March for Life Urges ‘Unity’ for Unborn amid Biden-Harris Radical Abortion Agenda
The virtual March for Life begins Friday at noon ET with the theme, “Together Strong: Life Unites!”
I ❤️ this crew. Our last/night before the @March for Life mtg is a little different this year but we are working hard for a beautiful and meaningful 48th March for Life. We start these behind scenes daily mtgs weeks out. #whywemarchpic.twitter.com/PRuQtA2I7I
Today is the 48th annual #MarchForLife! While we won t be leading the March in D.C. this year, the Christendom community will hold a march on campus, a specially dedicated Holy Hour for Life, and Adoration until midnight. Join us in prayer today! #WhyWeMarchpic.twitter.com/2DrIUiaysD
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Days before Christmas, a hospital in the North Carolina foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains maxed out its resources.
Caldwell UNC Health Care, a 137-bed hospital in Lenoir, had planned for a surge of COVID-19 cases for months. But the facility went from treating 19 infected patients to 49 in just one week, its president and CEO Laura Easton told
MedPage Today. The hospital s average daily census rose from between 60 and 80 patients to between 110 and 120.
Community spread was high, and a number of employees were also out of work, Easton said. Three out of five neighboring hospitals were similarly stretched.
Wilson
Joseph Edward “Ed” Wilson, 96, of Trenton, Ohio, formerly of Altoona, entered the presence of his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and was reunited with his beloved wife, Alice, on Monday, Jan. 18, 2021. He was born in Barnesboro, son of the late Thomas and Leona (Lowmaster) Wilson.
He married Alice (Thomas) Wilson on June 11, 1949, at the Second EUB Church in Altoona.
Surviving is a son, Thomas Edward (Karen) of Beavercreek, Ohio; a daughter, Patricia Louise (Danny) Kuykendoll of Trenton, Ohio; seven grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his beloved wife of 66 years, Alice; and a brother, William Robert Wilson.
God has used COVID-19 to create the greatest evangelism opportunity in history, said evangelist Nick Hall.
Hall is the leader and founder of Pulse, an evangelistic organization that reaches young people around the world with the Gospel. He told The Christian Post that during the COVID-19 pandemic, people worldwide accepted the Gospel at higher rates than normal.
“I think this could be the greatest evangelistic hour in the history of global Christianity and I say that with 2020 as the starting point,” he said.
Other online evangelism groups including the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, Global Media Outreach and Cru have also experienced a rise in the number of people interested in faith.
Franklin Graham interviewed by Together LA, Fresno, California, May 28, 2018. | Together LA
The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association’s prayer phone line has received 1,000 calls every day since its creation in March 2020 in response to COVID-19 and the lockdowns, said its assistant director Jonathan Edwards.
Most people call the prayer line because they’re afraid and worried about current events, said Edwards, who manages the prayer line for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, in an interview with The Christian Post. Call numbers rose rapidly at the beginning of the COVID-19 lockdowns. They’ve started rising again at the beginning of January.
Right now, the phone line receives 200 more calls than usual every day, he said. Call numbers get even higher after the Rev. Franklin Graham appears on television.