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Holy Land Experience

TBN's Acquisition Of 'Holy Land Experience' Theme Park Seeks To Change More Lives

June 9, 2007 ORLANDO -- Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN), the world's largest religious broadcaster and America's most-watched faith channel, hopes to change more lives through its addition of the "Holy Land Experience" theme park in Orlando, Fl., to the TBN family. Through the acquisition, TBN will bring an integration of the powerful living recreation of ancient Jerusalem with a cutting edge facility that will be used for television production, dramas, musical concerts, special events and movies.

"This marriage will bring an unprecedented synergy to both ministries and the production that is done there will be seen by a worldwide audience. TBN's involvement made sense, because both ministries are about changing and effecting people's lives. We've been doing that for 34 years," said Paul Crouch, Jr., TBN Vice President of Administration. "We believe this opportunity was heaven sent because it bought TBN an Orlando-based facility to fulfill it's local programming obligations for WGTL CH-52 and it will provide "The Holy Land Experience" with much needed promotion to bring more people to the theme park and Orlando as a whole."

The Holy Land Experience could well be considered Orlando's most inspiring destination as visitors experience a full day of discovery that takes them 2,000 years back in time to the world of the Bible. It brings to life ancient Israel as a unique, thriving world filled with fascinating exhibits and venues. Visitors learn about the Wilderness Tabernacle and the Great Temple; discover the amazing history of the Bible; explore the city of Jerusalem in miniature; see re-enactments of Jesus' ministry, His life, death, and resurrection; and feel the power and passion of our original musical productions.

WGTL TV, Channel 52, has a reach of over four million viewers in the Orlando and Cocoa Beach metropolitan areas with TBN's wide range of innovative faith-based programming. In October of 2006, TBN celebrated the inaugural broadcast of WGTL Ch-52 in Orlando with a dedicatory service attended by TBN founders Paul and Jan Crouch, Pastor Benny Hinn, Singer and Preacher Judy Jacobs hosted by Pastor George Cope and Calvary Assembly in Winter Park, Fl.

The combination of the production facilities and the Holy Land Experience offers Orlando visitors a powerful and unique faith based experience that can be promoted worldwide through the TBN network. The promotional capability can drive visitors to the complex.

"Some of the staff was asking what is going to be the immediate effect here at the park and my answer was 'I'm planning on you having more people coming through the turnstiles this summer,'" said Crouch. "Universal Studios does the same thing. We want the 'Holy Land Experience' to be a faith-based version of that."

About TBN
TBN is the world's largest religious network and America's most watched faith network. Each day TBN offers 24 hours of commercial-free inspirational programming that appeals to people in a wide variety of denominations. Beginning in 1973 as a single UHF station in southern California, TBN now reaches every major continent via 65 satellites and more than 12,500 television and cable affiliates worldwide. In the United States, TBN is available to 92 percent of the total households. Its website receives more than 27 million visitors monthly. For more information on TBN, visit www.tbn.org


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Christian News and Media Agency

Christians Warned Not to Jump on Global Warming Bandwagon

2006-08-07 -- WDC Media News --

(AgapePress) - A conservative columnist says an attempt to align the evangelical movement with the environmental movement on the issue of global warming is "nothing new under the sun." He believes Evangelicals should have better sense than to support what he sees as just another cultural fad.

In February, 85 Evangelicals endorsed an "Evangelical Climate Initiative," stating their belief in the need to fight human-caused global warming, the increase in temperature in the world's climate that they believe to be almost entirely due to human activity. In their statement, they assert that the consequences of global warming will be disastrous, particularly for the poor, if the warming effect is not reversed.

However, Mark Tooley of the Institute on Religion and Democracy recently argued against these claims in a column for the American Spectator magazine. He contends it is foolish to spend hundreds of billions of dollars over the next few decades trying to reorder industry and reduce economic growth to stave off global warming.

"Would it not be better," Tooley asks, "to spend that vast amount of wealth on actually helping the poor around the world?" Would that not be of greater benefit, he says, to "those hundreds of millions of people in the Third World, especially, who -- for example -- do not have access to any electricity whatsoever, do not have refrigeration, do not have heat, do not have air conditioning?"

In the past, the IRD spokesman notes, "some evangelicals invited ridicule by foretelling imminent doom if listeners did not repent." The Evangelical Climate Initiative, he says, "seems to fall into that same dubious tradition." In his article in the American Spectator, the conservative writer describes the Evangelical Climate Initiative as merely a passing craze.

"It's a vanity of people in every generation to think that their own problems are unique and completely divorced from what previous generations have experienced," Tooley says, "but in fact, we know that is not the case. I think that the apocalyptic talk about global warming is in some cases a fad that has been with us for several years."

That fad will certainly last for several more years, the Christian columnist asserts. However, he says he suspects currently popular global warming theories "will not be with us in the coming decades," as they will eventually subside, "just as the talk about the new ice age in the 1970s ultimately faded away."

Tooley says he would hope Evangelicals would have a better sense of history and be less anxious to embrace fads or jump on the "bandwagon involving apocalyptic claims," whether these have to do with global warming or other potential disaster scenarios.


Jim Brown, a regular contributor to AgapePress, is a reporter for American Family Radio News, which can be heard online.

© 2006 AgapePress all rights reserved.

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