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Пишет Misha Verbitsky ([info]tiphareth)
@ 2017-02-09 21:16:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Настроение: sick
Музыка:Mgla - Exercises in futility
Entry tags:judeo-christianity, smeshnoe, trump, usa

Starbucks Is Using Semen In Its Lattes
Как это охуительно
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/06/anti-gay-church-starbucks_n_6115136.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/james-david-manning-starbucks-semen_us_55c23b00e4b0f7f0bebb2fb8

"Starbucks is a place where these types frequent and a lot

of body fluids are exchanged there. But the thing that I
was not aware of is that there has been information that
has been released... what Starbucks was doing, is they were
taking specimens of male semen, and they were putting it
in the blends of their lattes. Now, this is the absolute
truth."

Типа - в старбаксе кофе специально такое вкусное,
оттого, что они добавляют туда мужскую сперму. И это
не тролль, совершенно реальный священник, затрамповец,
естественно.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_David_Manning

Вот если кому-то интересно, как выглядит избиратель
Трампа. Вот именно так он и выглядит.

Отсюда:
http://potsreotizm-new.livejournal.com/854573.html

Привет



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[info]tiphareth
2017-02-10 05:12 (ссылка)
Roberts resigned his pastoral ministry with the Pentecostal Holiness Church to found Oral Roberts Evangelistic Association (OREA).[1] He conducted evangelistic and faith healing crusades across the United States and around the world, claiming he could raise the dead.[17][18] In November 1947, he started Healing Waters, a monthly magazine as a means to promote his meetings.[19] Thousands of sick people waited in line to stand before Oral Roberts so he could pray for them. He appeared as a guest speaker for hundreds of national and international meetings and conventions. Through the years, he conducted more than 300 crusades on six continents, and personally laid hands in prayer on more than 2 million people.[12][20][21] He also ran direct mail campaigns of seed-faith, which appealed to poor Americans, often from ethnic minorities. At its peak in the early 1980s, Roberts was the leader of a $120 million-a-year organization employing 2,300 people. This spanned not only a university but also a medical school and hospital as well as buildings on 50 acres (200,000 m2) south of Tulsa valued at $500 million.[6][16] Another part of the Oral Roberts Evangelistic Association, the Abundant Life Prayer Group (ALPG), was founded in 1958.[1]

In 1963, he founded Oral Roberts University (ORU)[1] in Tulsa, Oklahoma, stating he was obeying a command from God. The university was chartered during 1963 and received its first students in 1965. Students were required to sign an honor code pledging not to drink, smoke, or engage in premarital sexual activities. The Prayer Tower, opened in 1967, is located at the center of the campus.

Roberts was a pioneer televangelist, and attracted a vast viewership. He began broadcasting by radio in 1947,[22][23] and began broadcasting his revivals by television in 1954.[6] His television ministry continued with The Abundant Life program reaching 80% of the United States by 1957, and quarterly Prime Time Specials from 1969 through 1980. In 1996, he founded Golden Eagle Broadcasting.[1]
On March 17, 1968, Roberts and his wife were received as members of the Boston Avenue United Methodist Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma by Dr. Finis Crutchfield, then pastor. The United Methodist Church offered more leniency in doctrinal and moral issues than the Pentecostalism. This granted Roberts some leeway, as it was expected that the strictness of the Pentecostal tradition may have impeded his rise in popularity.[24] Before Roberts' switch to Methodism, Crutchfield arranged a meeting between Roberts and Bishop William Angie Smith, at which the Bishop told Roberts, "We need you, but we need the Holy Spirit more than we need you and we've got to have the Holy Spirit in the Methodist Church."[25] Roberts became an elder in the Oklahoma Conference of the United Methodist Church. From 1968 through 1987, Roberts was a member of the United Methodist Church's ministry.[26][27]

Roberts affected the American Protestant community. According to one authority in conservative Protestant culture, his ministry's influence was second only to Billy Graham.[4][28][29] His divine healing ministry called for prayer to heal the whole person—body, mind and spirit.[30] Many labeled him a faith healer, but he rejected this with the comment: "God heals—I don't."[4][7] He played a major role in bringing American Pentecostal Christianity into the mainstream.[31] Even though Roberts was often associated with the prosperity gospel and the faith movement because of his close doctrinal and personal ties with Word-Faith teachers, his abundant life teachings did not fully identify him with that movement.[32]

In 1977, Roberts claimed to have had a vision from a 900-foot-tall Jesus who told him to build City of Faith Medical and Research Center, and the hospital would be a success.[33][34][35] In 1980, Roberts said he had a vision which encouraged him to continue the construction of his City of Faith Medical and Research Center in Oklahoma, which opened in 1981. At the time, it was among the largest health facilities of its kind in the world and was intended to merge prayer and medicine in the healing process. The City of Faith operated for only eight years before closing in late 1989, but the importance of treating the whole person—spirit, mind, and body—was conveyed to many medical professionals.[36][37] The Orthopedic Hospital of Oklahoma still operates on its premises. In 1983 Roberts said Jesus had appeared to him in person and commissioned him to find a cure for cancer.[38][39]

Roberts' fundraising was controversial. In January 1987, during a fundraising drive, Roberts announced to a television audience that unless he raised $8 million by that March, God would "call him home."[40][41] However, the year before on Easter he had told a gathering at the Dallas Convention Center that God had instructed him to raise the money "by the end of the year" or he would die.[42] Regardless of this new March deadline and the fact that he was still $4.5 million short of his goal,[43] some were fearful that he was referring to suicide, given the impassioned pleas and tears that accompanied his statement. He raised $9.1 million.[44] Later that year, he announced that God had raised the dead through his ministry.[45] Some of Roberts' fundraising letters were written by Gene Ewing, who headed a business writing donation letters for other evangelicals such as Don Stewart and Robert Tilton.[46]

Roberts maintained his love of finery and one obituary claimed that even when times became economically hard, "he continued to wear his Italian silk suits, diamond rings and gold bracelets—airbrushed out by his staff on publicity pictures".

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