‘Independence Day 2’ Cast News, Plot Rumors: Jeff Goldblum Returns, Liam Hemsworth Joining Cast

Independence Day Creative Commons/Image

Exactly 20 years after the release of science fiction film “Independence Day,” its sequel will be released on June 20, 2016, called “Independence Day 2.” This much has been confirmed by the film’s director Roland Emmerich.

Christian Post Report – Will Smith, who played one of the lead characters in the first film, will not be joining the cast this time.

Emmerich told Screen Rant that Smith is “too expensive” and that they want “maybe half of the people that you know would know from the first film (in the script) and the other half who are new.”

Jeff Goldblum is one of the actors who will return and reprise his role as the computer expert who helped Will Smith fight the aliens. The new actors cast in new roles include Liam Hemsworth and Jessie Usher. While it is not yet known what character Hemsworth will play, Usher will play the grown-up son of Will Smith who will be the one fighting the aliens in the movie.

Emmerich is said to be working with Dean Devlin on the script for the sequel. In reports as early as 2013, Emmerich revealed initial plot details for the sequel. According to a report in Entertainment Weekly, the sequel will take place in a modern-day setting, exactly twenty years after the events of the first film. It will happen in “a parallel history,” where humans are said to “have harnessed all this alien technology” which they will use to fight the aliens who are coming back to invade earth. The director even mentioned plans of not just one, but two sequels.

The sequel will be directed by Emmerich, with Dean Devlin, Harald Kloser and himself as producers. Twentieth Century Fox was said to have given the sequel a green light for the film’s development as early as November 2014.

“Independence Day” which is also known as “Independence Day Forever,” earned over $800 million when it was first released in 1996.

Source : Christian Post

Manny Pacquiao’s Trainer Freddie Roach Says Mayweather is ‘Biggest Challenge of My Life’

Manny Pacquiao Instagram/ @emmanuelpacquiao

Freddie Roach and Manny Pacquiao

Christian Post Report – The world’s most anticipated boxing match between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao is just two months away, and Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, has started preparing the Filipino boxer in his quest to end Mayweather’s winning streak.

In an interview with AFP, Roach said that training Pacquiao to face the American boxer is the biggest challenge of his career so far.

“Floyd’s undefeated. He’s talented. He’s unique. Here’s a guy I first saw when he was five years old in the gym. And he was a good fighter then,” said Roach.

Mayweather, who’s had 47 wins and zero losses in his career, will face eight-division champion Pacquiao in Las Vegas on May 2. The match is touted to be the biggest fight of all time.

“He’s trained himself his whole life,” said Roach of Mayweather. “He’s a natural fighter and he makes the moves himself, I mean Floyd is a self-made fighter. He was born into this sport. He just grew with it.”

“I’m happy this fight is here. Yes, it’s the biggest challenge of my life, but I think it’s going to be the greatest moment of my life also,” he added.

Roach has trained boxing champions Bernard Hopkins, Julio Cesar Chavez and Oscar De La Hoya. He has been training Pacquiao for 15 years. Roach has been voted US trainer of the year seven times, and endures a battle against Parkinson’s disease.

The trainer, who sees Pacquiao as his family, told AFP that he just got off the phone with the boxer and received a birthday greeting from him.

“I just talked to Manny,” said Roach. “He wanted to call me. He sang ‘Happy Birthday’ and he had the whole gym singing to me.”

The 55-year old is confident that Pacquiao can beat Mayweather.

“Manny has to make the right moves at the right time to win the fight and this time there is no room for error,” he said.

Though Roach acknowledges Mayweather’s skill in the ring, he said that the boxer, nicknamed “Money,” is not someone that could be called a good role model.

“I think Manny will do the world a public service to beat this guy, because [Mayweather] is not a good role model,” said Roach. “Manny’s a really good role model—he’s someone I would want my kids to look up to.”

Source : Christian Post

Manny Pacquiao’s Trainer Freddie Roach Says Mayweather is ‘Biggest Challenge of My Life’

Manny Pacquiao Instagram/ @emmanuelpacquiao

Freddie Roach and Manny Pacquiao

Christian Post Report – The world’s most anticipated boxing match between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao is just two months away, and Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, has started preparing the Filipino boxer in his quest to end Mayweather’s winning streak.

In an interview with AFP, Roach said that training Pacquiao to face the American boxer is the biggest challenge of his career so far.

“Floyd’s undefeated. He’s talented. He’s unique. Here’s a guy I first saw when he was five years old in the gym. And he was a good fighter then,” said Roach.

Mayweather, who’s had 47 wins and zero losses in his career, will face eight-division champion Pacquiao in Las Vegas on May 2. The match is touted to be the biggest fight of all time.

“He’s trained himself his whole life,” said Roach of Mayweather. “He’s a natural fighter and he makes the moves himself, I mean Floyd is a self-made fighter. He was born into this sport. He just grew with it.”

“I’m happy this fight is here. Yes, it’s the biggest challenge of my life, but I think it’s going to be the greatest moment of my life also,” he added.

Roach has trained boxing champions Bernard Hopkins, Julio Cesar Chavez and Oscar De La Hoya. He has been training Pacquiao for 15 years. Roach has been voted US trainer of the year seven times, and endures a battle against Parkinson’s disease.

The trainer, who sees Pacquiao as his family, told AFP that he just got off the phone with the boxer and received a birthday greeting from him.

“I just talked to Manny,” said Roach. “He wanted to call me. He sang ‘Happy Birthday’ and he had the whole gym singing to me.”

The 55-year old is confident that Pacquiao can beat Mayweather.

“Manny has to make the right moves at the right time to win the fight and this time there is no room for error,” he said.

Though Roach acknowledges Mayweather’s skill in the ring, he said that the boxer, nicknamed “Money,” is not someone that could be called a good role model.

“I think Manny will do the world a public service to beat this guy, because [Mayweather] is not a good role model,” said Roach. “Manny’s a really good role model—he’s someone I would want my kids to look up to.”

Source : Christian Post

Church Growth: When Communers Become Consumers

Once I had a friend—I’ll call him Bill—who worked out every day at the gym. When we got together, he liked to flex his bicep and say, “Greg, feel this!” Bill’s muscles were rock hard. Then one day I heard terrible news. Bill had died of a heart attack. Even though he appeared robust and powerful, his heart was diseased. Inwardly, as it turned out, Bill was a weakling.

Christian Post Report – I keep Bill in mind when I think about the church today. Outwardly everything can look promising. A ministry may appear to be going very well. Yet the inside reality can be another story. What makes a church body grow big doesn’t necessarily make it grow healthy.

The past two decades have witnessed a dramatic increase in the number of large churches, including “megachurches” (congregations of 1,000 or more), around the country. As a result of pastoring a large congregation, I’m frequently asked about our success at Harvest Christian Fellowship. What kind of church-growth formula do we follow? Can what we do at Harvest be applied to any church, anywhere, with similar results?

  • Greg Laurie
    (Photo: rever Hoehne for Harvest Ministries)
    Greg Laurie, senior pastor of Harvest Christian Fellowship in Riverside, California and Harvest Orange County in Irvine, California, shares the Gospel with a sold-out crowd of 19,000 for Harvest America at the American Airlines Center and Victory Park in Dallas, Texas, Oct. 5, 2014.

I understand these questions and the motivations behind them. Pastors would rather preach to people than to open spaces. And let’s face it, something would be terribly wrong if Christians weren’t interested in seeing churches grow. But it’s time to take a hard look at what church growth means.

In an article entitled “The Myth of Church Growth” featured in Current Thoughts and Trends, David Dunlap cites some troubling statistics.

For example, during the very time megachurches have sprouted across the landscape, the proportion of Americans who claim to be “born again” has remained a constant 32 percent. According to Dunlap, growth isn’t coming from conversions but from transfers—up to 80 percent of all growth taking place today. He goes on to quote C. Peter Wagner, one of the leading spokesmen for the church-growth movement, who admits, “I don’t think there is anything intrinsically wrong with the church growth principles we’ve developed. . .yet somehow they don’t seem to work.”

I would suggest that one reason they don’t work is because they tend to approach church as if it were a business. For example, some church growth experts are telling pastors their “customers” no longer attend to commune with God, but to “consume” a personal or family service. In a survey of 1,000 church attenders, respondents were asked, “Why does the church exist?” According to 89 percent, the church’s purpose was “to take care of my family’s and my spiritual needs.” Only 11 percent said the purpose of the church is “to win the world for Jesus Christ.”

These attitudes concern me and many other observers deeply. A business-driven response may make things only worse. In the long run, if we train consumers instead of communers, we’ll end up with customers instead of disciples. It might fill up an auditorium, but it will never turn the world upside down for Christ.

The last thing I want to do is discourage any person or ministry, or cause division. We must be careful about limiting the ways God can work; but we also need to be aware of how our strategies—even well-intentioned, statistically valid ones—can actually take us off course.
Allow me to suggest how certain popular church-growth “rules” can put a church’s health at risk when slightly misapplied or taken to extremes.

Church-Growth Risky Rule #1:

If it brings people in, it pleases God.

Recently, I attended a pastor’s gathering where many participants expressed frustration with the lack of numerical growth in their churches. One pastor said to me, “My feeling is, whatever works, and if it pleases God, that is what I want to do.” I understood his good intentions, but I couldn’t agree with him. “You know, I don’t want to be nit-picky,” I said, “but I really have to differ with you. It’s not whatever works; it is whatever is pleasing to God. Period.”

Why? Because if it’s pleasing to God, it will work. If there was ever a church growth plan that did work, it was the one the early Christians used. Talk about numbers. Talk about effectiveness. This church exploded. Why? Because they knew why they were here on earth and what they were supposed to do.

A careful reading of Acts 2:42–47 shows that the early church didn’t make bigger and better their business. Instead, they focused on five priorities: worship, prayer, evangelism, learning, and loving. The passage ends with the words, “And the Lord added to the church daily such as should be saved” (KJV). The first church didn’t have a problem with growth because God took care of the growth as they took care of honoring His principles.

Church growth is ultimately God’s business, not ours to control. Our commission is to live out the gospel individually and whole-heartedly in community. Then, in keeping with God’s will, “the Lord added to the church daily” will become the success story of our church. Not every pastor will necessarily have a “megachurch,” but he will have a growing one.

Church-Growth Risky Rule #2:

The less confrontational or overt the gospel message, the better.

One positive aspect of the recent growth movement is the emphasis on getting nonbelievers to come to church. I’m concerned, however, that in a sincere effort to get their churches to grow, some pastors are exchanging entertainment for exhortation and gimmicks for the gospel. We recently conducted a survey at our church and found that over 40 percent of those who attended had become Christians at one of our services. If people walk away from our services with a good feeling but no idea who Jesus is, I know we have really missed the boat.

Graham Scroggie said compromise is what “prompts us to be silent when we ought to speak for fear of offending.” Of course, drama, videos, music, and other media used to communicate Christian faith in churches today aren’t compromises by themselves. Yet we must be sure that gimmicks don’t take the place of the gospel. Let’s be sure we are actually proclaiming the whole gospel—including sin, judgment, and salvation.

Church-Growth Risky Rule #3:

Find out what your church is hungry for and feed it to them.

People and churches develop an appetite for what they are accustomed to being fed. A church with a steady diet of feel-good sermonettes in place of solid teaching from Scripture might eventually grow to become a large congregation—but it will be weak and immature.

You could easily conclude that many congregants want the church to be light and hassle-free. No heavy meals or five-course messages. But just because people have developed an appetite for empty calories doesn’t mean their bodies have no need for nutritious meals.

When our two boys were younger, they didn’t understand why my wife, Cathe, and I wouldn’t let them exist on a steady diet of Hostess Twinkies and Ding-Dongs. Nevertheless, we insisted on a balanced diet. Why? Because the boys’ appetites didn’t feed their real, long-term hungers.

There’s a reason Scripture tells pastors to “devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to preaching and to teaching” (1 Timothy 4:13). Whether they always feel it or not, human beings have a deep need to know the meaning of life and the reason for their existence. The answers people need can be found only in God’s Word and in a living relationship with Jesus, “the bread of life” (John 6:35).

Church-Growth Risky Rule # 4:

Target your church to a particular demographic.

Despite their diversity, the believers of the early church maintained a love and unity so powerful that they enjoyed the favor of all (Acts 2:47). Who wouldn’t want to join in on such a love feast? As a result, their numbers exploded and thousands came to Christ. Nevertheless, one trend in church growth is the attempt to target churches to a particular niche of “consumers.” You might call these designer churches. Every decision has a particular “consumer” in mind.

Now, there’s nothing wrong with trying to find ways to reach out to a specific segment of society and make a connection or with using common interests as a springboard for the gospel. Yet we need to be cautious about mistaking our circles of comfort for our calling. Philip went to an Ethiopian court official (Acts 8); Peter went to a Roman centurion named Cornelius (Acts 10); Paul went to a Philippian businesswoman (Acts 16). Each one of those contacts was instrumental in helping to spread Christianity around the known world.

Copyright © 2015 by Harvest Ministries. All rights reserved.

Unless otherwise indicated, Scripture taken from the New King James Version. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Bible text from the New King James Version is not to be reproduced in copies or otherwise by any means except as permitted in writing by Thomas Nelson, Inc., Attn: Bible Rights and Permissions, P.O. Box 141000, Nashville, TN 37214-1000

Used with Permission

Source : Christian Post

ISIS Attacks Christian Villages in Same Syrian Area Where Hundreds of Assyrians Were Abducted

syria isis (Photo: Reuters/Osman Orsal)

Fighters of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) patrol in the streets of the northern Syrian town of Kobani January 28, 2015. Kurdish forces battled Islamic State fighters outside Kobani on Tuesday, a monitoring group said, a day after Kurds said they had taken full control of the northern Syrian town following a four-month battle. Known as Ayn al-Arab in Arabic, the mainly Kurdish town close to the Turkish border has become a focal point in the international fight against Islamic State, an al Qaeda offshoot that has spread across Syria and Iraq.

Christian Post Report – Militants from Islamic State, or ISIS, attacked at least three more villages in northeasern Syria on Saturday, about a month after the Sunni terror group abducted hundreds of Assyrian Christians from the same area.

ISIS, which is also known as ISIL, began the attack Saturday evening, targeting at least three villages near the town of Tal Tamr along the Khabur River in Hassakeh province, according to The Associated Press.

As Kurdish militiamen and their local allies were defending the villages, dozens of fighters from both sides have been killed, Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reports.

“The battles are now very intensive, very violent,” Osama Edwards, director of the Assyrian Network for Human Rights, was quoted as saying. “Tal Tamr is the main goal of the Islamic State, to give them the corridor to the eastern border to Iraq.”

ISIS is an offshoot of al-Qaeda and wants to establish a caliphate in the Levant region and beyond. It has gained control over large swathes of territories in Syria and Iraq.

According to the Observatory, Kurdish fighters backed by local Assyrian militiamen were eventually able to push ISIS militants back.

Meanwhile, 26 ISIS terrorists, including two commanders, were killed in airstrikes in Hama province.

Last week, ISIS reportedly released 19 Assyrians from the village of Tel Goran in al-Hassakeh province after local Arab leaders negotiated with the terror group for three days, according to Assyrian International News Agency, or AINA.

Those released included 17 women and two men. Many more from the same village and hundreds from other villages remain captive.

AINA estimates that ISIS captured between 262 and 373 Assyrians from 35 villages on Feb. 23. Their release is also being negotiated.

The Assyrians, an indigenous Christian people, trace their roots back to ancient Mesopotamia.

According to Catholic Herald, ISIS militants have killed 15 of those it captured in February.

“Around 15 young Assyrians are martyred. Many of them were fighting to defend and protect the villages and families,” Herald quoted Abbot Emanuel Youkhana as saying last week. “It is believed there are casualties and many Assyrians have been killed in the village,” he added.

Abbot Youkhana also said that the hostages were likely transported to the nearby area of Mount Abdul Aziz, which is controlled by ISIS.

About 3,000 Assyrians have fled their villages, and there are no families left in the 35 Assyrian Christian villages that were attacked last month. The only people left in the region are Christian militia fighters who are fighting alongside Kurdish troops.

Since last June, when ISIS declared its “caliphate,” the terror group has killed roughly 2,000 people, about two-thirds of them civilians, according to the Observatory.

Source : Christian Post

‘Dancing With the Stars’ Season 20: Chris Soules Confirmed as Mystery Contestant

The Bachelor Youtube Screenshot/ file

Chris Soules

Christian Post Report – The mystery contestant of “Dancing with the Stars” season 20 has been revealed, and according to UsWeekly it’s none other than Chris Soules, this year’s star of “The Bachelor.”

On Wednesday March 3, the website revealed that the 33-year old farmer will be on the hit ABC competition.

When the celebrities competing on DWTS were announced on “Good Morning America” on Feb. 24, one name that was not mentioned was the star partnered with dance pro and season 19 winner Witney Carson.

“Her partner couldn’t rose—I mean, rise so early to here,” DWTS host Tom Bergeron said at the time. Fans of the show thought that Bergeron might have been referring to Soules in that statement.

A source told Us Weekly that Soules has been meeting with DWTS producers over the past few weeks. He even reportedly called fellow Bachelor Sean Lowe, a “Dancing with the Stars” alum, for advice.

“He seems like he’s not totally sure what he’s getting himself into! It will be fascinating to see how well he does,” said the source.

Soules will be joining the rest of the star-studded cast including Michael Sam, Nastia Liukin, Riker Lynch, Patti LaBelle, Willow Shields, Robert Herjavec, Redfoo, Charlotte McKinney, Noah Galloway, Rumer Willis, and Suzanne Somers.

ABC is reportedly pulling out all the stops to celebrate the show’s 20th season, which also happens to be its 10th anniversary. It was previously reported that producers will bring back Disney and Latin theme nights and introduce a new Spring Break special night.

Another new element is the addition of all-access cameras in the rehearsal studios, which will be made available on live stream. The Mirror Ball Trophy has also undergone a transformation, changing from the traditional silver to gold for the show’s 10th anniversary.

“Dancing with the Stars” season 20 premieres on March 16 at 8 p.m. on ABC.

Source : Christian Post

‘Agnostic’ Disney Star on How Role in Movie ‘Saved His Life’, Reignited His Christian Faith

  • Former Disney Channel star David Henrie will release his first short film
    (Photo: Benjo Arwas
    Former Disney Channel star David Henrie will release his first short film “Catch” in June 2014.

Speaking at a recent screening of the upcoming film “Little Boy” in New York, former Disney Channel actor David Henrie explained how working on the movie helped “save his life” by snapping him out of an “agnostic” rut in his life and led him back to Christianity.

Christian Post Report – The 25-year-old Henrie, who starred in the popular Disney show “Wizards of Waverly Place,” plays London Busbee, the older brother of the main character Pepper Busbee, or the “little boy.” The plot of the movie is that 7-year-old Pepper is desperately trying to find a way to bring his father back home from World War II and tries to do everything in his power through faith to make that happen.

The Christian entertainment news site Breathecast reports that Henrie told the audience at the Feb. 26 screening that when he first read the script, he was so moved that he sat in a coffee house and wept. Henrie recalled that he told his agent “this is the best script I have ever read, please get me in for this.”

After auditioning for a role in the movie, Henrie said he met some of the films producers, like Eduardo Verastegui, who were influential in helping him return to faith. The movie was written and directed by Smithsonian Institute Award-winning director Alejandro Gomez Monteverde.

“They were instrumental in changing my life, helping me to find the greater good and awaken the little boy in my heart, and led me back to my faith, led me back to my beliefs, and it has completely changed my life,” Henrie asserted.

The report also adds that Henrie, who proclaims to be a devout Catholic, confessed that he was in “a very agnostic place” in his life before working on the set of “Little Boy.”

“When we were on set, there were people of all different beliefs,” Henrie explained. “I had no clue that there were Christians behind the film. I will forever be grateful for ‘Little Boy’ because it was the film that saved my life.”

ASSIST News Service’s Dan Woodling interviewed Verastegui and the movie’s lead actor, Jakob Salvati, who plays Pepper Busbee, at the National Religious Broadcasters’ Convention in Nashville, Tennessee, in late February.

Salvati, who is the son of a California pastor in real life, explained the Christian overtones visibly present in the movie.

“Yes, I try everything in my power through faith to get my father back, because in my own life, I have learned from preachers at church that you can move a mountain with just a mustard seed of faith,” Salvati explained. “And in the film, I try everything in my power, but instead of just moving a mountain, I’m ending the war so I can bring my dad back.”

Salvati and Verastegui explained that Pepper’s faith was influenced by a priest who told him that one of the things he needed to do to bring his dad home from World War II was to befriend the Japanese person in his town.

“He gave me a list that will bring up my faith as I believe that having faith as a mustard seed can bring my dad home,” Salvati said. “So I try everything in my power to get that list done. One of the things on the list was to befriend Hashimoto who has the enemy’s face, but he’s not really the enemy.”

“Because we are in World War II, Hashimoto was the only Japanese in town and everyone hated him, including ‘Little Boy’ because he thinks he’s the reason why his dad is in World War II fighting against Japanese,” Verastegui added. “But then the priest tells him, ‘Your faith cannot work if you have hatred in your heart. So you have to become his friend.’ In other words, ‘If you want to be perfect, love your enemy and a part of the list is just that — loving your enemy.”

Although Henrie has been acting since he was nine, he said the serious nature of the role that he plays in the “Little Boy” took some getting used to because he is more accustomed to acting in comedies.

“The emotion was a lot and I wasn’t use to that,” Henrie said. “Angry and emotional all the time was tough, but you learn to laugh at it.”

Source : Christian Post

Chicago Bears NFL 2015 Trade News, Rumors: Brandon Marshall Traded to New York Jets

Brandon Marshall (Photo: Reuters/Beck Diefenbach)

Brandon Marshall (top) catches a touchdown pass above San Francisco 49ers cornerback Chris Culliver (29) during the third quarter of their NFL football game in San Francisco, California, November 19, 2012.

The Chicago Bears have traded WR Brandon Marshall to the New York Jets. The deal, which cannot be completed until Tuesday when the League year starts, is pending Marshall passing a physical. Since he was hampered by injuries last season that may not be a foregone conclusion. This move has implications for both teams but for the Bears it seems they are moving on from a highly talented, relatively affordable playmaker.

The return for the Bears, who sent two third round picks to Miami to get Marshall in 2012, are getting no where near that in return. Most reports have them getting a mid to late round pick. New Bears’ Coach John Fox likely doesn’t want the distraction of Marshall who publically criticized QB Jay Cutler while the team was struggling last year.

For the Jets the trade likely means they are ready to move on from WR Percy Harvin. The Seattle Seahawks dealt him to New York last October for a conditional 2015 pick. With Marshall in the mix as well as Eric Decker means the team will not want to keep Harvin and his 10.5 million dollar cap hit. Getting something in return for the troubled Harvin may be an uphill battle for a team looking to surround a young QB with positive, elite talent.

Marshall is owed 7.5 million guaranteed if he is on the roster as of March 12th. He is signed for 7.9 and 8.3 million for the next two seasons. A rebuilding team like the Bears can use that money for other players but that is still relatively affordable given what top WR’s get on the free agent market. That seems to indicate this was more about attitude than actual football skill. There are also some rumors that the team was miffed at Marshall for his weekly trips to New York to film a TV show, whish is possibly a jump start on his post playing career.

Source : Christian Post

The Strange Tale of the Stoned Reverend

The Strange Tale of the Stoned Reverend

 The Rev. Chris Schuller, former rector at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in St. Petersburg, Florida, who posted a video on YouTube calling on people to “thank God for marijuana” and stop being judgmental by “throwing stones at people who are already stoned,” might soon face punishment from his bishop for the public statements supporting the recreational use of the drug.

Christian Post Report – While the video was posted back in December it was recently brought to the attention of Bishop Dabney Smith, head of the Episcopal Diocese of Southwest Florida.

Diocesan spokesman Garland Pollard told The Tampa Bay Times in an interview published Wednesday that the bishop “was very disturbed by the video.”

“In this age of social media, we have two hats that we wear in the world, and we need to think of how we present ourselves. And the clergy is held to a higher standard,” continued Pollard.

Read more at http://www.christianpost.com/news/episcopal-priest-says-christians-should-stop-being-judgmental-and-thank-god-for-marijuana-video-135190/

Source : Christian Post

Karrueche Tran Breaks Up With Chris Brown on Social Media

Karrueche Tran Instagram/ karrueche

Karrueche Tran

Christian Post Report – Chris Brown and Karrueche Tran are known to have an on-off relationship, but it appears as though things may have finally ended for the two as Tran has broken up with the singer on social media, and this time, the couple may not be getting back together anytime soon.

According to TMZ, Chris Brown is the father of a 9-month-old baby girl. The report states that the child’s mother is a former model named Nia, whom the 25-year old “Ayo” singer has known for several years.

Several media outlets have reached out to Brown’s rep, who opted not to comment on the reports, and the recording artist has yet to make a statement about the paternity claims.

However, Tran took to Twitter on Wednesday, March 4, and her post appears to confirm that Brown is indeed a father.

“Listen, one can only take so much,” she wrote. “The best of luck to Chris and his family. No baby drama for me.”

The tweet instantly made waves on social media, and Karrueche was even trending worldwide on Twitter on Wednesday.

A source tells E! News that Tran sent the tweet because she knows for a fact that the allegations are true.

On Feb. 27, Tran posted a tweet which has since been deleted which read, “Ya’ll know a Nia?”

Another source tells E! News that Tran was caught off guard and shocked by the report, adding that it was the last thing she thought she’d ever hear. The source said that Brown has tried to reach out to Tran “all day, every day” but the model doesn’t want to hear anything from him right now and has refused to answer his calls.

Meanwhile, TMZ reports that Brown has allegedly offered to take an active role in raising the child, reportedly named Royalty, who lives in Texas with her mother.

Source : Christian Post