Hundreds Gather at Western Wall to Pray for China, End to Coronavirus

Hundreds Gather at Western Wall to Pray for China, End to Coronavirus


Hundreds of Israelis gathered at the Western Wall in Jerusalem Sunday to pray for an end to the coronavirus, citing traditional prayers and Psalms and even singing and dancing.

A sign on the men’s side of the Western Wall read in Hebrew and Chinese, “The People of Israel pray for the sake of China.”

The Jerusalem Post reported that the ceremony was promoted by Shmuel Eliyahu, chief rabbi of Safed and president of the Rabbinical Community Association.

As of Tuesday, there were 72,436 confirmed cases of the coronavirus and 1,868 deaths from it.

“Millions and millions of people are going through tremendous suffering in China and outside China,” Rabbi Avi Berman, executive director of the Israeli branch of the Orthodox Union, told The Jerusalem Post. “As Jews, we believe that God has the power to send healing. We are not doctors, but we can pray.

“We look at our forefathers and see how when they saw trouble in the world, they prayed to God to take care of it, they prayed for the sick to recover and for the poor to find sustenance,” Berman added. “The Chinese people represent one-sixth of the world and many are affected also in the United States, in Europe, in Asia. We should all worry about what is happening and come together to do something about it.”

King David, Berman said, “composed beautiful prayers that we can use” to pray.

The ceremony ended with a shofar blast,…

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Pastor Among 24 People Killed in Burkina Faso Church Attack

A pastor and at least 23 others were killed and 18 others injured after gunmen attacked a church in northeast Burkina Faso on Sunday. In a neighboring community, a deacon, a pastor, and the pastor’s family were killed by abductors over the weekend.

Col. Salfo Kabore, the regional governor, told AFP that a group of “armed terrorists” attacked a Protestant church in the border village of Pansi in the Yagha province during worship services on Sunday.

Kabore said that gunmen “attacked the peaceful local population, after having identified them and separated them from non-residents.”

The mayor of Boundore commune, Sihanri Osangola Brigadie, told ABC News that about 20 gunmen had attacked the church. Brigadie visited some of the victims at a hospital located about 110 miles from the attack.

“It hurt me when I saw the people,” Brigadie was quoted as saying.

A government official who spoke with ABC News on the condition of anonymity said that both Muslims and Christians were killed in the attack and the church was set on fire.

Additionally, the gunmen were said to have kidnapped three minors and forced the youth to help transport oil and rice raided from the town shops.

A resident of Sebba, a nearby town to Pansi, told AFP that fleeing villagers fled to Sebba for safety.

The attack comes as over 4,000 were killed by Islamic extremist attacks in Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali in 2019, according to the United Nations envoy for West Africa and the Sahel Mohamed Ibn Chambas.

Since 2016, Islamic extremist groups including the Islamic State West Africa Province and Ansaroul Islam have carried out attacks throughout the Sahel region of West Africa.

SOURCE: Christian Post, Samuel Smith

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In Disney version of ‘Extreme Makeover,’ castle gets updated

Even Cinderella needs an “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition.”

Disney officials said Monday that the iconic Cinderella Castle at Walt Disney World in Florida would be renovated over the next several months.

The most noticeable changes will be the addition of gold trim to most of the castle and the darkening of the blue hue on the castle’s turrets. The castle is located in the Magic Kingdom park.

Work on the castle will last through the summer. Despite the work, shows at the castle will continue as usual, Jason Kirk, a vice president of the Magic Kingdom, said in a blog post.

The renovation is coming during the 70th anniversary of the release of the 1950 classic animated film, “Cinderella.”

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Source: Associated Press

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‘Fresh Off the Boat’ leaving indelible mark on TV landscape

Even before “Fresh Off the Boat” hit the airwaves on ABC in February 2015, the show was facing pressure that other new shows weren’t.

It was set to be the first network TV comedy with an all-Asian cast since Margaret Cho’s “All-American Girl” premiered 20 years earlier. ABC canceled that series after one season, and some wondered how long this show would last too.

Randall Park, who portrays patriarch Louis, never even thought the pilot — inspired by restaurateur and TV personality Eddie Huang’s childhood memoir — would be picked up.

“The odds of a show getting picked up are tiny. On top of that, being an Asian-American family at the center of a show just made it kind of seem impossible in my head,” Park told The Associated Press in a phone interview from Atlanta, where he is filming the Marvel/Disney+ series “WandaVision.”

Now, after six seasons, “Fresh Off the Boat” will make its final voyage Friday.

Without question, the sitcom, centered on a Taiwanese-Chinese American family in the 1990s living in predominantly white Orlando, Florida — will be immortalized in the canon of Asian-American representation. It accomplished some unique firsts, like being the first American TV show to film on location in Taiwan and having a majority of dialogue in one episode be in Mandarin. It paved the path for movie stardom for Park (“Always Be My Maybe”) and on-screen wife Constance Wu (“Crazy Rich Asians,” “Hustlers”). And having passed 100 episodes, the Huangs will live on in syndication for years to come.

Hudson Yang, 16, was 9 years old when he won the role of Eddie. Thanks to his father, journalist Jeff Yang, he had an inkling this wasn’t just any TV gig.

“My Dad would definitely talk about how important it was to have this kind of show. We talked about how previously ‘All-American Girl’ tried to do the same thing,” Yang said. “I knew a little bit about how important it was but I didn’t really know the full scale until a little bit later on.”

The series used culturally specific humor while trying to universally appeal to a broadcast network audience.

“What was smart was having a writers’ room, showrunner and actors that felt more empowered like they were part of the process,” said Stephen Gong, executive director of the Center for Asian American Media. “They take that stereotype-based joke and turn it on its head a little bit more. That’s where the in-community joke gets funnier.”

The show may also be remembered for headlines generated off-screen. Wu, who was not available for an interview, shocked viewers when she angrily tweeted about the show’s renewal in May. She issued an explanation the next day, saying she would have to give up another project. She also apologized for being “insensitive” to struggling actors.

During the show’s first season, the real-life Eddie Huang distanced himself from the show. In an essay for Vulture in 2015, he slammed it as a “cornstarch story” that was less about about specific moments in his life and was instead a bland, “one-size-fits-all” narrative. Huang hasn’t wavered.

“I take representing my experience as an Asian American in this country very seriously,” Huang said in an interview in January. “I never compromised it for what a company or brand or studio told me to do.”

For better or worse, the show was often treated as a default ambassador for the Asian-American experience. So, the cast understands some of the criticism from Huang and others.

“As expected, there were some people who were like ‘This isn’t my family.’ It’s an understandable kind of response when there’s only one,” Park said. “But I get stopped by people of different races who say how much they love the show.”

“Fresh Off the Boat’s” absence leaves “Awkwafina is Nora from Queens,” the Comedy Central series led by the star of “The Farewell,” as the only other U.S. series with a mostly Asian cast. But because of “Fresh Off the Boat,” there’s already hope that Asian American-led successors will no longer be seen as out of the ordinary.

“It is redefining what mainstream culture is. I think that’s the legacy,” Gong said. “It helped redefined a space that will help all creative Asian American media, producers and artists.”

As a young Asian American actor, Yang said it’s been exciting to see how much the landscape has already changed in six years. He cited Ken Jeong’s since canceled ABC sitcom, “Dr. Ken,” and the game-changing opportunities for other “Crazy Rich Asians” actors.

“Henry Golding, he’s playing Snake Eyes,” Yang said. “I feel like things are slowly changing. Soon, we hopefully won’t have to worry too much about only having a few of us on TV, only having a few of us represented.”

Park credits “Fresh Off the Boat” fame for allowing him to be choosier about work. The actor, who co-wrote “Always Be My Maybe” with friends including Ali Wong — a former staff writer on the show — recently formed his own production company.

“I’m in more of a position to create things now which is really exciting,” Park said. “It’s been a focus of mine tell more stories from an Asian American perspective.”

Park also recently was in a position to direct. He helmed the series finale, which will include flashes of the Huang family’s future. Pulling double duty distracted him from getting overwhelmed with emotions.

“While a lot of people were crying, I was thinking about the next step,” Park said.

For Yang, the next step will likely be college as well as the next acting job. And he knows he can think big.

“My dream role is always gonna be Amadeus Cho. He’s the Asian hulk,” said Yang, referring to the fictional superhero in the Marvel comic books. “But now, my dream for the next role is something fundamentally different from Eddie.”

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Source: Associated Press – Terry Tang

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Michael Brown on As We Mindlessly Careen Our Way Down the Slippery Slope

Is anyone surprised that HGTV recently featured its first “throuple”—in this case, a man and two women? But what else should we expect? This is the inevitable direction of our society’s slippery moral slide. The avalanche goes downward, not upward.

People Magazine reported on Feb. 13, “With 17 seasons under its belt, House Hunters made HGTV history on Wednesday when it featured its first throuple—three people in a polyamorous romantic relationship—on one of its episodes.”

The episode was titled, “Three’s Not a Crowd in Colorado Springs.” And it featured one line in which one of the two women, named Lori, commented, “This is a couple’s kitchen, not a throuple’s kitchen.”

Polyamory is now as American as apple pie.

Of course, for years we were mocked for predicting this very thing.

For years we were vilified for saying that the redefining of marriage to include homosexual unions would soon lead to more radical redefinitions.

For years we were criticized for pointing to the presence of polyamorous groups marching in gay pride events. “We’re next,” they confidently proclaimed.

Now, “throuples” are being mainstreamed too. But why not?

It’s the question that I’ve never had answered in all of my interactions with LGBT activists and their allies. (For a classic example, see my debate with Prof. Eric Smaw.)

Put simply, if marriage is not the unique union of one man and one woman, then what is so sacred about the number two? As I asked in a 2015 article, “If Love Is Love, Why Not Three Men ‘Marrying’?”

For that matter, if love is love, why not four or more? Or why even need formal marriage? Conversely, why not marry yourself?

As absurd as this may sound, “self-marriage” (sologamy) has been growing in recent years. But why not? If marriage can be so fundamentally redefined as to include no member of the opposite sex (think of it!), then why not?

It’s like saying a duet can have one singer (or three). Or twins can refer to three babies (or one).

That’s just like saying marriage can refer to two men or two women. It fundamentally redefines the very meaning of the term.

And once that is done, then there’s no reason you can’t have throuples (or more). And there’s no reason people cannot marry themselves.

A search today for “self-marriage” yielded scores of thousands of hits, including links to a 2017 YouTube video on the What’s Trending channel. It was titled, “Sologamy: People Who Marry Themselves.”

SOURCE: Charisma News

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Esther Scott, “Dreamgirls” and “Boyz n the Hood” Actress, Dies at 66 After Heart Attack

Esther Scott, the veteran character actress who appeared in films and TV shows including Boyz N the HoodDreamgirlsTransformers, and Beverly Hills 90210, died Feb. 14 in Santa Monica, Calif., after suffering a heart attack. She was 66.

A representative for her talent agency confirmed the news to EW.

Scott got her start in Hollywood as a voice actress on the 1985 animated series Star Wars: Ewoks, where she brought to life the character of Shodu Warrick. She went on to appear on such popular shows as Full HouseEllenSister, SisterThe Geena Davis Show; and Hart of Dixie.

On the big screen, Scott’s credits covered a wide range including The CraftEncino ManDon Juan DeMarcoAustin Powers in GoldmemberThe Pursuit of HappynessGangster Squad, and The Birth of a Nation.

SOURCE: Entertainment Weekly, Rosy Cordero

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Priscilla Shirer Expresses Thanks for Prayers following Successful Lung Surgery

Priscilla Shirer Expresses Thanks for Prayers following Successful Lung Surgery


Bible teacher, actress and author Priscilla Shirer took to Instagram this week to thank the public for prayers after undergoing lung surgery she described as “curative.”

“I am recovering well from the surgery,” Shirer, the son of prominent pastor Dr. Tony Evans, said in the video. “My breathing is still pretty labored so I am working on my lung capacity, but doing really good … and the surgery was curative so Praise the Lord.”

Shirer, founder of Going Beyond Ministries, announced earlier this year she would undergo surgery on Jan. 13 after delaying it because of her mother’s battle with terminal cancer. Lois Evans died on Dec. 30, just two months after the family disclosed her chemotherapy treatments weren’t working.

As reported by Christian Headlines last month, Shirer said doctors had been monitoring a nodule they discovered three years ago on her left lung, but decided last summer that removal was imperative after the growth began showing “dangerous irregularities.”

“Thank you for praying for me and for our entire family,” she said at the time. “We refuse to cave to fear, anxiety or a decrease in faith … because, well … ain’t nobody got time for that! Through it all, we still believe God. We are trusting Him for a favorable outcome and that I will return to full health personally and full function in ministry.”

Shortly after Shirer left the…

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Abandoned ‘ghost ship’ washes up onshore: ‘God loves each of us as if there were only one of us’

A jogger running along Ireland’s southern coast last Sunday
spotted a most unusual sight: wedged onto a rocky outcropping below was a
mysterious 2,400-ton ship. The Irish Coast Guard was notified and sent a
helicopter to rescue any crew members aboard.

It turns out, the boat was a “ghost ship.”

The MV Alta was sailing from Greece to Haiti in September
2018 when it became disabled in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Ten crew
members were stranded aboard and eventually rescued by a US Coast Guard cutter.
Officials reached out to the ship’s owner, hoping it would hire a commercial
tugboat to tow the vessel to shore.

What happened next is unclear.

What we do know is that, last August, an ice patrol ship
manned by the British Royal Navy spotted the MV Alta in the middle of the
ocean. The vessel reportedly then crossed toward Africa, drifting north past
the Iberian Peninsula and into the Celtic Sea just south of the British Isles.

A massive storm over the weekend produced waves up to eighty
feet tall. They apparently brought the MV Alta to land as well.

Officials determined Monday that there was no sign of pollution. On Tuesday, a contractor was to inspect the wreck at low tide to determine what to do with the ship.

Let’s consider the “ghost ship” as a cultural
metaphor.

‘God loves each of us as if there were only one of us’

We live in an empiricist culture that believes “seeing
is believing.” Of course, we cannot use that maxim to prove its truth.

Nonetheless, we focus on what we can experience. Wars
overseas are less relevant to us than shootings near home. Brexit matters more
to the British and the Europeans than it does to the Australians.

And a ship floating in the middle of the ocean makes no news
until it makes land.

This focus on personal experience can cause us to value
ourselves by how others value us. A psychologist once taught me this formula:
“I am not what I think I am. I am not…

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“Good Times” Star Ja’Net Dubois Dies at 74

Ja’Net Dubois, one of the stars of “Good Times,” was found dead on Tuesday, TMZ reports.

Her family says she died in her sleep unexpectedly at her Glendale, California home.

Dubois played Willona Woods, the Evans family’s neighbor on the classic 70s sitcom.

She is most well known for her role on “Good Times,” but she also composed and sang the song “Movin’ On Up,” which was the theme for “The Jeffersons.”

SOURCE: FOX8

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Historically Christian Finland Threatens to Fine, Imprison Believers Who Speak Out on Matters of Faith

HELSINKI – Almost 70 percent of Finns are still members of the national Lutheran church. But that doesn’t mean they’re believers. Less than a third of Finns now say they believe in God. This historically Christian nation has not only left the faith but has begun criminal investigations of Christians. 

But this is still a nation with a constitution that still tells the national church to “proclaim a Bible-based Christian faith.” So, why is Finland investigating a member of parliament for ‘proclaiming her Bible-based Christian faith’?

MP Under Investigation for “Defaming or Insulting” Homosexuals

Päivi Räsänen is under two investigations for allegedly defaming or insulting homosexuals. The first after she shared a Bible verse on Twitter last year aimed at Finland’s Lutheran church for promoting the homosexual lifestyle.

Räsänen told us, “In my tweet, I directly cited Romans first chapter and verses 24 to 27 and posted the picture of the passages from the Bible.” The passage condemns homosexuality. 

Finland’s Prosecutor General has now opened a second investigation concerning a pamphlet that Päivi wrote 15 years ago about Biblical Christian marriage, called “Man and woman, He created them.”

Tweet Results in Criminal Investigation

It is biblical teaching that the Finnish constitution says it supports. Räsänen told us that because of that, she assumed the investigation would not go anywhere.

“Yes, yes, I assumed. In fact, it was a surprise for me that there is even a police investigation about that case. I wouldn’t have believed it. 

Leif Nummela, editor of a Christian newspaper and a Christian TV host in Finland told us, “I thought that this couldn’t happen. It was unbelievable. It was a real surprise. And my first thought was, ‘are they really going this far’?” 

The Lutheran pastor who published the pamphlet Päivi wrote on Christian marriage is also under investigation. 

Rude Awakening for Finland’s Christians

Finnish Christian broadcaster, author and theologian Pasi Turunen says this has been a rude awakening for many Christians.

“Finnish Christians have lived in a very homogeneous Christian culture,” Turunen said. “It’s been very easy because everybody thinks and believes the same way pretty much and now this has become a completely new situation for us when our faith is challenged.”

Päivi said this all began in prayer when she felt led by the Lord to do something to wake up the national church in Finland on the issue of homosexuality. But she now fears this investigation will make them too afraid to proclaim their faith.

“I’m worried that this case, the criminal investigation, might frighten some Christians to hide and to keep silent.” 

The Price Tag for Speaking Out

Turunen said, “It raises the threshold of saying anything in the public square and in one way, I see that that’s the purpose of this kind of attack: to put a high price tag on speaking your Christian mind out loud in the society.”

If convicted, Päivi could be fined or even imprisoned. And Turunen and Nummela both feel that support for her from Finnish evangelical leaders has been weak. 

“If we could easily have two hundred thousand Christians saying, ‘this is horrendous, stop persecuting Päivi Räsänen,’ and that would have a huge impact,” Nummela said. 

Turunen said he wishes “that evangelical leaders would be more outspoken and bolder. Otherwise, there will come a time when each of us will be in front of the firing squad.” 

Päivi says she’s not afraid and believes God has a plan in this for Finland.

She said, “I am waiting to see what God is doing, because when He raises up prayers, then we can know that He is doing something.”

Source CBN

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