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The Power of the Holy Ghost- my testimony
It was Friday that I started to reflect back on my life growing up in church. I can truly say that the Holy Ghost and the power of the Holy Ghost has changed my life for the better. I've experienced God moving be His spirit in my life and it's because of that power, that which God has enabled me to receive, why I am here today.

When I first received the Holy Ghost, I was 11 years old and at the time Kingdom Life was at Falconer and I remebered tarrying for the Holy Ghost with others my age group. I remembered being told the first word that comes in your head say it, (sounds strange huh?, I thought so too) because I was young and I never fully understood what the Holy Ghost was, I did it because I had that desire to receive that gift. When I first started to speak in tongues for the first time I remebered feeling that warmth inside me, it was as if God was having a conversation with me and was saying congratulations.

Now, growing up in an apostolic church (Kingdom Life Ministries) and in God, through the storms and through the rain. You know some of the adults may say, what kind of storm could you face as a young person, you wait till your my age. Well... you know what we still go through our problems as youth some as small as a bad mark in school or some too big to let them know. You know what, I have experienced some storms and rain where at times I felt like giving up but, God. For that I must thank God, for that yes that he has placed deep down inside of me. When I'm falling, I can say yes Lord. When I'm drifting, yes Lord, and the thing is, when the devil sees you difting, heading in his direction ot falling, he'll start to plant seeds of negativity, he'll ask you, why dont you curse God and die. Just when I'm about to give in the Holy Ghost steps in, and I hear the voice of Jesus say, "Come unto Me and rest; Lay down, thou weary on, lay down thy head upon My breast cast you cares upon me." For this reason I can say NEVER will a rock cry out in my place because I've got the power of the Holy Ghost residing in me!

If you are reading this and you feel as if you are heading in the wrong direction, now is the time for you to go to JESUS and say yes LORD hear I am!

(visit:
http://klife.ca/prayerministry.php
for prayer)



I LOVE YOU!!

YOU HAVE 20 MINUTES TO TELL 10 FRIENDS  THAT YOU LOVE THEM (INCLUDING ME)
B/C
TOMORROW'S NOT PROMISED. SO I LOVE YOU! GO!
 


I believe in
prayer. It's the best way to draw strength from heaven.




I know we can all use a prayer. God Bless.

   Each and everyone one of us are going through tough times right now, but God is getting ready to bless you in a way that only He can. Keep the faith.

My instructions were to pick four people that I wanted God to bless, and I picked you. Please pass this to at least (4) people you want to be blessed and a copy back to me.

This prayer is powerful, and prayer is one of the best gifts we receive.
There is n o cost but a lot of rewards. Let's continue to pray for one another. 

The prayer:
Father, I ask You to bless my friends, relatives and those that I care deeply for, who are reading this right now. Show them a new revelation of your love and power. Holy Spirit, I ask You to minister to their spirit at this very moment. Where there is pain, give them your peace and mercy. Where there is self-doubt, release a renewed confidence through your grace. Whe re there is need, I ask you to fulfill their needs. Bless their homes, famili es, finances, their goings and their comings. In Jesus' precious name. Amen.

(If the Lord lays upon
your heart to send this to more than four people, you are truly blessed).




Behold, a black horse
By Gary F. Ehman


Grocery store shelves empty, food-lines riots breaking out, reports of people killing and stealing from one another are scenarios, too frequently, seen on the evening cable news channels in the war-torn and disaster-plagued countries of the third world.


But could such scenes ever be duplicated in the richest nations of the world, nations such as the United States, Great Britain, France or Australia? 

The average American would laugh at such a thought! Food stores bulge with produce, meats, dairy products and canned goods. Farms continue, with what appears to be an endless supply of produce. “How could such a thing happen here?” would be the disdainful reply. One only has to remember the name Katrina to know it can happen anywhere, anytime. 

These warnings have, for years, been the domain of ultra-right and kook-fringe groups, but they have moved uptown and even some of the most conservative financial counselors are sounding urgent advice to their clients on being prepared. 

I recently came across a copy of a special investment report that stated: “Putting some food aside should be at the top of that list [physical needs]. If the public knew how thin the inventory is for many staples, we would see frantic buying” (Global changes and Opportunities Report, Jim Powell, May 2008). 

            Based on the idea that the population of the world continues to climb, nervous financial gurus warn that there isn’t enough food and resources to go around. There are extreme shortages in foodstuffs, such as wheat, rice, fish and resources, such as oil and natural gas to support their production world-wide. Wise investors should take steps to secure their needs. 

            The Bible forecasts such world-shaking events as this happening. The book of Revelation ominously warns about one of the four horsemen: “So I looked, and behold, a black horse, and he who sat on it had a pair of scales in his hand. And I heard a voice in the midst of the four living creatures saying, ‘A quart of wheat for a denarius, and three quarts of barely for a denarius; and do not harm the oil and the wine’” (Revelation 6:5-6). 

            What the Scripture does not explain is that a denarius relates to one day’s wages, and if calculated upon today’s scale, prices for our food will skyrocket to the point where all our efforts will be just to feed ourselves and our families. 

            A quick survey of the Internet market reports show that world grain supplies have dropped far below the world demand. Rice, corn, wheat, barley prices climb steadily. Shifting weather patterns cause crop-destroying drought and flood. Tragically, in the face of these natural disasters, increasingly large acreages of farmland are being used to produce crops for bio-fuel, not food, which is further exacerbating the situation.

            Tomorrow’s World, the gospel outreach of the Living Church of God, has been at the forefront of warning the nations of the cataclysm of world-ending events outlined in the pages of your Bible.  

            In his booklet, Fourteen Signs Announcing Christ’s Return, Roderick C. Meredith states: 

Those of us living in the advanced, developed world have thought these things would only occur in places like India, Bangladesh or Africa. How could famine happen to us? It is practically unthinkable to suggest that one dark day the supermarkets and restaurants would have to close due to lack of food! But famine, the pain of empty stomachs, will occur in the United States of America, Canada, Britain, New Zealand, Australia and elsewhere among the English-speaking peoples of the world. Let us understand what God says and why (Page 6). 

            What is the answer to this impending disaster? Is it hoarding foods, stocking up on tons of MREs, guns, ammunition, one’s own gas storage facility or construction of a self-contained fortress? 




Question: "Is it possible to be a gay Christian?"
Answer: “Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived; neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor homosexuals, nor thieves, nor the covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers, will inherit the kingdom of God” (1 Corinthians 6:9-10). There is a tendency to declare homosexuality as the worst of all sins. While it is undeniable, biblically speaking, that homosexuality is immoral and unnatural (Romans 1:26-27), in no sense does the Bible describe homosexuality as an unforgivable sin. Nor does the Bible teach that homosexuality is a sin Christians will never struggle against.

Perhaps that is the key phrase in the question of whether it is possible to be a gay Christian: “struggle against.” It is possible for a Christian to struggle with homosexual temptations. Many homosexuals who become Christians have ongoing struggles with homosexual feelings and desires. Some strongly heterosexual men and women have experienced a “spark” of homosexual interest at some point in their lives. Whether or not these desires and temptations exist does not determine whether a person is a Christian. The Bible is clear that no Christian is sinless (1 John 1:8,10). While the specific sin / temptation varies from one Christian to another, all Christians have struggles with sin, and all Christians sometimes fail in those struggles (1 Corinthians 10:13).

What differentiates a Christian’s life from a non-Christian’s life is the struggle against sin. The Christian life is a progressive journey of overcoming the “acts of the flesh” (Galatians 5:19-21), and allowing God’s Spirit to produce the “fruit of the Spirit” (Galatians 5:22-23). Yes, Christians sin, sometimes horribly. Sadly, sometimes Christians are indistinguishable from non-Christians. However, a true Christian will always repent, will always eventually return to God, and will always resume the struggle against sin. But the Bible gives no support for the idea that a person who perpetually and unrepentantly engages in sin can indeed be a Christian. Notice 1 Corinthians 6:11, "And that is what some of you were. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.

First Corinthians 6:9-10 lists sins that, if indulged in continuously, identify a person as not being redeemed—not being a Christian. Often, homosexuality is singled out from this list. If a person struggles with homosexual temptations, that person is presumed to be unsaved. If a person actually engages in homosexual acts, that person is definitely thought to be unsaved. However, the same assumptions are not made, at least not with the same emphasis, regarding other sins in the list: fornication (pre-marital sex), idolatry, adultery, thievery, covetousness, alcoholism, slander, and deceit. It is inconsistent, for example, to declare those guilty of pre-marital sex as “disobedient Christians,” while declaring homosexuals as definitively non-Christians.

Is it possible to be a gay Christian? If the phrase “gay Christian” refers to a person who struggles against homosexual desires and temptations – yes, a “gay Christian” is possible. However, the description “gay Christian” is not accurate for such a person, since he/she does not desire to be gay, and is struggling against the temptations. Such a person is not a “gay Christian,” but rather is simply a struggling Christian, just as there are Christians who struggle with fornication, lying, and stealing. If the phrase “gay Christian” refers to a person who actively, perpetually, and unrepentantly lives a homosexual lifestyle – no, it is not possible for such a person to truly be a Christian.





In the Miley Cyprus flap, where's critique of Photographer?
By Wallace G. Smith


The shock and controversy surrounding the Vanity Fair bareback-in-a-sheet photo-shoot of popular fifteen-year-old television and singing star Miley Cyrus has been passionate and persistent. The voices criticizing Miss Cyrus’ choice to be in such a photo have been loud and numerous.


But among those who agree that the photos represent a new low in the public sexualization of children, where is the passionate and persistent critique of famed photographer Annie Leibovitz, who took the photo? 

As I read (yet another) article on the matter in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on May 4, 2008, I searched for criticism of Leibovitz but found none. 

There certainly was criticism in the article for young Miley: “Dr. Shannon Fox, a psychologist who studies the sexualization of young girls in media, was unequivocally critical of Cyrus’ decision to pose in such a manner.” 

And Dr. Fox is right to be critical of such a decision. That’s one way children and teens learn right decision making – having their decisions evaluated by adults. Another way they learn is by experiencing the fruits of those decisions. Miss Cyrus may now be asking herself, as the Apostle Paul prompts the rest of us to ask ourselves: “What fruit did you have then in the things of which you are now ashamed?” (Romans 6:21). 

Proverbs (22:15) tells us that “foolishness is bound up in the heart of a child,” but that’s one reason it is called childhood. That’s why they need responsible adults in their lives. 

There has also been criticism of Miley’s parents, grandmother, and teacher, which is appropriate. Most accounts say Mom and Dad were not there when the photo was taken, though the grandmother and teacher were. Perhaps they felt an awkward discomfort during the shoot but went along with the “spirit of the moment.” It would be nice to give them the benefit of a doubt, though this doesn’t make the decision any less wrong. 

But where is the outrage concerning Ms. Leibovitz’s choice for creating such a shot in the first place? People.com reported on April 28 that the renowned photographer thinks the image is “simple” and “beautiful,” but does this justify such an ethical lapse? Are “simple” and “beautiful” sufficient justifiers for any photograph or image we wish to publish? I shudder when thinking of the sheer size of the flood gates that would be opened if that were so – and all the more when I think of what would come through those gates. 

Actually, Ms. Leibovitz has apologized... sort of. The photographer is quoted as saying: “I’m sorry that my portrait of Miley has been misinterpreted.” Of course, that comes across as an expression of regret about “outdated societal hang-ups” and not about a sad lapse in ethical and professional judgment. 

Let me suggest a different apology for the celebrated picture taker: “Miley Cyrus is a beautiful girl on her way to becoming a beautiful young woman. In my efforts to showcase that beauty in an artistic manner, I crossed a line without thinking. Our society has succeeded in paradoxically trivializing sexuality while simultaneously glorifying it, and consequently borders that were once obvious are now effortlessly crossed as our moral and ethical confusion deepens. I apologize for contributing to this confusion, and for taking an inappropriate picture of Miss Cyrus. There are more important measures of what is right and wrong than what a photographer or her subject thinks is beautiful or artistic.” 




Apocalypse or Business as Usual?
By Gary F. Ehman


Disaster after disaster, misery heaped upon misery – wind, fires, floods, earthquakes, wars, diseases – dominate the news these days. Does it seem as if these things are growing more intense, or is it just that they are “better reported” today?


The age-old debate intensifies, as the “realists” distain the “doomsday sayers” and the “doomsday sayers” point accusatory fingers at the “realists.” 

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