THE CONVINCING EVIDENCE THAT MET A COLD-CASE INVESTIGATOR WHO TURNED TO SCIENCE TO TRY TO DISPROVE CHRIST'S RESURRECTION

by Paul Strand

"If Christ physically rose from the grave, then that proves His identity, message and credentials. What was His identity? God Incarnate. What was His message? Salvation by faith in what He did on the cross. His credentials? Virgin born, sinless life, rose from the dead, i.e.: He is the Savior." -Alex McFarland

When atheists find evidence of Jesus' Resurrection and become Believers, you know there must be more than just faith that it happened. Two of the most famous former atheists came to a recent Truth for a New Generation conference outside this North Carolina city to talk about how they ended up strong defenders of the fact Christ really did rise from the dead. 

As a successful cold case detective, J. Warner Wallace became so well-known at solving decades-old murders, he ended up as the foremost expert on national TV true crime shows.

Debunkers say Jesus in the Biblical accounts only showed up to His closest followers, those most likely to lie about His Resurrection. But McDowell said the opposite is true.

"He appeared to the Apostle Paul, Saul of Tarsus, who was anything but a follower of Christ. He despised Christ as a false Messiah," McDowell said.

He also pointed out Jesus appeared to James, saying, "You take James, His brother. James was not a follower of Jesus Christ. He was embarrassed by Christ, his brother, going out and doing these things and claiming these things. But James ended up coming to Christ and became a leader of the Jerusalem church."

No Two People—Much Less 500—Have the Same Hallucination
The Bible talks about Christ after His Resurrection showing up before 500 people. Some debunkers say that was likely just a mass hallucination. Neither Wallace nor McDowell buys that.

McDowell interviewed five experts and learned, "No two people ever have the same hallucination because there's no external reference to it. It's all internal."

Wallace added, "There's just no history of kind that of group hallucinations with the kind of detail that we see in the Gospels. So I was never fond of that explanation."

Worshipping Jesus
McDowell stated, "In my research to refute Christianity, I became convinced the Church would never have been founded without the Resurrection. Everything that they did pointed back to that."

One huge thing they did: break the Sabbath and worship Jesus as they did it. Remember: all the early Believers were fervent Jews who had believed they faced dire danger if they broke the Sabbath.

Alex McFarland—who organized this Truth for a New Generation conference—points out how that changed right after Jesus' Resurrection.

"Pious Jews whose very relationship with God is contingent on keeping a Sabbath that they've observed for centuries, suddenly overnight begin to worship on Sunday. Why? Something must have happened. Well, Sunday was Resurrection day."

"Now you have to understand what it meant to the Jew if they ever broke the Sabbath," McDowell explained. "It could mean death."

The Resurrection Proves It All
But the Resurrection on a Sunday had been the proof positive that Jesus was indeed the Risen Lord, worthy of worship on that day of the week.

"If Christ physically rose from the grave, then that proves His identity, message and credentials," McFarland pointed out. "What was His identity? God Incarnate. What was His message? Salvation by faith in what He did on the cross. His credentials? Virgin born, sinless life, rose from the dead, i.e.: He is the Savior."

McDowell told CBN News the meaning of it all is so powerful and overwhelming, it still touches him deeply more than half a century after he first came to believe Jesus was indeed the Resurrected Son of God, able to conquer death.

"It gives me hope that as Christ was raised from the dead, I shall be, too. Because of that," he stated.

McFarland added, "In the empty tomb, we have it all, ironclad, guaranteed. I tell people the tomb was left empty so that your life could be made full."



‘I CAN ONLY IMAGINE’ FILMMAKERS: FAITH-BASED HIT IS A ‘CINDERELLA STORY’ OF AN INDIE FILM REJECTED BY THE STUDIO SYSTEM

by  Kate Erbland

Jon and Andy Erwin have their first bonafide hit, thanks to the indie distributor that saw the potential in a very different kind of niche market.

‘I Can Only Imagine’ Filmmakers: Faith-Based Hit Is a ‘Cinderella Story’ of an Indie Film Rejected by the Studio System

Jon and Andy Erwin have their first bonafide hit, thanks to the indie distributor that saw the potential in a very different kind of niche market.

Even the creators of last weekend’s surprise box office hit can’t quite imagine what’s happened. The Erwin brothers’ faith-based feature “I Can Only Imagine” beat out “A Wrinkle in Time,” “Love, Simon,” and “Game Night” — movies from three major studios — to win the number-three spot last weekend.

“I never, ever, in my wildest dreams, expected to be competing — with a $7 million film, with a marginal P&A budget — with ‘Black Panther’ and ‘Tomb Raider,'” Jon Erwin said. “This is a Cinderella story of an independent film [made] completely outside the system. That, honestly, the system straight-up rejected.”

In recent years, the faith-based genre has struggled to turn out crossover hits. However, Jon and Andy Erwin’s latest film, a Christian-themed biopic about the creation of the eponymous song from the group MercyMe, surprised this weekend’s box office  when it opened to $17 million.

The Erwins work exclusively in films aimed at the faith-based audience. Two of the Erwins’ previous efforts, including the inspirational sports drama “Woodlawn” and the moms-gone-relatively-wild comedy “Moms’ Night Out,” were produced through Pure Flix, distributor of the faith-based “God’s Not Dead” franchise.

Despite their track record, they couldn’t find a producer interested in financing their newest film. Even those within the faith-based system, like Pure Flix, wouldn’t bite on the story of an alcoholic dad (Dennis Quaid) who comes to Jesus late in life, only to inspire his son (Broadway musical actor J. Michael Finley) to pen a bestselling song based loosely on their relationship.

“We pitched around and nobody would finance it, even [if] they financed faith-based films,” Jon Erwin said. “People said there wasn’t an audience. Some executives said that there was no audience for a Christian music movie. But everybody I knew — in the Christian world that we live in — knew and loved the song, so we just believed that there was an audience for this movie, and that they would show up.”

The Erwins remained adamant that the hook of the song — a certified double platinum Christian hit in the early aughts that eventually broke into the mainstream, topping the Billboard sales chart for weeks and becoming the bestselling Christian single of all time — was enough to build a movie around, even if producers didn’t get it.

They ended up raising the money themselves, alongside their “Moms’ Night Out” producer Kevin Downes and a cadre of other independent producers. Casting kicked off in early 2017. By summer, they still didn’t have a distributor.

Where other suitors might not have seen merit in the music element, Roadside Attractions and Lionsgate saw opportunity. Roadside co-founder and co-president Howard Cohen said that they were first struck by the emotion of the story twinned with the song’s background. They also knew that the faith-based space was open for a higher caliber of film.

“‘I Can Only Imagine’ felt like a glossier, bigger, more marketable film, and we think this audience wants more legitimate-feeling films versus perhaps some of the recent films,” Cohen said. “We felt, as they did, that there was an opportunity with the faith audience to give them a higher quality of film than most of the releases in this space.”

Many independent filmmakers never get the chance to move to a larger distributor, but the Erwins hesitated despite being cash strapped: How would a mainstream company treat their audience? Roadside and Lionsgate, though not widely known for faith-based films, intrigued the filmmakers with their pitch to treat it on par with their other releases.

“They treated the audience with a lot of respect, and gave them the same respect as the bigger movies that they were releasing,” Andy said. “The audience can feel that respect. It’s important to them to feel treated as real moviegoers as well.”

“We have released a few other faith films, and when we saw this one we saw the opportunity to do something different,” Cohen said. “It was important to validate that premise by giving it a legitimate marketing campaign that could stand up to any non-faith film wide release. That thinking, we believe, shows respect to this audience.”

The Erwins were also eager for their own kind of respect. “Even though that we’re in the faith genre, and that’s our genre, we are independent filmmakers at heart,” Andy said.

Roadside’s background as an indie distributor hit that note, too. “The reason we wanted to partner with Roadside is there was this daring entrepreneur spirit, the sweat equity they were willing to put into it, that we had seen them do to their other indie titles like ‘Manchester by the Sea’ and other films like that,” Andy added. “They really thought that there was a similarity in the grassroots campaigns for faith films.”

They’re not kidding about the grassroots thing. The Erwins took the film around the country on a nine-month tour prior to release — Jon joked that he now has “800,000 frequent-flyer miles this year” — to spread word of mouth among the communities where they hoped to find their audiences.

“I think the box office and the Cinemascore are all a result of one word, and I think the one word that defines success or failure in this space, is ‘trust,'” Jon said. “You have to gain this audience’s trust. And that means, you have to go meet them. We just want to represent an underserved audience, exclusively. And that’s all we do, and our audience knows that’s all we do.”

Still, the filmmakers do admit to being shocked by the initial response to the film, including both the box-office take and its A+ Cinemascore.

“All our expectations to this point have been so shattered,” Jon said. “The box office that was achieved was done with a fraction, and I’m talking about a fraction, of the normal prints and advertising budget of a film like this. You can’t go spend $20 million on television when you have to raise the money.”

As the filmmakers noted, in just one weekend “I Can Only Imagine” has eclipsed the entire box office of their previous film, “Woodlawn.” Cohen said Roadside will “definitely” continue to release films for the faith-based audience, and that the success of “I Can Only Imagine” has made them take notice of the “continuing potential for this audience.” He noted that “at least two or three” producers from the faith-based space have already reached out about potentially working with Roadside.

One thing that really stood out to Cohen was the immediate audience loyalty: In opening-weekend exit polls in four markets, 79 percent said they planned to pay to see the movie in a theatre again. It was a stat that “floored” him, and it may be one that can help fuel yet another big weekend.

“We’re in a very unique circumstance here, and I don’t know what’s gonna happen,” Jon said. “But all I know is this film is profitable right now. This film is successful … We feel vindicated.”


“I Can Only Imagine” is currently in theaters.


EVIDENCE NOW PROVES THAT HOLLYWOOD STARS AND ATHLETES DRIVE AWAY VIEWERS WITH THEIR POLITICAL ACTIVISM

by The Washington Times
Host Jimmy Kimmel speaks at the Oscars on Sunday, March 4, 2018, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

Actors and athletes increasingly using their forums for political activism are turning off viewers, according to a newly released poll.

A McLaughlin & Associates/Media Research Center survey released Wednesday found that 44 percent were less likely to watch sports and entertainment shows “because they have become too political.”

In addition, 75 percent said they watch sports and entertainment to escape from politics, and “do not want to be bombarded with partisan political messages.”

The poll of 1,000 likely voters comes with television ratings plummeting in the last year for high-profile sports and entertainment events.

The NFL regular season ratings dropped by 9.7 percent in 2017 amid player protests during the national anthem, while the 2018 Academy Awards show suffered its worst-ever audience ratings, falling by 19 percent from 2017.

“Many people have speculated that it is the liberal politics in sports and entertainment shows that is driving their audiences away. We now have evidence that proves this is true,” said MRC president Brent Bozell.

The March 4 Oscars presentation on ABC featured digs at President Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and the National Rifle Association, along with shout-outs to illegal immigrants and support for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

“It is no coincidence that viewership of this year’s Oscars ceremony hit an all-time-low,” said Mr. Bozell. “The NFL and liberal sports networks like ESPN are completely at odds with their viewers’ interests and their ratings reflect it. Perhaps the sports and entertainment industries will finally heed this warning before Americans tune out for good.”

Nearly half, or 47 percent, of respondents who didn’t watch the Oscars said they either were “tired of these shows being full of political statements” or they “knew some of the presenters and winners would use the time to share their political agenda.”

The NFL’s ratings decline has been blamed on the take-a-knee protests as well as factors such as uncompetitive match-ups, poor officiating, and the overall decrease in television audiences as viewers “cut the cord” and turn to other devices for entertainment.


KENTUCKY HOUSE PASSES BILL THAT BANS DISMEMBERMENT ABORTIONS

by Fr. Mark Hodges

The Kentucky state House voted 71-11 Monday to ban dismemberment abortions.

Euphemistically called a “Dilation and Evacuation (D&E)” by the abortion movement, this method of abortion is commonly used on babies in the second trimester of pregnancy.

The Dismemberment Abortion Ban would prohibit this method of ending a pre-born child’s life. The bill notes that during such an abortion, the doctor “dismembers the living unborn child and extracts portions, pieces, or limbs of the unborn child from the uterus through the use of clamps, grasping forceps, tongs, scissors, or a similar instrument that…slices, crushes, or grasps…any portion, piece, or limb of the unborn child’s body.”

Before explaining the procedure under consideration, bill sponsor Rep. Addia Wuchner (R) allowed time for parents to take their children out of the legislative chamber, because she admitted the abortion descriptions would be “brutal.”

Dr. Lynda Sanders of Lexington gave testimony during debate over the bill. The Courier reported that Sanders’ “voice wavered as she asked the committee why Kentucky wasn’t providing unborn children some degree of dignity in how their lives end.”

“These lives are small and tiny but they are still human,” Wuchner added.

“Before the first trimester ends, the unborn child has a beating heart, brain waves, and every organ system in place,” said National Right to Life lawyer Mary Spaulding Balch. “Dismemberment abortion then kills a baby by tearing her apart limb from limb.”

About 10 percent of abortions across the U.S. are committed against babies in their second trimester of gestation. According to state data, 537 of Kentucky’s 3,312 abortions in 2016 were dismemberment abortions.

If the bill becomes a law, abortionists could face felony charges and up to five years in prison for violating it. Mothers would face no penalty.

Bring it. Let’s have that trial
The Dismemberment Abortion Ban only regulates a particular abortion technique. It doesn’t restrict abortion based on the baby’s age.

Opponents of the bill say it will not withstand court challenge, and will cost the state of Kentucky dearly in defending it. In response to those objections, Rep. Robert Benvenuti III (R) said, “To that, I say bring it. Let's have that trial.”

Rep. Chris Fugate (R) asked how anyone could “even think about suing the state or anybody else for taking up for life.”

A little face may come out and stare back at you’ during the abortion 
This is how former abortionist Dr. Anthony Levatino has described D&E abortions:

“Picture yourself reaching in with the clamp and grasping anything you can... Squeeze on the clamp to set the jaws and pull hard – really hard. You feel something let go, and out pops a fully formed leg, about 4 to 5 inches long.”

Dr. Levatino continues:

“Reach in again and grasp whatever you can. Set the (clamp) and pull really hard once again, and out pops an arm about the same length. Reach in again and again with that clamp, and tear out the spine, intestines, heart, and lungs.”

But the abortion is not over:

The toughest part of a D&E abortion is extracting the baby’s head. The head of a baby that age is about the size of a plum and is now free-floating inside the uterine cavity. You can be pretty sure you have hold of it if the clamp is spread about as far as your fingers will allow. You will know you have it right when you crush down on the clamp and see a pure white gelatinous material issue from the cervix. That was the baby’s brains.

You can then extract the skull pieces. If you have a really bad day like I often did, a little face may come out and stare back at you.

“The alternative method to dismemberment abortion (D&E) is Digoxin poisoning, killing the baby in the womb, and then inducing labor to deliver a dead baby,” said Kay Culp, Executive Director of Kansans for Life.

Culp told LifeSiteNews that abortionists have ulterior motives to fight dismemberment bans. 

“Dismemberment abortion facilitates fetal harvesting,” she said. “Clinicians experimenting on aborted baby parts don’t want their research tainted by drugs, and, they want fresh organs – packed for shipping within minutes of death.”

The Florida House passed a similar bill March 1, and South Carolina’s ban is soon going before the state Senate.

Alabama, Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Texas, and West Virginia have passed dismemberment abortion bans. All but Mississippi’s and West Virginia’s laws are being challenged in the courts.

In Kentucky, pro-life measures have easily passed since state elections put Republicans in control of the legislature and Matt Bevin became governor.



PRESIDENT TRUMP READIES TO MEET WITH N. KOREA'S KIM JONG UN, FAMILIES OF THREE AMERICAN CHRISTIANS IMPRISONED THERE HOPE FOR THEIR RELEASE

by George Thomas 

Tony Kim was on his way back home to the United States when North Korean authorities intercepted him just before he boarded his flight at Pyongyang international airport.

"My father had just finished his semester as a professor in North Korea when he was arrested at the airport," said Kim's eldest son, Sol, in a YouTube video.


"No explanation was given," Sol added. "My family and I have had no contact with him since."

Kim was a professor at Pyongyang University for Science and Technology, the country's only privately-run academic institution, when he was arrested on April 22, 2017.

"My mom, brother and I miss our dad so much. We are so worried about him and his health."

Kim's family is now hoping president Trump's sudden decision to meet North Korea's dictator Kim Jong Un in a historic US-NK summit will lead to his father's release.

"I am hopeful. It is hard to say any other feeling," the 27-year-old Sol Kim told Reuters.

Sol's father, who taught accounting at the university, was accused of anti-state activities and trying to overthrow the government. He was given a 15-year sentence.

A month later, another instructor from Pyongyang University for Science and Technology (PUST), Kim Hak Song, was also arrested.

A third person, Kim Dong Chul, a Korean-American missionary, was arrested in October 2015 and sentenced in March 2016 to 10 years of hard labor for subversion.

PUST was founded in 2010 by Dr. James Kim, a Korean American Christian businessman, with funding from South Korean and American Christians.

Dr. Kim appeared on CBN's 700 Club in 2011 to explain the mission behind the university.

The surprise announcement last week of a summit has many optimistic about prospects for a diplomatic solution to ending North Korea's nuclear ambitions.

Still, the White House is warning the US will continue to exert maximum pressure on the rogue regime until then.

Sol is hoping for a breakthrough.

"As a family, any news, any update and any progress is good progress and it is hopeful," Sol told Reuters.

The family's ordeal over these past 10 months hasn't been easy.

"These are hard days for our family," Sol said in the video. "My family and I long to make contact with my dad."



BLACK PANTHER STAR GAVE UP EVERYTHING FOR CHRIST, LANDS THE BIGGEST ROLE OF HER CAREER

by Will Maule
Letitia Wright, who plays T’Challa’s little sister, Shuri.
Black Panther is nothing short of a phenomenon. The latest installment in the wildly successful “Marvel” movie series, it has become the second-highest grossing four-day opening in movie history, raking in $242 million. The film has been praised by critics and received a 97% rating on review site Rotten Tomatoes.

“A film that fulfills the most rote demands of superhero spectacle, yet does so with style and subtexts that feel bracingly, joyfully groundbreaking,” wrote Ann Hornaday at the Washington Post.

But even more remarkable than box-office records and glowing reviews is the story behind actress Letitia Wright, who plays T’Challa’s little sister, Shuri. Wright, who appeared on British talk show This Morning, talked about how she almost missed out on the role after hitting a crisis in her life, dumping acting and going on a search for God.

“I needed to take a break from acting because I really idolized it. So I came off from it and I went on a journey to discover my relationship with God, and I became a Christian,” Wright said in the interview aired Feb. 9.

It really just gave me so much love and light within myself. I felt secure, like I didn’t need validation from anyone else, or from getting a part. My happiness wasn’t dependent on that, it was dependent on my relationship with God.”

At the very depths of her depression, the British actress ended up coming to Christ after attending a London actors’ Bible study. So convinced that she had to put God first, she even turned down an acting role that would have set her alongside Nicole Kidman and Elle Fanning.

“I remember God was like, to me, ‘Give up the job,’” the actress told Vanity Fair. “I can give you more than that; I just need you right now. Give up the job.”

Then, after laying down her own ambition and looking to the Lord, she was offered this gigantic role in Black Panther.

Letitia also explained how many of those in the entertainment are coming to know Jesus, and that the Christian community in Hollywood is an extremely supportive one.

“There’s a reason there are so many Christians in the limelight. A lot of young people who are in the creative industry are finding an avenue toward God now,” she said. “We’re all in the same path, we’re all in the same thing. But we all support each other, and love each other, and keep each other grounded, and keep each other positive.”

Now an international sensation and with a glittering career ahead of her, Wright just wants to be used as a “vessel” for the Lord. “Where I go, where He takes me, that’s where I need to spread the love of God,” she said in an earlier interview. “Because people’s souls are dying. My soul was dying, and He saved me. So I can’t keep this to myself … I fell in love with Jesus and I’m still in love. Amen.”




HISTORIC HONOR: WATCH AS AMERICA'S PASTOR TRAVELS TO WASHINGTON ONE LAST TIME

by CBN News

The man known as "America’s Pastor," Billy Graham, is in Washington, DC one last time Wednesday as his body lies in honor in the US Capitol Rotunda.

Some 30 family members are accompanying Graham’s casket to the city where he befriended and counseled presidents on both sides of the aisle.

Graham died last Wednesday at the age of 99.


Ministry in Life and Death:
Franklin Graham Requested His Father Be Buried in Casket Crafted by Prisoners

For House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-WI, and other congressional leaders, there was never any doubt that Graham would receive this honor.

"We got together and decided this is obviously something we should do," said Ryan. "Between Mitch, the president, myself, and Patrick McHenry we made that decision very quickly."

Eleven presidents and other distinguished Americans have had the honor, but Graham is only the fourth private citizen to lie in honor in the Capitol.

The others are civil rights heroine Rosa Parks in 2005 and two US Capitol Police officers who died in the line of duty in 1998.


BILLY GRAHAM'S MOTORCADE PROCESSION DRAWS THOUSANDS

by BGEA
Billy Graham's body is moved in a processional to Charlotte, North Carolina. (BGEA)
On Saturday morning, Billy Graham's casket left the Billy Graham Training Center at The Cove in Asheville, North Carolina, and made its way toward the Billy Graham Library in his hometown of Charlotte. The motorcade took about three and a half hours to make the 130-mile journey from the mountains to the city, traveling along I-40 East, U.S.-321 South and I-85 North.

Crowds of people lined the streets as the motorcade passed through Black Mountain shortly after departing from The Cove. The hearse traveled up State Street between Craigmont Road and I-40. It passed Town Hardware, formerly Black Mountain Drugstore, a place Billy and Ruth Graham used to frequent. Billy Graham often rode his horse there from his home in Montreat just a couple of miles away.

Just behind Town Hardware, Cherry Street dead-ends at the railroad tracks where the Black Mountain train station used to be. In the 1950s, Billy often boarded trains to Washington or New York at the Black Mountain train station, then flew out from one of those cities to preach internationally.
Around 2:20 p.m., the motorcade arrived in Charlotte and went through uptown before reaching the Billy Graham Library.
The motorcade passed another notable site at the intersection of South Boulevard and West Boulevard. The vehicles paused briefly in front of Grace Covenant Church, formerly Chalmers Memorial Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, which was five miles from Billy Graham's childhood home. Billy Graham and his family were members of this church during his childhood and teen years. Church bells rang out as the hearse stopped there.
Other Memorial Events
Billy Graham will lie in repose at the Billy Graham Homeplace on the grounds of the Billy Graham Library in Charlotte on Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 26-27. He will lie in honor at the U.S. Capitol Rotunda in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. 28 and March 1.

A private funeral service will be held on Friday, March 2, in Charlotte. Billy Graham will be buried beside his wife, Ruth, in the Prayer Garden at the Billy Graham Library


FLORIDA HOUSE PASSES BILL REQUIRING "IN GOD WE TRUST" TO BE POSTED IN ALL PUBLIC SCHOOLS

by Claire Chretien

The Florida House of Representatives passed a bill 97-10 requiring public schools to display the state’s – and country’s – motto “In God We Trust” in “a conspicuous place.”

Last week’s horrific shooting at a Florida high school on Ash Wednesday has raised questions about the culture that fosters such attacks.

Rep. Kimberly Daniels, a Democrat, introduced the bill because “our schools need light in them like never before.”

“God blessed me to pass two bills on the floor at Session today,” Daniels, who is also an evangelist and writer, posted on Facebook Wednesday.

“I think it’s marvelous,” Father Michael Orsi, a Naples, Florida-based Catholic priest and the host of Action for Life TV, told LifeSiteNews.

“It’s quite obvious [that] ever since God has been thrown out of schools, there has been a deterioration in society,” said Orsi, noting the public school system is largely run by a “secularized liberal cabal.”

Bringing God back into the picture is “the beginning of a solution to cast evil out,” said Orsi.

He explained Satan wants “to destroy the image of God in human beings. What do you do when you kill people? You are destroying the image of God.”

And school shootings aren’t the only way Satan works to destroy the image of God, he said.

“If life can be taken legally at a very, very early stage…what happens to the sanctity of life?” asked Orsi, wondering what impact knowing it’s legal to kill tiny humans has on the “emotionally disturbed or young people who have let evil into their lives.”

Orsi predicted if the bill makes it through the Florida Senate, Governor Rick Scott will sign it.

The bill has angered atheist groups that oppose the expression of religion in schools.

“Even though the phrase is, disgracefully, both the national motto and the Florida state motto, there is no question of this bill’s religious intent,” complained the Freedom From Religion Foundation. “This bill comes at a particularly awful time in the wake of the shooting at the Florida public school.”

“With God’s help, we can remain strong and resolute to resist evil in all its manifestations,” Miami Archbishop Thomas Wenski said after the shooting. “May God heal the broken hearted and comfort the sorrowing as we once again face as a nation another act of senseless violence and horrifying evil.”

Fr. Orsi said that after evil things happen, sometimes secularists will ask “where was God?” to try to get people to abandon their faith.

“The fact is that God is there. And people forget that,” he said. “He was with that phys ed teacher who took the bullets for those kids. God was there at Calvary when Christ died on the cross a painful death.”

He continued: “God sees the horror. God sees the sin. God sees the murder. God sees the evil.”

But “the end of the story is the Resurrection.”


US WOMEN'S HOCKEY TEAM WINS DRAMATIC GOLD, BUT THESE PLAYERS SAY FAITH IS FIRST

by CBN News
United States celebrates winning gold after the women's gold medal hockey game against Canada at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Gangneung, South Korea  (AP)
A huge victory for the United States at the Winter Olympics – the women's hockey team won the gold medal in a riveting shootout after the game had ended in a tie.

They were up against their hockey nemesis, Canada, which has defeated the US women's team in the gold medal match multiple times in recent years. In fact, Canada's women's hockey team has won the gold for the last four Olympics.

This was the first gold medal for the US women's team since 1998, and some are comparing it to the famous "Miracle on Ice" which happened 38 years to the day when the US men's team edged out the Soviet team in Lake Placid.

"Joy's the only word that comes to mind," said Gigi Marvin, a three-time Olympian and at 30 the oldest American on the roster.

Marvin scored during the shootout and also scored numerous goals to get the team to the gold medal match. But she says her mission is more than winning medals – it's about reaching others with the Gospel.

"My mission is more than winning another medal or championship," she told FCA Magazine before the game. "It's about sharing Christ and leading others to him."

She continued, "I know my worth is not found in what I can achieve in this game. Instead, my identity and value is only found in Christ, my Redeemer and Lord."

Goalie Nicole Hensley is regarded by many as the best female goaltender in the United States. She says the most important thing she's learned on the ice is how to trust God.

Untied States hockey team celebrate with their gold medals.  (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)
 "Looking back with 20-20 hindsight, obviously He had a plan in every single place that He put me. It is easy to say that now, but really it's just taught me that through the hardships you have to trust in your faith," she previously told the hockeywriters.com. "You have to be willing to be uncomfortable to either grow in your faith or grow as a person or player as well."

The Americans Olympic win comes after the team dominated the game the last four years, winning the last four world championships, including a victory over Canada last spring.

"Everything got into a blur, seeing my teammates sprinting at me," 20-year-old goalie Maddie Rooney said after the game. "It's an indescribable feeling."


BILLY GRAHAM, RENOWED EVANGELIST DIES AT 99

by Associated Press and Paul Clark


The Rev. Billy Graham, the evangelist who prayed with U.S. presidents and preached the Christian gospel to millions worldwide, died at the age of 99.

Spokesman Mark DeMoss said Graham died Wednesday morning at his home in Montreat, according to the Associated Press.


Graham was the most successful evangelist in 2,000 years of Christian history, as far as the size of his audience. Taking the Great Commission “to preach the gospel to the ends of the Earth,” Graham delivered the same, simple message of God’s love to some 215 million people in 185 countries worldwide over a half century.


His last public appearance was in 2013, at a gala event to mark his 95th birthday.

In his autobiography “Just as I Am,” Graham posed the question he planned to ask when he reached heaven. “Why me, Lord? Why did you choose a farm boy from North Carolina to preach to so many people?”


At 6-foot-3, with his thick mane of hair and a soft Southern drawl, Graham cut an imposing figure on stadium stages around the world and in the halls of power. He and his wife, Ruth, were awarded the nation’s highest civilian honor, the Congressional Gold Medal, in 1996, while Graham has his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Rev. Billy Graham died at the age of 99. He was known for his charisma, but said "I despise all this attention on me...I'm not trying to bring people to myself, but I know that God has sent me out as a warrior." USA TODAY


Swannanoa Valley residents remember the lesser-known, down-home version of the world-famous evangelist.

Graham used to slip in to First Baptist Church in Swannanoa about once a year to attend services, said Dan Snyder, worship and senior adult pastor there. “There would be such a buzz that Billy Graham was there,” he said. “I remember one Sunday it was his birthday, and I was asked to sing ‘Happy Birthday’ to him. I don’t think I heard the congregation sing any better than that morning. It was so exciting.”

Graham didn’t particularly want the attention, Snyder recalled of those yearly, random visits. He seemed to want to be able to slip into the service like anyone else, despite the entourage he typically had with him on those Sunday mornings. But sometimes he was successful, especially at the beginning of worship. Then whispers would get around that Graham was sitting in the back, or somewhere, and the energy in the church would change. There was an excitement in the air, Snyder said.


“He didn’t want to interrupt our worship time. He was a person who wouldn’t call attention to himself,” Snyder said. “He was just a humble man who was seeking after God like we all are. He just wanted to be himself during the service.”

Sally Pereira of Black Mountain spent her teen years in Montreat near the Graham family home. “Uncle Billy” and “Aunt Ruth,” as she came to call them, were in Pereira’s house a lot, and she was at theirs, hanging out with their children. Pereira, now 69, describes the Graham house during those days in the 1960s as the most normal one you could have, even as Billy Graham’s fame began to rise. The Graham kids were rambunctious (she remembers some of them sitting on the Montreat Gate, charging tourists a nickel or dime to let them take their picture).

When Pereira’s father died (he was T.W. Wilson, Graham’s friend, colleague and traveling companion), Graham went to the Pereira household in Montreat to comfort the young Sally Pereira (nee Wilson). “He said, ‘let me be your daddy,’” she said, treasuring the memory. He let her cry and comforted her with prayers and promises that her father was bound for heaven.


Eventually, as Grahams’ fame and family grew, the family moved higher up the mountain in Montreat. They bought the house next door to serve as his office and study. Pereira worked there, as part of the early Billy Graham ministries.

She recalls that the office staff would have daily devotions, and Graham often sat in. When he was there during her time to lead, she felt a bit intimidated, she said. Who was she to lead the prayers for a world-famous evangelist?

But Graham bowed his head and followed her lead just like the rest of the office staff. She loved him for that. It underscored Graham’s belief that no one was any more worthy than any other, that despite his gathering fame that he was just another person humbling himself in front of God, she said.

“He was always the one who would say, I’m not the boss, the Lord is the boss,” she said. “He was so humble and loving and concerned about people, one on one and not just when he was holding the big crusades.” 


In the Montreat office when she worked there, “if anyone was critical and tried to do a hatchet job on him (publicly), he would say, I want y’all to pray with me that I will never be guilty of what they are accusing me of. He tried never to fight back and lash out. He just wanted his life to disprove the criticism. He wanted to learn from it.”

Even as he became better known, Graham held on to his friends in Montreat and Black Mountain. Sometimes in his more physically fit days, he would would walk down the mountain from his house to Pereira’s house not far from the Montreat Gate.

“He’d stop by our house,” Pereira said, “and holler in, he’d say, ‘Mary Helen (Pereira’s mother), what are you fixing for lunch today?’ And she’s say, ‘I have some squash and lima beans that me and T.W. (T.W Wilson, Pereira’s father) are going to eat, you’re welcome to stay.’ And he’d say, ‘if you don’t mind.’


“He loved home cooking and homemade ice cream. He and daddy, a lot of times in their travels, would try to get to Crackle Barrel so they could have some good country cooking. When we’d pick them up at the Charlotte airport, they’d always tell us to stop at Bridge’s Barbecue in Shelby.”

Pereira remembers that her father and Graham loved to play golf at the Black Mountain Golf Course and have lunch afterward at the Coach House restaurant in town. People in Black Mountain treated the Grahams like anyone else, in part because the Grahams didn’t ask for anything else, she said. 

But local residents were protective. When tourists would show up in Montreat and ask for directions to the Grahams’ house, residents would often send them off in the wrong direction, Pereira said. “They treated the Grahams like neighbors. They would make a churn of ice cream and invite them over,”   she said.

“I have just been crying my eyes out,” Pereira said of hearing the news that “Uncle Billy” had died. “Everyone has to die, but this is such a shock. I can’t imagine a world without him. But I know that it is not the end. It’s the beginning of eternity.”

Graham became the nation’s chaplain, meeting and praying with every president from Harry Truman to Barack Obama. He gave the prayer at nine inaugural events. When the nation mourned the shocking losses of Sept. 11, 2001, Graham took the pulpit in Washington National Cathedral and underscored his hopeful message that humans could turn to God for comfort even in the darkest of times.


But mostly, he trotted the globe, holding 417 crusades, drawing overflow audiences in outdoor stadiums and indoor arenas. With music by his team members, choir leader Cliff Barrows and bass soloist George Beverly Shea, the crusades entertained audiences with music from a variety of stars including Johnny Cash, Ricky Scruggs and later Christian rap artists.

But the crowds came mainly to see Graham and to hear his consistent message of a way to find peace of heart through a personal commitment to Christ.

Longtime friend Glenn Wilcox first met Graham playing golf at Biltmore Forest Country Club in 1965. “He was just the most humble man I ever met,” Wilcox recalled. “He’d walk up to a member of the country club and introduce himself, ‘I’m Billy Graham,’ even though everybody knew who he was.

“Billy said, ‘The reason I do that is because it’s polite to say your name, I don’t want to hurt anybody. I’m just trying to help them to a personal relationship with Jesus Christ,’” Wilcox said.

Commitment to Christ
Graham was raised in a strict Presbyterian home, but his life changed in 1934 when the 16-year-old attended a tent revival staged by the evangelist Mordecai Ham on Charlotte’s Central Avenue. The teenager stepped forward and committed himself to Christ, in a simple act of faith he would call upon millions over the next decades to do for themselves.

Intent on the ministry, Graham enrolled briefly at Bob Jones College, the fundamentalist school, then located in Tennessee, but found the atmosphere too strict. He transferred to Florida Bible Institute, and Graham was ordained into the ministry by a Southern Baptist Church in 1939.

He went on to Wheaton College in Illinois to further his education, and there met Ruth Bell, the vivacious daughter of missionaries, who had been born in China. They courted and married in Montreat, and spent the first night of their honeymoon in the Battery Park Hotel in Asheville for $5. Graham was unable to afford the $20 at the Grove Park Inn.

Graham pastored a small Baptist church in Illinois and then joined Youth for Christ as a full-time evangelist, making $75. He went into academia, becoming president of Northwestern Schools, a Christian college in Minneapolis. But the flair for evangelism still called.

Graham burst onto the national scene in Los Angeles in 1949. William Randolph Hearst gave the order at his newspapers to “puff Graham,” and media nationwide picked up the story about the photogenic Southerner pounding at his pulpit and listeners’ hearts. The Los Angeles crusade ran for eight weeks, and Graham admitted in his autobiography that he came close to “burnout,” but he followed the California crusade with electrifying rallies on Boston Common.


He also avoided temptations to turn away from his calling. Wilcox said Hollywood producers wanted him for movies while political operatives tried to get him to run for public office. “I’m not a movie star,” Graham told them.

Electronic evangelism
Graham was able to use technology, bringing evangelism into the electronic age of radio, television and film and later into cyberspace with the Internet. His daily newspaper column published in the Asheville Citizen Times and nationwide carried his consistent message.

He founded magazines such as “Christianity Today” and “Decision” to give intellectual weight to his conservative Christianity against liberal theologians. He encouraged other evangelists worldwide with conferences in Amsterdam and elsewhere in Europe to continue the outreach he brought in his crusades.

Where other evangelists have gained the national spotlight but were often disgraced, Graham early on decided to avoid any trace of impropriety by never being in a room alone with another woman other than Ruth. The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association led the way with transparency and trustworthy accounting about fundraising and donations.

Although he was a fiery anti-Communist in his preaching, Graham learned early on to avoid mixing politics and religion. After the White House press corps photographed a young Graham re-enacting his prayer with President Harry Truman on the White House lawn, Truman was dismayed that the evangelist had repeated their conversation. From then on, through his White House visits, Graham kept his counsel and prayers private with the commander-in-chief.

He counted himself a friend of Richard Nixon, first when he was vice president and later as the president. Graham was deeply distressed by the events of Watergate and the vulgar language captured on the White House tapes.


Graham himself was captured on Nixon’s tapes; those came to light in 2002, with remarks about the Jewish ownership of major media outlets. Graham said he did not remember the 1972 conversation, but he apologized publicly and privately to Jewish leaders in Cincinnati at his crusade.

During his long career, Graham came under fire from fundamentalists for his willingness to share his crusade platform with Catholics and other Christian denominations. He also fought early on to bridge the racial divides, integrating his events with both white and black believers.

In 1957, he held a revival meeting in Madison Square Garden in New York that proved so popular, it was extended from six to 16 weeks, his longest rally ever, which packed the rafters most every night. Graham concluded his string of crusades back in New York with a crusade at Flushing Meadows in June 2005.

Graham also brought hope to New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. He appeared there in March 2006 during a Franklin Graham Celebration, where the mantle of evangelism was passed on to his oldest son and heir to his evangelistic empire.

While Graham circled the globe, Ruth stayed home and raised their five children in Montreat. Each of the five followed in their parents’ footsteps, individually advancing the Christian message.

Ruth Graham died at age 87 in June 2007, just weeks after the opening of the Billy Graham Library in Charlotte.

Graham will be laid to rest next to his wife at the foot of a cross-shaped walkway in the prayer garden.

About Billy Graham
Born: William (Billy) F. Graham, Jr., Nov 7, 1918, Charlotte, North Carolina.

Parents: William Franklin Graham, Sr., Morrow Coffey Graham. They were dairy farmers.

Married: Ruth McCue Bell, 1943 (She died in 2007). They met at Wheaton College in Illinois. Bell was the daughter of a missionary surgeon, and she spent the first 17 years of her life in China.

Children: Virginia (born 1945), Anne Morrow (1948), Ruth Bell (1950), William Franklin, III (1952), Nelson Edman (1958).

Ordained: 1939 by Peniel Baptist Church in Palatka, Fla. (a church in the Southern Baptist Convention).

Education: Florida Bible Institute (now Trinity College of Florida). Wheaton College in Illinois.

Career: After graduating college, Graham pastored the Village Church of Western Springs (now Western Springs Baptist Church) in Western Springs, Ill., before joining Youth for Christ, an organization founded for ministry to youth and servicemen during World War II. He preached throughout the United States and in Europe in the immediate post-war era, emerging as a rising young evangelist. The Los Angeles Crusade in 1949 launched Graham into international prominence. Scheduled for three weeks, the crusade was extended to more than eight weeks.

BGEA: Graham founded the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association in 1950. It was headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, until relocating to Charlotte in 2003.

Media: Through BGEA, Graham started the weekly “Hour of Decision” radio program, heard around the world for more than 60 years; and television programs that are still broadcast today on national Christian networks. He also started a syndicated newspaper column, “My Answer,” which is still carried by newspapers, including the Citizen-Times, both nationally and internationally. He also founded “Decision” magazine, the official publication of the Association, which has a circulation of more than 425,000.

Books: Graham has written 33 books, many of which have become top sellers. His autobiography “Just As I Am,” published in 1997, achieved a “triple crown,” appearing simultaneously on the three top best-seller lists in one week.

Most admired: Graham is regularly listed by the Gallup organization as one of the “Ten Most Admired Men in the World." In 2015, his made his 60th appearance overall in the list and his 54th consecutively.


Family:  Graham lost his wife of nearly 64 years, Ruth Bell Graham, in June of 2007. Together they had three daughters, two sons, 19 grandchildren and numerous great grandchildren.

Residence: Graham lives in Montreat, a community near Black Mountain.


'IN THESE MOMENTS OF DARKNESS, WE HOLD ONTO GOD'S WORD': TRUMP COMFORTS AFTER FLORIDA SHOOTING

by Crystal Woodall

President Trump is urging everyone to combat Wednesday's tragedy not with anger, but instead to "answer hate with love" and "cruelty with kindness" ... "We must work together to create a culture in our country that embraces the dignity of life."



President Donald Trump offered his condolences Thursday to the grieving families of the 17 people killed in the school shooting that took place Wednesday in the town of Parkland just north of Miami, Florida. (Screengrab: President Trump speaks to the nation after the Parkland shooting/via CBN News)

"Today we mourn for all of those who lost their lives," the president said. "No parent should ever have to fear for their sons and daughters when they kiss them goodbye in the morning."

"Each person who was stolen from us yesterday had a full life ahead of them, a life filled with wondrous beauty and unlimited potential and promise," he continued. "Each one had dreams to pursue, love to give and talents to share with the world. And each one had a family to whom they meant everything in the world."

He assured the town that all of America is praying for the victims and their families "with one heavy heart."

"In these moments of heartache and darkness, we hold on to God's Word in Scripture: 'I have heard your prayer and seen your tears. I will heal you,'" he said. "We trust in that promise and we hold fast to our fellow Americans in their time of sorrow." (Photo: Grieving mourners at the vigil/AP/via The Sun UK)


"I want to speak now directly to America's children, especially those who feel lost, alone, confused or even scared: I want you to know that you are never alone and you never will be. You have people who care about you, who love you, and who will do anything at all to protect you. If you need help, turn to a teacher, a family member, a local police officer, or a faith leader," he said.
@realDonaldTrump (Tweet)

"In times of tragedy, the bonds that sustain us are those of family, faith, community, and country. These bonds are stronger than the forces of hatred and evil-and these bonds grow even stronger in the hours of our greatest need."

Trump announced he plans to visit Parkland to visit with families in coming days.

The alleged gunman was reportedly an orphaned 19-year-old former student at the school who had a troubled past. Students and teachers say they saw warnings signs that he posed a danger to the school.
Trump, who suggested the teen was "mentally disturbed," vowed to work with authorities to address the issue of mental health and to make safer schools his "top priority."

"Our community is working with local law enforcement authorities to investigate the shooting and learn everything we can. We are committed to working with state and local leaders to help secure our schools and tackle the difficult issue of mental health," the president said.

President Trump is urging everyone to combat Wednesday's tragedy not with anger, but instead to "answer hate with love" and "cruelty with kindness."

"We must work together to create a culture in our country that embraces the dignity of life," Trump admonished.

Meanwhile, the gunman has been charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder after unleashing the deadliest school shooting in the U.S. in five years.


"CHRISTIANITY IS NOT A MENTAL ILLNESS!" VICE PRESIDENT PENCE BLASTS ABC'S 'THE VIEW' FOR MOCKING HIS FAITH

by Paul Strand

Vice President Mike Pence hit back Wednesday at comments made on ABC's "The View" comparing his hearing from Jesus Christ to mental illness.


On Tuesday, the panelists on the talk show discussed former White House staffer Omarosa Manigault Newman's recent comment on the reality TV show "Celebrity Big Brother" about Pence's faith. She said, "I am Christian, I love Jesus, but he thinks Jesus tells him to say things."

On "The View," Joy Behar commented, "It's one thing to talk to Jesus. It's another thing when Jesus talks to you. That's called mental illness, if I'm not correct, hearing voices."

Pence said during a broadcast with Axios journalist Mike Allen, "I actually heard that ABC has a program that compared my Christianity to mental illness. And I'd like to laugh about it, but I really can't."

"It's just wrong," Pence continued. "And it's an insult not to me, but to the vast majority of the American people who, like me, cherish their faith. My Christianity is the most important thing in my life."

Also on "The View," Behar went on to joke, "My question is, can he talk to Mary Magdalene without his wife in the room?"

Another member of "The View" team, Sunny Hostin, said of Pence's faith, "I'm Catholic, I'm a faithful person, but I don't know that I want my vice president speaking in tongues."

Pence also stated during the Axios interview, "I try to start every day by opening the Good Book. My wife and I try to have a prayer together before I leave every morning. I can honestly tell you my faith sustains me in all that I do and it's just a regular part of our lives. But I'm not unusual. I think I'm a very typical American, whatever your faith tradition, people understand that."

"But I just think it demonstrates just how out of touch some in the mainstream media are with the faith and values of the American people that you could have a major network like ABC permit a forum for invective against religion like that," Pence continued. "And I call them out on it. Not because of what was said about me. But it's just simply wrong for ABC to have a television program that expresses that kind of religious intolerance."

"We're better than that. Our country's better than that," Pence concluded.  "I'd like to be light about it, but I really can't. Not for my sake, but for the tens of millions of Americans who cherish their faith, I can't be silent."


PASTOR FACES DEATH THREATS FOR OFFERING TO HELP TEENS STRUGGLING WITH HOMOSEXUALITY

by CHARLENE AARON
The post received outrage from many on social media, driven mainly by the LGBTQ community.
(Photo Credit: WXYZ-TV Detroit | Channel 7 via YouTube)
Pastor Jeremy Schossau of Metro City Church in Riverview, Michigan, is facing explosive backlash after offering classes to teens struggling with same-sex attraction.

In a now deleted Facebook post, the church offered a workshop called, "Unashamed Identity" for girls 12-16 who are struggling with thoughts of being trans, bi, gay or other.

The post received outrage from many on social media, driven mainly by the LGBTQ community. It claims the program is conversion therapy, a controversial practice used to change an individual's sexual orientation.

Seth Tooley, who is gay, once attended Metro City Church.

In an interview with WXYZ he said, "Without a doubt it's conversion therapy." 

"The pastor, the elder and wife, and they started praying and they got louder, and they were trying to pray the demon of homosexuality out of me," said Tooley.

His mother Kimberly Tooley said, "I hear homosexuality demon, the demon of, the demon of and in the name of Jesus Christ and all these things and I screamed, I jerked him by the arm and said, "Let's go.'" 

Hundreds against the workshops recently protested outside the church and according to Schossau, some have responded with threats of physical harm to him and the church.

In a YouTube video in response to the controversy, he explained, "People have literally threatened to kill me and my family, to burn our house down, to burn our church down, to assault the people of our church and our staff."

Meanwhile, state lawmakers recently issued a release condemning the classes and have introduced legislation to ban conversion therapy across the state.

Schossau says the program is not conversion therapy but a conversation without condemnation.

"If people are thinking that we are grabbing somebody and pulling them in or making them come to us, that's crazy. It couldn't be farther from the truth," he said.

He added, "When it comes to this particular workshop, it is both the parent and the child coming together saying we want to talk. We don't force the kids to be there. We ask them if they want to be there. And they're there because they are struggling. They are looking for some counsel. They're looking for some direction, somebody to listen to them. And it is pure hypocrisy in the gay community for folks to think that you can have a choice to move from heterosexuality into homosexuality but not homosexuality into heterosexuality."

"Why is it wrong for somebody to call us who is struggling and hurting and just looking for somebody to talk to, and if they move toward heterosexuality, and we celebrate that. Why is that wrong?" said Schossau.

Protesters plan to hold more demonstrations outside the church until the "Unashamed Identity" program stops.

After coming under fire, the church's Facebook page is no longer available.