Morgan Freeman Takes Viewers on a Journey to Explore the World’s Religions in ‘The Story of God’

Christian Post Report – A poster for the NatGeo docu-series “The Story of God,” hosted by Academy Award-winning actor Morgan Freeman, sits outside a screening event at National Geographic headquarters in Washington, DC on February 3, 2016.

WASHINGTON — Although mankind may be divided by location, language and culture, one common thread knits the races together: a belief in God.

That’s the premise of the upcoming six-part NatGeo docu-series “The Story of God,” hosted and produced in-part by Academy Award-winning actor Morgan Freeman, which attempts to shed light on how cultures around the world view the Divine.

Freeman says he had preconceived notions about the world’s religions before beginning the documentary.

“Of course … I had preconceived ideas [about religion],” the actor told The Christian Post at a preview screening for the documentary earlier this month. “I didn’t change them … I just learned a lot about different cultural approaches [to religion].”

The series will carry viewers to 20 different cities across seven countries, including Egypt, Mexico, Israel, India and the United States.

Freeman, whose admitted fascination with God led him to portray Him in movies like the 2003 hit “Bruce Almighty” and its sequel “Evan Almighty,” told CP that he hopes audiences will see “the positive aspects of religion. How much [similarity] there is, as opposed to difference[s].”

One such similarity that’s highlighted early in the documentary is a belief in the afterlife, which is seen as a universal concept spanning many of the major religions.

A fisherman at sea who goes overboard and loses consciousness while submerged claims to glimpse the afterlife, and recalls seeing “millions of fragments of light.” Light is a common theme in near-death experiences. He also hears a voice tell him, “This is not your time.”

While the fisherman remained in the land of the living, in Egypt, where Freeman makes his first stop, the living and the dead coexist — separated only by the Nile River.

Accompanied by a guide, the 78-year-old actor tunnels through the ancient tomb of Egyptian Pharaoh Rameses III. As was the tradition of the pharaohs, they documented their actions and achievements through deep carvings in stone — the deeper the carvings the greater likelihood that future generations could read them and speak a pharaoh’s name, adding to his sense of immortality.

Freeman touches these ancient incriptions, likening them to how information seemingly lasts forever on the Internet. The walls of royal pyramids and tombs were also inscribed with spells meant to enable a king to join gods like Ra, the sun god, among others, in the afterlife.

A trip to India broadens Freeman’s understanding of Hinduism, which offers its devotees a belief in the universal spirit, Brahman, represented by Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva.

Hindus, who comprise 80.5 percent of India’s population, according to 2011 stats from the CIA World Factbook, believe in the life, death and rebirth, or reincarnation, of the soul. Freeman experiences a lightbulb moment when he learns that reincarnation is not a process that one hopes to constantly repeat, but that the objective is “to get it right,” as the actor says, in order to reach “moksha,” or salvation.

Freeman makes a stop in Mexico where he observes festivities celebrating Dia de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, a colorful and lively tradition that’s a mashup between acient Aztec rituals and Catholicism. The Aztecs worshipped the sun and believed that without daily sacrifices, it would not rise.

A visit to Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre enables the actor to delve into the traditions of Christianity, the world’s largest religion. The church is identified as the site of both of the crucifixion and the tomb of Jesus Christ of Nazareth before his resurrection three days later, and Freeman examines its scared spaces with awe.

In the documentary the actor also explores the practices of Christian megachurches. In early December of last year, as part of his research for the series, Freeman traveled to Houston, Texas, to visit Pastor Joel Osteen’s Lakewood Church, but not before his plane made an emergency landing after a freak accident, as previously reported by The Christian Post. The actor eventually arrived to the church where he met with Osteen. Details of that visit are expected to be revealed in the upcoming series.

“The Story of God” will premiere at 9 p.m. ET April 3 on National Geographic Channel and Nat Geo Mundo.

Source : Christian Post

Tina Campbell: ‘I Found Out Who I Really Was When My Marriage Fell Apart’

Christian Post Report – Tina Campbell says her husband’s infidelities made their marriage stronger.

“I found out who I really was when my marriage fell apart,” the 41-year-old gospel singer told Essence magazine earlier this month. “It was really hard.”

While the fourth season of her hit WEtv show “Mary Mary” with her fellow gospel singing sister Erica Campbell focused on drama concerning her husband’s cheating, Tina feels empowered by the process.

“That entire season was about my broken marriage. It was empowering for me to go through that in the public eye and then make it to the other side and fall in love again,” she said.

“My husband, who is also an executive producer on our show, was exposed in front of everybody but so was I. There was a lot of prayer and counseling, but now I’m stronger and so is our marriage.”

Last year, Tina made a shocking revelation about her husband’s infidelity while on the Steve Harvey talk show. Teddy Campbell had an affair with one of the gospel singer’s employees who became a close family friend.

“The person who it was, she used to work for me, and so, that broke my heart. She was a like a Godmother to my children,”Tina told the comedian-turned-talk show host. “She had access to my home, to come get my kids, and all that kind of stuff. [She] was very intermixed in my family.”

Tina detailed how she made her husband call the woman so that she could confront her.

“She hung up the phone. So I had my answer. It broke my heart, it devastated me, so I spazzed out [on the show]” Tina said. “I destroyed three cars, tried to stab and plotted murders and all kind of crazy stuff because I was angry. And I was doing all that like, … ‘Either I’m going to die wrong or live right.’ So we’ve been working on living right.”

Tina publicly dealt with the death of her father and husband’s infidelities simultaneously in 2013. Since then, the pair have been vocal about God helping them overcome their struggles.

Now that the fifth season of “Mary Mary” is getting ready to make its television debut, Tina admitted that it was a hard one for her to film.

Now that their WEtv hit reality series “Mary Mary” is gearing up for a fifth season that will premiere March 3, the gospel singer and author refuses to compromise her faith by representing drama.

“I’m contractually committed, yet I want to reflect my God even with these executives and behind the scenes people,” Campbell told JET magazine. “I’m not compromising my faith by no stretch of the imagination.”

Tina told The Christian Post in November 2014 that God worked a miracle in her marriage.

“I know God opened up the Red Sea for the children of Israel; He kept the three Hebrew boys from getting burned up in the fire; He kept Daniel from getting eaten by that lion, but He also kept Tina and Teddy from a broken marriage and He did it in one year,” Tina said during an interview with CP. “That is a modern day miracle. So anybody who can come to experience that God is still doing miracles, God is still proving Himself, the Bible is still real and it can still work in your life, I would think that anybody can be encouraged by that.

Source : Christian Post

Manny Pacquiao Could Still Be Senator Despite LGBT Backlash

Christian Post Report – Manny Pacquiao speaks during a press conference to announce his fight with Floyd Mayweather.

Manny Pacquiao has lost some fans and a major Nike endorsement after comparing gay people to animals, but the Filipino boxer is not expected to lose the opportunity to become a senator. In May, 37-year-old Pacquiao is hoping to be elected for one of 12 seats in the Philippines Senate.

Benito Lim, a political science professor at the Jesuit-run Ateneo de Manila University, told Reuters that homosexual voters were the minority in the Philippines, which gives Pacquiao a good opportunity to still win the elections.

“Pacquiao has clearly offended the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community with his comments on same-sex marriage, but this group represents a minority and this will not affect the boxer’s popularity among the voters,” Lim said. “He may still win in the elections.”

Gay marriage is not legal in the Philippines, where the population is 82.9 percent Catholic, according to the CIA World Factbook.

Last week, worldwide media pounched on Pacquiao after his controversial statement about homosexuality in a local “Bilang Pilipino” interview. Pacquiao had said, “It’s common sense. Will you see any animals where male is to male and female is to female?

“The animals are better. They know how to distinguish male from female. If we approve [of] male on male, female on female, then man is worse than animals.”

He quickly clarified on social media, however, that he did not mean to offend LGBT people but that was his sincerely held belief according to the Bible and he will not be retracting his views on homosexuality.

Filipino government employee Annabelle Magsipoc said the comments should not affect Pacqiuao’s political plans.

“The criticism against Pacquiao has no effect on us,” said Magsipoc in a Reuters Television report, according to Economic Times. “Actually, many people really wanted to say what Pacquiao said about same-sex marriage, but some people are trying to make this an election issue.”

The Times reported that Pacquiao, who is currently serving as a congressman for his Sarangani province in the Philippines, has consistently ranked eighth among other senatorial candiates vying for the 12 available seats.

Still one of those candidates, Valenzuela City Rep. Sherwin Gatchalian, did not agree with Pacquiao’s statement, which he later apologized for.

“I am a practicing Christian and may not approve of same-sex or LGBT marriage, but I will not stand in opposition to genuine initiatives moving for LGBT union in the country,” Gatchalian said, according to a Phil Star report.

Last year Pacquiao spoke to The Christian Post about why he is so passionate about engaging in politics in his country.

“I want to provide opportunities for my fellow countrymen that will improve their situations. As a politician, I want to help create jobs so that I can bring them out of their poverty,” Pacquiao revealed to CP. “I want to give them hope. Boxing has been my passion, but public service is my calling.”

Source : Christian Post

Justin Bieber Says He’d Be Terrible Person Without God

Christian Post Report – Singer Justin Bieber performs on NBC’s ‘Today’ show in New York November 18, 2015.

Justin Bieber says without God, he would be a terrible person.

The 21-year-old singer opened up about his relationship with God, and how that connection keeps him from being a bad person in a GQ magazine interview this month. “I feel like that’s why I have a relationship with Him, because I need it. I suck by myself. Like, when I’m by myself and I feel like I have nothing to lean on? Terrible. Terrible person.”

Although he admits to doing “stupid” things, the “Sorry” singer said his actions would be worse without God.

“If I was doing this on my own, I would constantly be doing things that are, I mean, I still am doing things that are stupid, but. … It just gives me some sort of hope and something to grasp onto,” Bieber said. “A feeling of security, and a feeling of being wanted, and a feeling of being desired, and I feel like we can only get so much of that from a human.”

The pop star also talked about past hurts and recognizing that he cannot rely on other people in the way he can depend on God.

“I’ve had people that burned me so many times,” Bieber told GQ. “If we invest everything we have in a human, we’re gonna get broken.”

Still, Bieber does not dwell on his negative experiences with people. He believes dwelling on such things is what the devil wants.

“He wants us to not be happy,” the singer said. “He wants us to, you know, not live the life that we can truly live.”

Bieber has developed close bonds with the likes of Pastor Carl Lentz of Hillsong New York City and Pastor Judah Smith from The City Church in Seattle, Washington, throughout the years, but there was once a time he was a Christian uninterested in attending church.

“Christians leave such a bad taste in people’s mouths. I was like, ‘I’m not gonna go to church.’ I had these church friends and I was like, ‘You guys are cool, I like you guys, but I’m not going to church,'” Bieber said in a Complex magazine interview last year. “Then it was the same thing of, ‘Just because you went to a weird church before doesn’t mean that this is weird’. It doesn’t make you a Christian just by going to church.”

However, Bieber soon came to realize the importance of attending a place of worship.

“Like I said, you don’t need to go to church to be a Christian. If you go to Taco Bell (fast food chain), that doesn’t make you a taco,” Bieber said. “I think that going to church is fellowship, it’s relationship, it’s what we’re here on the Earth to do, to have this connection that you feel there’s no insecurities. I think that’s where we need to be.”

Bieber came into the public eye as a global phenomenon at only 13 years old, but was previously blasted in headlines for allegedly smoking marijuana, vandalising his neighbor’s property, using racial slurs and drag racing. Yet the singer told Complex that he is striving to be more like Jesus Christ.

“I just wanna honestly live like Jesus. Not be Jesus. … I don’t want that to come across weird. He created a pretty awesome template of how to love people and how to be gracious and kind,” Bieber told the publication. “If you believe it, he died for our sins. Sometimes when I don’t feel like doing something, but I know it’s right, I remember, I’m pretty sure Jesus didn’t feel like going to the cross and dying so that we don’t have to feel what we should have to feel.”

Source : Christian Post