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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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WDC MEDIA NEWS
Christian News and Media Agency

The First President Deist or Disciple

2006-10-16 -- WDC Media News --

(AgapePress) - Dr. Peter Lillback begins his new volume on George Washington's faith with a cursory review of a few recent authors describing our first president as a "lukewarm Episcopalian," a "warm Deist," "not a deeply religious man," "not particularly ardent in his faith," and "one who avoided, as was the Deist custom, the word 'God.'"

Lillback aims to set the record straight in his comprehensive study titled George Washington's Sacred Fire. In more than 1,000 pages -- about one-third of them appendices to the main text -- he explores every aspect of the president's faith in order to verify that he was, indeed, a devout man who practiced his Christian faith.

How does he so verify? The Providence Forum says most other books about Washington's faith are based on anecdotal evidence that often either cannot be substantiated, or which possesses questionable authenticity.

George Washington's Sacred Fire, however, relies on extensive primary source documents, illustrations and quotes from Washington's own papers and those of his closest colleagues and family that will help clarify why the faith of our founding father matters in 21st century America and beyond.

The author is president of The Providence Forum, president of Westminster Theological Seminary and senior pastor at Proclamation Presbyterian Church, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.

"The mission of The Providence Forum is to 'retheistify' our nation," said Dr. Ralf Augstroze, "reestablishing the spirit of the faith and values of our founding fathers -- a spirit that acknowledged and actively professed the providence of God in the affairs and history of our nation." Augstroze is executive director of The Providence Forum.

Lillback defends the Christian perspective of our nation's founding, history, documents and values as reflected in earlier days of government and the courts. Fifteen years of research went into the book. It critiques and debunks the evidence used by 20th century scholars to "prove" that Washington was a deist.

While the thick volume could be intimidating, a look at the Table of Contents suggests a very basic look at a very human Washington. Lillback begins with a section titled "The Controversy," including a definition of deism. Subsequent sections address Washington's childhood, his Christian education, his personality, his military record and his family life.

The book has earned a great deal of media attention, and it has stirred-up the status-quo historical community across the nation. Understandably so. The purpose of George Washington's Sacred Fire is to prove definitively that George Washington was indeed a devout, practicing Christian, and that quickly puts revisionist historians on the defensive.

The book builds a compelling case for the Christian faith of Washington by relying on the president's own thoughts, words and deeds. Lillback's evidence strongly supports his premise that Washington was not a deist, but a strong practitioner of the Christian faith. Further, he aptly illustrates that this fact is critical for understanding the founding of America and for insuring the future strength of America as "One Nation under God."

The title borrows a phrase from Washington's 1789 inaugural address: "The preservation of the sacred fire of liberty and the destiny of the republican model of government are justly considered as deeply, perhaps as finally, staked on the experiment entrusted to the hands of the American people."


Randall Murphree, a regular contributor to AgapePress, is editor of AFA Journal, a monthly publication of the American Family Association. This book can be purchased through The Providence Forum website. For more information on The Providence Forum:1-866-55-FORUM; P. O. Box 446, Bryn Mawr, PS 19010.

© 2006 AgapePress all rights reserved.

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