Quote for the Day
He is pleased when you ask for His wisdom and He will generously give it to you (see James 1:5). Just remember to keep your heart pure, allowing no idols (your own will) to distort the pure rhema of God to you. Mark Virkler

The fear of the Lord…

Original Newsboys Singer John James Speaks Out on Scandal, His Own Sin, and God’s Redemption


From faithwire.com
Tucked smack-dab in the middle of John James’ new book — a memoir of his rise and fall with the Newsboys — is a gritty and vulnerable truth: “I had disqualified myself.”
That honest admission from James’ forthcoming book, “Newsboy: My Story of Hope and Second Chances,” offers a window into the unique view he has amidst the Newsboys’ latest scandal, disturbing allegations of sexual misconduct at the hands of its disgraced former lead singer, Michael Tait.
Another piece of the story is, before Tait took on the role of frontman, there was Peter Furler, and, before Furler, there was James.
James, a native of the coastal suburb of Mooloolaba, Queensland, in Australia, recently appeared on CBN’s Faith in Culture Podcast, where he spoke openly not only about his own past — the double life that led to his undoing — but also the heartrending legacy of the Christian rock band he helped create with Furler and Wes Campbell in a garage some four decades ago, in 1985.https://open.spotify.com/embed/episode/1rCVvjxDgJtSOkW6tPQk1r?utm_source=generator
Now in his early 60s, James is sharing his own testimony, an honest revelation coinciding with Tait’s downfall. At the height of the Newsboys’ early success, James’ own life was falling apart: he was caught up in the instant-messaging craze of the 1990s that led him into several compromising conversations, which quickly devolved into internet-based emotional affairs rife with sexual dialogue.
That, coupled with a growing struggle against alcoholism, led James to an uncomfortable confession to Furler while the band was working on its seventh studio album, “Step Up to the Microphone,” released in 1998. After his exit from the Newsboys, James’ life continued to unravel. His first marriage dissolved, illicit drugs became an escape, and a deep depression took over.
Now remarried and dedicated to missionary work, James said it was “authentic repentance” that restored him, healing him from his drug addiction, breaking the cycle of shame over his past sexual sins, and lifting the heavy weight of depression that had crippled him.
“It wasn’t because of anything I could do,” he said, “but it was the mercy and grace of God, that He constantly and lovingly drew me back to the foot of the cross in repentance.”
“That was more than just a prayer I said [at the altar],” James continued. “[It was] allowing the Holy Spirit … to address the brokenness and the sin in my life.”
From there, he added, the singer “started to bear fruit in accordance to repentance.”
James, now a missionary to the U.S. alongside his wife, Tanya, cautioned, though, the path to healing isn’t one that can be traveled “overnight.” It was — and is — “a long journey.”
That perspective, one that is aware of the need for accountability while making room for Bible-based redemption, gives James — who parted ways with the Newsboys 30 years ago — a unique opportunity to speak into the devastating Tait scandal that has dominated Christian news over the last year and a half.
Looking at all that has unfolded, James said, “It breaks my heart to see the legacy end this way.”
“My heart goes out to the people who were wounded, the victims, the people who were betrayed, just absolutely tragic,” he began, noting there are “absolutely” consequences to sin but that “no one is beyond redemption.”
He continued, “I carry the consequences and the scars of my mistakes and my sin that shipwrecked my time with the Newsboys. I carry those scars for the rest of my life. But we cannot take redemption off the table.”
“My prayer for everyone involved with the Newsboys tragedy is that, somehow, God would weave a redemptive story out of it,” James said. “I don’t know how, I don’t know how long, but one day, we would look back and think, ‘Man, that was the worst thing that ever happened. But man, what a testimony, God, of forgiveness, of repentance, of mercy, of grace, of healing that You brought out of that.’”
Redemption from sin, he added, is God’s “specialty.”
Listen to our entire conversation with James in the Faith in Culture Podcast episode above.
Love the Lord…
Quote for the Day
Along with a God-given ministry comes God-given revelation to wisely fulfill the ministry. Therefore, look for revelation in the areas in which God has given you accountability. Mark Virkler

God loves a cheerful giver…

Christian Freedom Index Launched in Australia

From Canberra Declaration
Among the recommendations the Index puts forward is an Australian Freedoms Act that would provide enforceable nationwide protections for speech, religion, conscience and association.
Australia’s first systematic audit of Christian freedom launches at Parliament House in Canberra tomorrow morning, with preview data already showing that nine in ten Australian Christians believe it has become riskier to affirm their faith publicly than it was just five years ago.
The Australian Christian Freedom Index (ACFI) 2025 — a 108-page report produced by the Canberra Declaration in partnership with the Australian Christian Lobby, FamilyVoice Australia, the Australian Family Coalition, CitizenGo, and the Human Rights Law Alliance — will be released at a bipartisan breakfast in the Reps Alcove at 7am on Thursday 28 May.
The event will be livestreamed at the link below.
Representatives from the Labor, Liberal and National parties, along with One Nation, are expected at the event, with organisers around a dozen parliamentarians.
Seven of the report’s eleven authors will give a short speech at the launch event. Every attendee will receive a hand-signed copy of the report.
What the Report Will Show
A companion guide released ahead of tomorrow’s launch — available here — previews the report’s major findings.
The full data draws on 10,808 survey responses collected from Christians across every Australian state and territory between 27 February and 6 April this year.

The companion guide shows perceptions of freedom varying sharply by civic domain. Respondents rated Christians as most free in church ministry and worship — the only domain where close to half rated Christians as at least somewhat free.
That figure fell to roughly one in four for evangelism, and dropped even further for Christian education and the workplace.
The lowest result was for Christian healthcare, where just 8% of respondents rated Christians as somewhat or very free to operate according to their beliefs.

The report’s legislative audit, which covers 74 Acts across nine jurisdictions from 2000 to 2025, documents a sharp acceleration in restrictive legislation.
Victoria ranks as the most legislatively restrictive jurisdiction; Western Australia the least.
Using the eight-stage persecution scale developed by Floyd A. Brobbel of Voice of the Martyrs Canada — a scale that runs from ridicule through harassment, discrimination, defamation and attack, to detainment, torture, and martyrdom — the ACFI locates Australia’s documented cases across the first five stages.

42 Recommendations
The report does more than document the problem: it makes 42 concrete recommendations across three audiences: parliaments, church leaders, and individual Christians.
For parliaments, the ACFI calls for an Australian Freedoms Act that would provide enforceable nationwide protections for speech, religion, conscience, and association — a positive legislative right to replace what it describes as the current patchwork of exemptions.
It also calls for restored religious hiring exemptions for faith-based schools across all jurisdictions and an end to compelled participation in abortion and assisted suicide for healthcare workers with conscientious objections.
For church leaders, the report urges public advocacy for Christians facing legal pressure, stating plainly that silence has only increased hostility.
The index also calls for the establishment of a national register of anti-Christian incidents, a mechanism that does not currently exist in Australia.
For individual Christians, the report calls on believers to maintain their public witness, engage their elected representatives, and share the findings of the report.
Most Australians — including most Christians — remain unaware of the scale of what the report documents, the companion guide notes.
Revere Christ as Lord
Quote for the Day
Journaling allows you to write in faith believing the flow of thoughts and pictures is from the Lord, knowing that you will be able to test them later. Mark Virkler



