aren’t working for “Social Justice”, yet we are.  We are building the foundations for something bigger than just playing with kids.  We are building the foundation for our vision, for our dream, for what we are called to do.

    And the first step of red-tape and paperwork is almost done, and its all been done correctly, legally, above reproach, and we intend to live our personal lives and ministry in that way.  So if anyone ever questions my visa here, I am now officially, legally, a permanent resident.  Everything done right.  The first time.  Let’s keep it that way.

    *as a side note, as I get into the sometimes gray area of sponsored blogs, I’m putting up a reviews tab on here, where reviews of products will be placed, so they are not confused with my ramblings about missions, life, and the world.  All sponsored blog posts will have a disclaimer on them, that they are sponsored.  Even if they stay here on the main tab.  I’m being transparent here…  you readers have a right to know what I’m compensated for.  That said, this is NOT a sponsored post.

  • Host an orphan for the summer!

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    How big is your heart?  Big enough to open your heart and your home to an orphan from Eastern Europe for a few weeks?

    New Horizons for Children runs an orphan hosting program which allows children to experience America and the love of a Christian family for 4-5 weeks.  The hosting programs run every winter and summer, and they’re looking for families to open up their hearts to host for the summer right now!

    Their website has more details about the hosting program and a listing of all the kids available to host, with photos. The kids are from Russia, Latvia, and the Ukraine, for this summer.

    The really awesome about New Horizons is that alot of these kids end up finding their forever families while in the US. Sometimes its the host family, sometimes its another local family. There is nothing more amazing than seeing the transformation in kids’ lives as they are adopted into a loving family.

    If you can’t host for whatever reason (I can’t because I’m overseas!), consider sponsoring a child for part or all of their program costs to allow another family to host them. Or, pick one or two to pray for. Pray for the kids, that a host family will find them, and they will find their forever family in the US.

    What I think I like best about New Horizons, as an organization, is that the people on staff actually host as well. And adopt. LeAnn, the founder, who I nannied for a few years ago, started the program after adopting one of her sons, when God put it on her heart to help more orphans, not just the “few” (ok, 7… or is it 8?) kids her family could adopt.

    Pray and see how God might have you involved in this awesome ministry to orphans in Eastern Europe.

  • savior of the month

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    wishing to find the hope in the blind

    the ones who cannot see beyond the pain and the rain

    and try to be free by flying free south always

    all the time wondering when

    the savior of the month will come down

    when the savior of the month will ride in on a star

    from the southern cross to venus’s tip

    he comes up riding on the horse on the hill

    the stray horse full of fleas and other debris

    the savior of the month is salvation to the soul of the wrong

    planning to fail again, fall again, die again

    he falls off the horse

    scared silent breathing up the hill

    the humid air beats upon the face

    of the little girl who only needs

    to be saved to be rescued to be loved

    to be held on the lap

    with curls being stroked

    and love profusely pouring out

    the savior of the month comes down

    from foreign lands and foreign tongues

    but whats that?

    I don’t know anything

    I don’t even know love

    don’t try to explain in English to me

    how much I love you

    or how much you care

    because I don’t want to understand

    the savior of the month always leaves me

    alone here without a tear to shed behind

    but hope therein it lies

    that not a tear falls and hoping that these fears fall

    from the stars with the savior to the earth

    shed again

    lighthearted breathing air that frees

    that saves that comes to save

    that always saves me

    June 2005, Recife, Brazil.  (just a little bit of cycnicism… i think i’ll be writing the sequel to this poem soon…)

  • Re: Bethel’s “Statement” concerning the Brazil “Miracle” Hoax

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    If anyone is still following this story, you probably already know by now that Bethel has issued an “appeasement” statement, basically to cover their backs so that they will never have to tell the truth about this whole story/hoax.

    I am sending Bethel one last letter/email, and then I am done.  However, this is an Open Letter, for anyone who wants to see it.  Email has been sent to a Donna on staff at Bethel, Pastor on Call, as well as to Bill Johnson ministries.

    To Donna and the Bethel staff,
    I did read your statement about the miracles in Brazil which you erroneously reported.

    First of all, I would like to make myself clear, I do believe in miracles such as the dead being raised.  So the dead being raised is not “staggering—and we know—hard to believe” nor is it “wonderfully uncomfortable and ‘out of the box.’”  I was trained at the Iris Ministries missions school in Mozambique.  The miracles I saw there were verifiable, there were neighbors and family members all around to witness the deaf’s ears being opened and the blind eyes being opened.  When possible, we noted their names and locations.  If someone was to question their testimony, we would be able to find them and their family and neighbors again to testify they were healed.  For example, Selma, a teenager, was healed from deafness in both ears, on the outskirts of the village of Namapa.  I have her photo and I would be able to find her again if I went back to Namapa.  Her entire family was there and witnessed her healing.

    Yes, the world is a big place, and though it seems Brazil is a land far, far away, it is my home, and it is not “another part of the world”.  I don’t think anyone at Bethel realizes what the nation of Brazil has been going through, nor what the residents of Teresopolis have been going through.  Over 800 people are dead, in Teresopolis and surrounding region, while another 600+ are missing, and 30,000 people have been left homeless.

    An apology, not an excuse, is still in order from the Bethel staff. The miracle has no eyewitnesses because it never happened.  Bethel should send a team to Brazil, ready to work hard in humanitarian relief, and to try to find those eyewitnesses, if it plans to maintain that the story is true.

    Some local missionaries went to Teresopolis to find eyewitnesses.  There were none.  “We are learning, the hard way, what it is like to report such a dramatic miracle prematurely, with the possibility of it not being true and/or the difficulty of documenting it to everybody’s satisfaction if it is true”, however, what if it is not true?

    What amount of evidence does Bethel need for Bethel Church to report that it was not true?

    And I quote from the eyewitness account: “We made contact with the National Security Force, who are patroling the area, and they took us to the school from where the community support is being administered. Talking to the coordinator of the operation, we confirmed that no foreign teams were in Caleme during or after the disaster, thus debunking once and for all the story of the supposed ressurections”.

    If there was no foreign team there, then how would there be any resurrections done by a foreign team?

    I don’t believe that anyone at Bethel will ever respond to this email, and I don’t believe that anyone at Bethel has the grace, dignity, nor humility to ever state that the story, in its entirety, not just the faux newspaper article, was false.  However, I guarantee, that Bethel will never hear the end of this faux pas.  There are too many Bible-believing, Holy Spirit-filled Christians who are hurt and saddened by Bethel’s response and perpetuation of a hoax.

    The church in Brazil is reporting on this as well, however, they are reporting the truth.  Christian blogs, church websites, and Christian (as well as secular) news agencies are reporting with headlines such as:
    “Resurrection in the Serra of Rio de Janeiro is False”
    “News about Resurrections in Teresopolis reverberate outside of Brazil through a Christian Site”
    “News about Resurrections in Teresopolis reverberate outside of Brazil through a Christian Site: The news is not true and the source was not revealed”
    “American Christian Site Spreads False News of Resurrection in Teresopolis”

    Bethel’s ambiguous response and “washing of hands” of the issue, has not suddenly made Brazilians believe that this ever happened.  Why?  Because those who live in this country, who love this country, and serve God in this country, know the real, hard truth of what has really happened in Teresopolis, and also, the truth that not only was the newspaper altered, but that the entire story is not true.

    I find it sad that Bethel will believe the “friend” of two second-year Bethel school students that said it happened, over the EYEWITNESS accounts of two long-term missionaries serving with a reputable Bethel-friendly organization.

    You may be asking yourselves, if anyone is at all is indeed reading this message, why am I spending so much time researching this?  Brazil is a nation that God put on my heart when I was seven years old.  It is now my home, and God has given me this nation to live my life poured out among the fatherless, abused, and impoverished here.  I find it a personal matter, as well as a national matter, when un-truths are reported about a land I love so deeply.

    I believe that, Bethel, as a church, has a responsibility to the people of God in Brazil to repent, to acknowledge that they perpetuated a hurtful hoax about a nation that is currently suffering from the greatest natural disaster in its history.

    Thank you, to anyone who has read this.
    -Emily Vieira

    *This post has been edited 15:30 (Brasilia time) on February 5, 2011.  Our heart is not to hurt or to divide, we just really want people who stand for the truth and will believe the truth, no matter how hard it is.  With much respect to those who are doing relief work in the area, I have edited this post so as to protect them.  Thank you all for understanding this.

  • And then I cried…

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    And then I cried

    The truth in Tersopolis is far worse than the lie.

    The truth is bodies buried under mudslides, still not found.

    The truth hurts worse than knowing we were lied to.

    And then I cried

    I cried for Rio, I cried for Brazil

    I cried for my own heart wanting to help

    I cried at the uncertainty of not knowing what to do next

    I cried for the families broken apart

    I cried for the little blonde haired girls, singing on TV, living in a church shelter

    I cried for those in the newspaper, no hope to carry on

    I cried for the living, walking around like zombies, shocked, purposeless

    I cried because the truth must be known

    I cried because the truth will always hurt worse than a lie

    I cried because no one was resurrected

    I cried because no foreign medical team was there

    I cried for justice, I cried for peace, I cried for us to help the least of these

    I cried at the donations, I cried at the lack thereof

    I cried at the immense need

    I cried at my own small hands

    And then I cried some more…

    If anyone wants to help the relief effort in Rio, please go to https://www.irismin.org/giving-center  At the bottom of the page is a link to give to help Trina’s relief effort there.  Thanks!  (if you give thru my website, I’m sending the money over to Trina as well)

  • Lack of Accountability: Redux

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    Well, now that we have clarified and confirmed that the resurrection story is a hoax, all we have to do now is wait.  Wait?

    For what?

    An Apology.  A Retraction.  What all good news reporting agencies do when they get the facts wrong.  (look at the NY Times, WSJ, Wash Post, etc, they all have a section in the paper to retract things they got wrong, everyday)

    Real newspapers have accountability, but what about big churches?  What about big ministries?  Do they have accountability?

    This whole incident is like a redux of a more personal incident involving a lie which a large ministry made to me personally.  I spent nine months trying to get the truth out of this large ministry.  I let it sit, then brought it up again.  Let it sit for a few months, they made up another lie, I let it sit again.  Finally, after nine months, I emailed them a rather long sermon in which basically I said “enough is enough, just tell me the truth!”.  And they did.

    I have no hard feelings towards that ministry now.  They repented, they apologized.  They started to act Christian.

    But I probably won’t ever be involved with them again.  I have friends who are involved with them, and I’m fine with that.  But I wouldn’t be involved with them again because of the lack of accountability.

    Now, how long will it take for this terrible hoax about 16 people being raised from the dead to gain an apology?  It is no longer just a personal offense in which I only require a personal apology, it is a National offense.  The nation of Brazil needs an apology.  The story needs a retraction.  Bethel needs to tell the truth.

    If an apology comes out, then Bethel will gain respect and credibility, but until they make a retraction and apology, I believe Bethel Church and the Christian church in general has lost much credibility in this event.

    I don’t want this to take up my energy or emotions anymore, its time to move on.  However, I am planning on sending letters and emails to Bethel Church to elicit a response from them.  Maybe you should too…

    Christians, let hold large ministries accountable to truth and to God’s word.

  • Digging for the Truth in Teresopolis

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    When I saw people posting on facebook about 16 people being raised from the dead after these horrible floods and mudslides in the Serrana region of Rio, I was intrigued.  I have friends there, I’ve been there, at least to Nova Friburgo.  I was concerned for my friends’ safety and even though the church in Friburgo is safe, me and my husband have been following the news about Rio quite intently.

    So, the story goes something like this, 16 people were raised in the Caleme bairro of Teresopolis on the 15th of January.  Then “the local newspaper” published a front page article with two photos about the incident on Sunday, January 16.  The “local newspaper” is called “O Diario” and their website is easy to access.  I obviously read Portuguese perfectly fine, and browsed through their entire website trying to find anything about anyone being raised from the dead.  Their front page articles get archived to the site and they have weeks and weeks worth of articles on their website.  I found nothing.  Not a trace.

    So I nonchalantly commented on the “original” post on “The Healing Herald” (also posted on ibethel.org but they apparently have removed it) and asked if they had a better copy of the newspaper article available.   Their reply: “Hi Ebair,  Sorry, but I do not have any other information besides an email from the original anonymous source, who wants to remain anonymous.  Thank you.”   They had a slightly better “version” so you can actually make out some of the details.  I have seen a pdf copy of the original Jan 16 front page circulating online, and, man, is it different!!  Just saying…

    The newspaper article is most likely a hoax because:

    1. The byline. The bylines for “O Diario” do not have the place.  They actually don’t have an “AP-style” byline at all.  Obviously not, they are not an American newspaper.

    2.  The font. Anyone who has studied journalism knows that once a newspaper starts using a font, they stick with it.  The “article” published by the “Healing Herald” uses what appears to be Times New Roman font (or a similar serif font) while the real “O Diario” newspaper uses a font without serifs.  Small detail, but its a huge clue.  Newspapers don’t change their fonts halfway through the page.

    3.  The spacing. Look at the other articles on “O Diario”.  They are less than double-spaced.  Again, newspapers don’t change their spacing for one article.

    4.  No names are used. Not even in the newspaper article.  Well, I don’t know what you all think we do here in Brazil, but all the newspaper articles, all the news on TV and radio has people’s names published!!  Brazilian journalists use names, its their protocol.  If they interview a farmer, his full name goes on the article.  Same thing would go for someone being interviewed about people being raised from the dead.  Even if the team from Bethel didn’t want to publish any names, the newspaper wouldn’t really care and would publish people’s names.

    Maybe just because people think Brazil is so foreign that no one would ever figure out a hoax here, or that people think Brazilians are stupid (I’m not even Brazilian yet and I’m insulted by the whole thing) and would believe it, but we have norms we follow here, and obviously, whoever made up the mock newspaper doesn’t know those norms.

    Nor do they think that anyone reading their little article would actually be able to just call up “O Diario” to find out the truth.  Nor do they think that someone would have the brains to go to the National Library here in Brasilia which has all the newspapers in the country to actually find out the truth.  Both of those are in my plans for tomorrow.

    I will get to the bottom of this and find out the truth.

    I’m not debating (right now) whether or not the people were raised from the dead.  I’m debating the validity of the “newspaper” article which the supposed missionaries are sending around the internet.  I’m a journalist.  I’m a missionary.  I’m married to a Brazilian.  And I’m offended at the hoax because it makes Christians look bad and look like liars or look too gullible.  I believe in the resurrection power of Jesus Christ, and I believe that He can raise people from the dead, but I do not for one instant believe that this newspaper article is actually true.

    That said, if you are thinking of coming to help the flood victims in Brazil, bring your shovels and work boots and your own clean water.  We don’t need more people making hoaxes about the terrible tragedy which has left over 500 people missing, over 800 people dead, and about 5,000 homeless. We don’t need more people with stars in their eyes thinking they’re gonna raise the dead in Teresopolis or Friburgo, we need people with Jesus’ hands and feet that are gonna help the people who lost their homes and families, people who will really love my country, and people who, most importantly, will love the truth over all.

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