Google Reveals How Much It Paid Man Who Briefly Owned Google.com Last Year, And There’s A Hidden Message

In 2015, Google had to buy back its google.com domain name from an ex-employee who owned it for about a minute.

Sanmay Ved was able to buy google.com for just $12, making him the owner of the world’s most visited web domain.

Google quickly spotted the error and refunded his purchase.

Ved had previously revealed that Google’s security team had contacted him to offer a reward for spotting the unusual error, but there was no mention of the amount.

Google later revealed in a blog post, as spotted by 9to5google.com, that it paid Ved $6,006.13 – an amount with a hidden message.

The figure subtly spells out the word ‘Google’ (if you squint a bit).

Google doubled the amount after Ved announced that he would donate the fee to a charity called ‘The Art of Living India’, which aims to bring education to poorer parts of the country.

Google, along with many other large companies, routinely awards cash prizes to people who report security bugs.

Source : Yahoo News

Grammy Award-Winner Tina Campbell Says Gospel Music Artists Face Unique Challenges

Tina Campbel (Photo: AMC Networks)

Christian Post Report – Mary Mary’s Tina Campbell

Despite earning multiple Grammy awards as a member of the Christian singing duo Mary Mary, Tina Campbell believes that getting people interested in gospel music can be a challenge.

“I don’t find it difficult to market gospel music necessarily. I do find it sometimes difficult to be received,” Campbell revealed in an interview with the Atlanta Business Chronicle earlier this month. “When people hear the word ‘gospel’ they think, ‘that word doesn’t apply to me.’ To some degree we have to be strategic in marketing it and presenting it.”

The 41-year-old mother of five built a career as one half of the gospel music duo Mary Mary along with her sister, Erica Campbell, who also serves as her reality television co-star in the WE tv hit reality television show “Mary Mary.”

“You have to show what’s good about it, you have to show what’s relevant about it, you have to show how it applies to the everyday person and their everyday life. It’s very important to include those elements of it because some people think it’s just for Sundays,” the 41-year-old singer told the Chronicle.

“If people understand that it’s relatable everyday for every situation — it’s what you laugh to, cry to, party to, be encouraged by, it’s your easy listening, it’s your workout music, it’s your motivation before you take that college exam — if you show people how it’s relatable, they are able to understand how amazing this music is.”

Tina found a way to relate to people with her first solo album, It’s Personal, and book I Need A Day To Pray last year. She previously spoke to The Christian Post about enduring challenges with her husband’s infidelity and father’s death that led her to create the projects.

“I went through my challenges that I went through last year with infidelity. In the process of writing journals to God, I ended up writing a book that I didn’t know I was writing,” she told CP. “Once I finished, God started downloading all of this music into me and I knew that God gave it to me to give it away. I knew when it came time to give it away, I didn’t want to just do things as usual.”

During an interview on “The Boris and Nicole Show” in July, The singer admitted she almost walked away from her Christian faith as she struggled to overcome her husband, Teddy’s, infidelities.

“Initially, I lost my way, and I said ‘forget this faith thing it doesn’t work,'” Tina revealed on the Fox talk show. “I pursued vengeance and I was going to get him back and everybody back and make the world understand they should have never hurt me.”

“I crashed, I cursed, I attacked, I drank myself to sleep,” she admitted. “I was miserable.”

Her husband, however, said he made the decision to fight for their marriage.

“In the moment where I did all of this to her, I was like, ‘OK, either I’m going to run, like I normally did, or I’m gonna rise up and I’m gonna stand up and be the man that I know that she needs,'” Teddy said.

As she worked on her first solo album last year, Campbell reached out to her fans on Instagram to explain: “I’ve been fighting discouragement for three weeks because I’m doing something I’ve never done before with limited experience, expertise, resources, and help to do it. Setbacks have worked to distract and discourage me. Sometimes I’ve fallen back but I wake up everyday and choose to move forward because God is with me and if God be for me, who can be against me: 1 John 4:4.

“Today I am encouraged because THE ULTIMATE ENCOURAGER ‘THE HOLY SPIRIT’ LIVES INSIDE OF ME and I’m choosing to tap into that and ignore everything else that conflicts with it: Isaiah 41:10, Deuteronomy 31.8, Joshua 1:9,” Campbell added. “God is more than amazing, more than able, and more than willing to manifest His love, His grace, and His power in my life and yours. All of you who have already began to support this project have encouraged me more than I can explain.”

Source : Christian Post

Donnie McClurkin Warns Fans About Pitfalls on Road to Gospel Music Superstardom

donnie mcclurkin (Photo: Reuters/Kevork Djansezian)

Christian Post Report – Gospel singer Donnie McClurkin performs “The Blood Will Never Lose Its Power” as a tribute to Andrae Crouch during the 2015 BET Awards in Los Angeles, California, June 28, 2015.

Even though he’s now a gospel music super star, Donnie McClurkin tells inquiring fans that his road to success was paved with challenges and disappointments.

The 56-year-old “We Fall Down” singer was asked on Twitter about the hardships he faced before reaching his veteran status in the industry.

“@donnieradio what has been the most challenging part in getting to where you are in your career today? #COGchat,” one person questioned McClurkin.

The singer responded by saying “the hardest thing in getting to where I am was finally believing what God said and thought about me regardless [of] my failures.”

The pastor of Perfecting Faith Church in Freeport, New York, has been a leading voice in gospel music with a career that spans 20 years. Still, McClurkin has warned people who believe they can be the next platinum selling artist in gospel music world.

He previously admitted that it was a tough industry and cautioned people not to do it if they did not feel called by God.

“If you want to do it to get into the industry, don’t do it. If you want to do it because you feel like you’re a gospel singer, don’t,” McClurkin previously told The Christian Post. “It’s got to be something that God has ordained because although it looks good from the outside looking in and although we bless so many people around the world with our music, inside of this gospel music world it’s not easy.”

The renowned singer is among the best-selling artists in the gospel music industry and has garnered multiple Grammy, Stellar, Dove and NAACP Awards. But he explained why he would not advise just anybody interested in being the next gospel music star to attempt to follow in his footsteps.

“There’s so much work that goes behind this and if you’re not called by God to do it, you’ll mess this thing up. Because pride won’t let you say ‘I’m not called to’ once you start,” McClurkin told CP. “Once you start, you’re going to keep on trying because you don’t ever want to show that you were in the wrong and that you didn’t hear from God. You’ve got to make sure that this is God and you’ve got to make sure that He called you to do it.”

That being said, the veteran singer also believes it’s important to help usher in the next generation of gospel musicians and has served as a judge on BET’s “Sunday Best” since 2010 to make that happen.

“It’s adding so much to the gospel music industry. We’ve got Crystal Aiken, we’ve got Y’Anna Crawley, Le’Andria Johnson, Amber Bullock and the list goes on that would’ve never been heard or seen, at least we don’t think so,” McClurkin told CP. “But what we do know is Sunday Best gave them that platform. For people like Jessica Reedy and Maurice Griffin and the list goes on. All of that’s happened because ‘Sunday Best’ decided that it was going to really deal with the anointed singers, the gifted singers and give them a national and international platform on BET.”

Source : Christian Post

5 Big Changes Coming to Social Media in 2016

Observer report – It’s been a memorable year in social media. 2015 saw the birth of live social streaming, with apps like Periscope and Meerkat winning over early adopters. Snapchat fully shed its reputation as a niche network and now counts more than 200 million active users. Meanwhile, video dominated social headlines, with Facebook users now logging an estimated 8 billion video views a day (even more than on YouTube, by some counts).

What does 2016 hold for social media users? Expect to see new technologies fundamentally change how we interact with social media, opening up new options like shopping and enabling us to share ever-more vivid, real-time experiences. But new functionality and the widening universe of social options also threaten to leave some users in the dust. Here’s a peek into the crystal ball at five trends that will change how we use social media in 2016:

Virtual reality comes to social media: “Imagine sharing not just moments with your friends online, but entire experiences and adventures.” That’s what Mark Zuckerberg wrote after Facebook acquired Oculus, the virtual reality company, for $2 billion back in March 2014. Well, we won’t have to imagine much longer. Facebook has already begun incorporating Oculus technology into its 360 Video. The unique videos, which have rolled out on News Feeds, allow users to experience scenes from different angles (looking right, left, up, down, etc.), on both web and mobile devices, creating a more immersive experience.

Right now, there’s 360 Video available from the likes of Vice and The Disney Channel and a really cool clip from Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Expect to see more immersive videos in 2016 as publishers and even brands catch up with the technology and begin creating more content. As for true, fully immersive VR, the consumer version of the Oculus Rift headset is slated for release in early 2016, opening up even more interesting possibilities for our News Feeds. Meanwhile, Oculus VR has already released a new “social” appcalled Oculus Social Alpha, for use with the Samsung Gear VR headset. The virtual movie-watching app allows you to “sit” in a theater and watch a video in real-time with other users — perhaps the first truly social application of Facebook’s new technology.

Social shopping takes off: Over the last year, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and Pinterest all unveiled or upgraded in-line buy buttons, which allow users to purchase clothes, crafts, gadgets and more without ever leaving their feeds. In many respects, this development is long overdue. We’re already discovering and talking about products on social media, and four out of five people say that posts from friends directly influence buying decisions. Plus, overseas in China, Korea and elsewhere, social channels have long incorporated ecommerce functionality.

So far, the primary stumbling block in North America has been ease of use. To buy on social media, we’ve had to click out to other sites (always problematic on smartphones) or we’ve been offered limited selection (a lathe now defunct Facebook Gifts). But innovations like Pinterest’s Buyable Pins now let users browse color and style options and pay, all without leaving the platform. In 2016, expect to see networks’ role shift from being channels whose primary function in ecommerce is providing referral traffic to being platforms where users make purchases directly.

Facebook Live takes live streaming mainstream: 2015 started off with lots of excitement about the new crop of live streaming apps, which allow users to broadcast live video to their followings. By late summer, Twitter-owned Periscope already boasted 10 million active users, and just this month it was named by Apple the best iOS app of 2015.

Expect to see live streaming reach a whole new, mainstream audience in the year ahead as Facebook rolls out its own mobile streaming functionality, generally referred to as Facebook Live. Already being beta-tested among a small number of U.S. iOS users, the feature allows for instantly sharing live video using the Facebook platform. What’s key here is that you don’t have to download a special app or leave Facebook to use the new video functionality. If Facebook Live rolls out as expected, it’s likely to not only dominate other live streaming options but also to fundamentally change the way Facebook’s 1.5 billion users engage with the platform.

The social media skills gap at work widens: With the explosion of workplace social networks like Slack (which recently saw more than 1 million users logged in at the same time) and the imminent launch of Facebook at Work, using social media in the office has gone from taboo to requirement. Businesses are incorporating social tools to streamline internal communications, to help sales staff reach customers, and, of course, for marketing and advertising. The problem is that front-line employees aren’t up to the challenge. Among 2,100 companies surveyed by Harvard Business Review, just 12 percent of those using social media feel they use it effectively. Even millennials brought up on social media are falling short: “Because somebody grows up being a social media native, it doesn’t make them an expert in using social media at work,” explains William Ward, professor of social media at Syracuse University.

The consequence of this social media skills gap can be seen in mounting corporate social media gaffes, from misused hashtags (see #WhyIStayed) to scheduled posts gone awry, not to mention trillions of dollars (yes, trillions) in lost productivity and business value. In 2016, expect to see social media training finally begin to make its way into the workplace in an effort to close this gap — similar to initiatives launched when office software suites and later email and the Internet itself emerged as critical business tools. A number of online offerings now provide self-paced lessons and video modules designed for the workplace. (Hootsuite is giving our course away free.)

Social media customer service gets a lot better: Customer service on social media has always seemed like a great idea. Why wait on the phone when you can Tweet and get an answer immediately? But the reality has been quite different. A new study of 500 top retailers shows that only 20 percent answer questions sent via Twitter and 54 percent respond via Facebook. And the average response time ranges from 27–31 hours! Not to mention that not all customer service problems lend themselves to being handled out in the open in a public forum.

Fortunately, change is on the horizon. In the latter part of 2015, both Twitter and Facebook significantly upped their customer service functionality. Twitter ditched the “mutual follow” requirement for its DM (Direct Messages) feature, meaning companies and customers can now contact each other directly and privately. At the same time, it lifted the standard 140-character limit for Direct Messages, so DM now makes a great one-on-one channel for tackling customer issues. Facebook, not to be outdone, has launched a beta version of Messenger Business, offering a new chat-based avenue for companies to have real-time, personal conversations with customers. Considering that Messenger has more than 800 million users, it’s not hard to see it evolving into a ubiquitous, mobile-friendly channel for customer service in the years ahead.

Perhaps the biggest change in social media is the accelerated evolution of networks into “everything platforms.” Twitter isn’t just for blasting out 140-character updates anymore: It’s for one-on-one messaging, video-sharing, customer service and more. Facebook isn’t just about connecting with friends: It’s now (or soon to be) a workplace productivity tool, a video sharing and streaming platform, a place to shop, etc. Similar transformations can be seen across LinkedIn, Instagram, Pinterest and Snapchat, among other networks. Social media has become less a discrete thing that people do than a natural component of everything they do. And that trend shows no signs of slowing.

Ryan Holmes is the CEO of Hootsuite and founder of Invoke Media.

Source : Observer

TD Jakes Visits Jail Inmates as Part of Criminal Justice Reform Project

Christian Post Report – Bishop T.D. Jakes of The Potters House preaches about the trauma of making transitions in life at the Woman Thou Art Loosed conference at MegaFest on Aug. 30, 2013, in Dallas, Texas.

To help further craft their vision for criminal justice reform, Bishop T.D. Jakes and a Dallas County judge visited the Dallas County Jail last Wednesday to meet with inmates who say they want a second chance at life.

Going before a parole board, the inmates told Jakes and Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins their stories, which included background on their childhoods, families, and addictions, as well as their plans for how to stay out of jail, their support systems and even their fears, hopes and dreams.

Among those stories was one 35-year-old inmate’s concern that his criminal record will “scare off” employers and landlords, and his hopes to overcome the negative labels of “junkie” and “crackhead” that he has endured. Another inmate, a 50-year-old woman, is ashamed to allow her sons to visit her after being imprisoned more than eight times. Her latest conviction involved the sale of crystal meth. She hopes to see more programs in place that help ex-offenders stay on the straight-and-narrow after they get out of jail.

“No little boy, little girl starts their life saying ‘I hope I grow up to be incarcerated,'” Jakes told The Dallas Morning News.

The pastor and judge hope to advance their efforts for criminal justice reform as well as reduce the jail population and provide support for ex-offenders who are trying to reintegrate into society.

Jakes has already created a re-entry program for ex-offenders through his Dallas megachurch, The Potter’s House. The Texas Offenders Reentry Initiative, or TORI, is a program that aims to reduce recidivism in Dallas, Fort Worth, Austin, Houston and San Antonio through services that include employment, housing, family reunification, education, healthcare and spiritual guidance, states the church’s website.

The Potter’s House pastor plans to share the inmates’ stories and struggles when he travels to Florida this spring to meet with “thousands of ministers.”

That meeting will likely be Jakes’ International Pastors & Leadership Conference Apr. 21-23 in Orlando, Florida, where the megachurch pastor and other speakers, experts and presenters will provide church leaders with resources and insight on how to fulfill their missions.

Bishop T.D. Jakes is the senior pastor of The Potter’s House, a megachurch with more than 30,000 members. He speaks nationally and has become a resident expert on Oprah Winfrey’s OWN network.

Source : Christian Post

Children Burned Alive in Horrific Boko Haram Attack; 86 People Slaughtered

Christian Post Report – Women and children rescued from Boko Haram ariving at the IDC camp in Yola, Adamawa State in this undated photo.

A number of children were burned alive in Boko Haram’s latest horrific attack in Dalori village in Nigeria, with officials saying that 86 people were killed.

The Associated Press reported on Monday that charred corpses and bodies with bullet wounds littered the streets in the Northeastern village, which is hosting up to 25,000 refugees who have fled the Islamic militants.

One survivor said he hid in a tree and heard the screams of children being burned alive.as Boko Haram militants torched huts.

The distraught man told the AP in a telephone call that several members of his family were killed or wounded in the attack, which occurred Saturday evening.

Militants reportedly burned and shot to death civilians, while three female suicide bombers blew themselves up among people fleeing to the neighboring Gamori village.

Nigerian army troops arrived at the scene and clashed with the militants, but a soldier who spoke on condition of anonymity said the army was defeated because the terrorists were better armed.

One resident, identified as Kulo Sheriff by CNN, said that the attack began right after some in the community had finished village prayers.

“We had just finished evening prayers when the gunmen came to our village and indiscriminately opened fire and set fire to homes,” Sheriff said.

“They detonated two bombs, which added to our fright and confusion. Everybody fled into the bush from where we saw our homes burning.”

Resident Adamu Kyari‎ added: “We slept in the bush with no blankets despite the chilling weather. We could hear soldiers battling with the Boko Haram attackers. It was terrifying.”

A state emergency agency official said that workers examining the scene of the attack found 12 bodies that were burned beyond recognition.

“We can’t even pick those ones, they were seriously burned,” the official said, according to Reuters.

Just last week Boko Haram carried out another series of suicide bombing attacks on the town of Chibok, killing 16 people in the process.

Boko Haram, which now refers to itself as the Islamic State’s West Africa Province, has killed well over 20,000 people since it began its insurgency in Nigeria in 2009, and has driven over 2.3 million people from their homes.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has been criticized by some in the country’s media, including the Premium Times, for suggesting in December that Boko Haram had been “technically defeated.”

The publication said on Monday that while it is true that Boko Haram no longer controls large towns and is not governing large territory, it pointed out that the insurgency remains deadly and that the conflict is “far from over.”

Buhari insisted yet again on Sunday that Boko Haram has “lost the war,” however, and are now “seeking ways and means to gradually find their way back into society.”

“I urge all citizens wherever they live to own the war against terror and to be part of the fight because it is the only way we can finish the remaining work that needs to be done to make our country safe again,” the Nigerian president said, according to TheCable, adding that the militants are “so desperate to embarrass the government and the people that they have no qualms attacking isolated communities and markets.”

Source : Christian Post

D.A. Carson on What Matters Most: Faith or Christ

Christian Post Report – D.A. Carson speaking at Bethlehem 2016 Conference for Pastors and Church Leaders in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Theologian D.A. Carson, president of The Gospel Coalition, explored the ground of all human assurances before God, tackling the question in a message about which matters more, the intensity of faith or its object.

Speaking at the Bethlehem 2016 Conference for Pastors and Church Leaders in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Carson asked listeners to picture two Jews by the names of Smith and Brown.

“The day before the first Passover, having a little discussion in the Land of Goshen, Smith says to Brown, ‘Boy, you’re a little nervous about what’s gonna happen tonight?'” Carson, a research professor of New Testament at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in Deerfield, Illinois, said in the message titled, “How Long, O Lord? Steadying Our Soul in the Midst of the Storm.”

“‘Brown says, ‘Well, God told us what to do through His servant Moses. You don’t have to be nervous,'” Carson continued. Brown then asks Smith if he hadn’t slaughtered the lamb, put the blood on the doorposts, suggesting that that’s all he needed to do before eating the Passover meal.

“Of course, I’ve done that; I’m not stupid, but still, pretty scary when you think of all the things that have happened around here recently, you know,” Smith responds, referring to incidents recorded in the Bible like river turning into blood. “Pretty awful. And now, there’s a threat of the first born being killed, you know,” Smith adds. “It’s alright for you, you’ve got three sons, I’ve only got one … and the angel of death is passing through tonight, you know. … I’ll be glad when this night is over.’

Brown responds by saying, “Bring it on. I trust the promises of God.”

“That night, the angel of death swept through the land,” Carson continued, and then asked the listeners, “Which one lost his son?” After a long pause, he said, “Neither.”

“Because death doesn’t pass over them on the ground of the intensity or the clarity of the faith exercised, but on the ground of the blood of the lamb,” Carson explained. “That’s what silences the accuser.”

We don’t need to offer any excuses, that we tried hard, Carson added. It is enough that Jesus died, that He for me, he said. “That’s the ground for all human assurance before God.”

We are so fickle when it comes to the intensity of our faith, but the ground of overcoming the evil one is the object of our faith, “the ground of the blood the Lamb,” he concluded.

Source : Christian Post

Leonardo DiCaprio Meets Pope Francis, Promises to Pray for Him

Actor Leonardo DiCaprio met with Pope Francis at the Vatican last week where the two exchanged environment-message gifts.

 Vatican Radio noted that DiCaprio, who has been an outspoken activist for the environment, gave the pontiff an art book from Dutch Renaissance painter Hieronymus Bosch, alongside a check for his charity.

DiCaprio kissed the pope’s ring during the encounter, which was shown on video, and opened up a page of the book depicting the famous “The Garden of Earthly Delights” triptych, which he said hung over his crib as a child.

“As a child I didn’t quite understand what it all meant, but through my child’s eyes it represented a planet, the utopia we had been given, the overpopulation, excesses, and the third panel we see a blackened sky that represents so much to me of what’s going in in the environment,” DiCaprio told the Vatican leader.

Francis in turn gave “The Revenant” actor a copy of his encyclical, “Laudato Si,'” or “Praise Be to You,” which contains some of the Roman Catholic Church leader’s strongest statements on mankind’s responsibility toward the planet.

“The urgent challenge to protect our common home includes a concern to bring the whole human family together to seek a sustainable and integral development, for we know that things can change. The Creator does not abandon us; He never forsakes His loving plan or repents of having created us,” Francis wrote in it.

At the end of their encounter, Francis asked DiCaprio to keep him in his prayers, and the actor promised to do so.

DiCaprio, who earlier in January spoke out against corporate greed at the World Economic Forum in Davos, later described his meeting with Francis as an “‘incredible honor.”

“He’s been inspiring and revolutionary, to come out and be outspoken about the issue of climate change and endorse the scientific community,” DiCaprio said backstage at the Screen Actors Guild awards on Saturday, according to USA Today.

”We have 99 percent of the scientific community now saying climate change exists and it’s caused by mankind. Anyone who doesn’t believe in climate change doesn’t believe in science. So the fact that he has come out as the spiritual leader endorsing the scientific movement is unprecedented, and it was an incredible honor to meet him,” he added.

The actor also praised Francis’ encyclical, calling it “one of the most important things in climate change history. Basically, it’s spreading the Gospel that we should care about the planet we live in.”

“It’s a sin to destroy our planet,” he said.

The Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, established in 1998, has been engaged in pressing environmental issues throughout the years, which the actor has often spoken out about, including protecting biodiversity, oceans conservation, wildlands conservation, and tackling climate change.

 Source : Christian Post

‘The Finest Hours’ Movie Highlights Hope, Faith, and Fate of Epic Sea Rescue

“The Finest Hours,” released nationwide Friday, is a Walt Disney Pictures film with a plot taken right from the history books. In the true story of the U.S. Coast Guard’s famous rescue, the Hollywood film showcases the hope and faith of the brave men out at sea.

In 1952, a massive winter storm split an oil tanker in two, off the coast of Cape Cod, trapping more than 30 sailors on board. The Coast Guard heard about the ship in distress and set out on a daring rescue attempt in which mostly every man on board was rescued. The heroic event is now a movie based on a book by the same name.

“The Finest Hours” stars Chris Pine, Casey Affleck, Ben Foster, Holliday Grainger, John Ortiz and Eric Bana.

The following is an edited transcript of an interview with the film’s producer, Jim Whittaker, in which he discusses the deep faith of the men who risked their lives on the historical Coast Guard rescue mission.

The Christian Post: “The Finest Hours” was a lovely film. The themes throughout the entire movie were inspiring and faith was noticeably a big factor. Can you tell us about how faith played a role in the lives of these men?

Whittaker: The hero of the film, Bernie Webber, was the son of a Baptist minister and struggled with his commitment to faith. All of that changed on February 18th, 1952, when he was sent out to rescue what turned out to be 33 men on the back half of an oil tanker that had split in half. It was in the middle of this rescue, which Bernie described as Divine Providence, that played the strongest hand in him continuing forward to rescue any survivors and ultimately succeeding. He felt that God had provided a guiding hand for him on his journey that night and it made him realize that his real calling was to be a Coast Guard rescue man rather than travel in the footsteps of his father, a Baptist minister. In dire times of survival it’s not uncommon for people to turn to their faith and that was also true for the men on the oil tanker Pendleton, which was cut in half by 60-foot waves during the hurricane.

CP: Bernie Webber was a man of integrity and urged the men on the boat to keep hope when there seemed to be none. Do you know why he held so closely to his values?

Whittaker: By all accounts Bernie was an incredible man of great integrity. He was humble, sincere and always did the right thing no matter what the circumstances. When he was called upon as the leader of the C-Team, the only ones left in the station to go out to perform a rescue under suicidal circumstances, he answered the call. He held out hope at every turn but it was in the midst of his most challenging circumstances, that he felt the guiding hand of God urging him to continue.  And he never lost faith or hope in his quest.  These are some of the many qualities he held and we felt privileged to be able to show that in the film.

CP: Throughout the entire film Ray Sybert kept saying that he did not believe in luck. Why was that such an important point to make in this movie?

Whittaker: The film is ultimately about hope, faith and fate. Bernie had great faith and came to believe that it was his fate to rescue the men. By showing Sybert as a person who didn’t believe in luck, it served to highlight the role that fate played in these two men’s lives. In a certain sense Sybert came to realize that maybe his life was made up of more than just luck but fate as well.

CP: The romantic aspect of the film was classic and traditional, what are you hoping people take away from that?

Whittaker: What I loved about the romance is that Miriam was a telephone operator who fell in love with Bernie when she overheard him turning down another woman for a blind date because he had to go out and perform a rescue at sea. She knew Bernie was the man for her, not because he was a Coast Guardsman, but because of the kind and gentle way in which he turned this other woman down. A modern woman in the 1950’s, she was determined to marry Bernie and in fact she was the one who proposed to him. I love the idealism rooted in integrity of character that turned out to be the right thing for both of them. They were married for 58 years until Bernie’s death at the age of 81.

CP: What else can you add concerning the faith or family aspect of the film?

Whittaker: I recently took my 10-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter to see the film and they loved it. In part because they admired the characters and they loved the adventure. Notwithstanding my role as their father, they kept saying “Dad I really like it, I really liked it” and I knew they did because they kept repeating it the next day when they woke up. I think it’s a great film for families and in particular families of faith.

 Find out more information visit  – fandango.com/thefinesthours

Source : Christian Post

How Evangelist Dave Sterrett Would Sway Christians Who Support Abortion

It’s a little bit of show and tell if you ask him about his strategy to change the minds of pro-choice Christians, but it also involves asking philosophical questions like, “What does it mean to be human?”

Dave Sterrett, Christian evangelist and founder of Disruptive Truth, an organization dedicated to proclaiming “the disruptive truths of Jesus until the whole world hears,” thought about the question for just a little while when this reporter asked him: “What would you say to Christians who are pro-choice?”

He had just finished talking about his organization’s new campaign launched this month called We Choose Life that he hopes will disrupt the conversation on abortion by providing a small group, one-day, training and discussion guide on the issue.

It will be available as a free download along with short films that feature pro-life training and biblical hope from Sterrett as well as true stories from pro-life leaders such as Lila Rose, founder of Live Action. Sterrett has also written a companion book, We Choose Life released this month by Hendrickson Publishers to help the cause.

His aim is to train and equip 500,000 high school and college students to be able to give “an answer to the abortion issue with clarity, compassion and conviction, offering real answers, real stories and real hope to a new generation.”

“How do we answer the questions? We know that Planned Parenthood is focused, targeting minorities and university students. That’s where they often have their abortion facilities,” he said.

“We want to provide answers because there’s many young people and adults who say, well, I’m pro-life. But you ask them the tough questions, ‘what about cases of rape? What about incest? What about if the mother’s life is in danger? How do you answer those questions?” he asked.

The Church, he said, has been silent on the issue of abortion and has been pouring much more effort into bringing attention other causes such as deaths from AIDS, heart disease, lack of clean drinking water and so on, which collectively do not amount to the 40 million who die annually on a global scale as a result of abortion.

“If the church and other believers are bringing attention to these other causes, my question is why is the church so silent about abortion?” Sterrett asked.

“Worldwide, we talk about justice, there’s a lot of things my generation, for example, is passionate about. Sex trafficking, exposing the darkness of that,” he continued. “If we really wanted to shut down sex trafficking here in the United States, one of the things that’s something closely related to that is abortion, because these young girls get pregnant and where do the sex traffickers take them? They take them to the abortion facilities.”

“We know from Lila Rose, who is in our video, her undercover work at Live Action has exposed that Planned Parenthood has not reported sex trafficking, they have not reported statutory rape. In fact, Planned Parenthood knows that they’ll make money off abortions, so Planned Parenthood does not oppose it. … We need to be concerned about all these other causes.”

The Church has come a long way on the issue of abortion, he said, but there is still a lot more work to do.
“During the time of Roe v. Wade most Protestants were in favor of abortion. We were silent,” Sterrett said.

“Though there were a lot of things happening with the Jesus movement, people were being saved but the Protestants, the Evangelicals were quiet about abortion. My particular denomination at the time — Southern Baptist — was in favor of abortion,” he noted. “And thankfully in the late ’70s the Southern Baptist, the Assembly of God and many of the Evangelical denominations changed … and took a pro-life stance, but we still have a long way to go.”

Indeed, although the Resolution on Abortion, adopted at the Southern Baptist Convention in June 1971 — two years before the landmark Roe v. Wade decision — charged that society had a responsibility to affirm the sanctity of human life, it still allowed abortion under a set of circumstances open to broad interpretation.

“Be it further RESOLVED, That we call upon Southern Baptists to work for legislation that will allow the possibility of abortion under such conditions as rape, incest, clear evidence of severe fetal deformity, and carefully ascertained evidence of the likelihood of damage to the emotional, mental, and physical health of the mother,” the document notes, in part.

Sterrett argued that this is not something widely known.

So, with so much left to do in the Church, this CP reporter asked him the question: “What would you say to Christians who are pro-choice?”

He thought for a little.

“I would want to listen to them and ask them why they are pro-choice and then I would try to understand what are the reasons they are and then I would begin to ask them questions like, very simple questions that would allow them to think,” he began. “Ask them, you know, ‘what is a pregnancy? Are they in favor of all abortions or some? What does it mean to be human?’ I would ask them what do they mean by abortion.”

And after asking and telling. There might have to be some showing.

“You have some people who are pro-choice, they have no idea what an abortion is … they have no idea,” Sterrett said.

“And so, what we do in this video, as difficult as it is, we talk about the abortion procedure. And once individuals begin to see what abortion is and what does it mean to be human, they begin to change their minds,” he noted.

“And one of the guys that helped with the video, he considered himself pro-life but he wasn’t really sure, and one of the things that actually changed his position was seeing this image that we show of what an abortion is. And that changed his mind.”

Source : Christian Post