Weekly briefing: Churches and meeting bans, more Americans praying, biblical worldview decline
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Samaritan's PurseSamaritan's Purse set up an Emergency Field Hospital in East Meadow in New York City's Central Park in response to the coronavirus, March 2020.
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We've compiled the top stories of the week. Here's what you need to know:
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Mass gathering bans: Some churches fight to meet, others urge compliance with gov't guidelines
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"At this point, holding public church gatherings in the midst of a public health crisis is not a defense of religious freedom — it is a defiance of common sense and the care of your congregation. Spread the Good News, not the virus!" — Tony Perkins, Family Research Council
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Christians, businesses serve rising needs during pandemic
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Americans are also offering comfort and entertainment to the public in the form of virtual concerts, teddy bear hunts, and online chapel for students.
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Americans increasingly turn to prayer
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In the United States, a Pew survey showed that more than half (55 percent) of adults have prayed for an end to the coronavirus. Among those praying are Americans who do not belong to any religion, with 24 percent praying for an end to the pandemic.
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Idaho first state to ban sex change on birth records, males in women's sports
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Idaho Gov. Brad Little signed into law a bill requiring high school-aged girls to prove their sex through a physical exam, DNA test or testosterone levels test and another bill requiring birth records and other relevant official documents to note the biological sex of a person.
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Record low number of Americans hold biblical worldview
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Even among those who attend an evangelical church, only one-fifth have a biblical worldview.
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Most Christians, the study revealed, are notional Christians, or "those who self-identify as Christian and who do not embrace eternal salvation through a personal confession of sin and accepting Jesus Christ as their personal savior."
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"Unless America experiences a steady increase in people reflecting a biblical worldview in their lives, America's future is more likely to resemble that of nations characterized by moral and behavioral chaos." — Tracy Munsil, associate professor of political science at ACU
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