The wind industry cannot be relied upon for our electricity

UK - It’s not been a good few days for the wind industry, one of the most highly subsidised parts of the UK economy. The cold weather means that the public is, naturally enough, consuming far more energy to keep warm. Electricity demand reached its highest level this winter on Monday, as my colleague Emily Gosden reports, and yet on that very same day wind turbines generated their lowest output of the season. It was an embarassing moment for an over-hyped industry.

Davos arrives as world on verge of nervous breakdown

UK - Do-gooding captains of industry and government will travel up a Swiss mountain this week for the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos with one hefty task on their minds: how to make the world a better place. Dozens of heads of state and 2,500 business leaders, along with cultural emissaries and experts from across the entire field of human endeavor, will pile into the Alpine ski town — population 11,142 — for five days of intense workshops, speeches and fast-and-furious networking starting Tuesday night.

Jean-Claude Juncker compares British membership of EU to doomed romance

EUROPE - Jean-Claude Juncker has compared British membership of the EU to a doomed romance and suggested it is time for Britain to get a divorce from Europe. It is the first time the president of the European Commission has publicly contemplated a British exit and he reinforced his message by insisting he would not get down on his knees to beg Britain to stay.

BBC Democracy Day: Europe 'faces political earthquakes'

EUROPE - The rise of populist parties is tipped to cause shock waves across the European Union. Political earthquakes could be in store for Europe in 2015, according to research by the Economist Intelligence Unit for the BBC's Democracy Day. It says the rising appeal of populist parties could see some winning elections and mainstream parties forced into previously unthinkable alliances.

UK sends warship to Falklands

FALKLAND ISLANDS - One of Britain’s newest and most powerful warships was last night heading towards the Falklands to strengthen the islands’ air defences. Navy chiefs have sent HMS Dragon, a Type 45 destroyer, to the South Atlantic after a deployment in Chile. Last night naval sources said the move was part of the MoD’s effort to speed up the “operational drumbeat” by which the Navy keeps guard over the Falklands. With Argentina attempting to lease 12 supersonic bombers from Russia, the MoD is also to install a new £200 million air defence missile system in the islands. This will replace the ageing Rapier missile batteries which were used against the Argentine air force in the 1982 Falklands War.

 
Islamic State fighters mass on Lebanon border

MIDDLE EAST - Exclusive: How Islamic State fighters have been training new recruits close to Lebanon – and could launch cross-border attacks. Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant fighters in Syria, massed close to the Lebanese border, are threatening to launch attacks across it, the Telegraph has witnessed.

Will Denmark be the next country to cause currency chaos?

DENMARK - Investors are worried that the Danish central bank could abandon its peg, following the Swiss in eschewing the link between its currency and the euro. In the aftermath of the market panic triggered by the Swiss National Bank's shock decision to scrap its euro ceiling for the franc, investors are asking whether Denmark could do the same.

QE or not QE? That is the question facing ECB chief Mario Draghi

EUROPE - The European Central Bank may announce a quantitative easing scheme as early as this week as the currency bloc teeters on the brink of a deflationary spiral. One notable absentee when the great and the good convene in Davos this week for the annual World Economic Forum meeting will be Mario Draghi. The president of the European Central Bank is likely to be holed up in Frankfurt putting the final touches to the hefty stimulus package that many leading economists believe will be announced this week.

Hollande backtracks on statement that ECB QE will begin Thursday

FRANCE - The French President has caused a headache for the eurozone’s policymakers. He declared on Monday that the European Central Bank (ECB) will announce a quantitative easing programme this week, in a move that will support the French economy. Francois Hollande made the comments to business leaders at the Élysée Palace, according to the Wall Street Journal. The newspaper reports that Mr Hollande said: “On Thursday, the ECB will take the decision to buy sovereign debt, which will provide significant liquidity to the European economy and create a movement that is favourable to growth.” Since his speech, the French leader has felt the need to backtrack. His office has declared that Mr Hollande was referring to the "hypothesis" of QE, not that it was certain.

 
PEGIDA: 'We won't be muzzled' after terror threat stops march

GERMANY - The PEGIDA group intends to hold protests next Monday again, after a terror threat forced the group to call off this week's march. The German government also said that the sudden suspension must remain "a one-off." PEGIDA founder Lutz Bachmann and fellow senior figure in the movement, Kathrin Oertel, told reporters in Dresden on Monday that the group was planning another march in one week's time. This followed Sunday's sudden police ban on all public demonstrations in the city, following "concrete" terror threats against a member of PEGIDA's 12-person organizers' committee. PEGIDA has since said that founder Bachmann was the individual in question. "We don't want to let anybody take away our rights to freedom of opinion and assembly," Oertel said on Monday. Bachmann concurred, saying: "We won't be muzzled."

 
Snowden leak reveals massive size of F-35 blueprints hack by China

CHINA - The reported theft by Chinese hackers of blueprints for the US’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter amounted to 50 terabytes of classified information, documents leaked by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden have revealed. The hackers are believed by many US officials to be affiliated with the Chinese government. The humiliating 2007 incident saved China “25 years of research and development,” according to a US military official cited by The Washington Post in a 2013 article covering the breach.

Judge orders father to take his children to church

UK - A judge has ordered a father to take his children to Roman Catholic mass as part of a divorce settlement, even though he is not Catholic. The man, who can only be identified as “Steve” because of reporting restrictions on the case, faces possible contempt of court and a jail sentence if he fails to go to church when he has custody of the children. The church attendance requirement was imposed by Judge James Orrell during a hearing at an undisclosed county court in the Midlands.

Online gamer dies after three-day binge

TAIWAN - Taiwan records second 'sudden death' of a computer game-player so far this year. A computer gamer has died in Taiwan after a three-day online binge of combat games, the second "sudden death" of an internet cafe patron in the country this year. Staff of the game centre in the city of Kaohsiung told The Taipei Times that the 32-year-old man, only identified by his surname, Hsieh, appeared to be sleeping.

Branded RACIST at seven

UK - Summoned to a meeting at her seven-year-old son’s primary school, Hayley White was prepared for a quick chat about his behaviour. But when she was told that Elliott had been at the centre of an ‘incident’ with another pupil that was so serious she would have to sign an official form admitting he was racist, she refused to believe what she was hearing. ‘When I arrived at the school and asked Elliott what had happened, he became extremely upset,’ said Ms White, who is a 32-year-old NHS worker. ‘He kept saying to me: “I was just asking a question. I didn’t mean it to be nasty”.’

2014: The Year of the Christian Genocide

USA - The year 2014 saw more global persecution of Christians than any other year in recent history, and can only be compared to the first centuries when Christians were hunted down as criminals in the Roman Empire. The policy of the Emperor Diocletian, in fact, who reigned from 284-305AD, was remarkably similar to that taken by the Islamic State and Boko Haram: “Convert or die.”

“Just what is an APOSTLE?”
Just what is an Apostle?

Today we find the Church of God in a “wilderness of religious confusion!”

The confusion is not merely around the Church – within the religions of the world outside – but WITHIN the very heart of The True Church itself!

Read online or contact email to request a copy

Listen to Me, You who know righteousness, You people in whose heart is My Law: …I have put My words in your mouth, I have covered you with the shadow of My hand, That I may plant the heavens, Lay the foundations of the earth, and say to Zion, “you are My people” (Isaiah 51:7,16)