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.


US VP Mike Pence Arrives in Israel, is Greeted by Netanyahu - Israel Today

US VP Mike Pence Arrives in Israel, is Greeted by Netanyahu

Monday, January 22, 2018 |  Israel Today Staff
Watch video here: Pence in Israel
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Sunday, January 21, 2018

Why You Might Need to Be Reclaimed in Holy Spirit's Power - AMARIS BEECHER CHARISMA NEWS

(Unsplash/Ariel Lustre)
Why You Might Need to Be Reclaimed in Holy Spirit's Power
AMARIS BEECHER  CHARISMA NEWS  Jan. 21, 2018
"I crossed the street to walk in the sunshine."
– Elizabeth Gilbert, Eat, Pray, Love
I was roughly 20 years old when the popular and "transforming" Eat, Pray, Love made its way to theaters. Now, don't hate me and stop reading this post if you loathe what I'm about to say—but I like really disliked the movie. I mean, I'm fairly certain I discovered the eye roll in that theater. I'm being cheeky of course, but that movie got under my skin. The whole concept of traveling around the world alone to discover yourself was just annoying.
However, now at the ripe old age of 28, I get it. I get what people are looking for. I understand why women need to discover themselves.
We go through those terribly awkward years in middle school, then the desperate years in high school, and by the time we get to college, our hearts are broken, our friendships are fractured and we have no idea what our favorite food is because we always go with what everyone recommends.
The chains of insecurity. The desperate need for affirmation and love. The trauma we experience throughout life. These things morph our personalities into some ungodly zombie who's walking around but dead on the inside. And now, we're not even attractive.
You're no longer exciting and unique when you try to be like everyone else and make everyone around you happy.
So we seem controlled and put together to the world, but on the inside, we are dying of anxiety, depression, insecurity and self-hatred.
We Are Crippled
You see, Jesus was radical in the way He loved women. He liberated us from the moment he came to earth. In those days women had tough ways of living. They couldn't be around other people when they were on their period. They had strict ways of dressing. Sadly, in those days, they were seen as the weaker person rather than image bearers of the same mighty God as men.
But when Jesus came, he changed things. He loved women so radically that it has transformed us for eternity.
"Mary took a pint of very costly ointment made from pure nard, and anointed the feet of Jesus, and wiped His feet with her hair. The house was filled with the fragrance of the ointment" (John 12:3).
Mary's display of honor and devotion is impressive. And in a culture where this could have been seen as sexual behavior, the Bible records it as an incredible expression of love to Jesus. She was able to live life as a fully reclaimed disciple because of the love of Jesus. And ultimately her life was fearless and fully alive because of it.
No more rejection issues ...
No more insecurities ...
No more fear or anxiety ...
She was reclaimed and redeemed. How did she get there?
To understand how Mary got to this type of living, we have to look back and see where she started. We first see Mary lingering at the feet of Jesus in Luke 10
This caused agitation with Martha (Mary's sister). Scripture tells us that Martha complained of the workload, but Mary continued to stay at the feet of Jesus. This tells me Mary was a natural individualist.
Countercultural
In that culture, the woman was supposed to be the one maintaining the home and cooking.
Bustling around a home was not Mary's natural tendency.
In a culture where there were particular gender roles, can you imagine the shame she probably felt with not wanting to be that way?
I presume she didn't feel that shame here at Jesus' feet. She was able to rest; which is why I think she lingered.
But then, something terrible happens. Her brother gets sick (John 11).
The sisters try to get Jesus to come while he's sick because they believe in his healing power.
Jesus doesn't come. Lazarus dies.
Jesus shows up after Lazarus had been in the grave for four days. Imagine the stench.
He was dead. He wasn't in a state where he could have been resuscitated. No, he was already covered in the ceremonial drapings and ready to be buried. That type of dead.
Jesus heads to their town. Martha runs out to meet him as soon as she hears that he's near. Mary, on the other hand, doesn't move. She stayed in the house.
Isn't this interesting? Mary, who was found lingering and staying at the feet of Jesus, didn't go to him. Why? I can imagine because of the disappointment in Jesus. I too have felt that disappointment, the heartache of death. The pain of unanswered prayers.
After Jesus speaks with Martha, he calls and asks Mary to come. Mary goes to Jesus, and when she sees him, she falls to his feet and says, "Lord, if You had been here, my brother would not have died."
Jesus weeps when he sees Mary weeping. He cared for her and Lazarus. Our pain means something to Jesus.
Jesus raises Lazarus from the grave. Lazarus is brought back to life. "Then Mary took a pint of very costly ointment made from pure nard, and anointed the feet of Jesus, and wiped His feet with her hair" (John 12:3a).
We can see that this is Mary's response to Jesus raising Lazarus from the grave.
We Are Mary
Let me explain:
When God created you, He created you to be a unique individual. He created you to have your own personality. Your own preferences. Your own talents and gifting. Your own unique traits.
And then you experience life. You experience rejection. Betrayal. Neglect. Abuse. Divorce. Insecurity ... to name a few.
The woman you were intended to be has been morphed by the experiences you've gone through.
Mary got to see a glimpse of her true self when she was in the presence of Jesus. She saw that she didn't want to be like everyone else, didn't want to uphold a façade. She wanted to live authentic to the life God had called her to live.
But it wasn't until Lazarus was brought back to life that she was able to live her reclaimed life fully.
God did not intend for Lazarus to die. He also did not intend for us to experience those traumatic moments.
Once Lazarus was raised from the grave, and Mary saw that Jesus could fully save, she was able to live as the full person that God had intended her to be.
She Was Reclaimed
This is real self-discovery.
Mary anointed Jesus with a very expensive perfume (a year's wages), pulled her hair down and wiped the oil up with it.
This displayed completed freedom. She was so secure. So confident. She could be countercultural and fully love Jesus with complete honor, devotion and humility.
Like Mary, do you feel obligated to live in the expectations or roles that have been placed on you? Do you feel ashamed by not conforming to those expectations? Don't live in that shame or constant striving. Instead, linger at Jesus' feet and embrace the freedom that He has offered to you.
This too can be the life you live, sister. Living a life fully alive. Fully free. Fully Redeemed. Completely reclaimed.
Today, my prayer for you is that you would see the life God intended you to live and begin to walk in it. That you would dream big again. That you would feel confident in your skin. That you would speak your mind.
Through Jesus, we can let our hair down and be the exact unique individual we were designed to be.
Take a step that way today. 
Amaris Beecher is a whole-hearted Christian, richly blessed wife and mother of two stunners, living life in sunny Orlando, Florida. Her goal is to inspire women to live their lives with authenticity and freedom through Jesus Christ.
This article originally appeared at sheisreclaimed.com.
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Brody File: Trump Gets A+ on 'Evangelical Report Card' for His First Year - David Brody CBN News


Brody File: Trump Gets A+ on 'Evangelical Report Card' for His First Year
David Brody  CBN News 01-20-2018
On the one-year anniversary of President Donald Trump's inauguration, CBN News Chief Political Correspondent David Brody gives him high marks on issues important to evangelicals.
Saturday morning, Brody tweeted:

Just this week, Trump became the first president to make a live address to the annual March for Life and the Department of Health and Human Services announced a Conscience and Religious Freedom Division to protect health care workers with religious or moral objections to peforming tasks that violate their conscience.
In addition to policy decisions addressing evangelical issues, Trump has appointed many evangelicals to Cabinet and sub-cabinet positions and granted unprecedented White House access to their leaders. Images of the president receiving prayer in the Oval Office and Vice-President Pence's statement that Trump is a believer only strengthen their support.
Here are some of the reasons evangelicals give the president top marks for his first year in office.
The meeting between President Trump and evangelical leaders was planned by the White House in advance, but the prayer time was totally spontaneous. It came during a daylong listening session with the Office of Public Liaison.
After the meeting, Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council told his supporters that he's found the Trump administration to be "genuinely interested and responsive to the concerns of the evangelical community" and added that after 14 years in Washington, DC "I am more optimistic that we can change the course of this country. "This was much more than a photo-op. The relationship between evangelicals and this White House is palpable."
Many Christians are celebrating President Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and his plan to move the US embassy to the city of Jerusalem. It is seen as the fulfillment of biblical prophecy for the Jewish people.
White House officials say the decision is based on the "recognition of reality," affirming the fact that Jerusalem has been Israel's seat of power for the last seven decades.

"With this move, President Trump demonstrates the benefit of his outsider status. It's a reality other presidents allowed decades of politics, failed diplomacy and Arab threats to cloud," says CBN White House Correspondent Jennifer Wishon.
CBN News Senior Editor John Waage says, "Christians should celebrate the pending embassy move to Jerusalem despite the difficulties because it is part of the great miracle of our time: the return of the Jewish people to the land and the city the Lord promised to them."
After all, the Bible focuses clearly on Jerusalem in many places: "Thus says the Lord: I will return to Zion, and dwell in the midst of Jerusalem. Jerusalem shall be called the City of Truth, the Mountain of the Lord of hosts, the Holy Mountain." - Zechariah 8:3
Neil Gorsuch was President Trump's first nominee to the US Supreme Court.  
"He's a true conservative," evangelist Franklin Graham told CBN News. "This man, certainly, for all of us Christians, we are very, very thankful that President Trump has nominated him, because he will protect religious liberty."
As a justice on the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, Gorsuch ruled in favor of Hobby Lobby and Little Sisters of the Poor in their legal battles against being forced to cover abortifacient contraceptives for their employees – something that would've violated their religious beliefs.
Evangelist and Pastor Greg Laurie said, "As Jefferson so eloquently reminded us, the God who gave us life gave us liberty, so I pray Judge Gorsuch never forgets to value each and every American as our Maker does."
During his campaign, President Trump said he was going to bring "Merry Christmas" back, and he's done just that.
"As president of the United States it's my tremendous honor to finally wish America and the world a very Merry Christmas," he said at the annual lighting of the National Christmas Tree.  
And he took it a step further, putting the focus on Jesus.
"From the earliest days of our nation, Americans have known Christmas is a time for prayer and worship, for gratitude and good will, for peace and renewal. For Christians, this is a holy season, a celebration of the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ," the president said.
"The Christmas story began 2,000 years ago with a mother, a father, their baby son, and the most extraordinary gift of all – the gift of God's love for all of humanity," he continued. "Each one of us is a child of God. That is the true source of joy this time of year," President Trump said.
The president and First Lady Melania Trump also restored "Merry Christmas" to the White House Christmas card, which had not included that phrase during President Barack Obama's tenure.
Vice President Mike Pence wasted no time showing how the new Trump Administration would be different in scope than the previous administration.  
Just one week after being sworn into office, Pence made history by addressing tens of thousands of pro-life supporters at January's March for Life. It was the first time a US vice president ever spoke at the event.
During his 12-year tenure as a congressman from Indiana, Pence was a leading advocate against abortion on Capitol Hill.
"In many ways Vice President Mike Pence is President Trump's North Star," says CBN News White House Correspondent Jennifer Wishon.
Less than one month after taking office, President Donald Trump told thousands of faith leaders he would "destroy" a law that keeps pastors from speaking about politics from the pulpit.   
The Johnson Amendment was created in 1954 by then Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson. It limits the free speech of pastors, essentially threatening to take away a church or non-profit's tax-exempt status for endorsing or opposing a political candidate.
"I will get rid of and totally destroy the Johnson Amendment and allow our representatives of faith to speak freely and without fear of retribution," he promised at the National Prayer Breakfast in February.
The president has tried to make good on his promise but still needs help from Congress to do it.
President Trump has aggressively followed through with his campaign promise to support the pro-life agenda – a promise that won over a demographic key to his electoral victory: evangelical Christians.
One of his very first actions as president was to reinstate the Mexico City Policy. With a stroke of his pen, Trump withheld US tax dollars from foreign non-governmental organizations that perform abortions or provide abortion referrals.

He's also vowed to make the Hyde Amendment law. That means instead of lawmakers having to attach the amendment to spending bills, it would become the law of the land that no federal tax dollars can be used to fund abortion-on-demand in the US.
The president also took a stand against China's forced abortions by cutting $32.5 million to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). Those funds were redirected to the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which provides medical care to families across the world.
"The outrage of the Obama administration's 'see no evil' policy that financed forced abortions and coerced sterilizations in China and other dictatorships is finally over," said Fr. Pavone, national director of Priests for Life. "The United Nations Population Fund is a broker of oppression. That our country funded this organization in violation of federal law is a disgrace."
Shortly before leaving office, former President Barack Obama imposed a regulation that prohibited states from withdrawing their funding to Planned Parenthood. Obama imposed the ban after several states began taking action in the wake of undercover videotapes exposing Planned Parenthood officials discussing the sale of aborted baby body parts.

A few months into the Trump administration the Senate voted to overthrow the regulation. That resulted in a 50-50 tie, which allowed Vice President Pence to step in and cast the tie-breaking vote.
"I've been in the political realm for 20 years and have been in pro-life advocacy for 30 years. We're nine months into his administration and he's been keeping his word. I'll go back to a Ronald Reagan slogan: 'Trust but Verify.' We'll continue to trust and hold him accountable, but we are on track to seeing the most pro-life president this country has ever seen," said Tony Perkins, president of Family Research Council.
The president's efforts to roll back the Obamacare contraceptive coverage mandate that employers must provide birth control to workers at no cost was recently blocked by a federal judge's ruling.
In April, CBN News White House Correspondent Jennifer Wishon broke the story that members of President Trump's cabinet are meeting together weekly for a Bible study.

The meetings are led by Ralph Drollinger, the founder of Capitol Ministries, who started working on arranging the Bible study during the Trump team's transition to the White House.
"In terms of a country's health and direction, when its leaders are seeking God, the nation is in a position to be blessed by God in ways that are 'far more abundantly beyond all that we ask or think,'" Drollinger told CBN News referring to Ephesians 3:20.

"These are the most influential people of the US government meeting weekly to study the Bible verse by verse and grow themselves spiritually, it's truly remarkable," says Wishon.
Drollinger sends his weekly Bible study to President Trump too and says he's welcome to attend the meeting anytime.
Since Nikki Haley headed to New York as President Trump's UN ambassador, the Trump administration has demonstrated time after time that it will not stand for the UN's ongoing hostility towards Israel.
In an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council in early December, Ambassador Haley defended Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
She also criticized the UN for its hostility against the state of Israel.
"Over many years the United Nations has outrageously been one of the world's foremost centers of hostility towards Israel. The UN has done far more damage to the prospects of Middle East peace than to advance them," she told the assembled ambassadors. "We will not be a party to that. The United States no longer stands by when Israel is unfairly attacked in the United Nations."
In a separate move, the State Department withdrew from the United Nations Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) after a series of decisions by the UN body displayed what the Trump administration sees as clear hostility toward Israel.
Those moves include a May vote, on Israel's Independence Day, to approve a resolution rejecting any legal or historical claims by Israel to the city of Jerusalem. Then came a July vote to declare the city of Hebron in biblical Judea, which is the final resting place of the Jewish patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, to be a Palestinian World Heritage site.
Vice President Pence announced this fall the Trump administration has decided to bypass the UN in helping the Mideast victims of Islamic genocide to rebuild.
"The UN has too often failed to help the most vulnerable communities - especially religious minorities," Pence explained. "And while faith-based groups with proven track records and deep roots in the region are more than willing to assist, the United Nations continues to deny their funding requests."
"It is my privilege to announce that President Trump has ordered the State Department to stop funding the ineffective relief efforts of the United Nations and from this day forward, America will provide support directly to persecuted communities through USAID," Pence said.

12. President Trump's Journey to Jesus
In an interview with CBN News in November, Vice President Pence spoke about his and President Trump's Christian faith.
"The president and I are believers," Pence told CBN News.
"I've been with this president in the Oval Office with religious leaders when people have asked to pause for a moment of prayer, and the president readily embraces that. I think he's always very humbled and grateful by the support of believers," Pence said.
And evangelicals from Trump's team of advisers say they've seen the change in his life.
"I can tell you Donald Trump is not the same man that you are hearing about from his past. He has had a radical change in his heart. He has had a heart change toward the things of God and the people of God, and he is surrounding himself with prayer warriors," says Mary Colbert, an evangelical leader who has attended meetings with the president.
President Trump even confirmed his Christian faith once again during his Christmas announcement when he referred to "OUR Lord and Savior Jesus Christ."
 

Joel C. Rosenberg's Blog - “Pence’s unenviable task” on his trip to the Middle East.

VP-Sisi-handshake-Jan2018

















New post on Joel C. Rosenberg's Blog

“Pence’s unenviable task” on his trip to the Middle East. (My new column in the Jerusalem Post.)

by joelcrosenberg
On Saturday, Vice President Mike Pence, his wife Karen, and his senior advisors landed in Cairo, Egypt. The V.P. held 2 1/2 hours of meetings with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, following by a two hour dinner. Early reports in the media and from my sources in Cairo are very positive. I'll post more details soon.
Late Saturday night, Air Force Two headed to Amman, Jordan, where the V.P. and his team will stay overnight. On Sunday morning, the V.P. will meet with King Abdullah II. I anticipate those talks to be more sensitive than the ones in Cairo.
The Jerusalem Post has just published a new column of mine, examining the V.P.'s trip from a somewhat different angle than the column I wrote Friday for Fox News. In this one, I look at the Trump administration's four policy objectives in the Middle East and the progress they are making with each. I also examine the enormously challenging balancing act Vice President Pence has undertaken on this trip in which he will be welcomed so warmly by the Israelis but urgently needs to strengthen strained ties with Egypt and Jordan, as well as seek a way to repair relations with the Palestinians.  
Please continue to pray that the trip goes well and each of these relationships improves.
The following are excerpts from the Jerusalem Post op-ed. To read the column in full, please click here.
As US Vice President Mike Pence arrives in the Middle East, he has a tough needle to thread. Israeli support for the Trump administration is soaring. The Arab street is furious.
Can he deliver a convincing message that the US truly wants to be a regional peace-maker? And having delivered more than most Israelis expected in the first year, is the vice president authorized to announce specific policies to strengthen America’s critically important alliances with Egypt and Jordan, even as the Palestinians refuse to see him?
It’s worth zooming out for a moment to put Pence’s trip in context.
The Trump-Pence administration came into office a year ago with four specific strategic objectives in the region.
The first was to crush Islamic State (ISIS), dismantle the genocidal grip of the “caliphate” that controlled large swaths of Iraq and Syria, and prevent ISIS foreign fighters from being able to attack and kill Americans....
The administration’s second objective in the region was to dramatically reorient America’s policy toward Iran....
The administration’s third objective was to rebuild the US-Israeli alliance, badly damaged during the Obama years. In this it has far surpassed expectations. Polls show Israeli support for Trump has skyrocketed. In May, 56% said he is “pro-Israel.” Today, that number is 76%....
Which brings us to the administration’s fourth objective: rebuilding America’s alliances with the Arab world, also damaged during the Obama years. This initiative started off quite well, despite Trump’s incendiary “Muslim ban” pledge during the campaign....
A year later, however, this strategy is foundering. The president’s Jerusalem decision --how it was made, why it was made and when it was announced -- has infuriated the Palestinians, who have cut off relations with the White House. It has also seriously complicated US relations with Jordan (a country whose population is about 70% Palestinian), and much of the Sunni Arab world.
Trump’s nuances -- that the boundaries of the Holy City still need to be negotiated, thus keeping the door open to a possible Palestinian capital in east Jerusalem; and saying the status quo of the holy sites must be protected -- either weren’t heard or weren’t believed. As one senior Arab official told me, “Very few people in our part of the world watched President Trump’s full speech. Fewer still read it. All they heard was the headline, ‘Trump gives Jerusalem to the Jews.’” Palestinian leaders should be using the moment to re-engage in peace talks, not continue to boycott them. Their people urgently need a final resolution to this painful conflict.
Until that happens, the vice president should focus on bolstering relations with Egypt and Jordan, two faithful and vitally important allies....
The vice president has an unenviable task. One trip can’t fix everything. But taking a victory lap before the Knesset and coming empty-handed to Amman and Cairo would seriously set back US interests in the region.
[Photo: Vice President Pence met on Saturday with Egyptian President el-Sisi. Early reports indicate the conversations were very positive.]
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