Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Jim Bakker - The Jim Bakker Show, plus ARISE & BUILD. He is building!


The Jim Bakker Show 
- daily broadcast on the PTL Network
and website The Jim Bakker Show


With the Jim Bakker Show 
and the Morningside land,
Jim & Lori are walking 
in the Lord's fulfillment 
for their earthly lives 
and many more, now and to come.


Jim Bakker - Arise & Build
He is building again!

After more than eight years in the Missouri mountains near Branson, Jim and Lori Bakker are building now more than ever on the new land named Morningside.

Having ourselves been Heritage USA/PTL Lifetime Partners (Laurie and I began in 1985, with a total of three lifetime memberships) on the former Fort Mill, SC property, it is exciting to see Jim being fully restored, raised up and now building once again. As he has given himself to the Lord's plans and purposes, we can see the Lord Jesus honoring him and making a way for others to follow.

Thank you Jim and Lori for your commitment to the eternal plans and purpose of our Lord. It is exciting to see what the Lord is doing in your midst. We commend you!

Shalom and love,

Steve & Laurie Martin
Love For His People, Inc.

P.S. We are current members of MorningStar Church, which was able to obtain and restore 52 acres of the former Heritage Grand Hotel, just south of Charlotte, NC where we live. Founded by Rick Joyner, MorningStar and Heritage International Ministries are both based on that property. The Lord has restored the widow's mite that was given sacrificially by so many.

At least six other ministries also reside on the former Heritage USA land, including Antioch International Church (Peter Wyns), All Nations Church (Mahesh and Bonnie Chavda), The Movement (Lathan Wood), Fresh Fire USA (Todd Bentley) and The Upper Room (James Russell).

The Lord always honors those whom are His. And He is in the redeeming and restoration business, for all who will come to Jesus (Yeshua) for salvation.






















As Jim speaks to his staff, they listen closely.

"Team work makes the dream work" - Jim Bakker


Some of the staff builders









Rabbi Jonathan Cahn and Rick Joyner
- guests on the Jim Bakker Show




Jim Bakker - Founder & Chancellor - a pioneer of Christian Television. 
Jim Bakker
From humble beginning, he rose to build one of the largest ministries in the world. As a young man, Jim was called to “make Jesus real” to the world. During the golden era of television, he was divinely inspired on what medium he could use to do just that. He dreamed of a night-time Christian talk show-one that could display the format and quality of The Tonight Show hosted (at that time) by Johnny Carson.

In 1966, his dream came true. While hosting a children’s show on Pat Robertson’s fledgling Christian station in Virginia, Jim became the co-founder and host for the first Christian talk show – “The 700 Club”. Next, he co-founded TBN and then the PTL and Inspirational Television Networks.

Today, Jim hosts “The Jim Bakker Show” which is an hour-long daily broadcast seen throughout the United States, Canada, and the entire world through Direct TV, Dish Network and other worldwide satellites. His number one passion however, is to train the next generation of Christian television broadcasters by giving them the tools to dream and create media for their generation to continue in spreading the Gospel to all the world.

Jim’s show is broadcast from a new Christian Retreat Center called “Morningside” just outside Branson, Missouri. This 700-acre property is a thriving Christian community that also serves as the backlot for “The Jim Bakker Show” and “Generation NOW”, a syndicated television program produced solely by the Morningside Master’s Media Students.





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The Jim Bakker Show 
- daily broadcast on the PTL Network
and website The Jim Bakker Show


Trump: ‘Obama Hates Israel, Jewish State Safe With Me’ - II&ET Nov. 1, 2015

Trump: ‘Obama Hates Israel, Jewish State Safe With Me’ - II&ET Nov. 1, 2015

REPUBLICAN presidential candidate attacks deal with Iran, which he says leaves Israel in ‘so much trouble’ “So many friends in Israel, they don’t know what happened,” “They actually think Obama hates Israel. I think he does.”
R

epublican presidential candidate Donald Trump said Thursday that he believes US President Barack Obama hates Israel, citing the recent nuclear deal with Iran which he said was “so bad” for the Jewish state.

“So many friends in Israel, they don’t know what happened,” he said of the agreement between Tehran and the US, along with other world powers. “They actually think Obama hates Israel. I think he does.”

Speaking during a campaign speech in Reno, Nevada on, the business magnate added: “Honestly, I think Israel is in such a massive amount of trouble because of the agreement.”

Trump vowed to defend Israel if elected president. “Israel is safe with this one,” he said, pointing to himself. “Nothing bad is going to happen to Israel.”

Trump, a brash billionaire businessman, dominated the Republican field for months. Recently he has been losing ground to neurosurgeon Ben Carson.

Neither Trump nor Carson are career politicians but both have capitalized on anti-Washington, anti-establishment feeling among many conservatives.

Israeli leadership has sharply criticized the Iran deal, and the issue had served to further fracture relations between Jerusalem and Washington. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is said to have enraged Obama by trying to turn Congress against the deal behind the president’s back. Meanwhile the US’s handling of the nuclear negotiations, the Palestinian conflict and other regional challenges have greatly diminished Israelis’ trust in the American leader, with many seeing him as weak, naive, or both.

Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon this week declared the dispute over the accord over. “The Iran deal is a given,” he said in Washington while meeting with his US counterpart Ashton Carter. “Our disputes are over. And now we have to look to the future.”

Netanyahu is to be hosted by Obama at the White House on November 9 — their first face-to-face talks in over a year.
Though generally unpopular in Israel, some security experts — including former heads of the Shin Bet and Mossad — have said it has its good aspects. Former IDF chief of staff Benny Gantz has said he sees the benefits of the accord, which he has acknowledged will probably put off a nuclear-armed Iran for at least 10-15 years. The diplomatic effort, he said, probably prevented war from breaking out.
The Republican nominee will most likely face Hillary Rodham Clinton, former first lady and secretary of state in the 2016 presidential race. The overwhelming favorite for the Democratic nomination, her campaign received a boost from a strong debate performance two weeks ago.

Rediscovered Prophecies - The Jim Bakker Show - Day 2 with John Shorey

Jim & Lori Bakker

Rediscovered Prophecies 
The Jim Bakker Show 
- Day 2 with John Shorey

Jim Bakker

Watch here: 


Jim Bakker Show 2015 | Show# 2861 | Aired on November 2, 2015


Jim Bakker Show © 2015 • Morningside Studios

Home » Video Archives » Rediscovered Prophecies (Day 2)




Now at MorningSide in Arkansas


Jim Bakker with daughter Tammy Sue







Voters Strike Houston LGBT Ordinance by Wide Margin - CBN News 11.04.15

Voters Strike Houston LGBT Ordinance by Wide Margin

Houston media are reporting the city's LGBT Ordinance failed by a large margin. Television station KHOU reports early voting results and returns predict it won't pass. KHOU says those number were approximately two-thirds of the voters against the ordinance with a third for it.
The Houston Equal Rights Ordinance was nicknamed HERO. It would have, among other things, allowed people with various sexual identities to use whatever bathroom of the sex they identified themselves as - regardless of their biological sex.
Opponents worried it could put women and children at risk. Pastors and their churches across the city fought the measure out of that concern and because of other language in the measure.
They say the way the law was written the city could fine and even imprison violators who did not make certain public accomodations.
Watch Wednesday's "The 700 Club" for a full report and reaction to the vote.
Dave Welch with the Houston Area Pastors Council said it did not include strong protections for people of faith to protect them if those public accomodations conflicted with their biblical values. He said that was one reason Christians rallied against it. He also told CBN News that it really came down to standing for God's truth about sexuality.
Those supporting it and voting for it, included Houston's lesbian mayor Annise Parker.
She and others argued it was a necessary nondiscrimination ordinance to protect the LGBT community.

Israel: Can the Violence Be Stopped? MAAYAN JAFFE/JNS.ORG CHARISMA NEWS

Injured Israeli woman

Israeli police and rescue personnel at the scene of a terror attack in the central Israeli city of Rishon Lezion on November 2, 2015. Three Israelis were wounded in a stabbing attack by a 19-year old Palestinian terrorist from Hebron. (Avi Dishi/Flash 90)


Standing With Israel


Israel: Can the Violence Be Stopped?




From the outside, the intensely charged Arab-Israeli conflict can be baffling. He said, she said, they said, we said. But we often don't ask—we assume. And based on our media outlets of choice or the friends in our Facebook feed, we see only one side to the violent and deadly conflict that has been roiling Israel for the past month.
These are the facts on the ground: From Oct. 1-25, 11 innocent Israeli Jews were killed and 126 were wounded (13 seriously), according to Magen David Adom, Israel's national emergency response organization. This includes 54 stabbings, five shootings, and five car-rammings in what has become known as the Palestinian "stabbing intifada." Continuously compiled unofficial statistics paint an even grimmer picture.
"The recent series of attacks against Israelis is the direct result of incitement by radical Islamist and terrorist elements, calling on Palestinian youth to murder Jews," writes the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 
What's next?
JNS.org reached out to three Israeli scholars—a self-proclaimed "left-wing" Jewish academic, self-proclaimed "right-wing" Jewish academic, and self-proclaimed "centrist" Israeli-Arab academic—and asked each of them the same questions. Their responses indicate that sometimes, those three camps have more in common than one might think.
The scholars:
Dr. As'ad Ghanem (centrist Israeli Arab), Department of Government and Political Philosophy, School of Political Science, University of Haifa
Eli Pollak (right-wing Israeli Jew) Department of Chemical Physics, The Weizmann Institute of Science, vice chairman of Israel's Media Watch 
Prof. Sammy Smooha (left-wing Israeli Jews), Sociology Department, University of Haifa
JNS.org: Why is genuine dialogue and finding a resolution to this conflict so elusive?
Ghanem: We are farther from finding a solution to this conflict than we were in 1993 ... because of some major developments in the conflict over the past 20 years: 
1. The collapse of the Palestinian National Movement—there is no Palestinian National Movement. Abu Mazen (Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas) is doing his best, but he is not the right person to solve this conflict on the Palestinian side ... There is no genuine representation on the Palestinian side.
2. Since [former prime minister Ariel] Sharon came into power, there has been a historical move to the right in Israel—not just the right, the extreme right. Not just to the political right, but demographic shifts in Israel that cannot be solved through politics. 
I am pessimist. Right now there is a very protracted/complicated situation that makes the possibility of going back to the peace process very difficult. There is a hope that international powers will use some of their power to push the sides. But, I don't think the world is ready to invest in us right now. 
Pollak: There is no interest on the Palestinian/Arab side to generate dialogue, so there is no dialogue.
Smooha: Both sides are not prepared to make the necessary concessions, despite the fact that they agree on an overall solution. They disagree on the details and the details are important. The core issues of dispute:
Borders: The Palestinians demand pre-67 borders with land swaps, the Israeli government does not accept this.
Settlements: The Palestinian Authority demands the dismantling of Jewish settlements; Israelis disagree.
Refugees: Can they return to the pre-67 borders? Israel rejects this demand altogether.
Jerusalem: The Israelis want a united Jerusalem. The Palestinians want a divided Jerusalem.
The nature of a Palestinian state: The Palestinians want a sovereign state with few restrictions. Israel demands that it have its army positioned on the Jordan River, that it have the right to search for terrorists, etc. Israel wants closed borders.
JNS: Is the two-state solution still viable?
Ghanem: Many thought that U.S. President Barack Obama would choose to use his political power to push for peace, now we know this was not real and the hope for two states is a lot less promising. We have two options: One is to continue this conflict, and it seems right now that we are going to face this situation for many years coming. The other option is one democratic state for both peoples. If we could set up a state where we have an equal share political entity with equal citizenship for both peoples—for members of both communities—and we preserve the right for both sides to self-determination, why not?
Pollak: It will never be because there is no interest from the other side to make real peace. It is clear this is a religious war and...ultimately the other side's goal is to have a single state on the land of Israel, without Jews. Speeches by Arab political leaders document this.
Smooha: It is not viable now because the right wing is in power and now Bibi (Benjamin) Netanyahu is not interested in any solution....Jews in this country are post-traumatic, they are frightened and Netanyahu is using their post-trauma to reinforce an iron wall mentality and get support.
JNS: How do you balance religion and democracy? Can we maintain a Jewish state?
Ghanem: I know many politicians believe there should be separation of religion and state. I don't agree with this. It is okay to have some kind of religious elements in politics, including in more secular states such as the U.S. or France. There is a connection between religion and state and it is not anti-Democratic. The question is what is superior to the other. Politics needs to be superior to religion, this is democracy. The will of the people should rule, not the rule of God.
Pollak: Judaism is a set of values. Democracy is a system by which a nation rules itself. They are very different and they go parallel to each other. What does it mean that we are a Jewish state? That the day of rest is Saturday and not Sunday. Is that against democracy?
Smooha: We need to privatize religion and strengthen Israeli citizenship to be the basis of our commonality. To find balance, we must find a way to respect democracy and religion.
JNS: Do you (Pollak and Smooha) trust Israeli Arabs? Do you (Ghanem) trust Israeli Jews?
Ghanem: I trust many Jews—the people, I trust them. Many Israeli leaders, them I don't trust. I don't trust Abu Mazen either.
Pollak: In principle, yes. You have more than 1.5 million Israeli Arabs and obviously some of them are anti-Israel and want to throw us into the sea. I believe most of them don't want that. Most of them are actually happy to live within the Jewish state because they know the situation here is better than in any Arab state.
Smooha: I do try to trust Israeli Arabs. There is always some suspicion because of the situation. One cannot be 100-percent trustworthy of every Arab, but without some trust, we will never resolve the conflict.
JNS: Is there equality in Israel?
Ghanem: There is no equality, except the right to vote. 
Pollak: In practice, no. One of the big errors that we, the Jewish majority, have made is that although the non-Jewish minorities have equal rights, we have not treated them equally, the way they should be treated. So many times, I have walked around Arab towns and seen the sewage in the streets, the lack of police presence, how poor they are. Israel has made mistakes and it is still not doing enough to correct those errors.
Smooha: There is no equality between man and woman, rich and poor, or Arab and Jew.
JNS: Can we stop the violence?
Ghanem: I don't have a recipe. Only if the leaders will be ready to make real steps toward peace will we be able to reduce the terror and violence.
Pollak: We have to ask ourselves what is the root of the violence and treat the root....The root of the problem is the religious war of Islam against any other religion in the world.
Smooha: We have to give the people hope. Otherwise, the situation will start cooling down, but it will start again in a couple of months or years.

* The scholars' opinions are their own and not represent the academic establishments at which they work.
For the original article, visit JNS.org.
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NORWAY - 'Judas' Betrayal Led to Massacre - Claim (Norway's Utoeya) - Charles Gardner ISRAEL TODAY

'Judas' Betrayal Led to Massacre – Claim

Wednesday, November 04, 2015 |  Charles Gardner  ISRAEL TODAY
The tragedy of Norway’s Utoeya massacre was directly linked with the country’s policy toward Israel, a new book claims.
A breach in the wall (available from a-breach-in-the-wall.com) relates how the Norwegian Labour Party, once Israel’s greatest friend, had turned Judas by betraying them into the trap of the Oslo Accords which have given them twenty-plus years of terror instead of the promised ‘land for peace’.
Norway had thus been left particularly vulnerable to attack in view of God’s clear statement that those who curse Israel will come under judgment (Genesis 12.3). And Jeremy Hoff concludes that it was surely no coincidence that the tiny island of Utoeya, where the ruling Norwegian Labour Party’s youth wing (AUF) was enjoying its annual summer camp, was the scene of the deadliest massacre by a single gunman in world history – also referred to as Norway’s 9/11.
On July 22, 2011, right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik murdered 77 people. After detonating a car-bomb in the heart of the Government complex, killing eight, he drove unhindered to Utoeya, where he slaughtered 69 left-wing political activists.
Only the day before, the campers had mounted a re-enactment of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, complete with security wall and checkpoint, to help illustrate what they perceived as the causes of trouble in the region. Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Store was photographed in front of a ‘Boycott Israel’ banner, and Palestinian youth had previously been hosted at the site while AUF had encouraged terrorism against Israel. They had reaped a bitter harvest.
The party’s youth had long been aggressively campaigning for a much more pro-Palestinian stance and, by 1993, the mother party became the official peace broker for the Oslo Accords which set up the mechanism for negotiations towards a two-state solution dividing Israel – against the clear commands of God (Joel 3.2) – and breathing new life into the PLO (Palestinian Liberation Organization) in the process.
Norway still presides over the committee responsible for channeling millions of dollars of aid to the Palestinian Authority, much of which is frittered away by corrupt leaders feathering their own nest.
The author sees the tragedy as a warning from God, giving Norway the chance to repent. And on a visit to Britain earlier this month, he suggested that the rest of Europe, including the UK, also needed to heed this warning.
He tells of a profound experience a year before the massacre during which he wept bitterly for the sins Norway had committed against Israel and that subsequently – in an email dated August 28 2010 – he published a ‘prophetic revelation’ pertaining to an attack about to happen in which he noted: “Norway’s critical role [in the Oslo Accords] has placed the nation in a dangerous position of standing against God! Judgments are scheduled against Norway unless she repents of this serious sin.”
UK-based South African, Francois Botes, in a message given at a YWAM (Youth With A Mission) base on another Norwegian island on May 11 2011, described a vision he saw of a flag flying at half-mast across the whole country “because of an event”, and it was soon after the tragedy that political scientist Per Haakonsen caused a media storm by linking Utoeya with the nation’s policy on Israel at a meeting organized by a local leader of the Christian Democratic Party.
Humanly speaking, the whole tragic episode could have been avoided but for a series of monumental communication blunders, starting with the approach road to the government complex, which had been flagged up as a security risk seven years earlier when it was recommended that it should be blocked off. Then there were questions as to why sufficient road blocks weren’t set up and how Breivik managed to board the only island ferry disguised as a policeman. Indeed, communication between police rescue teams broke down to the point of almost total confusion comparable to that which afflicted the ancient enemies of Israel in biblical records.
In fact there are too many ‘coincidences’ recounted in this book to allow any seriously open-minded reader to escape the conclusion that God takes a dim view of those who touch the apple of his eye (Zechariah 2.8).
The book is too important to be written off simply as the figment of overactive imagination, or even to be restricted to the ‘review’ section of theological journals. The message is basically a summing up of the Bible’s doctrine on the seed of Abraham – “I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse” (Genesis 12.3) – with the help of meticulous documentation of a major modern catastrophe.
This was underscored by the first scripture publicly quoted by a Norwegian politician (Labour’s Oyvind Groslie-Wennesland) in association with the attacks – “He who keeps Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep” (Psalm 121).
The author also emphasizes – as Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has done in the past week – the PLO’s direct links with the Nazis. And yes, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, did help to persuade Hitler to annihilate the Jews rather than simply expel them.
Hoff also sees prophetic significance in the number of those killed – 77 – which is closely associated with vengeance in each of its three mentions in the Bible. In addition, the name Lord of Hosts (also translated Lord of Armies), a title denoting military authority, occurs exactly 77 times in the book of Jeremiah, generally seen as a prophet of doom despite many inspiring passages focusing on Israel’s future hope. And the generation experiencing the outpouring of God’s vengeance when Jerusalem was destroyed in AD 70 was the 77th from Adam.
As it happened, the official investigation into the tragedy found that the road to Utoeya remained open for at least 77 minutes [after the bombing] before the national alarm was triggered.
It seems that God’s hand of protection on Norway had been lifted.
Asked if he had a ‘word for Britain’, Hoff’s answer was brief. It was “pride”, he said.

Charles Gardner is author of Israel the Chosen, available from Amazon, and Peace in Jerusalem, available from olivepresspublisher.com
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