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‘Parties Were In Relationship Since 2012’: HC Grants Bail To Man Accused Of Rape On False Pretext Of Marria – News18

The Madhya Pradesh High Court has granted anticipatory bail to a man accused of rape of a 40-year-old government teacher on a false pretext of marriage. The court found that the woman had been in a prolonged relationship with the accused, and held that no prima facie case was made out warranting the denial of bail.
The court, presided over by Justice Achal Kumar Paliwal, observed that “Looking to the age of the prosecutrix and period of relationship between the parties, it cannot be said that appellant established physical relations with the prosecutrix on the false pretext of marriage. Further, as per prosecution story, parties were in relationship with each other since 2012."
The case stemmed from a First Information Report (FIR) lodged on November 17, 2024, at Mahila Thana Police Station, Balaghat District.
The woman alleged that the accused had established a physical relationship with her over an extended period—from June 5, 2015, to April 18, 2022—on the false promise of marriage.
The appellant faced charges under Sections 376(2)(n), 294, and 506 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and Sections 3(2)(v) and 3(1)(w)(i) of the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.
The appellant argued that there was a substantial delay of over two years in filing the FIR, which raised serious doubts about the credibility of the prosecution’s allegations. It was further contended that the prosecutrix’s educational background and long-term relationship with the appellant negated the assertion of a false promise of marriage. Relying on the Supreme Court judgments in Shajan Skaria v. State of Kerala (2024) and Prathvi Raj Chauhan v. Union of India (2020), the appellant claimed that the circumstances did not constitute a prima facie case under the SC/ST Act, rendering anticipatory bail maintainable.
Opposing the bail plea, the respondents asserted that Section 18 of the SC/ST Act bars anticipatory bail in such cases unless there is clear evidence negating the applicability of the Act. It was further argued that the appellant’s conduct warranted custodial interrogation.
The court made critical observations on the prosecutrix’s claim and the applicability of the SC/ST Act. It noted that while Section 18 generally excludes anticipatory bail, an exception is made when there is no prima facie evidence under the Act. The court observed, “It is correct that normally, application for anticipatory bail is not maintainable for the offence registered under the provisions of SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act in view of Section 18 of the SC/ST (PA) Act. But if prima facie, no case is made out under the SC/ST (PA) Act, then, application for anticipatory bail is maintainable."
The court further found that the prosecution failed to establish essential ingredients for invoking the SC/ST Act against the appellant.
The court also considered the prosecutrix’s education, age, and prolonged relationship with the appellant, underscoring that such factors cast doubt on her assertion that the physical relationship was predicated on a false promise of marriage. Additionally, the significant delay in filing the FIR undermined the prosecutrix’s claim of a false promise of marriage.
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Considering these factors, the court granted anticipatory bail, directing the appellant to furnish a personal bond of Rs 30,000 with a solvent surety of the same amount. The appellant was also ordered to cooperate with the investigation, appear before the investigating officer as required, and comply with Section 482(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The court clarified that non-compliance with the conditions would result in the automatic cancellation of the bail.
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For Years, My Child Seemed “Possessed.” Watching Netflix’s Top Movie Brought It All Back. – Slate

Even as a tween growing up during the 1980s, a time many people consider to be the golden age of horror movies, I couldn’t understand why you’d willingly pee your pants when life is scary enough as it is. Still, this past weekend, I streamed Netflix’s current No. 1 movie, The Deliverance, by Lee Daniels, the director of Precious and The Butler. In it, Andra Day is Ebony, a single mom of three, and Glenn Close plays their born-again grandmother, in a campy role much remarked upon on X. Shortly after moving houses, the children begin behaving bizarrely. The youngest converses with an unseen entity. His eyes turn into dark pools; he slips into trances and says disturbing things. After the kids break down at school one day, they’re taken to the hospital. They undergo brain MRIs, which are normal, and a doctor declares there’s nothing wrong with them.
Spoiler alert: The children are possessed, and the cure is Jesus.
Satan taking the reins of your soul isn’t just a cinematic trope: 51 percent of Americans believe in demonic possession, according to a 2013 YouGov survey. The Deliverance is even based on a true story of a family from my home state of Indiana. A mother thought her children had been possessed; what made the case unusual is that several state and local authorities agreed.
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I am not one of those believers, but I watched the movie because when my daughter, Rory, was 6 years old, she began having unexplained and terrifying symptoms like Ebony’s children, and my husband and I found ourselves living in a real-life horror film. While demonic possession creates a thrilling plot, and believing in spirits can help make sense of the unsensible, there’s real danger in pointing the finger at Lucifer. Watching The Deliverance, I kept thinking: If I had sought exorcism instead of medical specialists for my daughter, she could have died.
Rory was a typical first grader, funny and full of energy and imagination. Wearing a sparkly blue mermaid tail—a gift from her grandmother—she and friends spun make-believe scenarios for endless hours of entertainment at the neighborhood swimming pool. She loved historical American Girl dolls too, and on weekends, she begged to go to a living-history museum near our home so she could pretend to live in the 1800s. We went often enough that we bought an annual membership and a pint-size period calico dress so she could look the part.
That spring, though, something about Rory changed. It started with agitation. The smallest things would send her into rages. Like Dre, the youngest son in Ebony’s family in The Deliverance, she became aggressive, once looking menacingly at a family member as she drew her finger across her throat in a threatening gesture. Her voice, normally lilting and punctuated with laughter, turned flat and devoid of emotion. Her speech, previously precocious, became nonsensical words strung together. Then she fell completely silent, sitting in strange positions with her dark, vacant eyes fixed on a faraway point.
One day, after I hadn’t heard her voice for some time, Rory turned her head slowly, looked at me intently, and said, “Mama, can you turn off the TV? It’s telling me to die.” Chilled to my core, I snapped off the cartoons and held her tightly in my arms.
I grew up in the Catholic Church. My parents, who attended Catholic school their entire lives, enrolled me in kindergarten at the parish near our house. After switching me to public school in first grade, they dutifully sent me to CCD every week for my religious education. When my grandmother was dying of cancer, the notorious nun who ran the program castigated my mom over our spotty attendance, and a few years later, my family effectively left the church for good.
Yet when Rory became mysteriously, terrifyingly ill, I remembered my grandmother’s devotion to St. Jude, the patron saint of hope and impossible causes. Some nights, when my husband got home from work, I would walk the two blocks to our neighborhood Catholic church and sit on a bench outside, weeping and pleading for my daughter to somehow return to me.
Still, doctors could find nothing physically wrong with Rory. Many suggested that her problems were purely psychiatric. Some thought they were behavioral and implied my parenting style could be to blame. No one directly suggested that evil was at work, though I suspect that had more to do with our white middle-to-upper-middle-class milieu than with what was happening to Rory. Despite being agnostic, in a moment of abject desperation, I bought a bundle of sage and smudged every corner of my 80-year-old home. I figured it couldn’t hurt, but all it did was aggravate my allergies.
It never occurred to me that I should consider casting out demons—although if someone had suggested this, I might’ve tried it, especially if it brought with it a community to rally around and support us. Instead, we became pariahs. With no explanation for what was happening to Rory, many in our circle of friends and local community othered us and distanced themselves to protect against the fear that what had come for my child could easily come for theirs too. Like Ebony in The Deliverance, who (the movie implicitly argues) opened the door to the devil by abusing alcohol, drugs, and her children, the intimation was that we must have done something to invite this. During my family’s crisis, even I found myself wondering: Why is this happening to Rory? What have we done to deserve this? As I frantically tried to figure out why my little girl had completely changed, seemingly overnight, I also wondered where all the people in my life who said they would pray for my family had gone.
There is a long history of attributing the inexplicable to the work of the devil. Epilepsy, which was first described 4,000 years ago on an ancient tablet in Mesopotamia, was thought for millennia to be caused by evil spirits entering the body, when it is in fact due to electric changes in the brain. For time immemorial, mental illness has been attributed to the devil. In her book The Great Pretender, Susannah Cahalan writes that historically, exorcisms were often used to drive the “devil” out of unquiet minds. When a child suddenly becomes different from how they were, without an explanation, possession offers a framework that may appeal to some. People who live in underresourced communities and belong to marginalized racial and ethnic groups are less likely to be believed by physicians, so when something goes wrong, it’s much harder to find help. Possession can provide reassurance and answers—and therein lies the danger.
It took two years of nonstop searching and advocacy to find appropriate care for Rory. After seeing more than 20 medical professionals in four states, I found a team of doctors in North Carolina that was evaluating children with symptoms similar to Rory’s. These new doctors ordered an MRI of Rory’s brain, and, just as happens with the kids in The Deliverance, it was normal. Fortunately, though, the other testing her doctors ordered was comprehensive and extensive. It revealed several markers of inflammation in her blood and autoantibodies in her spinal fluid. She was diagnosed with autoimmune encephalitis, a life-threatening inflammatory brain disease in which autoantibodies attack neural receptors, causing psychiatric and neurological symptoms such as hallucinations, psychosis, loss of language, and involuntary movements.
AE was first described in 2005, when Josep Dalmau, a researcher at the University of Pennsylvania, and colleagues identified a type of autoimmune disease that targeted the brain’s NMDA receptors. Since then, researchers have discovered more than 20 new antibody-mediated diseases classified as AE. They believe that the most likely cause of the illness is an inappropriate immune response to a viral trigger.
Initially considered very rare, AE may be more common than previously thought. A 2018 study found that AE has a prevalence of 13.7 per 100,000—a rate that is increasing due to more research and better detection. Still, it’s frequently misdiagnosed as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and autism. And yes, historically, demonic possession.
At the end of The Deliverance, Ebony accepts Christ as her savior and drives out the demon, and her children are themselves again. Rory, now a college sophomore, has returned to being the same sunny, creative person she was before all this started too. But no amount of holy water or rebuking evil would have cured her. Rory was treated for years with steroids, immune-suppressing medication, and monthly infusions of healthy donor antibodies called intravenous immunoglobulin that cost $16,000 a dose. Fortunately, my husband’s job offered good insurance that covered the expensive treatments. Though it caused financial hardship, I was able to pause my work and use my journalism skills to investigate what was happening to my daughter and navigate the medical system. The monthly 1,200-mile round-trip visits to Rory’s doctors drained us financially and took a toll on my health, but I know they would not have been an option for so many families. What happens to their children? This is what haunts me.
Slate is published by The Slate Group, a Graham Holdings Company.
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Monte-Carlo Film Festival 2024: A Line-Up that Ignites the World of Comedy Cinema – Le Podcast Journal

ÉDITORIAL | POLITIQUE ET SOCIÉTÉ | ÉCONOMIE | NATURE ET DÉVELOPPEMENT DURABLE | ART ET CULTURE | ÉDUCATION | SCIENCE ET HIGH-TECH | SANTÉ ET MÉDECINE | GASTRONOMIE | VIE QUOTIDIENNE | CÉLÉBRITÉS, MODE ET LIFESTYLE | SPORT | AUTO, MOTO, BATEAU, AVION | JEUNES | INSOLITE ET FAITS DIVERS | VOYAGES ET TOURISME | HUMOUR

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Illness or demons? Online conference helps discern mental, spiritual health issues – Detroit Catholic

(OSV News) — For Catholics who wrestle with mental health challenges, the mixed messages they often receive can do little to relieve the anguish they experience. Their fellow faithful — emphasizing spirituality — may counsel more intense prayer. Clinicians, meanwhile, may completely discount the therapeutic benefits of anything remotely religious.
“Everything is a demon, or everything is an electrical impulse. Both are false,” said Daniel Coleman, a missionary for Souls of the Christian Apostolate. SOCA, a Denver-based, lay-led movement seeks to engage Catholics in daily mental prayer — a practice of silent, intimate conversation with God.
“Yes, there are chemical reactions,” Coleman added. “And yes, there’s unseen agencies — but we have to be responsible.”
For the last four months, Coleman has focused almost solely upon an answer to that conundrum: The Divine Fulfillment free online conference titled “Transforming Mental Health Through Catholic Spirituality.”
For three days — Dec. 27-29 — viewers can access the one-of-a-kind event, which organizers describe as designed “to guide participants from feelings of emptiness to a state of divine fulfillment.” The conference unites experts in psychology and spiritual theology to explore the intersection of mental health and mental prayer, to focus on a “whole person” approach to healing.
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, or NIMH, nearly one in five U.S. adults experiences mental illness each year. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported a surge in anxiety and depression symptoms among adults in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, with anxiety increasing from 15.6% to 18.2%, and depression increasing from 18.5% to 21.4%, between 2019 and 2022. The most affected groups included adults 18-29 years old, those with less than a high school education, those with family incomes less than 100% of the federal poverty level, and those living in rural areas.
In 2023, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops launched a National Catholic Mental Health Campaign, designed to inspire a nationwide conversation around the topic of mental health and to mobilize the Catholic Church to respond compassionately and effectively to the mental health crisis.
Coleman recalled a brainstorming session with Kevin Roerty, founder and CEO of SOCA, around the time of the USCCB’s announcement, that grew into the Divine Fulfillment Conference.
“We were having a conversation: ‘If we had a conference, what would we do? What would it be?'” remembered Coleman. “And (Kevin) thought for a long moment. He paused — and then he looked up and said, ‘Mental health and mental prayer.’ And when he said it, it resonated very deeply and it was like, ‘Yes, let’s do that.'”
According to a description provided by organizers, the conference will feature bishops, licensed mental health professionals, and veteran thought leaders, all of whom will “address some of the most pressing psychological and spiritual challenges facing Catholics today, including anxiety, depression, isolation and lack of purpose.”
Participants are promised “the opportunity to receive not only inspiration but also practical, faith-based tools to enhance their mental well-being and strengthen their connection to God.”
“For the last four months, I’ve interviewed now over 50 leaders in spirituality and mental health to provide a conference that gives generational impact,” Coleman said, “to really swing the needle on a very grave amount of suffering that many people are enduring quietly and in isolation, because of this shame and the stigma associated with mental illness and seeking help for it.”
Among the more than 40 experts featured are Ukrainian Catholic Archbishop Borys A. Gudziak of Philadelphia and Bishop Robert E. Barron of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota, co-chairs of the U.S. bishops’ mental health campaign; Bishop John P. Dolan of Phoenix, one of the most outspoken American prelates on the necessity of spiritual accompaniment for those suffering from mental illness; Father Timothy Gallagher, an Oblate of the Virgin Mary and a preeminent writer on Ignatian spiritual direction and discernment; Bob Schuchts, author and founder of the Tallahassee, Florida-based John Paul II Healing Center; Theresa Karminski Burke of Rachel’s Vineyard; and Paul Vitz, a professor at Divine Mercy University, a Catholic institution offering psychology and counseling graduate degrees.
“We’ve had several leaders — archbishops, bishops, priests — be very vulnerable,” said Coleman, “and talk about their own mental and emotional struggles due to traumas in childhood, or being diagnosed with mental illnesses, or having to take sabbatical from their positions as clerics because of the pressures of their positions and unresolved things from their past.”
Coleman emphasized, however, that the conference won’t simply be sharing and prayer.
“We’re not just feeding people spiritually — we’re also putting them in touch with equipment and resources that they themselves or the people around them can utilize to either directly receive help for mental illness,” he said, “or at least be put in contact with institutions and organizations and clinicians who can point them in the right direction.”
For Coleman and his colleagues, the need for engagement with mental health issues is not only obvious — it’s also urgent.
“It is a conversation,” said Coleman, “that needs to be had for the global church.”
– – –
Kimberley Heatherington writes for OSV News from Virginia.

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‘Educated, 40-Year-Old Woman’: Madhya Pradesh HC Grants Bail to Man Accused of Rape on False Pretext of Marriage – LawBeat

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The court found that the woman had been in a prolonged relationship with the accused and held that no prima facie case was made out warranting the denial of bail
The Madhya Pradesh High Court granted anticipatory bail to a man accused of committing rape on a false pretext of marriage upon an educated woman aged 40 years and employed as a government teacher.
The court, presided over by Justice Achal Kumar Paliwal, observed that “Looking to the age of the prosecutrix and period of relationship between the parties, it cannot be said that appellant established physical relations with the prosecutrix on the false pretext of marriage. Further, as per prosecution story, parties were in relationship with each other since 2012.
The case stemmed from a First Information Report (FIR) lodged on November 17, 2024, at Mahila Thana Police Station, Balaghat District. The prosecutrix alleged that the accused/ appellant had established a physical relationship with her over an extended period—from June 5, 2015, to April 18, 2022—on the false promise of marriage. The appellant faced charges under Sections 376(2)(n), 294, and 506 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and Sections 3(2)(v) and 3(1)(w)(i) of the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.
The appellant argued that there was a substantial delay of over two years in filing the FIR, which raised serious doubts about the credibility of the prosecution’s allegations. It was further contended that the prosecutrix’s educational background and long-term relationship with the appellant negated the assertion of a false promise of marriage. Relying on the Supreme Court judgments in Shajan Skaria v. State of Kerala (2024) and Prathvi Raj Chauhan v. Union of India (2020), the appellant claimed that the circumstances did not constitute a prima facie case under the SC/ST Act, rendering anticipatory bail maintainable.
Opposing the bail plea, the respondents asserted that Section 18 of the SC/ST Act bars anticipatory bail in such cases unless there is clear evidence negating the applicability of the Act. It was further argued that the appellant’s conduct warranted custodial interrogation.
The court made critical observations on the prosecutrix’s claim and the applicability of the SC/ST Act. It noted that while Section 18 generally excludes anticipatory bail, an exception is made when there is no prima facie evidence under the Act. The court observed, “It is correct that normally, application for anticipatory bail is not maintainable for the offence registered under the provisions of SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act in view of Section 18 of the SC/ST (PA) Act. But if prima facie, no case is made out under the SC/ST (PA) Act, then, application for anticipatory bail is maintainable.
The court further found that the prosecution failed to establish essential ingredients for invoking the SC/ST Act against the appellant.
The court also took into account the prosecutrix’s education, age, and prolonged relationship with the appellant, underscoring that such factors cast doubt on her assertion that the physical relationship was predicated on a false promise of marriage. Additionally, the significant delay in filing the FIR undermined the prosecutrix’s claim of a false promise of marriage.
Considering these factors, the court granted anticipatory bail, directing the appellant to furnish a personal bond of ₹30,000 with a solvent surety of the same amount. The appellant was also ordered to cooperate with the investigation, appear before the investigating officer as required, and comply with Section 482(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The court clarified that non-compliance with the conditions would result in the automatic cancellation of the bail.
 
Cause Title: Bhupendra Sohagpure v State of Madhya Pradesh and Others [CRA-13678-2024
Appearance : Senior Advocate Manish Datt, Advocates Mayank Sharma and Vikas Khurshel – for the appellant; and Learned counsel for the State, Seema Jaiswal, and Advocate Sanjay Sharma- for the Respondent/ Complainant
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Hackers steal information from 31 million Internet Archive users – Houston Public Media

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The digital library’s website was defaced earlier this month with a message boasting its theft of Internet Archive users’ sensitive records. The nonprofit said it’s working to bolster security.
A hack this month on the world’s largest archive of the internet — whose mission is to provide “universal access to all knowledge” — has compromised millions of users’ information and forced a temporary shutdown of its services.
The attack on the Internet Archive leaked identifying information from more than 31 million user accounts, including patron email addresses and encrypted passwords, according to the website Have I Been Pwnd, which tracks accounts that may be compromised in a data breach.
The Internet Archive, a nonprofit based in San Francisco that operates on a shoestring budget, provides free access to its enormous digitized library of websites current and past, software applications, and print materials. The organization said its vast cache of archival material “is safe” following the breach.
The nonprofit, which has a mission to provide “universal access to all knowledge,” says it will appeal the ruling.
IA said that it took down the entire site temporarily to “access and improve our security.” By Friday, most of its services were back online, including its archive tool of websites, the Wayback Machine. The IA said that it was working “around the clock” and through the weekend to restore the rest of its services securely.
“In coming days more services will resume, some starting in read-only mode as full restoration will take more time,” read a blog entry from IA founder Brewster Kahle posted Friday.
News of the attack surfaced on Oct. 9, with visitors to archive.org sharing screenshots showing that the website’s JavaScript had been defaced with a message that the Internet Archive had been breached:
The internet is forever … or is it? The average webpage is deleted or changed in just 100 days. To preserve all human knowledge — digital and analog — Brewster Kahle created the Internet Archive.
“Have you ever felt like the Internet Archive runs on sticks and is constantly on the verge of suffering a catastrophic security breach? It just happened. See 31 million of you on [Have I Been Pwnd],” read the JavaScript alert that momentarily appeared on the site.
“We’re taking a cautious, deliberate approach to rebuild and strengthen our defenses. Our priority is ensuring the Internet Archive comes online stronger and more secure,” Kahle said in his blog post.
He noted other recent cyberattacks on libraries — the British Library, Seattle Public Library, Toronto Public Library, and Calgary Public Library.
“We hope these attacks are not indicative of a trend,” he said.
In May, the Internet Archive saw its first attack since its founding in 1996, Kahle told The Washington Post, and intermittent outages have followed.
Since 2020, the Internet Archive has been dogged by lawsuits over its digitization of copyrighted books and music. Kahle told the Post the costly fines from the lawsuits could amount to a death blow for the archive.
The nonprofit has yet to share further updates on the breach of sensitive information. NPR has reached out to the Internet Archive for more details about the attack and how its patrons were affected.
 
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How to leave a spiritual legacy – Sydney Anglicans

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You can often tell things about people by the words they use. For example, a person’s name often ties them to an age group. Phrases they know and use also show this – “Pin or sign?” only makes sense to people over a certain age. Likewise, the importance of the concept of legacy matters to older people and holds little interest for young people. 
Legacy is what we leave behind for the next generation. Over generations, several of our diocesan heroes have stated their goal to “leave the Diocese more evangelical than they found it”. After World War II many significant building projects were undertaken because of the great need for new churches in new areas, but the common mantra was not about today’s needs. It was, “Let’s build something for future generations”.
Legacy is, therefore, a view to a long-term horizon rather than an immediate one. It makes sense that because young people tend to operate with an immediate horizon that legacy concerns are diminished. 
It is generous to forego something in the present for the benefit of those not yet born.
Of course, the world we live in expects us to live only in the immediate. Andrew Root (writer of The Congregation in the Secular Age) says our social media and digital world shapes us to want immediate outcomes and instant gratification. He says there is no longer space even for what he calls “sacred time”, where you can sit in church and meditate in wonder on God. Church now has to be full of sensory stimulation and the meeting of my and my family’s needs. Legacy, in this world, is a foreign word. 
The desire for legacy is praiseworthy and biblical. It is generous to forego something in the present for the benefit of those not yet born. The Scriptures speak of one generation’s responsibility to shape and provide for the next, especially in telling and trusting in the praiseworthy works of God (Psalm 78:4, 2 Timothy 2:2).
But legacy has a downside. It can, and sometimes does, inhibit change where it is beneficial. It can create a posture of “This is what we have always done, so don’t question it”. The question of protecting and preserving what is, or changing our ways, should always be addressed. 
This question is sometimes assumed to have different answers based on your age. But it is not that simple. Your disposition and the timeframe horizons you work within also come into play. So, what is the best way to act? 
From Genesis to Revelation, there is no doubt God is eternal and everlasting. This is why he can be trusted with every aspect of life (Ex 3:14-15, Heb 13:8, Ps 41:13; 90:2, 106:48, Heb 7:21, Jam 1:17). But the Scriptures expect people to change, and change fundamentally and deeply, under the power of God’s Spirit. This is the weight of the word repentance. 
In 2 Corinthians 3, Paul proclaims that Christians are changed from one degree of glory into another as we behold the face of God in Christ. We have a glorious, unchanging Lord who calls us to constant change. How do we hold the two together? 
This is further complicated because our sovereign God sometimes works in us with immediate effect, and at other times uses lifelong exposure to his word and people to transform us. He operates with multiple time horizons, and he chooses to do work differently with different people. 
What is the impact on the structure of church life? Should we change nothing because God is unchanging? Or should we constantly change and risk losing God-given blessings in the search for novelty to enhance immediate effect?
Secular management analyst Professor Alex Hill asked in his book Centennials, “What enables companies to exist and thrive after a century?” His conclusions resonate with what God says (after all God’s ways are best for everyone). Hill says legacy and growth are achieved by having two components: a stable core and a disruptive edge – and both can and should coexist. 
For Christians, our stable core lies in God and what he has established. God is sovereign, God is good, God is wise, he speaks the truth to our lost world in his word. Jesus is the only and necessary hope for every person, and God works to transform people through His Spirit. 
These are things we must believe, rejoice in and live out. You could add to this the perpetuation of that core: teach the next generation, and generations beyond that, and generously be open and giving of your resources to others.
our stable core lies in God and what he has established.
The disruptive edge might involve seeking input and wisdom from sources other than those who act as you do and belong to your tribe. This calls for discernment to evaluate their ways, motives and presuppositions as well as your own. 
Additionally, you could be open to unexpected insights and opportunities – and be willing to courageously explore how you might engage with them. This probably involves spending time just chatting with others about anything, as insights often derive from these conversations even if they seem inefficient at the time. 
Jesus set his eyes on heaven (Heb 12:2). The apostle Paul had eternal and heavenly horizons. He set his sights on what is unseen and eternal (2 Cor 4:16-18), and both call all who follow to do likewise. We must all have this heavenly horizon. And God gives the honour to his children to be involved in what he is doing by influencing generations to come and people who do not yet know him. 
This calls us to legacy thinking and acting. It is Christian to ask, “What can I provide to see the gospel widen and deepen in future generations?” And yet we must learn about promoting and using disruptive edges. God gives the changes and variety of events and seasons (Ecc 3:1-8), encouraging us not to rest and rely on only one way of operating.
“What can I provide to see the gospel widen and deepen in future generations?”
Managing change is difficult. It takes courage and requires wisdom. So, each of us should ask the Lord for this wisdom, which he grants without finding fault (Jam 1:5). Leaving in place and growing what should be left for future generations – and modifying how we function to promote the gospel in the present day – is an exciting journey we all share. 
 
The Rev Dr Archie Poulos is head of the ministry department at Moore College and director of the Centre for Ministry Development. 
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