Manny Pacquiao Hit With Multiple Lawsuits After Floyd Mayweather Jr. Loss

Floyd Mayweather vs Manny Pacquiao (Photo: Reuters/Steve Marcus)

Christian Post Report – Undefeated WBC/WBA welterweight champion Floyd Mayweather Jr. of the U.S. and WBO welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao of the Philippines pose during a final news conference at the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, April 29, 2015

Manny Pacquiao made it through “the fight of the century,” but now he is battling with a shoulder injury and a number of fans who have decided to file lawsuits against the Filipino boxer.

Pacquiao,36, is the subject of five class-action lawsuits, according to ESPN reports. The website claims two lawsuits were filed in California, one in Las Vegas, Texas and another in Illinois with a numer of fans, pay-per-view buyers, ticket buyers and gamblers seeking upwards of $5 million in compensation.

Pacquiao was reportedly fighting while suffering from a longstanding shoulder injury that was aggravated further a little over two weeks before the fight against Mayweather. While the Nevada State Athletic Commission expects fighters to make their injuries known on a pre-fight medical questionnaire, ESPN reports that Pacquiao failed to reveal his injury, a decision which could likely cause trouble for him and the Top Rank boxing promotion company that represents him.

One of the California lawsuits filed on behalf of Paul Mahoney who purchased the fight for $99.95 on pay-per-view, explained why fans felt the need to sue Pacquiao.

“Pacquiao’s injury unquestionably materially, significantly and negatively affected the quality of the product,” the lawsuit states, according to ESPN.

Top Rank lawyer Daniel Petrocelli told ESPN  however, that his team had no obligation to make Pacquiao’s injury known to the public.

“This is a frivolous lawsuit, and we are confident it will be dismissed,” he said.

Pacquiao, who is said to have received over $100 million in revenue from the fight he lost to Mayweather, is scheduled to have surgery May 6 which will force him to stay away from boxing for at least nine months. However, he told The Christian Post that he was fueled by much more than just being a boxer.

“I love my boxing, but I realize now, that is not what my life is all about. I just want to encourage all those who are a Christian, to share their salvation experience to others,” Pacquiao told CP. “I think that we could make an impact in this world. I’m not sure yet if I’m going to retire in 2016, but the legacy that I want to leave is to be a role model and an inspiration, [to] not only the boxing fans, but to everyone around the world.”

The Christian Post reached out to Manny Pacquiao’s representatives, but were unable to reach them at press time.

Source : Christian Post

‘Prophetesses’ Who Claim They Can Predict the Future and Heal the Sick Are the Focus of New Lifetime Reality Show Titled ‘Preach’

Lifetime network has announced the premiere date for a new reality show, or “docuseries” featuring four Christian women who believe God has given them powers “to heal the sick, see the future and rid people of their addictions.”

Lifetime is premiering its new docuseries, Preach, on Friday, June 5, 2015. (Photo: Lifetime video)

Christian Post Report – Lifetime is premiering its new docuseries, “Preach,” on Friday, June 5, 2015.

“Known as ‘Prophetesses,’ these women speak as interpreters through whom the will of God is expressed. In order for their legacy to continue, they must enlist protégés and teach them how to carry on their gift. These ‘Queens of the Church’ each have different styles and their own special way of delivering God’s message, but all are united in their love of the Lord,” Lifetime states in a press release.

The four Ohio women at the center of the new six-episode series are: Belinda Scott, described as a “Major Prophetess” and who co-pastors the New Spirit Revival Center Ministries; Taketa Williams, dubbed the “Beyonce of the Preaching World,” leads along with her husband, Apostle Roderick A. Williams, Impact Christian Center; Linda Roark, referred to as the “Blue-Eyed Soul Sister,” is said to have a “passion is to see people saved, healed, and delivered;” and Kelly Crews, who was described by the network as just developing her own ministry.

Watch a 30-second highlight of the “Preach” series in the video player below:

As the video indicates, the four women are Charismatic Christians who believe the Holy Spirit is still working today like He did in the early days of the church, when Jesus’ followers performed miraculous healings and spoke in tongues. Some prominent modern-day Charismatics include evangelist Benny Hinn and preacher Kenneth Copeland.

Not all Christians believe that the Holy Spirit empowers Christians today in the same way He did first century Christians, who the Bible describes as having spiritual gifts to prophesy, raise people from the dead, and speak in tongues (glossolalia).

Reactions to the 30-second teaser for “Preach” shared beneath Lifetime’s post of the video on Facebook were diverse.

“Wow. What a way to make fun of the Gospel, but we ARE in the end times and the Word DOES say in the end false prophets will rise (I take that to mean any and every one that makes light of God’s word),” wrote Lorena Baracchi, who had nearly 2,000 other viewers give a “thumbs up” to her comment.

Leslie Sierra wrote, “OK, this is a (bit) much. This makes religion look like it’s all a show. Non-religious people don’t understand speaking in tongues or having the Holy Ghost. It’s a special gift and this makes lightly (sic) of it. Stop looking for reality shows to air and go to church if you want to spread the Gospel.” Nearly 1,500 people indicated that they agreed with her comment.

Some lesser-agreed-with responses came from two men, one calling himself a prophet.

“I take my assignment as a prophet very seriously; I’m not looking to broadcast nothing GOD is doing through me! They really need to stop playing! Lifetime you’ve gone to (sic) far this time!” Reginald Walton wrote.

Another man, Brent Foster, suggested that viewers who responded negatively to the “Preach” teaser video were betraying their embarrassment over long-practiced Christian traditions.

“So, the church has been doing this for years, but now that TV cameras are in the picture, and it’s being shown to the masses, all of a sudden, people are having a problem with it?” Foster wrote. “Are church folks now embarrassed by their traditions?”

“Preach” premieres at 10 p.m. ET Friday, June 5 on Lifetime, which also airs other religion-based series such as “Preachers’ Daughters” and “The Sisterhood: Becoming Nuns.”

The “Preach” docuseries is produced by CORE Media Group with Jennifer O’Connell, Jenny Ramirez and Rasheed J. Daniel serving as executive producers, along with Eli Lehrer, Mary Donahue and Mariana Flynn executive producing for Lifetime.

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Source : Christian Post

Pastor Kong Hee and City Harvest Members Raised Church’s Budget Deficit to Continue Financing Popstar Wife’s Career, Prosecution Alleges

City Harvest Church founder Kong Hee (Photo: Reuters/Edgar Su)

City Harvest Church founder Kong Hee arrives for his trial at the Subordinate Courts in Singapore, May 15, 2013. Prosecutors for the trial said they had evidence of a “deliberately planned” scheme by church leaders to channel part of the church’s building fund to fund the music career of Kong’s wife, singer Sun Ho, according to local media.

Christian Post Report – The prosecution in the long-standing case against Singapore megachurch pastor Kong Hee and five other City Harvest Church members has claimed that the accused manipulated transactions and raised the church’s budget deficit to $1.8 million in order to continue financing the popstar career of singer Ho Yeow Sun, Kong’s wife.

“Essentially, you were prepared to increase the church’s expenses by $630,000, causing the church deficit to rise to $1.8 million for 2007, to ensure that you were able to continue financing Sun Ho’s music career. Correct?” Deputy Public Prosecutor Christopher Ong asked former CHC finance manager Serina Wee Gek Yin on Tuesday, The Straits Times reported.

Wee, Kong, and four other CHC members are being tried for misusing church money by secretly funneling funds by way of sham bond investments into a company called Xtron, which was in charge of Ho’s career.

The prosecution has alleged that Xtron was a sham company operated by CHC’s leadership, though Kong has denied the accusations.

If convicted of having misused $19.2 million in church funds, the six accused could face up to 20 years in prison.

The latest accusations focus on Wee, Kong, and deputy senior pastor Tan Ye Peng, who are being implicated in planning to move CHC’s editorial and graphics department to Xtron, with the idea to outsource the work done by the department to the company and address Xtron’s cash-flow problems.

Wee admitted that there was a proposal to have the in-house design services moved and be provided by Xtron.

She explained: “I also stated that there would be benefit in the sense that this staff, they would be able to provide services for commercial entities, and then they can improve in their skills, which will benefit the church as well.”

When asked whether those additional benefits and improvement in the skill-set of the staff was worth $630,000, Wee replied that she is not in a position to asses the benefits.

“It is something that is intangible, and it’s up to the church board to assess whether they find that it is beneficial for the church to enter into this increased retainer,” the former finance manager said.

Kong and Tan have repeatedly denied any wrong-doing in the case.

Following his turn to take the stand in April, Tan said he would never intend to cause harm to the CHC congregation.

“I’m an ordinary man, I’m just a pastor, I just want to do the will of God, I just want to be faithful to the vision that God has given to us,” the deputy pastor said.

“In all honesty, I would never do anything that would cause loss to the church. … This is the church that I grew up in. This is my spiritual family.”

Source : Christian Post

Election Roundup! Huckabee and Fiorina Enter the Ring

Election Roundup! Huckabee and Fiorina Enter the Ring

Ending months of speculation, Mike Huckabee, former governor of Arkansas and a Baptist minister, will formally announce his candidacy for president today, joining a quickly growing field of GOP candidates. With his entry, the Republican field is shaping up to be the year of the Christian conservative presidential candidate — perhaps reflecting a backlash against the Obama years, which many have perceived as hostile to conservative Christianity.

Christian Post Report – The Washington Post describes him as arguably “the most underrated candidate in the race.” Unlike most of the other candidates, Huckabee has experience running for president. He won the Iowa Caucuses in 2008 and obtained valuable experience in the primary debates. Becoming the governor of Arkansas shortly after Bill Clinton, he knows how to deal with the Clinton machine and take on Hillary. The Post notes that he is the only Southern populist in the race, and is not seen as a Washington insider, since he has never worked in D.C.

http://www.christianpost.com/news/carly-fiorina-announces-presidential-bid-to-become-first-woman-president-138622/

Source : Christian Post

Georgia Church Suffering Split After Vote to Leave PCUSA Fails

Grace Church Columbus (Photo: Grace Church)

The congregation of Grace Church of Columbus, Georgia, which held its first worship service at the Shearith Israel Synagogue in Columbus, Georgia, on Sunday April 26, 2015.

Christian Post Report – A congregation in Georgia is seeing dozens of members leaving to form their own church following its failure to officially disaffiliate from the Presbyterian Church (USA).

Members of First Presbyterian Church of Columbus narrowly defeated a resolution to seek dismissal from PCUSA over theological differences.

The week after the vote, about 70 of its members worshipped at the nearby Shearith Israel Synagogue under the new name of “Grace Church of Columbus.”

Glen D. Giles, a member of Grace Church, told The Christian Post that he joined the newly created congregation because he felt “isolated and disenfranchised by my denomination.”

“I felt that in the almost three decades I had been a member of that denomination it had transformed from a denomination into a political action committee,” said Giles, who added that he was speaking only for himself.

“I desired to be a part of a church and denomination that will have less conflict and more unity, especially in adhering to the Word.”

In March, a supermajority of PCUSA presbyteries voted in favor of Amendment 14-F, which changed the definition of marriage for the denomination.

While PCUSA’s Book of Order had originally defined marriage as being between only “a man and a woman,” Amendment 14-F changed it to “two people, traditionally a man and a woman.”

The first congregation to have voted to leave PCUSA since the vote was Brighton Presbyterian Church of Rochester, New York.

Kerry E. Luddy, spokeswoman for Brighton Presbyterian and wife of the head pastor, told CP in an earlier interview that it was “not a sudden decision.”

“We have been prayerfully considering this for about two years, and officially began the discernment process in mid-2014,” said Luddy.

“Our reason for leaving is centered on the status of biblical interpretation within the PCUSA. We believe that Scripture’s meaning and intent should not be altered to fit a current culture.”

First Presbyterian of Columbus, a congregation with approximately 900 members, voted in the last Sunday of April to see if they would take a similar route.

While supporters of dismissal had a majority of votes in the final tally of 266 to 146, they were eight shy of the necessary two-thirds majority to have the resolution pass.

“Members of the group had been among those seeking to separate from the PCUSA, which has become more liberal about same-sex marriage and other doctrinal issues in recent years,” reported Alva James Johnson of the Ledger-Enquirer.

“They had hoped to join the Evangelical Covenant Order of Presbyterians, a new denomination formed out of churches that have separated from the national denomination.”

Giles of Grace Church told CP that “ECO is much more in line with the denomination I joined almost 30 years ago.”

“It is a structurally weak denomination and puts the emphasis on the church and its mission. It’s a very mission driven denomination,” said Giles.

“We had a few ECO pastors and representatives come meet with us prior to the vote and they were such great, positive, energetic and focused people. They really got me excited about the denomination.”

Source : Christian Post

Supreme Love

1 Corinthians 13:1-3

  • Dr. Charles F. Stanley
    (Photo: In Touch Ministries)
    Dr. Charles F. Stanley (File).

Christian Post Report – There is no value or human expression of greater importance than love. Paul’s incomparable treatise on this subject in 1 Corinthians 13 is sandwiched between two chapters that deal with spiritual gifts. The Corinthians focused too much on their display of such gifts, so the apostle showed them the “more excellent way” (1 Corinthians 12:31). Interestingly, he made no attempt to define love but instead described its importance and expression.

The type of love Paul is talking about isn’t human in origin but, rather, comes from God—a part of His very nature. It’s unselfish, sacrificial love that acts on behalf of someone else. Since the Lord wants to transform our character into the image of His Son, this priority makes perfect sense. You see, whenever we display such selfless care for one another, that’s when we are the most like Christ.

The first three verses of this chapter issue us a warning. Without the motivation of love, all our good deeds—even service for the Lord—will profit us nothing. In God’s eyes, a loving spirit is more important than all our impressive words, knowledge, faith, generosity, and self-sacrifice. When we stand before Christ to be judged for our good works, those deeds done for selfish reasons will not be worthy of reward.

We are all blinded to some degree when it comes to our motives, so discerning why we serve God or do good deeds can be difficult. Pray to know your heart’s hidden intentions, and replace any self-centered motivations with His “more excellent way” of love. Then your works will be of eternal value.

Used with permission from In Touch Ministries, Inc. © 2015
All Rights Reserved.

Source : Christian Post

United Methodist Regional Body Accused of Bullying Pastor for Supporting Traditional Marriage

  • United Methodist Church
    (Photo: UMNS/Mike DuBose)
    Protesters for greater inclusivity in The United Methodist Church stand in silent vigil just outside the bar of the denomination’s 2012 General Conference on May 3, 2012, in Tampa, Fla.

A regional body of the United Methodist Church based in Georgia has been accused of bullying a pastor and her church over their support for traditional marriage.

Christian Post Report – Carole Hulslander, pastor at Still Waters UMC of Atlanta, has accused the UMC North Georgian Conference of removing her from her congregation over her decision to sign a statement calling for the denomination to maintain its views on homosexuality.

According to “The Erick Erickson Show” radio program, since expressing her support for the UMC to maintain a traditional definition of marriage, Hulslander found herself harassed by NGUMC leadership.

“The culture war has arrived at the door of Still Waters United Methodist Church. It’s congregation, whether they like it or not, is being made to care,” claimed the program.

The allegations laid against the NGUMC are that they’re removing Hulslander from her position as pastor and even attempting to remove the Still Waters congregation from their building.

According to the Erickson program, two weeks before Easter Sunday the congregation was presented with a new pastor.

“The new pastor came in and began berating one of the members of the congregation. The new pastor demanded keys be handed over,” claimed the radio program.

“When others intervened to calm the situation, the new pastor told the congregation to ‘f— off’. The lion that would separate the sheep from their shepherd now paces around the walls of this church.”

A search of the North Georgia Conference’s website showed that before the controversy Hulslander was part of the NGUMC’s New Multicultural Church Development Committee.

For her part, on April 21 Hulslander created a page on GoFundMe calling on individuals to financially help Still Waters find a new facility.

“Still Waters Church is under attack! A multicultural, Bible-believing CHRISTIAN church and school under threat of losing our building from the liberal leadership in our own denomination,” reads the page, in part.

“We have children and adults from around the world who have come to learn in an environment not hostile to GOD. We serve everyone including feeding, clothing and housing the homeless. We need a new building to carry on our mission for CHRIST.”

As of Wednesday the GoFundMe page had garnered 94 donations totally nearly $5,000, with over 130 shares on Facebook.

According to the Book of Discipline, which is an important governing document for the UMC, homosexuality is “incompatible with Christian teaching.”

The Discipline further defines marriage as between one man and one woman, bars clergy from performing same-sex weddings, and allows for homosexuals to be ordained provided they remain celibate.

Some UMC regional bodies, known as conferences, have passed resolutions denouncing the language and called for the Discipline to be amended so as to be more inclusive of homosexuality.

The Christian Post reached out multiple times over several days to the UMC North Georgia Conference for clarification on this matter, but they did not return comment.

Source : Christian Post

Why Didn’t You Come Sooner? — A Zambian Mother, Living With HIV, Exposes Her Child to the Virus (CP in Zambia 2)

Editor’s note: The Christian Post was invited by World Vision Zambia to meet with locals who have been impacted by the organization’s water, sanitation and hygiene program. This is the second of a series of articles on that trip, which took place March 22-28. Read part one: Sickness, Discomfort and Death: the Fate of Families and Children With No Access to Clean Water.

<b>Christian Post Report</b> – Nurse Bertha Hamaanga, 28, checks up on a mother and her young child on March 25, 2015, at the Moyo ADP Health Center in Southern Zambia.” title=”<b>Christian Post Report</b> – Nurse Bertha Hamaanga, 28, checks up on a mother and her young child on March 25, 2015, at the Moyo ADP Health Center in Southern Zambia.” name=”jpg” src=”http://images.christianpost.com/full/83449/nurse-bertha-hamaanga-28-checks-up-on-a-mother-and-her-young-child-on-march-25-2015-at-the-moyo-adp-health-center-in-southern-zambia.jpg” class=”imgPhoto” width=”550″ height=”450″ /> <small class=(Photo: The Christian Post/Nicola A. Menzie)

Christian Post Report – Nurse Bertha Hamaanga, 28, checks up on a mother and her young child on March 25, 2015, at the Moyo ADP Health Center in Southern Zambia.

A woman, perhaps in her 30s, sat on the bench adjacent to the nurse’s desk. Her child, a few months old, sat tucked inside the colorful homemade sling strapped across her back and her left side. It was finally her turn to speak with the nurse. Her child’s nearly-bare head bobbed from side to side as he peered wide-eyed around the 8×10 room at the narrowed eyes set in strange faces peering back at him. But the strangers could not hold his steady gaze, their eyes weighed down by the sadness and shock that gripped them after his mother had entered into the room.

Nurse Bertha Himaanga talks with an HIV-positive mother during a check up at the Moyo ADP Health Center on March 25, 2015, in Southern Zambia. (Photo: Courtesy of Brian P. Duss)

Nurse Bertha Himaanga talks with an HIV-positive mother during a check up at the Moyo ADP Health Center on March 25, 2015, in Southern Zambia.

There was anger, too, and frustration, expressed on the part of the nurse who sat at a desk that was sandwiched between the window on her left and the bench, occupied by the mother and her child, on her right.

The nurse’s smooth, brown face appeared taut and her eyes betrayed her mood as she conversed with the woman in Tonga, one of Zambia’s major languages. This was the Moyo ADP Health Center in southern Zambia and the nurse, 28-year-old Bertha Himaanga, did not seem at all pleased as she questioned the unidentified mother:

“When did you last visit the clinic?”
“Why didn’t you come sooner?”
“Have you been taking your medicines?”

The child’s mother was HIV-positive, and was supposed to be taking medicine. But she had not been doing so, although she had been breastfeeding the newborn — and exposing him, with every suck and swallow of milk he took, to the virus that kills thousands of Zambia’s babies and children every year. The boy, whose name was not revealed, was having difficulty keeping down food, the woman told the nurse.

Nurse Bertha Himaanga examines a young child of an HIV-positive mother at the Moyo ADP Health Center on March 25, 2015, in Southern Zambia (Photo: Courtesy of Brian P. Duss)

Nurse Bertha Himaanga examines a young child of an HIV-positive mother at the Moyo ADP Health Center on March 25, 2015, in Southern Zambia.

Himaanga, the only nurse among a staff of three on duty that day, rose from her chair, disappeared into an adjacent room, and seconds later reappeared wearing latex gloves. She approached the baby and gently pried open his mouth. The child squealed in discomfort.

Less than half a minute later Himaanga removed the gloves, disposed of them in a trash can, and sat back down at her desk. She opened a thin notebook, one that resembled the dozens of others piled on top of a second and nearby desk, and started writing on one of its pages.

The room was quiet, except for the sound of some observers, a part of a small group that was visiting the clinic that day, shuffling around the stone-floored room and taking photos. Hushed chatter and faint laughter from the other women waiting in line outside drifted into the room. Those among the visiting group who were not taking photos, instead studied the mother and her child.

There was a small wound on the baby’s forehead that seemed too stubborn to heal. His face appeared slightly gaunt, and his head had tufts of brown hair in random places. Apart from the momentary intrusion from Nurse Himaanga, the child did not make a sound.

A young child looks on while his mother speaks with a nurse at the Moyo ADP Health Center in Southern Zambia on March 25, 2015 (Photo: Courtesy of Rachel Teodoro)

A young child looks on while his mother speaks with a nurse at the Moyo ADP Health Center in Southern Zambia on March 25, 2015.

Although only a test could determine inconclusively whether or not the baby, born HIV-free, was now himself infected, those standing about the room, their curiosity overriding the compulsion to look away, suspected that it was already too late for the boy, present only three months in the world. Afterward, Nurse Himaanga, who had shared during an earlier chat that she entered the profession because she “felt like (she) could help save people’s lives,” confessed that she also suspected that the baby was infected.

Himaanga also told us, the small visiting group of journalists, a blogger and World Vision staff members, that the mother had lied to her three times when she was asked how often she had returned the health center since giving birth to her child at the facility.

The mother, who has three other children at home, all HIV-free, had stayed away from the health center because “she’s been busy,” Himaanga told us, and her husband was not of much help.

In Zambia, where about 14.5 million people live, women’s work at the home involves, among other things, cleaning, cooking, washing and — if she is among the 4.8 million living in the rural areas without a clean water source — walking miles, in some cases, to a dam or pond to fetch (unsanitary) water to do all of those chores. These are chores that could literally take a woman all day to do.

But this woman had not been taking her medicine. None among the observing group had asked what might have been the reason for that neglect.

People are seen waiting outside the Moyo ADP Health Center in this photo taken on March 25, 2015 (Photo: The Christian Post/Nicola A. Menzie)

People are seen waiting outside the Moyo ADP Health Center in this photo taken on March 25, 2015.

The Moyo Health Center, the name of which means “heart” or “life,” is a part of a local World Vision Area Development Program. World Vision began its work in Zambia in 1981, first directing its attention to three community programs in one district. By 1995, World Vision Zambia had introduced the Area Development Programs, or ADPs. These ADPs, currently numbering 39, spanning 29 districts and serving more than 2 million people, provide service and education in the areas of health, nutrition, livelihood security and economic development.

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Stephen Curry Talks About His Christian Faith in MVP Acceptance Speech

  • Stephen Curry
    (Photo:REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson)
    Stephen Curry, Golden State Warriors point guard, won the skills challenge event during the NBA All-Star weekend in 2011.

Stephen Curry, the Christian Golden State Warriors point guard, was officially named MVP of the 2014-2015 NBA season and made sure that his faith was at the forefront of his acceptance speech.

Curry, 27, received the honor after getting 100 of 130 first place votes and earning 1,198 points from a panel of 129 writers, broadcasters and fans who voted on the NBA’s official website. After helping his top-seed Warriors dominate the Western Conference, the guard made sure to highlight his faith when accepting the MVP honor Monday.

He spoke about his blessings, despite some of the struggles he was forced to endure.

“There were obviously good times and bad times. Times I wanted to shut it down,” Curry said in his speech, which is featured on the official NBA website. “It just made me feel like how blessed and thankful I am to be in this position.”

Curry went on to thank his wife, mother Sonya and father Dell Curry, who happens to be a retired NBA player.

“Mom you are our spiritual guidance and our disciplinarian at times when pops was away. … The way that you raised us, not taking any slack,” Curry said in his speech. “We knew sports was important to us and our family but there are priorities in life.Obviously faith is foremost, how we did in school is important. If we didn’t handle that business then there were no privileges.”

While the player shared notable memories with his teammates and Warriors staff, he also made it clear that his faith was one of the key reasons for his success.

“Sometimes people make it seem like you have to have certain prerequisites or a crazy life story in order to be successful in this world. But the truth is you really don’t,” Curry said. “It doesn’t matter where you come from, what you have or don’t have, what you lack or what you have too much of, but all you need to have is faith in God, an undying passion for what you do and what you choose to do in this life, and a relentless drive and the will to do whatever it takes to be successful in whatever you put your mind to.”

Earlier this year, he took time out to reflect on his Christian faith when speaking to Christian sports apparel brand, Active Faith. According to the Christian athlete, his relationship with Jesus Christ started around middle school.

“My parents had us in church every Sunday, every Wednesday. It was more of a tradition at that point; I didn’t have a personal relationship with the Lord until I went to the altar call one Sunday and the youth pastor told us to make a decision for ourselves,” Curry told Active Faith. “The youth pastor told us we had to make a decision for ourselves, we couldn’t rely on our parents. It had to be a decision on our own, and that’s when I made it.”

Source : Christian Post

‘Black or White’ Film DVD Release Seeks to Spark Conversations Amid National Racial Tensions

  • (Photo: 135th St Agency)
    “Black Or White” is available on Blue Ray,DVD and Digital HD.

In the wake of ongoing racial tensions taking place around the nation, the film “Black or White” may inspire people to see beyond the surface of skin color if they take the movie home.

Christian Post Report – Nearly five months after it was released in movie theaters, “Black or White” is now being released on BLU-RAY, DVD and Digital HD on May 5. The movie intertwines elements of faith, forgiveness, and race when two grandparents find themselves engaged in a legal battle for the custody of their bi-racial granddaughter, Eloise.

The caucasian grandfather, played by Oscar winner Kevin Costner, is suddenly left to care for Eloise on his own after the death of his daughter and his wife, while the African-American grandmother, played by Oscar winner Octavia Spencer, believes she should be raising the child of her struggling son, Reggie.

Mike Binder, the film’s writer and director, believes that the film can help spark a conversation about the country’s racial divide.

“In light of recent events, it’s become clear that there very much exists a racial divide in this country. When I began writing the script for ‘Black or White,’ the attention around race issues in America was certainly prominent and very much a motivating factor in my desire to tell this story,” Binder said in a director’s statement shard with The Christian Post.

“But in the time since, it seems that we have moved into new territory around this topic and the thematic elements within ‘Black or White’ have become timelier than anyone could have predicted when the idea for this story was born. … I wanted to do a piece about where we go forward in racial relations in this country, I wanted us to have a conversation.”

Binder was inspired to write the movie after he and his wife began to help raise his bi-racial nephew that grew up equally with both sides of his family from different racial backgrounds and lived starkly different neighborhoods.

André Holland, the actor who plays Eloise’s father, Reggie, believes this film has the ability to prompt strong feelings in people.

“People who see this film will have no choice but to feel something and to have strong opinions,” Holland said in a statement. “This movie will definitely start conversations and bring up some potent feelings. I think that’s what art is supposed to do — help us see each other in different ways.”

“Black or White” is available wherever DVD’s and digital movies are sold. For more information, click here.

Source : Christian Post