I hope this finds you well. We have two noteworthy updates to share with you.
Firstly, the World Health Organization (WHO) recently forecast a 77 percent rise in global cancer cases, escalating from 20 million to 35 million cases annually by 2050. What is driving this alarming increase?
Secondly, Shen Yun tours 200 cities annually, presenting pre-communist Chinese culture to over a million people. Despite its mission to revive authentic Chinese culture, it is banned in China. Why? Please see our related videos below.
From New York Times best-selling author Eric Metaxas comes a riveting new film challenging audiences to take a stand in the face of evil. “Letter to the American Church” is a documentary adaptation of Metaxas’s latest book of the same name.
Metaxas guides audiences through the striking similarities between the church in Hitler’s early 1930’s Nazi Germany, the political regimes of Mao and Stalin, and modern day America and her church. Audiences will see that silence in the face of evil is itself evil. Metaxas and his colleagues agree that this is the hour of the American church.
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Family of Six Started Eating Dinner by Candlelight, and Here’s What They Noticed
After a trip to Norway, a missionary family of six took on a new tradition of eating dinner by candlelight and noticed some amazing changes.
Homeschooling mom and native New Yorker Kaisa Coats, 33, currently lives in Nashville, Tennessee, with her North Carolina-born husband, Scott Coats, 35, and their four kids. The family has lived “all over the place” owing to mission work including Norway, in 2017, where they came face to face with a different take on family dinnertime.
“That is actually the first place we saw that people use candles a lot for dinner,” Mrs. Coats told The Epoch Times. “I don’t think it’s the tradition … from what we’ve gathered, I think it’s their lifestyle.”
Reflecting on the experience, Mrs. Coats said that in Norway it just felt so calm and peaceful.
“We would go to dinner on these bases we would be at, and there’s candles on every single table,” she said. “Everyone was fine, calm, so then, about a month ago, my husband said, ‘Let’s try that, I think that’d be really calming and nice for our family.’ We started it, and it’s been wonderful.”
Living in their first large home with an intentional dining space, the Coats sit down for dinner together as often as they can by candlelight, using odorless, non-toxic candles. Since they began, Mrs. Coats has noticed some interesting changes in her kids and their family dining dynamic.
“[W]e turn lights off, and it’s calm, and they‘ll sit and talk. They will sit longer because I feel all the distractions go away,” she said. “One thing my kids have always loved to do is go around the table and ask, ’What was your favorite part of the day?‘ They’ll all answer that. But I’ve noticed that since we started doing the candles, everyone will sit and ask me or my husband to come up with questions to go around the table.”
Since they started having dinners by candlelight last December, the kids have been very excited and look forward to more of it. Additionally, they also argue about who is going to blow the candles out at the end, and they take turns doing so.
Mrs. Coats grew up in a large family and rarely sat down for dinner with them. Thus with her own family, she finds it imperative that they come together. Since sharing their new candlelight tradition on Instagram, she has also been blown away by the responses from viewers.
“I did not expect this to happen, but I love it, and seeing comments honestly makes me emotional,” she told The Epoch Times. “Seeing comments of all these people that are older, 10 or 20 years older than me, saying they love this, this was some of their favorite memories. … This is going to be a really sweet memory for [our children].”
Mr. Coats, an artist and music teacher, creates large-scale art pieces out of broken-down musical instruments. His wife is a full-time mom and homeschooler with an earring business on the side. The Coatses are a Christian family and claim faith is “the cornerstone of our life,” a philosophy that has informed their parenting style and their prioritization of family time.
“When we had our first [child] I was still working part-time,” Mrs. Coats said. “When we had our second, I wanted to be home with them. … Now that they are a bit older, I can’t imagine not spending their young years with them.”
Through homeschooling, the children “get to point at whatever their interests are [and spend] their time that way.” Mr. and Mrs. Coats also decided, on getting married, to never have a television in their house.
“We have computers, we have laptops … but it really limits it and makes the focus never on the TV,” Mrs. Coats said. “[The children] choose to do other things, and we encourage them to build and play and do those things. … We don’t mind them watching a show or two a day, but we do notice a difference, even on the days that they watch nothing. Their behavior, it’s just very steady.”
Mrs. Coats believes there is “an attack on the family unit” and a distraction epidemic in the United States.
“We’re distracted with our phones, we’re distracted with our TVs … and it’s eating up time that we could be face-to-face with people,” she said. “I would say, even if you’re not with your family, or maybe you don’t have an immediate family, just get out of your comfort zone and find people.”
In sharing their newly formed family tradition around the table, Mrs. Coats wants to remind people that “sitting down and having meals together as a family is so important.”
“[T]he way we live our lives, we have a lot of young people in and out of our home all the time, people come stay with us and have meals with us,” she said.
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