LA Pastor Says God Showed Him the End of the Coronavirus

LA Pastor Says God Showed Him the End of the Coronavirus


Shawn Bolz, a prophetic pastor in Los Angeles, believes that God showed him the end of the coronavirus and that “the tide is turning now,” according to Fox News.

“He is answering the prayers and cries of the nations and is putting an end in sight,” Bolz tweeted. “The exaggerated fear-based tactics of both the enemy and several media outlets for political reasons is coming to an end. The enemy has been trying to distract and steal from several equally important purposes and issues by dominating airwaves with conspiracy and fear.”

The coronavirus, which started in China, has spread to over 90,000 people and killed over 3,000. It has sparked worldwide alarm, including in the US where eleven people have died from it.

Bolz heard this prophecy from the Lord while at an event in South Africa where he was speaking with Bethel pastor Bill Johnson and Sean Feuct, a Bethel musician running for Congress in California.

While singing Bethel’s new song, “God of Revival,” he heard God tell him that the virus would soon end.

“I just felt like the tide is turning shortly—whether it’s two weeks or two months—God cares about this,” Bolz said. “He’s answering prayer and I saw two vaccines coming. I think one will come from Israel and another from an Asian nation, and they’re going to hit pretty quickly.”

Countries all over the world are working on a vaccine, but officials predict that it…

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Alex Trebek Credits ‘Faith in God,’ Prayers for Beating 18 Percent Survival Rate

Alex Trebek Credits ‘Faith in God,’ Prayers for Beating 18 Percent Survival Rate


Alex Trebek, the longtime host of the popular television game show Jeopardy!, is crediting his faith in God and the prayers of “millions” for helping him beat a low survival rate for patients with advanced pancreatic cancer.

Trebek, who has stage four pancreatic cancer, noted in a video posted on social media Wednesday that the one-year survival rate for those in his situation is 18 percent.

“I’m very happy to report I have just reached that marker,” Trebek said. “Now, I’d be lying if I said the journey had been an easy one. There were some good days, but a lot of not-so-good days. I joked with friends that the cancer won’t kill me; the chemo treatments will. There were moments of great pain, days when certain bodily functions no longer functioned, and sudden massive attacks of great depression that made me wonder if it really was worth fighting on.

“But I brushed that aside quickly because that would have been a massive betrayal – a betrayal of my wife and soulmate Jean who has given her all to help me survive,” he said. “It would have been a betrayal of other cancer patients who have looked to me as an inspiration and a cheerleader of sorts of the value of living and hope.

“And,” Trebek added, “it would certainly have been a betrayal of my faith in God and the millions of prayers that have been said on my behalf.”

Trebek encouraged his fans to face…

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At trans fashion show, focus is on models

Asher is just Asher — not he, or she, or they. At age 12, that’s the way Asher likes it.

But strutting down the catwalk in a light peach dress with flowing tulle, evoking nothing less than a princess, Asher glows.

Asher’s mother sits in the audience, applauding her child. She and others are here to cheer loved ones in what is described as a “celebration of gender identity and expression” — a celebration of who they are, not just what they wear or how they present.

This is the First Event Conference, held for four decades by the Trans Club of New England. Many years ago, the conference added a fashion show, featuring about a dozen male-to-female crossdressers. But over time, the focus became less and less the clothes, and more and more the people in them.

On a winter’s night, 40 people — transmen, transwomen and others who do not fit easily into any category, models ranging in age from 8 to 78 — walk the runway.

The older ones can easily recall a time when people like them were universally regarded as freaks, when a public occasion like this one, and all the love of family and friends that surrounds it, was unimaginable.

Not that it’s all been easy; Julie Gregory is 57, and says her sister “actually called me ugly in a picture I sent her and said that she has a brother, not a sister.” But her wife (they’ve been together 14 years) is supportive. Hormones have made Julie a more confident woman, and she looks forward to surgery.

“I have always had beauty inside,” she says. “I am now showing that to the world on the outside by my transition and I am so blessed to get to live as a woman who has so much love to give.”

Lisa Smith gets to live as a man and as a woman. “I have a male identity and a female one that I display at different times,” she says. Lisa is 70, and happily married for 44 years. Her wife prefers not to meet Lisa or see her in photos; she knows her husband as a male, the way Lisa spends most of her life.

But when she puts on the dress, when she is Lisa, “I do the best I can to appear as the woman I would have been, had I been born a woman.”

Some young ones like Asher have never had to conform to stereotypes. They just are.

Asher’s mother recalls the milestones: how Asher brought a prized tube of blue lipstick to kindergarten, and began wearing her sundresses in the summer before third grade, and “started getting really amazing at makeup and hair in the fourth grade.”

The teachers, staff and students at Asher’s school, she says, have come to understand: Asher is not a boy, not a girl. Asher is non-binary. Asher is Asher.

And it is Asher who strides the runway, triumphant.

___

Source: Associated Press – WONG MAYE-E

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Jonathan Evans Says Lois Evans’ Faithfulness Until Death Reminds Christians to ‘Focus on Christ’

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Jonathan Evans, son of pastor Tony Evans and the late Lois Evans, shared how his mother’s faithfulness and perseverance in the face of incurable cancer taught him the importance of staying focused on God’s purposes despite setbacks.

Evans, managing director at The Urban Alternative, spoke at the opening session of the NRB 2020 Christian Media Convention on Feb. 25, just months after his mother died from an incurable form of cancer.

Evans shared how Lois Evans received her cancer diagnosis just a year ago, around the same time Tony Evans was given the NRB Hall of Fame Award. While the Evans family was devastated, Lois encouraged them to refrain from despair and instead stay focused on furthering the Gospel.

“I have every expectation that you will love me and care for me and pray for me and be there with me,” Jonathan Evans recalled his mother saying. “I have every expectation that you will do that as my family, but God has an expectation that you always remember, through thick and thin, that you are here to serve the purposes of God.”

“[She said], ‘Everything from pain and anguish … opposition that comes against you is all a distraction from the reason why you are here,’” he shared. “So will you stand up and hold your head up and you will continue the work of the ministry.”

Every Christian, Evans stressed, would do well to learn from his mother’s faithfulness in the face of suffering.

“Everybody here is facing something where you need to hear a word that says that you are here no matter what you’re going through, no matter what you face. You’re here to serve the purposes of God,” he said. “Do not turn to the left or to the right, we are too close. The Promise Land is right here.”

Evans, who played in the NFL for five years, said that every football player plays on Sunday “thinking about Monday.”

“Why? Every time a player is playing the game they’re thinking about the next day because the next day is where you have to watch the film and be accountable for your previous performance,” he explained.

“You better stay focused, because one day your coach will pull down the screen and turn on the overhead projector and pick up the red pointer and all he would wonder is, ‘Are you out there bearing image of the uniform that I gave you, based on the playbook that I wrote for you? Or were you out there doing your own thing, serving your own purpose?’”

Source: Christian Post

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New Cinderella Film to Feature ‘Genderless’ Fairy Godmother—’Kids Are Ready’

New Cinderella Film to Feature ‘Genderless’ Fairy Godmother—’Kids Are Ready’


An upcoming theatrical remake of the classical story Cinderella will include a “genderless” Fairy Godmother played by actor and singer Billy Porter.

Porter, who is gay, told CBS News the 2021 Sony movie will be a “classic fairytale for a new generation.” Singer Camila Cabello will play the lead role of Cinderella. 

“It hit me when I was on the set last week, how profound it is that I am playing the Fairy Godmotherthey call it the Fab G,” Porter told CBS News this week. “Magic has no gender.

“We are presenting this character as genderlessat least that’s how I’m playing it. And it’s really powerful,” he said.

Addressing the controversy over a genderless character in a Cinderella film, Porter added, “I think the new generation is really ready. The kids are ready. It’s the grownups that are slowing stuff down.” 

Disney released its own live-action version of Cinderella in 2015, but the Sony version presumably will be much different. Deadline previously described the 2021 movie as a “musical comedy” that “re-imagines the traditional Cinderella story in which our heroine is an ambitious young woman whose dreams are bigger than the world will allow.”

Porter is known for challenging gender norms. Earlier this year, Porter wore a dress as he appeared on PBS’ Sesame Street. He pushed back against critics of his attire. 

“If you don’t like it,…

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Erdogan, Putin Meet in Hopes of Reaching Syria Ceasefire

MOSCOW (AP) – The Turkish and Russian presidents on Thursday sat down for talks in Moscow aimed at ending hostilities in northwestern Syria involving their forces along with proxies that threaten to pit Turkey against Russia in a direct military conflict.
  
Before the latest crisis, President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had managed to coordinate their interests in Syria even though Moscow backed Syrian President Bashar Assad while Ankara supported its foes throughout Syria’s nine-year war. Both Russia and Turkey appear eager to avoid a showdown, but the sharply conflicting interests in Idlib province make it difficult to negotiate a mutually acceptable compromise. 
  
Both leaders underlined the need to reach agreement at the start of the Kremlin talks. Putin said they need to work out steps to end fighting and prevent damage to bilateral relations. Erdogan also voiced hope for finding a settlement and pointed at blossoming Russia-Turkey trade.
  
A Russia-backed Syrian offensive to regain control over Idlib – the last opposition-controlled region in the country – has pushed nearly a million Syrians toward Turkey. Erdogan responded by opening Turkey’s gateway to Europe in an apparent bid to coerce the West to offer more support to Ankara.
  
Turkey has sent thousands of troops into Idlib to repel the Syrian army, and clashes on the ground and in the air that have left dozens dead on both sides. Russia, which has helped Assad reclaim most of the country’s territory, has signaled it wouldn’t sit idle to see Turkey rout his troops.
  
Putin offered his condolences to Erdogan over Turkish losses in a Syrian airstrike, but noted that Syrian troops also suffered heavy losses. 
  
“We need to discuss the situation to prevent any such incidents and also not to damage Russia-Turkey relations that we cherish,” the Russian leader said.
  
“The world’s eye are on us,” Erdogan said. “The steps we will take, the right decisions we will take here today will help ease (concerns in) the region and our countries.”
  
Just before sitting down with Erdogan, Putin discussed the situation in Idlib with European Council head Charles Michel who met the Turkish president in Ankara on Wednesday. The Kremlin said Michel informed Putin about the EU’s efforts to block the flow of migrants.
  
After Turkey had downed several Syrian jets, Moscow warned Ankara that its aircraft would be unsafe if they enter Syrian airspace – a veiled threat to engage Russian military assets in Syria.
  
Russian warplanes based in Syria have provided air cover for Assad’s offensive in Idlib. 
  
Opposition activists in Idlib blamed Russian aircraft for Thursday’s strike on a rebel-held village which they said killed at least 15 people, including children, and wounded several others. The Russian military had no immediate comment on the claim, but it has staunchly denied similar previous claims insisting it hasn’t targeted residential areas.
  
The fighting in Idlib comes as the most severe test to Russia-Turkey ties since the crisis triggered by Turkey’s downing of a Russian warplane near the Syrian border in November 2015. Russia responded with an array of sweeping economic sanctions, cutting the flow of its tourists to Turkey and banning most Turkish exports – a punishment that eventually forced Turkey to back off and offer apologies.
  
Turkey can’t afford a replay of that costly crisis, far less a military conflict with a nuclear power, but it has a strong position to bargain with. Moscow needs Ankara as a partner in a Syrian settlement and Russia’s supply routes for its forces in Syria lie through the Turkish Straits. 
  
Moscow also hopes to use Ankara in its standoff with the West. Last year, Turkey became the first NATO country to take delivery of sophisticated Russian air defense missile systems, angering the United States. Turkey has put its deployment on hold amid the crisis in Idlib.
  
The talks in Moscow will mark the 10th encounter in just over a year between Putin and Erdogan, who call each other “dear friend” and have polished a fine art of bargaining.
  
Last October, they reached an agreement to deploy their forces across Syria’s northeastern border to fill the void left by President Donald Trump’s abrupt withdrawal of U.S. forces. Prior to that they had negotiated a series of accords that saw opposition fighters from various areas in Syria move into Idlib and in 2018 carved out a de-escalation zone in Idlib.
  
They blamed one another for the collapse of the Idlib deal, with Moscow holding Ankara responsible for letting al-Qaida linked militants launch attacks from the area and Turkey accusing Moscow of failing to rein in Assad.
  
A possible compromise on Idlib could see Assad retain control over the key M5 highway, which his forces claimed in the latest offensive. The road that spans Syria linking Damascus with Aleppo, the country’s commercial capital, is essential for Assad to consolidate his rule.
  
In a sign that the Kremlin firmly intends to secure control of the M5, earlier this week Russian military police have deployed to a strategic town of Saraqeb sitting on the highway to ward off any Turkish attempt to retake it. 
  
In return, Putin could accept the presence of Turkey-backed militants in the areas alongside the border and put brakes for now on Assad’s attempts to claim full control over Idlib.
  
___
  
Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey, contributed to this report.

(Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.)

Source CBN

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First US Coronavirus Death Confirmed Outside Washington State

WASHINGTON, DC – Health officials say a California man has died from coronavirus in the first US death outside the state of Washington. They say he was likely exposed on a cruise to Mexico that returned last month. California officials are now trying to track down other passengers and testing kits are being flown aboard the ship after new passengers complained of flu-like symptoms. 

“The ship will not come onshore until we appropriately assess the passengers,” California Governor Gavin Newsom said Wednesday. 

Newsom has declared a state of emergency as the number of California cases surpasses 50 – the most in the country. Los Angeles County has also declared a local emergency. 

“We need every tool at our disposal to make sure we’re ready to support any coronavirus patient who is diagnosed and to prevent any further spread,” said Hilda Solis, the LA County supervisor. 

In New York, hundreds are under self-quarantine after family members and neighbors of a victim tested positive. Nationally, that brings the total number of cases to more than 150 in 17 states with 11 deaths. 

Globally, though, the infection rates and death tolls are much higher. More than 95,000 people in at least 80 countries have been infected, and the latest reports show the death toll around 3,200. 

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Meanwhile, in the US Capitol, the House of Representatives has approved $8 billion in funding to fight the disease, including $3 billion for developing treatments. The bill now goes to the Senate where it’s expected to pass. 

The CDC is also expanding its guidelines on testing, allowing more people to get tested. 

Vice President Mike Pence, who’s overseeing the government’s response to the outbreak, tried to reassure Americans Wednesday in a news conference with reporters. 

“If you are a healthy American, the risk of contracting the coronavirus remains low,” said Pence. 

Pence said more than 1.5 million testing kits are being shipped across the country. He and members of his team are scheduled to travel to Washington state Thursday to meet with Governor Jay Inslee and health officials. 
 

Source CBN

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Honeymooners quarantined 27 days: How coronavirus spreads and help from the wisdom of Job

Rachel and Tyler Torres made it home to the Dallas area this week. The honeymooners were on a cruise from Japan in January when there was an outbreak of COVID-19 on their ship. They spent twenty-seven days in quarantine, including fourteen days on a military base in San Antonio. “We joke now that we’ve been married fifteen years,” Rachel says.

In related news, release of the new James Bond movie will be postponed to November because of theater closures in China (which is the second biggest movie market in the world, behind the US), Italy, and South Korea. The governor of California declared a state of emergency yesterday as the number of coronavirus cases in the state rose to fifty-four. And Congress agreed to an $8.3 billion emergency spending bill to combat the epidemic. 

Advice from health professionals 

Coronavirus is affecting our planet in ways we have not seen in my lifetime. The Washington Post reports that “the spreading coronavirus is shaping up as a pandemic of potentially historic proportions, possibly on the scale of the global outbreak of influenza in 1957 but unlikely to be as catastrophic as the Spanish flu of 1918.” 

How should we protect ourselves? Here is some advice offered by health professionals

Let’s begin by explaining how the disease is transmitted. Droplets containing the virus are ejected from those who are sick via the mouth or nose as they cough, sneeze, laugh, sing, or talk. These droplets typically land on the floor or ground unless they hit something along the way. 

To access our cells, they must enter our bodies through the eyes, nose, or mouth. (You cannot absorb them through the skin.) Experts believe sneezing and coughing are likely the primary forms of transmission. Talking face-to-face or sharing a meal could pose a risk as well. 

According to the World Health Organization, viral droplets can survive on surfaces for a few hours up to several days. If we touch these…

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Churches Taking Extra Precautions as WHO Warns Coronavirus is Deadlier Than Flu

Churches and other religious groups are now ramping up measures to protect their congregants from the Covid-19 disease caused by the new coronavirus as the World Health Organization warned Tuesday that it’s now deadlier than the flu.

“Globally, about 3.4 percent of reported Covid-19 cases have died,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHO’s director general, said at a news conference in Geneva, Switzerland. “By comparison, seasonal flu generally kills far fewer than 1 percent of those infected.”

As of Tuesday more than 90,000 people had been infected with the new coronavirus with more than 3,100 deaths globally.

“This virus is not SARS, it’s not MERS, and it’s not influenza,” Tedros emphasized at the news conference. “It is a unique virus with unique characteristics.”

Tedros also highlighted other differences between the coronavirus and the flu, which are both primarily spread from small droplets from the nose or mouth. For instance, a lot of the transmission of the flu is driven by infected people who aren’t showing symptoms. In the case of the coronavirus, infected people not showing symptoms only accounts for a small fraction of the spread.

The spread of the coronavirus can also be contained, unlike the flu. The new strain of coronavirus causes more severe illness than the flu, Tedros said, because “there are not yet any vaccines or therapeutics … which is why we must do everything we can to contain it.”

And as at least 15 states in the U.S. reported coronavirus cases, religious leaders have been responding as needed as the warnings against the disease grow more urgent.

SOURCE: Christian Post, Leonardo Blair

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Five of the Most Common Questions We Get about Church Revitalization and Replanting

Revitalize & Replant is sponsored by the North American Mission Board and ChurchReplanters.com. More than 10% of churches in North America are at risk of closing and the North American Mission Board is committed to reversing this trend by decreasing the death rate of existing churches while simultaneously increasing the birth rate of new churches. To learn more about what it means to become a replanting pastor or to explore resources for replanting and revitalization in your own church, visit ChurchReplanters.com.

Do you have a question about church revitalization or replanting for us to use on the podcast? Visit the podcast page to submit your question. If we use it on the show, you’ll get a copy of Autopsy of a Deceased Church and Reclaiming Glory.

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