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Sodomy the worst of evils |
Wake up out your slumber |
Stop fighting each other |
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Harry Hay the pedophile agenda |
Wake up out your slumber |
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Stop fighting each other |
GLYNN COUNTY, GA. — A Georgia pastor and conservative political activist was arrested Friday morning on charges of child molestation and aggravated child molestation. Ken Adkins, 56, of St. Simons Island, turned himself into police at about 9 a.m., according to officials with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. The GBI was requested on Aug. 12 to assist officials with the accusations against Adkins. >> Read more trending stories Adkins is currently in the Glynn County Jail. The investigation is ongoing. Adkins has one church, with locations in Brunswick, Jacksonville and Atlanta, according to his website. Adkins recently came under fire when he tweeted "homosexuals got what they deserved" after the deadly mass shooting at Pulse Nightclub. His Twitter account has since been set to private. Prime example of Christians blame gaming this man blames homosexuals for what pedophiles in churches like him does, raping children and turning them into perverts. They are men and women of no integrity. Any cause they raise they so in contempt of law. They hate the laws of the land and pedophiles are the greatest law breakers. Wake up out your slumber
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Indeed |
Wake up out your slumber |
Wake up out your slumber |
Sodomy the worst of evils |
Eco Currency is the revolution |
Them pedophiles are coming out of the church and nowhere else Wake up out your slumber |
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Stop fighting each other |
Saving money is making money. If you learn to save money as a group, region you would have enough for capital investment without bank loans. This is how come Bankers hate group economics. Think your way around obstacles. Wake up out your slumber |
Evangelical church accused of ignoring sexual abuse, "pedophilia ring"Sovereign Grace is not the first church to face cover-up allegations -- and it probably won't be the lastT.F. CharltonMARCH 12, 2013 8:17PM (UTC) This article originally appeared on Religion Dispatches. I was not surprised when Sovereign Grace Ministries (SGM), the church group I grew up in as a teen and young adult, was served with a lawsuit this past October, alleging clergy cover-ups of sexual abuse. Sadly, I was even less surprised when the suit was amended in January to include Covenant Life Church (CLC), the congregation I had attended for nine years, and to add new charges of physical and sexual abuse by pastors, as well as allegations of abuse on church property. From what I’d seen inside Sovereign Grace and Covenant Life from 1996–2005, the alleged abuse seemed almost predictable—the result of the group’s toxic teachings on parenting, gender, and sexuality. Sovereign Grace is a U.S.-based church-planting network (they say “family”) of predominantly white, suburban, reformed evangelical congregations. C.J. Mahaney, the current president, and Larry Tomczak—today a pastor at Bethel World Outreach Church in Brentwood, Tennessee—co-founded the Gaithersburg, Maryland church that would become Covenant Life in 1977. It was the first in what would become a network of 91 churches across 25 states and 17 countries. And it would launch the careers of several conservative Christian activists, including Lou Engle, whose ministry The Call has played a significant role in exporting American religious homophobia to Uganda, as well as Che Ahn, president of the charismatic Harvest International Ministries. Both men were among Covenant Life’s early leaders. Five years after its founding, in 1982, the church launched what would become its overarching ministry, Sovereign Grace, originally called “People of Destiny International.” The grandiose name reflected the group’s aspirations to greater influence as a ministry, a vision that would only begin to be realized as the group shifted away from its charismatic beginnings toward reformed evangelicalism. By 1997, Mahaney had found a new protégé in Joshua Harris, a young evangelical beloved in the conservative homeschooling community for his speaking tours and magazine for religious homeschoolers. Harris’ book I Kissed Dating Goodbye, which promoted parent-supervised “courtships” instead of “secular” dating, was published in the same year. Its popularity—the book was a Christian bestseller—and Harris’ name recognition helped bring SGM to greater prominence among evangelicals. Mahaney eventually appointed Harris as his successor as senior pastor of CLC in 2004. The two men now boast ties with some of the biggest names in reformed evangelicalism, including Albert Mohler, president of the country’s largest Southern Baptist seminary, and Seattle’s “cussing pastor,” Mark Driscoll. Harris and Mahaney are also board members of influential, staunchly conservative organizations like The Gospel Coalition and the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood. Alongside these powerful partnerships has come strife. In its short history, SGM has been shaken by several high-profile departures and church splits. Co-founder Tomczak left in 1997 over theological disagreements with Mahaney’s increasingly Calvinist-inspired preaching, and his objection to how the church “disciplined” him after one of his sons fell into unspecified “teenage rebellion.” In July 2011, another former church leader, Brent Detwiler, released documents criticizing his own ouster, recording perceived slights and internal conflicts in painstaking detail, portraying CLC and SGM’s leadership as fractious and dysfunctional and Mahaney as a narcissistic, passive-aggressive bully. It also charged that in 1997, Mahaney had attempted to blackmail Tomczak out of voicing doctrinal disagreements by threatening to reveal his son’s unspecified “sins.” After Mahaney publicly confessed to this attempted blackmail, and to “deficiencies” in his leadership that seemed to confirm Detwiler’s unflattering account, he was forced to take a leave of absence as president of SGM. But his absence was short-lived; SGM’s board quickly restored him, over the objections of Harris and others, and SGM moved its headquarters to Louisville, Kentucky in April 2012. Since then, several churches have voted to leave SGM,including CLC and Sovereign Grace Church of Fairfax, the other church named in the lawsuit. The Lawsuit This rocky history is a fitting prelude to the controversies surrounding the ministry in recent years. Perhaps the biggest thorn in SGM’s side has been the spate of former members’ blogs that have cropped up since 2007, starting with SGM Survivors—a site where ex-members have shared numerous accounts of SGM’s cult-like atmosphere, including cover-ups of spousal abuse and sexual abuse of children as young as two. And in October 2012, three people whose stories were first shared on SGM Survivors formalized their complaints by becoming the first plaintiffs in the current class action lawsuit, charging the ministry and its past and present clergy for complicity in the abuse. Greetings Reason being these church pedophiles are hard to expose is because they work in teams. This is a coordinated effort to mask these atrocities against babies, fake charities and scape goating. Lots of them perverts are in community policing. I know the Clinton administration were loud advocates of community policing while running child trafficking rings in Haiti and Washington DC. And you guessed it correct these pedophile politicians sit in the front row of churches. Wake up out your slumber
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The modern St. Dunstan's Church was built in 1864, but the site has had a place of worship sitting on it since Anglo-Saxon times. In 2011, the church made national headlines for being the site of a youth club named The Shed. It was here in the late-1980s that the church's groundkeeper and the club's founder, former soldier William Lambert, abused children in a dilapidated hut on the church's grounds. The hut isn't there now; it's long burned down. Painful memories, however, live on. Lambert claimed he was a warlock who could pass on his powers to the children he abused through sex. During a 2011 trial, a court heard that Lambert raped a child on a tombstone, claiming she would get power from "the black floating monk" who he told her haunted the church. Another time, a girl confided in him her fears she was pregnant. He coerced her into having sex with him by claiming that if she did, she no longer would be. His victims were aged between 11 and 15 years old. In May 2011, at age 75, Lambert was jailed for 11 years. Dunstan, the Anglo-Saxon saint the church is named after, is renowned for his battles with the devil. Born in Somerset in the year 910, religious scripture tells us that, in later life, Dunstan was approached by the devil with a view to recruiting him to his cause. Dunstan chased him away with tongs. In the real world, however, this church continues to be soiled by the wrongdoings of the past. In recent years, St. Dunstan's graveyard has been excavated twice. First in 2012, between June and September. Then again in April of the subsequent year. It's believed that its graveyard is the final—unmarked—resting place of the missing schoolboy Lee Boxell. Lee Boxell "Lee was our first child," says his father, Peter, today. "His birth was a dream come true for me. I couldn't wait to get home from work to spend time with him. He was a really good kid. Average at school, but with some really good friends. He was interested in a girl who lived nearby and would often take a neighbor's dog for a walk as an excuse to meet her. He loved music. I took him to see Shakin' Stevens in concert once, which he absolutely loved. He was always calling the radio stations to enter pop music competitions. Taping songs he liked off the radio. He was quiet, well behaved, considerate, and sensitive. Possibly too trusting and not streetwise. I miss him." ADVERTISEMENT When Lee Boxell vanished, almost 31 years ago, he was 15 years old. The last confirmed sighting of him was on the day he went missing, Saturday, September 10, 1988. "It was a warm, sunny day," says Peter. "My wife Christine was going to visit Lee's grandmother. His sister was going to see a friend and I was going shopping. I remember him coming down from his bedroom in the morning, still in his pajamas, and sitting in an armchair. I asked him what he planned for the day. Half-asleep, he mumbled something, but I could see that he wasn’t fully awake, so I decided not to ask him again. We all left the house. That was the last time I saw I ever saw my son." We know that after his family left that day, Lee put on his black jeans, his brown suede shoes, his Swatch, and a white T-shirt with an image of The Flintstones printed on the front. He headed off to Sutton to meet his friend, Russell. The two boys mooched around for a bit, at parting 1 p.m. they parted ways. Lee, a big soccer fan, said he might go to a stadium to watch a game. His team, Sutton United, were away in Lancashire. Lee would watch football wherever and whenever. "He was crazy about Sutton United, was Lee," says Peter, "and he often went to away games on the supporters' bus—but he wouldn’t have gone that far, and not that last minute." This was the era in which the Charlton Athletic team shared a ground with the Palace team. The fixture Lee had his eye on was Charlton vs Millwall. Following extensive reviews of crowd footage after that fixture, it's believed that Lee never made it to the match. For one thing, there's a supposed sighting of him at 2:30 p.m. outside a Tesco grocery store on Sutton High Street. He couldn't have made it to the game for kick-off. The Boxells sensed something might be wrong at around 5 p.m.—during this era, the time that the day's soccer calendar drew to a close. If he didn’t come straight home afterward, Lee would always call at to say when he'd be back. "He always did that," says Peter. "He'd always find a pay phone, even though so many were vandalized." "Lee's mom called me in the evening and panicked when I told her that Lee hadn't come home," continues Peter. "She got a cab back to our house. We contacted Lee’s friends, neighbors, and relatives. We called local hospitals in case Lee had been admitted after an accident. No one knew where Lee was. I knew that Anthony, one of Lee’s close friends, had gone to the coast with his parents. They lived nearby, so I awaited their return home thinking Lee might have gone with them. Anthony arrived late that night, but without Lee. I then contacted the police. They said Lee would probably turn up." Lee didn't turn up. As hours became days, days became weeks, weeks became years—despite Crimewatchspecials, TV appeals by the Wimbledon soccer player John Fashanu, and the T'Pau singer Carol Decker, Lee's face being printed on milk cartons, and even his inclusion in the video for the missing-kid-anthem "Runaway Train" by the indie rock band Soul Asylum—the family still waited. Lee Boxell with his family before he disappeared. In 2013—the year that Lee would have turned 40—a tip-off in the wake of the Lambert investigation prompted police to believe that Lee might be buried in the graveyard of St. Dunstan's, just a mile away from the Boxell's family home. The idea that Lee had attended The Shed, witnessed abuse, tried to stop it, and was then killed was floated. Witnesses said they'd seen him at the club from time to time. "I do think that if Lee had gone to The Shed and seen another child being assaulted, it would have been in his character to come to the victim’s aid," says Peter. Scotland Yard's biggest ever archaeological dig followed. Ground penetrating radar used by the army was deployed. They found nothing. Hope that answers might arise for the Boxells then came when three men—aged 78, 42, and 41—were arrested on suspicion of murder, conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, and indecency with children. A 42-year-old woman was also arrested on conspiracy to pervert the course of justice and indecency with children. However, all were released without charge. "There have been rumors Lee is still alive," says Peter. "I'd love that to be true, but it’s highly unlikely. The only sightings of Lee in recent years are by persons who are associated with the suspected murderer, so are highly suspect. If Lee is alive, others would have seen him…" When Peter speaks to VICE, it's Missing Children Week, a drive by the charity Missing People to put a spotlight on the many missing children stories which have no resolution, which tail away with more questions than answers. "I just hope that one day someone will do the right thing and come forward and reveal where Lee's remains are," says Peter. "We need some closure after 30 years of living in limbo, not knowing what happened to our son. We just need an end." True story about a pedophile ring founded by a church club. These perverts they work in teams which includes the high ranking, wealthy and well educated in leadership. The culprit in this case seems to be the fall guy. This pedophilia isn't rarely occurring it has always been the norm within the church yet well hidden behind community policing. Wake up out your slumber |
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1492 |
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