Teen beheads statues of Jesus and Mary, posts shocking selfie on social media

A 19-year-old teenager, seen here with a blurred face, poses with the statues whose heads he decapitated. (PHOTO: Facebook)

Kids do the most foolish things in order to appear cool. A teenager from Dulwich Hill, New South Wales fell prey to that after he decapitated religious figures and posted a selfie on social media.

A teenager beheaded the statues of Jesus Christ and Mary outside St. Paul of the Cross church, according to Channel 7. The 19-year-old then posted photos online of him holding the broken pieces while smoking a cigarette.

Instead of receiving raves, the teenager was roasted on social media. He promptly turned himself over to the authorities after he was threatened by netizens, the Gospel Herald reported. "Soooo he got scared because people found out who he was now he wants police to protect him. Praying for you, you need Jesus!" an angry social media user wrote.

"So shameful! Makes no sense, was it self defense??? Some people have no respect or limits, and he has surely crossed the line," another added.

However, not all the comments were harsh. People from the faith community even extended a hand of friendship to the boy who made the huge social media faux pas. "We would like to invite him for a rosary. We don't blame him, rather the devil that lives within that tempts us and make poor decisions daily," one person wrote.

"Yes we are in a time of hardship and our religion is being tested but we must remain in the footsteps of Christ," wrote another. "He would not show any hate toward this young bloke and so we should not either. Forgive and forget; this is what we are taught. If God Himself can forgive this lost gentleman then so should we." 

For his part, the teenager also issued a statement of apology to the Greek Orthodox church and community "for offending you."

"It was not my intention," he said.

News
The evidence for faith-based morals: the academic research that backs Christian family values
The evidence for faith-based morals: the academic research that backs Christian family values

Research shows that lifelong marriage is good for all concerned

Wildwood Kin’s Meg Loney on how a 24/7 prayer meeting brought her back from the brink 
Wildwood Kin’s Meg Loney on how a 24/7 prayer meeting brought her back from the brink 

Meg Loney went from the depths of drug addiction to being a follower of Christ bringing hope and healing to others with her music.

How going to prison for a crime I didn’t commit changed my life – for the better
How going to prison for a crime I didn’t commit changed my life – for the better

In 2008, Wilson Femayi was wrongly convicted and sent to prison for a crime he didn’t commit. He had just graduated from Bible college. His arrest — the result of a personal vendetta — was a devastating moment. But even in that dark place, God was at work. Today, Wilson is the Executive Director of Prison Fellowship Zimbabwe, leading programmes that are restoring prisoners and reuniting families across the country.

Christians in Africa face worsening violence, report finds
Christians in Africa face worsening violence, report finds

A new report from International Christian Concern (ICC) has revealed a disturbing rise in violence against Christians across parts of Africa, with Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), and Kenya experiencing a surge in attacks, abductions, massacres and forced displacements.