Showing posts with label Benjamin Gill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Benjamin Gill. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2018

What's Inside President Trump's New Religious Freedom Executive Order - CBN News Benjamin Gill

What's Inside President Trump's New Religious Freedom Executive Order
05-03-2018
CBN News Benjamin Gill
Christian leaders are reacting positively to news that President Donald Trump is unveiling a new 
White House plan to protect religious freedom and to work more closely with the faith community.

The president is announcing the new initiative today on the National Day of Prayer.

Evangelist Franklin Graham praised the move saying, "I'm extremely grateful that we have a 
president who realizes the importance of prayer, faith, and religious freedoms to our nation."

Related


The Difference a Year Makes: Johnnie Moore on Freedom of Religion in the Age of Trump

Trump's executive order calls for the executive branch to ensure "conscience protections," and it states 
a broader goal to preserve "the religious liberty of persons and organizations in America." Here's 
what it says:

"It shall be the policy of the executive branch to vigorously enforce Federal law's robust protections
for religious freedom. The Founders envisioned a Nation in which religious voices and views were 
integral to a vibrant public square, and in which religious people and institutions were free to practice
 their faith without fear of discrimination or retaliation by the Federal Government."

Later the order specifically directs the Treasury Department, which includes the IRS, not to target 
churches or religious groups for speaking out about political issues:

"In particular, the Secretary of the Treasury shall ensure, to the extent permitted by law, that the 
Department of the Treasury does not take any adverse action against any individual, house of worship, 
or other religious organization on the basis that such individual or organization speaks or has spoken 
about moral or political issues from a religious perspective, where speech of similar character has, 
consistent with law, not ordinarily been treated as participation or intervention in a political campaign 
on behalf of (or in opposition to) a candidate for public office by the Department of the Treasury."

Johnnie Moore, an unofficial spokesman for the president's group of faith advisors, said it's "good 
for America" that President Trump has welcomed the faith community with open arms.

"This executive order is the product of the President's unwavering prioritization of faith and religious 
liberty and reflects the smart work of people like Jared Kushner and advisors in the policy and public 
liaison divisions who met with hundreds and hundreds of leaders and government officials to assess 
ways in which the government can partner more effectively with communities of faith," Moore said.

He also points out how important it is for there to be a faith-based liaison associated directly with 
the White House.

"Ordering every department of the federal government to work on faith based partnerships - not just 
those with faith offices - represents a widespread expansion of a program that has historically done 
very effective work and now can do even greater work," Moore contiued.

READ: The Difference a Year Makes: Johnnie Moore on Freedom of Religion in the Age of Trump

He says he'd like to see the White House faith-based effort focus on issues like prison reform, 
mental health issues, strengthening families, promoting education and meeting humanitarian needs.

California pastor and evangelist Greg Laurie also weighed in with praise for Trump's latest pro-faith 
move.

"I've always believed that America is better when it's faithful, together. Anything any administration 
can do to demonstrate a positive partnership between our faith communities and government, the 
better off our country will be and so I herald this important initiative that empowers people of faith 
in America," Laurie said.

Watch here: President Trump

Friday, April 27, 2018

'Censorship Is Not a Hoax': Diamond and Silk Testify in Congress About Facebook Bias - CBN News Benjamin Gill

Photo Credit: Diamond & Silk via Facebook
'Censorship Is Not a Hoax': Diamond and Silk Testify in 
Congress About Facebook Bias
04-26-2018
CBN News Benjamin Gill
The pro-Trump, conservative, social media personalities known as "Diamond and Silk" claim Facebook has treated them like they’re a danger to the world. Facebook denies it, but the two women report the social media 
giant launched a campaign of "bias censorship and discrimination" against their D&S brand page
On Thursday they testified before Congress, passionately defending their claim and bashing the 
tech giant. 

"Facebook along with other social media sites have taken aggressive actions to silence conservative 
voices such as ourselves by deliberately restricting and weaponizing our page with algorithms that 
censored and suppress our free speech," the women said.

"We've also noticed how someone with a liberal point of view that spewed hate against the 
President can garner up to 19 million views with only 539,000 followers, yet we have 1.2 million 
followers and only received 13,000 views on our video."

Social media outlets like Facebook and Twitter refused to send a witness to testify at the House 
hearing which is called "Filtering Practices of Social Media Platforms."

MORE: Google Rejects Christian Publisher Ads that Mention Jesus

In addition to Diamond and Silk, the hearing includes testimony from Republican Rep. Marsha 
Blackburn; Electronic Frontier Foundation Legal Director Corynne McSherry; News Media Alliance 
CEO David Chavern; and New York Law School Innovation Center for Law and Technology 
Director Ari Waldman.

"Censorship is not a hoax, it’s real. It is wrong for these social media giants to suppress and 
disregard people by diminishing and denying them their free speech. If social media is supposed 
to be a place for all idea(s) or to express idea(s) then algorithms and tactic(s) should not be in 
place to suppress some idea(s)," Diamond and Silk state.

The LIVE HEARING is BELOW. If you missed Diamond and Silk, scroll back in the video to watch.
Here's a link to Diamond and Silk's prepared testimony.

MORE: Twitter Censors Rep. Marsha Blackburn for 'Inflammatory' Pro-Life Message



Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Diamond & Silk Face 'Censorship & Discrimination' by Facebook: Their Reply to Zuckerberg Is Perfect - Benjamin Gill CBN News


Photo Credit: Diamond & Silk via Facebook
Diamond & Silk Face 'Censorship & Discrimination' by Facebook: Their Reply to Zuckerberg Is Perfect
04-09-2018
Benjamin Gill  CBN News
They're pro-Trump and proud of it, but Facebook reportedly says two conservative media personalities 
known as "Diamond and Silk" are dangerous to the world.

The two women report Facebook has launched a campaign of "bias censorship and discrimination" 
against their D&S brand page.

"Facebook gave us another bogus reason why Millions of people who have liked and/or followed 
our page no longer receives notification and why our page, post, and video reach was reduced by 
a very large percentage," they state on their public page.

So they put together a list of questions aimed at Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg asking:
"What is unsafe about two Blk-women supporting the President Donald J. Trump?"
"If our content and brand was so unsafe to the community, why is the option for us to boost our 
content and spend money with FB to enhance our brand page still available? Maybe FB should give 
us a refund since FB censored our reach."
"Lastly, didn't FB violate their own policy when FB stopped sending notifications to the Millions 
of people who liked and followed our brand page?"

Meanwhile, Diamond and Silk also spoke to Fox News about their ordeal saying, "When we signed 
up with Facebook, they didn't say that this platform was only for liberal viewers."

"If a privately owned bakery has to go against their Christian values to bake a cake, then Mark 
Zuckerberg is going to have to suck it up buttercup and allow Diamond and Silk to speak our truth,"

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Faith-Based Box Office: 'I Can Only Imagine' and 'Paul, Apostle of Christ' Score in the Top 10 - CBN News Benjamin Gill

ICanOnlyImagine
Faith-Based Box Office: 'I Can Only Imagine' and 'Paul, Apostle of Christ' 
Score in the Top 10

03-26-2018
CBN News Benjamin Gill
Faith-based films performed well at the box office for a second straight weekend, with 
"I Can Only Imagine" capturing the third spot once again. "Paul, Apostle of Christ" landed 
in the eighth spot in its debut weekend, earning $5 million for Sony's Affirm Films.

"I Can Only Imagine" held strong in its second weekend in theaters, scoring a solid $13.8 million. 
That brings its total earnings to $38 million – an impressive performance for a film that only cost 
$7 million to create.
'I Can Only Imagine'

The movie tells the story behind the popular Christian song about heaven. It beat films with much 
bigger budgets, like "Tomb Raider" and "Sherlock Gnomes."

It's rare for two films with Christian themes to make the top 10 at the box office, and while the 
earnings aren't astronomical, it's the kind of success that makes Hollywood take notice.

"I Can Only Imagine" is a story of pain and victory, revealed through the true-life account of 
Bart Millard who suffered at the hands of an abusive father – a father who eventually became 
transformed into a kind man by the power of Jesus Christ.

It stars Dennis Quaid as Bart's father, Arthur. He spoke with CBN News about the movie's 
message of healing.

"The gift that Arthur gave to Bart was that Bart did not have to carry that around for the rest 
of his life, which would be a heavy, heavy load. He broke that chain and freed Bart as well. 
Just a beautiful, beautiful story about making the impossible possible," he noted.

MORE: 'On My Way to Heaven': Dennis Quaid Wrote This Heart-Warming Christian Song 
After 'I Can Only Imagine'

Meanwhile, "Paul, Apostle of Christ" stars Jim Caviezel who once played the role of Jesus 
in the most successful biblical film of all time, "The Passion of the Christ."

In his latest biblical film, Caviezel plays the role of Luke, who wrote part of the Bible, as 
he visits the apostle Paul while he was imprisoned by the Romans.

Caviezel spoke to CBN News about the film saying, "The message of hope is throughout the film, 
it permeates, like the Bible, it permeates your heart and you feel loved when you walk out of the film."

Monday, February 5, 2018

'All the Glory Belongs to God': The Faith of the Super Bowl-Winning Philadelphia Eagles - CBN News Mark Martin,Benjamin Gill


Philadelphia Eagles
Photo Credit: philadelphiaeagles via Instagram
'All the Glory Belongs to God': The Faith of the Super Bowl-Winning Philadelphia Eagles
02-04-2018
CBN News Mark Martin,
Do faith and football go together? For players on the Philadelphia Eagles, the answer is a resounding "yes."
The Eagles won their first Super Bowl 41-33 over the New England Patriots in a hard-fought game Sunday night in Minneapolis.  
“All glory to God,” MVP Quarterback Nick Foles said right after the win.
“I felt calm. We have such a great group of guys, such a great coaching staff... we’re very blessed," he said. 
Just nine years ago, Eagles head coach Doug Pederson was coaching high school. Now he's a Super Bowl champion.
“I can only give the praise to my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ for giving me this opportunity," Pederson said Sunday night.
And touchdown-scoring Wide Receiver Zach Ertz echoed the same sentiment. 
“Glory to God first and foremost,” Ertz said.
And despite being sidelined by a season-ending injury, Eagles QB Carson Wentz threw all his support to Foles, and all the glory to God.
NFC Conference Champions
On January 21st, the Eagles clinched the NFC Conference Championship, earning the right to face the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LII.
"First and foremost, all glory belongs to God. I wouldn't be here without Him and this is just very humbling and unbelievable," QB Nick Foles said immediately after that Eagles' win over the Minnesota Vikings. "I'm blessed to have amazing teammates, amazing coaches."
Foles, who turned in an amazing performance to lead the Eagles to victory, is bold about professing his born-again faith, describing himself on Twitter as a: "Believer in Jesus Christ, husband, father, son, brother."
A number of his teammates share that faith in Christ, and you can bet many on the team were as "prayed up" for the Super Bowl as they were throughout the season.
At the start of the season, Foles and teammates Zach Ertz, Trey Burton, Carson Wentz, and Chris Maragos released a Bible study on humility and surrender through the YouVersion Bible app.
And back in November, the Eagles team released a video on its Facebook page entitled, "The Locker Room's Binding Force." It's a look at the Christian faith of three players and how Christianity is a big part of the team's unity.
Starting quarterback Carson Wentz, wide receiver Torrey Smith, and safety/special teams player Chris Maragos share their testimonies in the video.
"I was kind of on this downward spiral because the things I was trying to place in my life to give me satisfaction would last for a little bit and then they'd fade away," Maragos said in the video. "And that was my sophomore year in high school."  
"I was really at a crossroads at that point and had to make a decision on where I was going," he continued. "And that's when I gave my life to Christ, and really he supplied that satisfaction and that joy for me." 
Players have the opportunity to attend chapel among other things.
"On every Monday night, we have a couple's Bible study. We have a Thursday night team Bible study," Wentz explained in the video. "And then Saturday nights, we actually get together the night before the game and just kind of pray; talk through the Word; what guy's have been reading, what they're struggling with, and just kind of keep it real with each other."
"To have that here in an NFL facility like this, it's really special," he added.
"As men, you tend to be very sheltered. If I'm going through some things, I may not express that to the next man," Smith shared. "Only you can kind of expose your weaknesses and things you want to work on, whether it's in your relationship or your marriage or your family, whatever it may be."
"When you're able to talk about it amongst your brothers, amongst your family, it helps you grow," he continued. "And when you realize that you can apply Biblical principles to it, it helps us all grow."
"I think the biggest thing that we're always challenging each other with is just to not lose sight of the bigger picture," Wentz said. "I think wins, losses, highs, lows, everything that comes with this game, it's so easy to take your mind and your eyes off of the ultimate prize, and that's living for the Lord."
"And we want to be united," Maragos said. "We want to support each other; we want to support each other in our lives through the difficulties off the field as well as on the field."
"And so I think it's really kind of something to where we're all just kind of binding together to kind of keep each other sharpened and keep pushing forward," he continued.  
That unity helped propel them to the NFC Championship game and now a 41-33 win over the Patriots in the Super Bowl

Monday, January 22, 2018

'All the Glory Belongs to God': The Faith of the Super Bowl-Bound Philadelphia Eagles - CBN News Mark Martin, Benjamin Gill


Philadelphia Eagles
Photo Credit: philadelphiaeagles via Instagram
'All the Glory Belongs to God': The Faith of the Super Bowl-Bound Philadelphia Eagles
01-21-2018
CBN News Mark Martin,
Do faith and football go together? For players on the Philadelphia Eagles, the answer is a resounding "yes."
Sunday night the Eagles clinched the NFC Conference Championship which means they're headed to the Super Bowl to face the New England Patriots.
"First and foremost, all glory belongs to God. I wouldn't be here without Him and this is just very humbling and unbelievable," quarterback Nick Foles said immediately after the Eagles' win over the Minnesota Vikings. "I'm blessed to have amazing teammates, amazing coaches."
Foles, who turned in an amazing performance to lead the Eagles to victory, is bold about professing his born-again faith, describing himself on Twitter as a: "Believer in Jesus Christ, husband, father, son, brother."
A number of his teammates share that faith in Christ, and you can bet many on the team will be as "prayed up" for the upcoming Super Bowl as they were throughout the season.
At the start of the season, Foles and teammates Zach Ertz, Trey Burton, Carson Wentz, and Chris Maragos released a Bible study on humility and surrender through the YouVersion Bible app.
And back in November, the team released a video on its Facebook page entitled, "The Locker Room's Binding Force." It's a look at the Christian faith of three players and how Christianity is a big part of the team's unity.
Starting quarterback Carson Wentz, who suffered a season-ending injury, wide receiver Torrey Smith, and safety/special teams player Chris Maragos share their testimonies in the video.
"I was kind of on this downward spiral because the things I was trying to place in my life to give me satisfaction would last for a little bit and then they'd fade away," Maragos said in the video. "And that was my sophomore year in high school."  
"I was really at a crossroads at that point and had to make a decision on where I was going," he continued. "And that's when I gave my life to Christ, and really he supplied that satisfaction and that joy for me." 
Players have the opportunity to attend chapel among other things.
"On every Monday night, we have a couple's Bible study. We have a Thursday night team Bible study," Wentz explained in the video. "And then Saturday nights, we actually get together the night before the game and just kind of pray; talk through the Word; what guy's have been reading, what they're struggling with, and just kind of keep it real with each other."
"To have that here in an NFL facility like this, it's really special," he added.
"As men, you tend to be very sheltered. If I'm going through some things, I may not express that to the next man," Smith shared. "Only you can kind of expose your weaknesses and things you want to work on, whether it's in your relationship or your marriage or your family, whatever it may be."
"When you're able to talk about it amongst your brothers, amongst your family, it helps you grow," he continued. "And when you realize that you can apply Biblical principles to it, it helps us all grow."
"I think the biggest thing that we're always challenging each other with is just to not lose sight of the bigger picture," Wentz said. "I think wins, losses, highs, lows, everything that comes with this game, it's so easy to take your mind and your eyes off of the ultimate prize, and that's living for the Lord."
"And we want to be united," Maragos said. "We want to support each other; we want to support each other in our lives through the difficulties off the field as well as on the field."
"And so I think it's really kind of something to where we're all just kind of binding together to kind of keep each other sharpened and keep pushing forward," he continued.  
That unity helped propel them to the NFC Championship game on Sunday night, and now against the Patriots as well.