House Speaker Pelosi Fires Back at President Trump, Says ‘I Pray Very Hard for Him’ After His Speech at National Prayer Breakfast

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi defended her decision to tear up President Donald Trump‘s State of the Union address saying on Thursday that she did so to send a message to the American people that the speech was nothing more than “a manifesto of mistruths” with the president “using the Congress of the United States as a backdrop for a reality show.”

“I saw the compilation of falsehoods,” Pelosi told reporters at a press conference, saying, “I started to think, there has to be something that clearly indicates that this is not the truth. And he shredded the truth in his speech, shredded the Constitution in his conduct, so I shredded the ‘state of his mind’ address.”

Pelosi added that her move had nothing to do with the president first refusing to shake her hand on Tuesday night when he took to the dais to deliver his address.

The speaker said she felt “very liberated” by her unprecedented act of defiance, tearing up the president’s speech, though it has engendered bipartisan criticism, saying, “I have extended every possible courtesy. I’ve shown every level of respect. I tell my members all the time — there’s no such thing as eternal animosity. There are eternal friendships, but you never know, … everybody is a possible ally.”

She also criticized his decision to award the Presidential Medal of Freedom — the country’s highest civilian honor — to conservative talk-show host Rush Limbaugh while in the House chamber Tuesday. She said Thursday that — at first — she thought his comments were about civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., who is battling pancreatic cancer.

“Do it in your own office. We don’t come to your office and do our business there,” Pelosi said while blasting Republicans for committing “a serious breach” of protocol by shouting in unison, “four more years!” in the chamber in support of Trump’s re-election.

Earlier at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, Trump said he doesn’t like people who use their faith as justification for doing what they know is wrong, appearing to target Sen. Mitt Romney, the lone Republican who voted with Democrats, to convict Trump, after saying he was guided by faith.

SOURCE: ABC News

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Major Christian Group Pledges $50M to Re-Elect Trump

Major Christian Group Pledges $50M to Re-Elect Trump


A major Christian organization is pledging to spend $50 million and reach 22 million evangelical, Catholic and pro-life voters as part of a digital and grassroots campaign to highlight President Trump’s accomplishments and re-elect him this year.

The Faith & Freedom Coalition, founded by Ralph Reed, launched the campaign Wednesday, calling it the “largest pro-family voter education campaign in modern American political history.” 

It released a two-minute digital ad, “Promises Kept,” that opens with images of Trump becoming the first president to appear at the March for Life. But it touches on other issues, too, including the economy, criminal justice reform, religious liberty and federal judges. 

The ad calls Trump the most “pro-life,” “pro-family,” “pro-religious freedom” and “pro-Israel” president “in history.” It ends with the tagline: “Promises Made. Promises Kept.” 

“In 2016, Donald Trump won 81 percent of the evangelical vote,” said Timothy Head, executive director of the Faith & Freedom Coalition. “At that time, many evangelical and faithful Catholic voters did so on faith. Now, there is an impressive and historic record of accomplishments. These are promises made and promises kept, not only to the faith community, but to the American people. That’s a message we will ensure every faith-based voter in every key state and Congressional district gets…

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Boko Haram Terrorizes Nigeria and Surrounding Countries

A lack of religious freedom in sub-Saharan Africa has thrown the region into turmoil.

“This is the first freedom, so to speak,” says David Curry, of Open Doors USA, while describing religious freedom. “It’s the place where . . . people are being pressured for issues of conscience. If you cannot decide for yourself if you’re going to be able to read a Bible and worship freely and go to church . . . you’re not free at all.”

And that certainly describes the situation in Nigeria, along with Cameroon, Chad, and Burkina Faso. Militant Islamic group Boko Haram has been ravaging the land for years, killing and kidnapping Christians and others. And the situation only seems to be growing worse.

Curry says, “You have a clash of civilizations of sorts [with] a lot of Christians in the South of Nigeria, and Islamic Sharia law states in the North. And for a long time, Nigeria has been the most violent place, that we can measure, against Christians.” Curry says North Korea, for instance, may be a more violent place for Christians, but the danger there is not as easily measured.

Boko Haram is always getting bolder, Curry says. “You have weak, weak governments that are responding very slowly and ineffectually and it’s really emboldening Boko Haram in a way that I think is problematic. We could see them conquering . . . what they would call a caliphate where they feel like they own an entire region that would cross three or four different country boundaries.”

SOURCE: Mission Network News, Kevin Zeller

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Jay-Z Says He Wasn’t Protesting the National Anthem during the Super Bowl

Jay-Z Says He Wasn’t Protesting the National Anthem during the Super Bowl


Jay-Z and Beyoncé stirred controversy at the Super Bowl on Sunday when the power couple didn’t stand during the National Anthem. But Jay-Z says it wasn’t out of protest. He was just in “artist mode.”

At an event at Columbia University Wednesday, according to TMZ, a professor asked him if he remained seated to send a message. But he quickly replied, “It actually wasn’t. Sorry.”

Jay-Z’s production company, Roc Nation, recently entered a multi-million-dollar deal with the NFL to produce all of the entertainment, including the half-time show.

“I’m really just looking at the show,” he said. “The mics start. Was it too low to start?… Is it too many speakers on the floor?” he said.

He continued saying that no “silent protest” was needed since his production company was “making the biggest loudest protest of all” by featuring a diverse group of artists at the game. He also threw out the possibility that his eight-year-old daughter Blue Ivy was in on it, saying he would never put her “in that position.”

TMZ researched the entertainment mogul’s history with the National Anthem at sporting events and found that he always stands.

“Taking a knee” during the National Anthem started as a silent protest of racial injustice by football player Colin Kaepernick in 2016 and sparked sharp debates. The NFL essentially blacklisted him, so when Jay-Z entered into…

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Larry King has ‘less of a fear of dying now’: The reality of hell and urgency of love

Larry King is known for many things. He has been on radio
and television since 1957, interviewing thousands of guests over the decades.
He has been married eight times to seven women and recently filed for divorce
from his seventh wife.

He calls himself an “agnostic atheist,” which is
an interesting and contradictory description. An “agnostic” is
someone who does not know (or says we cannot know) whether God exists; an
“atheist” is someone who claims with certainty that he does not.

King is now opening up about his views on life after suffering a near-fatal stroke in March 2019. He told People magazine, “I have less fear of dying now.” He added: “I’m 86 and it is what it is. I just want to keep working until the end. I’d like to die at work—I’ll retire right there!”

He has no plans to slow down. “I’m very proud of what I do,” he says. “And I’m a good father—nothing beats parenthood. There’s an element of pinching myself every day. Look at what I’ve come through. All in all if you look at it, I’ve had a blessed life.”

The correlation between Larry King’s irreligiosity and his views on death is not surprising. According to surveys, at least 80 percent of religious Americans believe hell exists, while fewer than 5 percent of non-religious Americans agree.

The reality of hell and urgency of love

God’s word is much clearer on the subject than public
opinion: “If anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he
was thrown into the lake of fire” (Revelation 20:15). Those whose names
are “written in the book of life” are those who have trusted in
Christ as their Lord (Luke 10:20; Philippians 4:3; Revelation 3:5).

As a result, those who most deny the reality of hell are
those who are most likely to go there.

This is one of Satan’s most effective strategies. If he can
convince people that there are no eternal consequences to their rejection of
God’s saving love,…

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Review: John Moreland goes deep in ways few songwriters can

John Moreland, “LP5” (Old Omens/Thirty Tigers)

Singer-songwriter John Moreland could bring an audience to tears singing nursery rhymes.

On his new album, “LP5,” Moreland adds a new element of production to the stripped-down style that made his first four albums so memorable. Some of it works, some of it doesn’t. But taken as a whole, it’s still rich with the stirring lyrical imagery and brutal honesty that made Moreland a word-of-mouth sensation even without a natural home on traditional radio.

On “LP5,” Moreland works with producer Matt Pence and is more adventurous musically than he has been. Some of it distracts from what he’s best at. “A Thought Is Just a Passing Train,” for example, is dressed up with instrumental solo work that feels like the wrong outfit for this particular party.

But even if some songs don’t match the simple elegance that was the hallmark of his earlier work, this album still dazzles with lyrical surprises. Moreland is such an original that comparisons are risky here, but his singing owes a debt to Bruce Springsteen, and his lyrics, dare we say it, evoke Bob Dylan — without creating the impression that he’s trying too hard.

On “In Times Between,” an achy tribute to a songwriter friend who died in a car wreck, Moreland grieves openly and movingly. “You’re buzzing in the strings, you’re sailing towards the skies,” he sings. “You’re swimming in the seas that are streaming from my eyes.”

Moreland opens “Let Me Be Understood” with the line, “Momma’s little martyr woke up with her face drawn on.” And that’s it, you’re hooked. It’s the beginning of one of the album’s best songs, and yet another reminder that Moreland digs deep with the kind of ease few singer-songwriters can match.

___

Source: Associated Press – SCOTT STROUD

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Women vying for Oscars salute their progress, snubs aside

The mood at Diane von Furstenberg’s lunch honoring this year’s female Oscar contenders could have been downbeat, given the shutout of women directors for Sunday’s awards. Instead, it was celebratory and defiant.

The 30-plus nominees who gathered at von Furstenberg’s home, tucked into elegant and secluded grounds, cheered as the women spoke in turn. Laura Dern, a best supporting actress nominee for “Marriage Story,” kicked things off Wednesday by recalling von Furstenberg’s first nominees’ lunch six years ago.

A single couch was enough to hold the handful of women, Dern told the packed room, adding, “I look forward to that entire garden to be filled in a few years!”

Von Furstenberg and Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences CEO Dawn Hudson said a record 67 nominations went to women this year, which Hudson called representative of a trend in the academy that has long tilted heavily male. Half the newly invited members are women, she said, and the leadership is changing as well.

“When I started with the academy nine years ago there were six female governors, and it was hard for our voices to be heard around the big table,” Hudson said. “And today there are 25.”

Greta Gerwig, excluded from the best director category for “Little Women” despite its best-picture bid, was on hand briefly before dashing out, it was explained, to get back home to her baby.

“That’s OK. As long as she gets the Oscar,” a guest called out. Gerwig is a nominee for best adapted screenplay.

Former studio chief Amy Pascal, who produced “Little Women,” offered an industry veteran’s perspective.

“On behalf of Greta and myself, yeah, it would have been better if she got nominated. But ‘Little Women’ is the third movie in the history of the Oscars that is produced, directed and written” by women, Pascal said, drawing applause.

That’s good, she said, “but more is better.”

Krysty Wilson-Cairns, who earned a best original screenplay nod for “1917,” said the film has been her passport to many parties and some telling moments.

“Every time I say I’m the writer of ‘1917,’ people go, ‘huh?’ and those people are unfailingly male. And today, not one single person in this room has gone, ‘huh?’” she said. “So i just want to say thank you for that.”

Karen Rupert Toliver, a producer of the nominated animated short “Hair Love,” marveled at being in the room with her industry “heroes.” Toliver was among the few nominees of color attending the lunch in a year that produced only one nod for a non-white actor, Cynthia Erivo in “Harriet.”

Women are making impressive strides in documentaries and animation, as was emphasized by the nearly 20 guests with nods in those categories.

Julia Reichert, who earned her fourth and latest nomination for the documentary “American Factory,” summoned memories from her early career. One was hearing that a woman can control the family’s shopping budget “but you don’t want to give her $5 million to make a movie.”

“This is an actual quote from a producer guy back then. And how do we get from there to where we are?” Reichert said, suggesting two reasons.

“We’re not accepting patriarchy, not accepting the way the males have done it. We have our own way and we’re going to make our own way. The other thing is solidarity, solidarity among women,” Reichert said, drawing shouts of “Yes!” from other guests.

Some reinforced the value of sisterhood with their own stories. Kirstine Barfod, who with Sigrid Dyekjaer produced the nominated documentary “The Cave,” about a heroic doctor and her staff in war-torn Syria, said it was Dyekjaer’s faith in her abilities that helped make her career possible.

Work, not awards, should be the main goal, Dern said in an interview at the lunch.

“We need to take the focus off of the lack of accolades for women and look at the lack of opportunities. You can’t say five movies were made by women, and they got snubbed. Well, OK, but of the 300 guys who got to make them, there were a bunch of guys who got snubbed,” Dern said. “We need to change the numbers.”

Anita Hill, head of a commission scrutinizing sexual abuse and harassment in the entertainment and media sectors, said hearing women of proven value say they are not getting treated fairly “has inspired me to do my work even harder.”

Many guests tipped their hat to von Furstenberg, with Pascal calling the fashion magnate a woman who “takes charge every day and doesn’t take ‘no’ for an answer and built her own empire.”

Hudson saluted her for her dedication to the long-planned academy museum that is slated to open this year.

Actress Tessa Thompson, a lunch co-host, said the facility will “do justice to the stories of women in film,” a promise echoed by the museum’s new head, Bill Kramer.

“We pledge to be inclusive. We pledge to tell complete, complicated stories. And we’re doing it with your help,” he said. The museum’s opening date will be announced soon, Kramer said.

___

Source: Associated Press – LYNN ELBER

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Nigerian Church Burned, at Least 32 Christians Killed in Three Separate Attacks on Plateau State Villages

New reports out of Nigeria indicate Muslim Fulani herdsmen have launched more murderous attacks against Christian villages.

Morning Star News reports at least 32 people were killed and a pastor’s house and church building were burned down in two nights of attacks last week in Plateau State by the Islamic militants.

The Church of Christ in Nations (COCIN) building and house were destroyed in an attack on predominantly Christian Marish village on Jan. 27. It was one of three communities in Bokkos County that underwent a series of armed assaults that began the previous evening, area residents said. 

The attacks were the latest bloodshed in an escalation of violence in Plateau state, where herdsmen killed Christians in Riyom and Mangu counties earlier this month.

Herdsmen killed 17 people in Marish and Ruboi villages on Monday after killing 15 people in an attack on Kwatas on Sunday (Jan. 26), Titus Ayuba Alams, former speaker of the Plateau state House of Assembly, told Morning Star News. 

The attacks took place between the hours of 7:00 pm and 4:00 am on Kwatas on Sunday, and also on Monday within the same time frame on Ruboi and Marish by the herdsmen,” Alam said.

Five people were wounded in the attacks and several houses were burned, area resident Theophilus Mancha told Morning Star News.

“A pregnant woman and 16 others have been killed,” Mancha said.

Kwatas, Marish, and Ruboi are suburbs of Bokkos town located about nine miles southwest of Plateau State University.

Kelly Kanang, another area resident, confirmed that Fulani herdsmen launched the attacks.

“Our people have been killed again. About 15 of the dead have been evacuated to the mortuary along with many others that sustained injuries during the attack on Sunday night,” Benjamin Dogo of Kwatas told Morning Star News in a text message.

State police said 13 persons were killed and five injured in the attack on Kwatas. Police spokesman Ubah Gabriel Ogaba confirmed the attack by “unknown gunmen” on Kwatas.

“My heart again bleeds by this tragedy as lives of innocent citizens are cut short for no reason,” Plateau Gov. Simon Lalong said in a statement. “Security agencies must go after those who are behind these attacks and their sponsors so they can face the law and be taught a lesson.”

Sen. Istifanus Gyang, deputy chairman of the Nigerian Senate Committee on Defense, said attacks on the Christian communities raise questions on the readiness of security agencies to protect people against attacks by herdsmen.

“Only last week, Kombun village in Mangu LGA was attacked and now, it is Kwatas, Marish, and Ruboi villages in neighboring Bokkos LGA,” he said.

This attack on Nigerian Christians is just one in a long line of murders of Christian believers there. Last year (2019) some 1,000 Nigerian Christians were murdered. The Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust (HART), headed up by a member of the British House of Lords, Baroness Cox, estimates that 6,000 Christians in Nigeria have been murdered since 2015, according to an earlier report by CBN News.

As CBN News reported last month, Save the Persecuted Christians (STPC), a bipartisan, multi-faith coalition of nearly 200 civic, faith, and community leaders who pray and advocate for the more than 300 million persecuted Christians around the world, is calling for a US special envoy to be sent to Nigeria and the Lake Chad region because of the extreme violence against Christians there.

Meanwhile, the mainstream media in the US remains silent as Muslim terrorists’ merciless killing of Nigerian Christians continues. 

Nigeria is ranked 12th on Open Doors’ 2020 World Watch List of countries where Christians suffer the most persecution.

Source CBN

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Christian Ministries Forced to Cut Back after Trump Administration Slashes Foreign Aid

Christian Ministries Forced to Cut Back after Trump Administration Slashes Foreign Aid


Christian nonprofits in Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador are slashing budgets, letting employees go, and abandoning projects because of relief cuts made by the Trump administration last year.

According to Christianity Today, ministries working in the Northern Triangle have been reeling since last June when the Trump administration withheld over $500 million in foreign aid. Unhappy with the onslaught of illegal immigrants, the State Department sought to pressure their governments to slow migration. But several nonprofits are saying that they were seeing progress.

“The Trump administration shot itself in the foot with these cuts,” said Chet Thomas, director of Proyecto Aldea Global in Honduras. “These projects are designed to … reduce the number of people migrating to the US.”

Much of this foreign relief aid landed with Christian relief organizations who worked to fix situations that caused people to flee to the US. Some nonprofits helped to develop communities while others trained national staff.

The International Justice Mission (IJM) felt the hit. The nonprofit had to layoff 40 percent of its staff last year, as well as pull back on its partly government-funded $10 million “Project Sentinel.” The project was focused on strengthening the criminal justice system by mentoring police and lawyers. According to an independent report, the project was…

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PODCAST: Whyte House Family Devotional Reading of Charles Spurgeon’s Morning and Evening #20 (with Daniel Whyte III)

This is Daniel Whyte III, president of Gospel Light Society International with the Whyte House Family Devotional Reading of Charles Spurgeon’s Morning and Evening podcast. This is Episode #20.

Charles Spurgeon was a prominent English Particular Baptist preacher. He was very influential among the Christians of various denominations during his age and even today, and is commonly called the “Prince of Preachers”. After some time of alternately searching for God and running from God, he had a powerful encounter which led him to give his life to Christ. Spurgeon was only 16 when he preached his first sermon and he began publishing books shortly afterward. At the time of his death, he had preached nearly 3,600 sermons and published 49 volumes of commentaries, sayings, anecdotes, illustrations and devotions. Spurgeon said, “encouraging thoughts are like honey to the heart”, and wrote this devotional in hopes that its uplifting messages for each day of the year would bring comfort and refreshment to our walk with God. He was inspired by Isaiah 50:4 which reads, “He wakeneth morning by morning. He wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learned” and Psalm 63:5-6 which says, “My soul shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatness; and my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips; when I remember Thee upon my bed, and meditate on Thee in the night watches.”

Job 19:26 reads: “And though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God:”

Mark the subject of Job’s devout anticipation “I shall see God.” He does not say, “I shall see the saints”—though doubtless that will be untold felicity—but, “I shall see God.” It is not—“I shall see the pearly gates, I shall behold the walls of jasper, I shall gaze upon the crowns of gold,” but “I shall see God.” This is the sum and substance of heaven, this is the joyful hope of all believers. It is their delight to see him now in the ordinances by faith. They love to behold him in communion and in prayer; but there in heaven they shall have an open and unclouded vision, and thus seeing “him as he is,” shall be made completely like him. Likeness to God—what can we wish for more? And a sight of God—what can we desire better? Some read the passage, “Yet, I shall see God in my flesh,” and find here an allusion to Christ, as the “Word made flesh,” and that glorious beholding of him which shall be the splendour of the latter days. Whether so or not it is certain that Christ shall be the object of our eternal vision; nor shall we ever want any joy beyond that of seeing him. Think not that this will be a narrow sphere for the mind to dwell in. It is but one source of delight, but that source is infinite. All his attributes shall be subjects for contemplation, and as he is infinite under each aspect, there is no fear of exhaustion. His works, his gifts, his love to us, and his glory in all his purposes, and in all his actions, these shall make a theme which will be ever new. The patriarch looked forward to this sight of God as a personal enjoyment. “Whom mine eye shall behold, and not another.” Take realizing views of heaven’s bliss; think what it will be to you. “Thine eyes shall see the King in his beauty.” All earthly brightness fades and darkens as we gaze upon it, but here is a brightness which can never dim, a glory which can never fade—“I shall see God.”

PRAY.

Thank you for listening to the Morning and Evening podcast. If you do not know the Lord as your Savior, here is how you can be saved from Hell and walk with the Lord morning and evening until you go to that wonderful place called Heaven when you die:

First, accept the fact that you are a sinner, and that you have broken God’s law. The Bible says in Romans 3:23: “For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God.”

Second, accept the fact that there is a penalty for sin. The Bible states in Romans 6:23: “For the wages of sin is death…”

Third, accept the fact that you are on the road to hell. Jesus Christ said in Matthew 18:8: “Wherefore if thy hand or thy foot offend thee, cut them off, and cast them from thee: it is better for thee to enter into life halt or maimed, rather than having two hands or two feet to be cast into everlasting fire.” Also, the Bible states in Revelation 21:8: “But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death.”

Now that is bad news, but here’s the good news. Jesus Christ said in John 3:16: “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” Just believe in your heart that Jesus Christ died for your sins, was buried, and rose from the dead by the power of God for you so that you can live eternally with Him. Pray and ask Him to come into your heart today, and He will.

Romans 10:9 & 13 says, “That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved… For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.”

If you believe that Jesus Christ died on the Cross for your sins, was buried, and rose from the dead, and you want to trust Him for your Salvation today, please pray with me this simple prayer: Holy Father God, I realize that I am a sinner and that I have done some bad things in my life. I am sorry for my sins, and today I choose to turn from my sins. For Jesus Christ sake, please forgive me of my sins. I believe with all of my heart that Jesus Christ died for me, was buried, and rose again. I trust Jesus Christ as my Savior and I choose to follow Him as Lord from this day forward. Lord Jesus, please come into my heart and save my soul and change my life today. Amen.

If you believed in your heart that Jesus Christ died on the Cross, was buried, and rose again, allow me to say, congratulations on doing the most important thing in life and that is accepting Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour! For more information to help you grow in your newfound faith in Christ, go to Gospel Light Society.com and read “What To Do After You Enter Through the Door”. Jesus Christ said in John 10:9, “I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture.”

If you accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior today, please email me at [email protected] and let us know. There is some free material that we want to send you. If you have a prayer request, please e-mail that to us as well, and we will pray for you until you tell us to stop.

God loves you. We love you. And may God bless you.

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