Tag Archives: gospel

Nicki Minaj’s Mother To Release A Gospel Album

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During her second acceptance speech at the American Music Awards , rapper Nicki Minaj revealed that her mother was going to be releasing a Gospel album. Nicki Minaj won the AMA award for Best Rap/Hip-Hop Album, and mentioned that her mother had already found a publicist. Despite her racy image, Nicki Minaj did thank God for her award. No word if Nicki will make an appearance on her mother’s forthcoming project. RELATED POSTS: New Gospel Songs How To Cope When You Don’t Like Your Daughter’s Boyfriend

Nicki Minaj’s Mother To Release A Gospel Album

6th Annual Atlanta Gospel Music, Health & Wellness Festival Date Announced

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The Atlanta Gospel Fest Music Health & Wellness Festival is a three day musical extravaganza designed to elevate your spirits while educating your mind, body and soul with an array of gospel music concerts, a series gospel music industry workshops and panels, wealth & finance empowerment segments and a multitude of free health care services for the entire family.This year”s Gospelfest will be held he beautiful Georgia World Congress Center 285 Andrew Young Boulevard Atlanta, Georgia  Friday July 15th, Saturday July 16th & Sunday July 17th, 2011 . It is designed to give direction and focus to the new uprising in the contemporary Christian and Gospel music throughout the state of Georgia and around the world. Focusing on all gospel genre’s not to exclude Drama, Poetry & Dance. There is something for everyone. Centrally located where you can see the World of Coca-Cola, Georgia Aquarium, Inside CNN Atlanta, The Children’s Museum of Atlanta, all circling Centennial Olympic Park. You’ll see Zoo Atlanta, Fernbank Museum of Natural History and Stone Mountain Park. Find famous Atlantans at the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic Site, Margaret Mitchell House and Jimmy Carter Library & Museum. The featured artist this year is the wonderful Pastor Donnie McClurkin . Some of the festivities include the following: Choir Competition, Praise Dance Workshop Competition, Girls Boot Camp, Women’s leadership luncheon, lectures, workshops and more to acknowledging an historic woman in Leadership & the Gospel Industry whom have already made positive influences in the fight to save the purify our young women. The success and growth of Gospel Fest 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 in the past 4 years has been tremendous therefore we have once again reserved the Georgia World Congress Center for 2011 for the 6th Annual Festival. Each year our goal is to improve and elevate the presence of the Gospel Music in today’s ever changing world of diversity, economics and family values The Leading Women’s Repertory Theatre /The Atlanta Gospelfest Music Health & Wellness committee and a host of child volunteer advocates have chosen Wellspring Living to be recognized and awarded for the success and continuous drive to increase the awareness of child prostitution/slavery to our young women and we welcome it’s initiative at our 6th annual luncheon in addition to acknowledging an historic woman in Leadership & the Gospel Industry whom have already made positive influences in the fight to save the purify our young women. If you would like to go www.atlantagospelfest.com. Related Stories 8 Cheap Family Vacations Book Review: What Are You Doing With Your 86400 Seconds?

6th Annual Atlanta Gospel Music, Health & Wellness Festival Date Announced

6th Annual Atlanta Gospel Music, Health & Wellness Festival Date Announced

Originally posted here:

The Atlanta Gospel Fest Music Health & Wellness Festival is a three day musical extravaganza designed to elevate your spirits while educating your mind, body and soul with an array of gospel music concerts, a series gospel music industry workshops and panels, wealth & finance empowerment segments and a multitude of free health care services for the entire family.This year”s Gospelfest will be held he beautiful Georgia World Congress Center 285 Andrew Young Boulevard Atlanta, Georgia  Friday July 15th, Saturday July 16th & Sunday July 17th, 2011 . It is designed to give direction and focus to the new uprising in the contemporary Christian and Gospel music throughout the state of Georgia and around the world. Focusing on all gospel genre’s not to exclude Drama, Poetry & Dance. There is something for everyone. Centrally located where you can see the World of Coca-Cola, Georgia Aquarium, Inside CNN Atlanta, The Children’s Museum of Atlanta, all circling Centennial Olympic Park. You’ll see Zoo Atlanta, Fernbank Museum of Natural History and Stone Mountain Park. Find famous Atlantans at the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic Site, Margaret Mitchell House and Jimmy Carter Library & Museum. The featured artist this year is the wonderful Pastor Donnie McClurkin . Some of the festivities include the following: Choir Competition, Praise Dance Workshop Competition, Girls Boot Camp, Women’s leadership luncheon, lectures, workshops and more to acknowledging an historic woman in Leadership & the Gospel Industry whom have already made positive influences in the fight to save the purify our young women. The success and growth of Gospel Fest 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 in the past 4 years has been tremendous therefore we have once again reserved the Georgia World Congress Center for 2011 for the 6th Annual Festival. Each year our goal is to improve and elevate the presence of the Gospel Music in today’s ever changing world of diversity, economics and family values The Leading Women’s Repertory Theatre /The Atlanta Gospelfest Music Health & Wellness committee and a host of child volunteer advocates have chosen Wellspring Living to be recognized and awarded for the success and continuous drive to increase the awareness of child prostitution/slavery to our young women and we welcome it’s initiative at our 6th annual luncheon in addition to acknowledging an historic woman in Leadership & the Gospel Industry whom have already made positive influences in the fight to save the purify our young women. If you would like to go www.atlantagospelfest.com. Related Stories 8 Cheap Family Vacations Book Review: What Are You Doing With Your 86400 Seconds?

6th Annual Atlanta Gospel Music, Health & Wellness Festival Date Announced

‘You’re Amending the Gospel’: MSNBC Host Grills Pastor About Hell Theory

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Martin Bashir may have just conducted one of the toughest interviews you will ever see on MSNBC. As we noted earlier , evangelical pastor Rob Bell is in New York City to promote his new, controversial book, Love Wins . In it, he wrestles with the idea that everyone goes to Heaven. This morning he visited with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos and gave the opposite of a hard-hitting interview. Later in the… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 16/03/2011 02:36 Number of articles : 2

‘You’re Amending the Gospel’: MSNBC Host Grills Pastor About Hell Theory

Obama: ‘I Can’t Spend All My Time With My Birth Certificate Plastered On My Forehead’

In an interview with NBC's Brian Williams that aired yesterday, President Obama addressed the lingering rumors about his birth and religion, condemning what he calls a “network of misinformation” and taking a swipe at the birther movement. “We went through some of this during the campaign,” Obama said in response to a question about the rising number of Americans who think he's a Muslim. “There is a mechanism, a network of misinformation that in a new media era can get churned out their constantly.” “I will always put my money on the American people and I'm not going to be worrying too much about whatever rumors are floating out there,” Obama said. Even facing the beliefs of a number of Americans “as sizable as this?” Williams asked. “I can't spend all my time with my birth certificate plastered on my forehead. The facts are the facts,” Obama responded. added by: TimALoftis

Glenn Beck Condemns Obama’s Christianity, Calls for "Religious Revival"

Standing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday, conservative talk show host Glenn Beck led what turned out to be a largely religious rally, calling on the assembled crowds to bring America back to God. The event took place on the forty-seventh anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s legendary “I Have A Dream” speech, leading to sharp criticisms of Beck for dishonoring Dr. King's memory, and the memory of that day. And indeed, as many have already pointed out, the racial dynamics of Beck's mostly-white rally and the much smaller but heavily African-American protest rally, led by Al Sharpton, seemed to provide a potent illustration of how far the country has yet to come. Religion has slipped its way into recent media discourses, mostly because of the Park51 Center controversy and the revelation that disturbing number of Americans believe Barack Obama to be a Muslim. But many of these discourses have centered on the othering of American Muslims, which is why I was surprised to see a new twist in Beck's discussion of Obama's religion. Beck's new line is that while Obama may not be a Muslim, he is certainly a bad Christian. Specifically, Beck charged that Obama adhered to “liberation theology,” a Catholic movement aligned with Marxism that originated in Latin America in the 1950's and '60s. This morning, debriefing the rally on Fox News, Beck half-heartedly retracted an accusation of racism hurled at Obama last summer, saying that he had a “big fat mouth sometimes” (he may tie Dr. Laura for best non-apology of the year), but added that he made the comment because he “didn't understand Obama's theology.” Obama, Beck said, subscribed to liberation theology, which he described as centered on “oppressor and victim.” This is not, Beck claimed, a theology which many Christians follow, because it is, in his words, the “direct opposite of what the gospel is talking about. It's Marxism disguised as religion.” Beck took this complex theological discussion a little further, saying that while Obama believed that “your salvation is directly tied to collective salvation,” while Beck (and all good Christians) believed that “Jesus came for personal salvation.” Beck said “people aren't recognizing [Obama's] version of Christianity.” Liberation theology is not a new subject for Beck, who devoted an entire episode last July to attacking the idea that Jesus was a victim. “Social justice,” Beck said, “isn't in the Bible…Jesus was a conqueror. Jesus conquered death.” Beck's deep misunderstanding of both liberation theology and much of Christianity itself are obvious in these remarks, and illustrate the extent to which Beck is willing to harness religious rhetoric for political aims. I don't know whether Obama subscribes to liberation theology, but if he does, it's in theory rather than in practice, because the movement itself has very little political influence today. His beliefs correspond to a basic tenet of Christianity: the obligation of the Christian to care for others. This is repeated throughout the New Testament, from Matthew 25:40 (“Just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me [Christ]”) to Paul's epistle to the Romans, where he writes, “We, who are many, are one body in Christ, and individually we are members one of another.” This doesn't seem to jive with Beck's assertion that because Christians believe that they are saved through God's grace, this translates into an exclusively personal vision of salvation. In an interview on Religious Dispatches, Union Theological Seminary president Serene Jones addressed Glenn Beck's bizarre formation of grace, saying, “Just as grace reminds us as individuals that there is nothing we can do to earn the love of God—that it is simply poured out upon us—so too it reminds us that at a political level, the minute we start constructing political structures that we think are unambiguously right, we are making our own politics into God. Nobody does that more than Glenn Beck.” Obama's interpretation of Christianity is not radical – and it is in fact Glenn Beck who is deeply out of sync with fundamental Christian ideals. When asked, on Fox News, how he would respond to critics of his wealth, Beck responded “the money doesn't matter.” It's hard to believe that Beck hasn't read the gospel of Matthew, where Christ says to a young man, “If you wish to be perfect, go, sell your possessions and give the money to the poor” (Matt. 19:21), but from his comments, it seems that he's never bothered to read or wrestle with the scriptures that he seems so eager for Americans to embrace. Perhaps it would be best for Beck simply to listen to Martin Luther King, Jr., who wrote, “Any religion that professes to be concerned about the souls of men and is not concerned about the slums that damn them, the economic conditions that strangle them and the social conditions that cripple them is a spiritually moribund religion awaiting burial.” Is Beck's God the one that we want America to turn toward? And is Beck's Christianity one that Christ would recognize? added by: pinkpanther

NYT’s Friedman Defends CNN’s Nasr and Hezbollah Founder Fadlallah, the Alan Alda of the Middle East

Tom Friedman stepped into a journalistic controversy in his Sunday New York Times column, ” Can We Talk? ” protesting CNN’s firing of senior editor of Middle East affairs Octavia Nasr for posting this message on Twitter upon the death of Hezbollah founder Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah: Sad to hear of the passing of Sayyed Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah… One of Hezbollah’s giants I respect a lot. According to Western intelligence, Fadlallah blessed the drivers of the vehicles behind the 1983 attacks on Marine barracks in Beirut which killed 241 Marines. President Clinton froze his assets in 1995 because of his suspected involvement with terrorists. Yet Friedman was dismayed by Nasr’s dismissal by CNN: I find Nasr’s firing troubling. Yes, she made a mistake. Reporters covering a beat should not be issuing condolences for any of the actors they cover. It undermines their credibility. But we also gain a great deal by having an Arabic-speaking, Lebanese-Christian female journalist covering the Middle East for CNN, and if her only sin in 20 years is a 140-character message about a complex figure like Fadlallah , she deserved some slack. She should have been suspended for a month, but not fired. It’s wrong on several counts. Friedman’s omission of the killing of the Marines is especially odd considering he used the massacre to insult Ronald Reagan in an exchange with then-GOP presidential candidate Lamar Alexander in a March 5, 1995 appearance on CBS’s Face the Nation. Friedman downplayed Fadlallah’s hatred of Israel, never mentioning the phrase “suicide bombers” and saying only that he “had some dark side.” I’ve never met Octavia Nasr or Fadlallah. Fadlallah clearly hated Israel, supported attacks on Israelis and opposed the U.S. troops in Lebanon and Iraq. But he also opposed Hezbollah’s choking dogmatism and obedience to Iran; he wanted Lebanon’s Shiites to be independent and modern, and he built a regional following through his social commentaries. …. Of course, Fadlallah was not just a social worker. He had some dark side. People at CNN tell me Nasr knew both. But here’s what I know: The Middle East has to change in order to thrive, and that change has to come from within, from change agents who are seen as legitimate and rooted in their own cultures. They may not be America’s cup of tea. But we need to know about them, and understand where our interests converge — not just demonize them all. Dan Abrams, founder of Mediaite, responded at length to Friedman in the comments section of a related Mediaite article. ….when a journalist who covers the middle east expresses admiration for the leader of a group that is at least partially a terror organization, its not just a small matter. He may have done other amazing things including being more progressive than others of his ilk, but can you imagine what would happen to an American journalist expressing admiration for an Al Quaeda leader who had other, better, attributes? When you work at a media entity like CNN (or the New York Times) and you don’t get that words matter — all of them — then that in and of itself, should be a fireable offense. One would think, from the wailing of Friedman and Nasr’s other apologists, that Fadlallah was defined by his support of women’s rights. But the Times’s July 5 obituary for Fadlallah , which appeared before the Nasr controversy broke, devoted a single paragraph to his “comparatively progressive positions on women’s rights and family law,” while emphasizing his justification for suicide bombings and hatred for Israel. “Comparatively” is the operative word, as the opinions of this Alan Alda of the Middle East aren’t exactly bold by civilized standards: “…he argued that women had the right to defend themselves from domestic violence.” Friedman’s interest in Fadlallah’s feminism is pretty new. His only previous mention of Fadlallah, according to a Nexis search, was a single citation in the last paragraph of a 1984 news story, back when Friedman was a New York Times reporter.

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NYT’s Friedman Defends CNN’s Nasr and Hezbollah Founder Fadlallah, the Alan Alda of the Middle East

Time’s Padgett Likens ‘Misogynous’ Catholic Church to Segregationists

Time magazine’s Tim Padgett, who claims to be a Catholic, used the rose-colored glasses of his leftism to mercilessly bash his own church in an article on Monday where he compared Catholic bishops to ” white Southern preachers [who] weren’t ashamed to degrade African-Americans ,” labeled the Church ” misogynous ,” and accused the institution of an ” increasingly spiteful bigotry ” against homosexuals. Padgett, who wrote back in January 2009 that the communist Cuban revolution “deserves its due,” launched a full-bore attack on the Church in the Time.com article, ” The Vatican and Women: Casting the First Stone .” Padgett wasted little time in unleashing his rage against the Church, labeling a recent Vatican document, which listed “grave crimes” according to canon law, ” Rome’s misogynous declaration ,” since, in his view, was an “avowal, as obtuse as it was malicious , that ordaining women into the priesthood was a sin on par with pedophilia.” The document in question , which revised the Catholic Church’s concerning “exceptionally serious” crimes against faith and morals, does no such thing. Philip Pullella of Reuters reported on July 16 that “Monsignor Charles Scicluna, an official in the Vatican’s doctrinal department, said there was no attempt to make women’s ordination and pedophilia comparable crimes under canon…law…. While sexual abuse was a ‘crime against morality ,’ the attempt to ordain a woman was a ‘crime against a sacrament ,’ he said, referring to Holy Orders (the priesthood).” The Time writer used his mistaken premise to further attack the Church’s hierarchy: Rome’s misogynous declaration , tossed into its new guidelines on reporting clerical sexual abuse, did more than just highlight the church’s hoary horror at the idea of female priests… It also pointed up an increasingly spiteful rhetoric of bigotry . When Argentina in mid-July legalized gay marriage, the country’s Catholic bishops weren’t content to simply denounce the legislation; they used the occasion to argue for the subhumanity of homosexual men and lesbians, the way many white Southern preachers weren’t ashamed to degrade African Americans during the civil rights movement . Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio not only called the new law “a scheme to destroy God’s plan”; he termed it “a real and dire anthropological throwback,” as if homosexuality were evolutionarily inferior to heterosexuality …. What’s at stake is the Catholic Church’s ability to salvage any moral authority from the sexual-abuse tragedy. The fact is, it can still do that without ordaining women. But it can’t do it while digging itself a deeper hole like a defendant hurling insults at a judge. It can’t do it by excommunicating a hospital nun, as an Arizona bishop recently did, because she signed off on an abortion that saved a mother’s life. It can’t do it by losing sight of the difference between dogged traditionalism and mean-spirited obscurantism, as it so often does these days . And it’s sounding that way to Catholics as much as it is to non-Catholics. Many if not most of us Catholics remain Catholics today not because of the church’s leadership but in spite of it. In a new Gallup poll, 62% of U.S. Catholics say gay relationships are morally acceptable. Which means we’re not thrilled to have our religion represented by a bunch of homophobes wearing miters …. If the Catholic Church’s perennial teachings on the absolute immorality of abortion and homosexual acts send you in that much of a rage, why is Mr. Padgett sticking around? There are plenty of other denominations that he could join that are more in line with his liberal thinking. They have sold out orthodox Christian teachings and principles in order to stay “relevant” in eyes of the secular world. The heterodox Catholic revealed his just-below-the-surface dissent against Catholic Church teaching on sexuality and embryonic stem cell research more than two years earlier in an April 19, 2008 article to mark Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to the U.S. Throughout his most recent piece, the writer made it clear that his objection to Catholic doctrine had reached a new level since the Pope’s visit. He, like many of his fellow travelers, wants to remake the Catholic Church in their left-wing image. That is the source of his outrageous vindictive against the Church. Earlier, at the beginning of his first paragraph, Padgett hinted that he believed the feminist, neo-gnostic theory, popularized by the DaVinci Code, that Mary Magdalene was an apostle: What a rich coincidence we Roman Catholics got to experience at Mass on Sunday, July 18. The scheduled Gospel passage was Luke’s story about Jesus visiting the sisters Martha and Mary of Bethany (who Catholic tradition says was Mary Magdalene). Many biblical scholars believe the narrative shows Jesus encouraging Mary to assume the role of a disciple, like Peter and the guys . Padgett became more explicit in his endorsement of this DaVinci Code theory later in his piece: Its argument for keeping women out of the priesthood — Jesus had no female apostles — is as shamefully bogus as it is unjust. The hierarchy, threatened by claims of Mary Magdalene’s ministerial status, has long tried to identify her with the unnamed “woman caught in adultery” in the Gospel of St. John . When that woman was dragged before Jesus for judgment — death by stoning, the men demanded — Christ famously said, “He who is without sin, cast the first stone.” The church wants us to embrace that compassionate teaching when it comes to pedophile priests, and yet it is deaf enough to cast stones at the “crime” of female priests . The writer couldn’t be more wrong if he tried. There is no longstanding conspiracy against St. Mary Magdalene. Father Prosper Gueranger, a 19th century French Benedictine monk and theologian whose cause for canonization opened up under Pope Benedict XVI, quoted from another great theologian, a teacher of none other than St. Thomas Aquinas, to praise the biblical woman: “[Saint] Albert the Great assures that, in the world of grace…God has made two great lights…the Mother of our Lord [the Virgin Mary] and the sister of Lazarus [St. Mary Magdalene]….As the moon by its phases points our the feast days on earth, so Magdalen in heaven gives the signal of joy to the angels of God over one sinner doing penance .” Also, if the Church is trying to be “compassionate” towards pedophile priests, as Padgett claimed, then why is it doubling the statue of limitations from 10 years to 20 years in cases of priests suspected of child abuse, among other tougher guidelines, in the very document that the writer himself maligned? The Time writer concluded his writer with more left-wing condescension toward the Catholic Church: My daughter happened to be serving as an altar girl at Mass on Sunday. She was smart enough to sense that in the gospel reading, Jesus was relating to Mary as if she were a disciple. And she’ll learn that the New Testament is full of other passages that indicate Jesus believed women could be alteri Christi, or ‘other Christs,’ as priests often call themselves. Real Catholicism encourages that kind of enlightened thinking — and it certainly doesn’t call it, as the Catholic Church does, a crime . Mr. Padgett, you have no right or standing to define what “real Catholicism” is. Be intellectually honest with yourself and your audience: your religion is your liberalism, and the Catholic Church is not the best fit for you. Stop trying to change the Church to fit your left wing agenda.

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Time’s Padgett Likens ‘Misogynous’ Catholic Church to Segregationists

Super Bowl Coach Drops Gargantuan Tip

Filed under: TMZ Sports Indianapolis Colts head coach Jim Caldwell isn’t holding anything back for Super Bowl week — including his wallet — ’cause dude just dropped a monstrous tip after a coaches dinner in Miami this week.

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Super Bowl Coach Drops Gargantuan Tip

Tyler Perry Lawsuit — The Devilish Similarities

Filed under: Celebrity Justice , TV , Music TMZ has obtained a copy of the gospel song Tyler Perry allegedly stole for his show “Meet the Browns” — and let’s just say Tyler’s in for a hell of a fight. Here’s the song as it appeared on the TV show in 2009 (left) and here’s the version Johnny ..

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Tyler Perry Lawsuit — The Devilish Similarities