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#Pastor Tom Hughes
soonintheclouds · 6 months
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The World Against Israel | LIVE with Tom Hughes & Dr. Andy Woods
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She was demure and elegant in a flowing gown – he looked dapper and debonair in a tailored navy suit.
So pity the poor bride and groom whose lavish Caribbean nuptials were overshadowed by such glamorous guests.
Then again, if you will invite Prince Harry and his actress girlfriend Meghan Markle to your wedding, what do you expect?
All eyes were on the young lovers as the prince attended the wedding of friend Tom ‘Skippy’ Inskip at the weekend in Montego Bay, Jamaica. 
Not having seen each other for a fortnight, Harry, 32, and 35-year-old Meghan used the trip as an excuse for a romantic reunion – and their affectionate behaviour set tongues wagging that it might not be long before they, too, are walking up the aisle.
For Meghan, the surroundings are not entirely unfamiliar.
In 2011, she married her first husband – film producer Trevor Engleson – at a resort just 60 miles along the coast. So, is she feeling the love second time around? 
We reveal exactly what the young couple got up to on their romantic West Indian weekend...
He flies in economy, while she takes a private jet
Harry arrived in Jamaica on Wednesday to join the groom’s party ahead of the big day – he was one of 14 ushers.
The royals don’t use private planes for personal engagements, so he took a Virgin Atlantic flight from Gatwick to Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay.
The prince did splash out on a premium economy seat, costing upwards of £2,000 return.
Meghan flew in the following day from Toronto, where she’s filming US legal drama Suits, in a private jet that belongs to a friend.
Ever the gentleman, Harry picked her up from the airport, greeting her with a kiss before they drove back to the hotel together.
The luxury resort where JFK stayed
With 110 acres of lush tropical gardens, suites designed by Ralph Lauren and its own private bay, the wedding reception venue is the perfect backdrop for royal romance. 
The Round Hill Resort was built in the 1950s as a series of luxurious cottages for rich and famous visitors. Guests have included JFK and Jackie Kennedy, who spent their honeymoon here.
Grace Kelly, Fred Astaire, Clark Gable, Sir Paul McCartney, and Emma Watson have also stayed.
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A hotel worker revealed that Meghan and Harry stayed in a £5,000-a-night premium luxury villa, the resort’s most exclusive accommodation away from prying eyes, which comes with its own housekeeper, two pools and a games room with a bar and pool table.
Ever watchful of their safety, security guards were stationed in rooms nearby.
Guests have breakfast served on their balcony, and options include Jamaican delicacies such as ackee (a fruit like a lychee), saltfish with fried dumplings and callaloo (a leafy green vegetable).
It’s quite a change from Meghan’s first trip to the island during her low-key wedding in 2011.
She and her husband-to-be stayed at the four-star Jamaica Inn in Ocho Rios, where they indulged in drinking games and wheelbarrow races before saying their vows.
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The (other) very happy couple 
It takes a brave bride to invite glamorous, leggy Meghan to your wedding. But flame-haired Lara Hughes-Young didn’t seem bothered about being outshone.
Lara, 30, a software developer at global technology company ThoughtWorks, knows Harry through her new husband ‘Skippy’, who went to Eton with the prince.
She’s the granddaughter of late Conservative MP Michael Hughes-Young.
Her father holds the title Lord St Helens – making her official title the Honourable Lara Inskip.
She is said to have been ‘singing Meghan’s praises’ since meeting her last year.
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They may have been the focus of attention on the day, but Megan and Harry were far from the only notable guests at the wedding.
Harry’s aunt Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York, was on the list, accompanied, insiders say, by her daughter Eugenie.
After the ceremony, a smiling Fergie, wearing a black minidress with a jewelled neck, was seen posing for photographs with Pastor Conrad Thomas, who officiated the ceremony.
Archie Soames, one of the ushers, is the great-grandson of Winston Churchill. Maid of honour Alice St Clair Erskine is an actress who portrayed the Duchess of Cambridge in the 2011 American TV show William and Catherine: A Royal Romance.
Olympic sprinter Usain Bolt is rumoured to have popped in for the party.
Trying not to upstage the bride
For the ceremony, Meghan chose a £1,200 floral print maxi dress by Canadian designer Erdem. 
Harry opted for a bespoke navy suit, believed to be from his favourite Savile Row tailor Gieves & Hawkes, and teamed with a yellow rose. 
Meghan accessorised her elegant attire with a nude clutch bag and a pair of £249 gold-rimmed sunglasses by Dior to shield her eyes from the hot Jamaican sun.
The bride did her best to stay in the spotlight in a breathtakingly simple white satin gown with a plunging neckline and full, flowing skirt – a direct contrast to Meghan’s high-necked style.
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Meghan's tender touch for her prince 
Meghan placed a protective arm on Harry’s back as she steered him out of the church and guests say the pair were very tactile throughout the reception as she was introduced to his old friends. 
At one point they were seen deep in conversation, as a jacketless Harry drank a beer and Meghan an Aperol spritz cocktail as she continued to rub his back.
Minutes later, she moved even closer, gazing into his eyes and putting her arms around his neck.
‘They are both head over heels and don’t care who sees it,’ said an onlooker.
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hiswordsarekisses · 1 year
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Absolutely amazing - convicting - inspiring - beautiful - I love it so very much!!!!!
From Lynette Hughes:
Intercessory prayer is done most often in private when no one is looking except God. Intercessory prayer is offered on behalf of others and intercessors rarely get any recognition in the church. The men that have been the most heroic for God have been the men with the greatest prayer life. America has produced some of the greatest prayer warriors in the world.
John Nelson Hyde was one of them. He was a missionary to Pakistan through whom millions of people accepted Jesus Christ. They say it was just awesome when this man went into prayer. There's a little book out on him called "Praying Hyde" that would be well worth your reading.
Edward Payson, {1783-1827} a Congregational pastor, better known as Praying Payson of Portland, Maine, was another great prayer warrior. He used to kneel at the side of his bed and pray, and pray, and pray. When they washed his body for burial, they found calloused pads on his knees like a camel.
Tradition says that Apostle James had camel's knees, but it's a living fact that Payson had them. When they were washing him, somebody said, "What abnormal knees. They're heavy with callouses." That's because he used to pray at the side of his bed with energy - and he wore two deep grooves about six or seven inches long into that hard floor where he prayed and made intercession. His prayers brought revival and during the 20 years of his ministry, his church witnessed more than 700 converts who came to saving faith in Jesus Christ.
Or what about Rees Howells? {1879-1950} one of the most effective intercessors of the 20th century and founder of the Bible College of Wales. Leonard Ravenhill met his widow Mrs. Rees Howells. They stood on the terrace of her home and she turned and said to him, "Do you see the room there?" He said, "Yes, I see that room." "That door?" "Yes." "Rees went through that door at six o'clock in the morning and he stayed there until six o'clock at night every day for 11 months except the one day that his mother died."
David Brainerd was an American missionary to Native Americans, especially the Delaware Indians of New Jersey,k who died at the age of 29. David had terminal tuberculosis and only weighed about 95 pounds. An entry from his diary reads: "I got up this morning and the Indians were still committing adultery and drinking and beating their tom-toms and shouting like hell itself. I prayed from a half hour after sunrise to a half hour before sunset. There was nowhere to pray in the Indian camp. I went into the woods and knelt in the snow. It was up to my chin."
No, he didn't have a heater with him or anything else. He was just there in the frigid snow, tuberculosis and all. He continued, "I wrestled in prayer until a half hour before sunset, and I could only touch the snow with the tips of my fingers. The heat of my body had melted the snow."
What amazing intercessory prayer! It was prayer which gave to his life and ministry their marvelous power. It was prayer that gave him an awareness and abhorrence of personal sin. It was prayer that centered his heart in God. It was prayer that made him long for more of Jesus. It was prayer that motivated his service.
David Brainerd, Praying Payson of Portland, John Hyde, and Rees Howells - when God puts the fire to their prayer life, I don't think there will be anything lost. It won't be flammable wood, hay or straw; it will be highly prized, gold, silver, and precious stones.
When Jesus examines our prayer life, will we receive a reward or will we experience loss? Well, God pity us. We can't even get people together long enough to pray for a half-hour; and we have velvet cushions on the chairs, central heating and air conditioning, and soft fluffy carpets on the floor. Brothers and Sisters, are you prepared to stand before the judgment seat of Christ? We may not have to fear the Lake of Fire, but will we need to fear the eyes of Christ that can be like fire piercing through all our hypocritical religiosity and pretense?
Lynette Hughes
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byneddiedingo · 1 year
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Gary Cooper and Joan Leslie in Sergeant York (Howard Hawks, 1941)
Cast: Gary Cooper, Walter Brennan, Joan Leslie, Margaret Wycherly, George Tobias, Stanley Ridges, Ward Bond, Noah Beery Jr., June Lockhart, Dickie Moore, Clem Bevans, Howard Da Silva. Screenplay: Abem Finkel, Harry Chandlee, Howard Koch, John Huston, based on a diary by Alvin C. York edited by Tom Skeyhill. Cinematography: Sol Polito. Art direction: John Hughes. Film editing: William Holmes. Music: Max Steiner
Sheer Hollywood biopic hokum made watchable by Howard Hawks and Gary Cooper, along with a colorful supporting cast. Sergeant York earned Hawks his one and only Oscar nomination for directing -- not Bringing Up Baby (1938) or Only Angels Have Wings (1939) or His Girl Friday (1940) or To Have and Have Not (1944) or The Big Sleep (1946) or Red River (1948) or Rio Bravo (1959), more than two decades of the most entertaining movies anyone ever made. It was in fact Hawks's lack of the kind of high seriousness so often rewarded with Oscars that makes Sergeant York still entertaining today, which is why he lost to John Ford for How Green Was My Valley, a directing Oscar that by rights should have gone to Orson Welles for Citizen Kane. It's fairly clear that Hawks doesn't take Sergeant York entirely seriously, with its exteriors built on the soundstage, its well-scrubbed hillbillies, its cornpone hijinks and caricature religiosity, not to mention dialogue that sounds straight out of Al Capp's "Li'l Abner." But it also takes a Gary Cooper to deliver speeches like "I believe in the bible and I'm a-believin' that this here life we're a-livin' is something the good lord done give us and we got to be a-livin' it the best we can, and I'm a-figurin' that killing other folks ain't no part of what he was intendin' for us to be a-doin' here." Granted, Cooper had just turned 40 and was a good deal too old to play Alvin C. York, but his characteristic sly, shy self-effacement is essential to the role. The old story that York himself said that he wouldn't allow himself to be played on film by anyone else but Cooper sounds like the work of a Warner Bros. publicist, and one biographer has suggested that it was a hoax cooked up by producer Jesse L. Lasky to persuade Cooper to take the part, but se non è vero, è ben trovato -- if it's not true, it ought to be. Sergeant York cleaned up at the box office, especially when it got a second run after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and raked in 11 Oscar nominations, winning for Cooper and for film editing. Other nominees include Margaret Wycherly as Mother York -- a far cry from her killer mama in Raoul Walsh's White Heat (1949) -- and Walter Brennan, with his false teeth in and his eyebrows darkened, as Pastor Pile, along with the screenwriters, cinematographer Sol Polito, the art direction, the sound, and Max Steiner's patriotic tune-quoting score. It can't be taken seriously today, but it can be enjoyed.
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mcveigh1956 · 4 months
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The Pre-Tribulation Argument! | Weekly Interview With Pastor Tom Hughes ...   Watch Very Very Very Very Very Very Very Very Very Very Importance
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Reassuring news updates suppressed by the establishment and much more! Shared daily!!! Come find my show #SupplementalBroadcast 🎱 #youtuberecommendedchronicles🔮 on YouTube & Rumble! New episodes posted regularly!!! 🧩🕯️🎟️ #Censorship #Politics #Truth #Commentary #Science #TheGreatAwakening 🧿🙏🫶🏼
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radioguyusa · 5 months
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The End of the Internet? | Pastor Tom Hughes & Patrick Wood
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caybarrasr1966 · 5 months
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Prophecy Update with Pastor Tom Hughes and David Tal
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aifolksongs101 · 8 months
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If there were a Corpse Bride live action film.
1.Victor Van Dort:
- Eddie Redmayne: With his ability to portray vulnerability and charm, Redmayne would be an excellent choice to play the timid and nervous groom-to-be, Victor.
2. Emily (The Corpse Bride):
- Emma Stone: Known for her versatility and ability to bring depth to her characters, Stone could capture both the haunting beauty and tragic nature of Emily.
3. Victoria Everglot:
- Lily James: James has proven her talent in period dramas and could embody Victoria's grace, elegance, and determination as she navigates her complicated love triangle.
4. Lord Barkis Bittern:
- Tom Hiddleston: Hiddleston's ability to portray complex villains with charisma makes him an ideal candidate for the conniving and manipulative Lord Barkis.
5. Nell Van Dort:
- Helena Bonham Carter: Given her previous collaboration with director Tim Burton and her talent for playing eccentric characters, Bonham Carter could bring humor and quirkiness to Victor's overbearing mother.
6. William Van Dort:
- Colin Firth: Firth's refined acting style would suit the role of Victor's stern and traditional father, adding depth to the character's internal conflict.
7. Pastor Galswells:
- Hugh Grant: Grant's comedic timing and charm would make him a great fit for the bumbling yet well-meaning Pastor Galswells.
8. Elder Gutknecht:
- Ian McKellen: With his commanding presence and gravitas, McKellen could bring the enigmatic and wise Elder Gutknecht to life.
9. Maggot:
- Andy Serkis: Known for his motion-capture performances, Serkis could lend his talent to bring the creepy yet endearing character of Maggot to the screen.
10. General Bonesapart:
- Mark Strong: Strong's ability to portray authoritative and intense characters would make him a suitable choice for the stern and militaristic General Bonesapart.
11. Mrs. Plum:
- Meryl Streep: Streep's versatility and ability to embody a wide range of characters would make her an excellent choice for the eccentric and mysterious Mrs. Plum.
12. Paul the Head Waiter:
- Sacha Baron Cohen: Cohen's comedic prowess and ability to bring eccentric characters to life would make him a perfect fit for the flamboyant and hilarious Paul.
It is important to note that these casting choices are purely speculative and based on the actors' previous performances, suitability for the roles, and their potential chemistry with other cast members. The actual casting decisions for a live-action "Corpse Bride" movie would depend on various factors, including directorial vision, availability, and auditions.
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facetioussoup · 1 year
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Don't Dance with the Devil - Pastor Mark Henry - Guest Speaker for Tom Hughes
Don’t Dance with the Devil – Pastor Mark Henry – Guest Speaker for Tom Hughes
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soonintheclouds · 6 months
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It's Worse Than They Are Telling Us | LIVE with Tom Hughes & John Haller
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politacs7 · 1 year
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vital-information · 2 years
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“When it comes to Jane, so many images have been danced before us, so rich, so vivid, so prettily presented. They’ve been seared onto our retinas in the sweaty darkness of a cinema, and the aftereffect remains, a shadow on top of everything we look at subsequently.
It’s hard; it requires an effort for most readers to blink those images away, to be able to see Edward Ferrars cutting up a scissor case (a scene that arguably carries a strong suggestion of sexual violence) rather than the 1990s heartthrob Hugh Grant nervously rearranging the china ornaments on the mantelpiece. By the time you’ve seen Colin-Firth-as-Mr.-Darcy poised to dive into a lake 50 times, it’s made a synaptic pathway in your brain. Indeed, I’d question whether we can get away from that, certainly how we do.
And this ought to concern us, because a lot of the images—like the images on the banknote—are simplistic, and some of them are plain wrong. Pemberley isn’t on the scale of the great ducal mansion at Chatsworth; Captain Wentworth doesn’t buy Kellynch Hall for Anne as a wedding present at the end of Persuasion; the environs of Highbury, the setting for Emma, aren’t a golden pastoral idyll. We have, really, very little reason to believe that Jane was in love with Tom Lefroy. But each image colors our understanding in some way or another, from Henry Austen’s careful portrait of his sister as an accidental author to Curtis Sittenfeld’s updated Pride and Prejudice, set in suburban Cincinnati.
The effect of all of them together is to make us read novels that aren’t actually there.
In the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, the then secretary of defense, Donald Rumsfeld, famously suggested that there were three classes of knowledge. There were known knowns—things you know you know. There were known unknowns—things you know you don’t know. And there were unknown unknowns—things you don’t know you don’t know. I would suggest that when dealing with someone like Jane Austen, we could add another, and more dangerous, class of knowledge; what might be termed the unknown knowns—things we don’t actually know but think we do.
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If we want to be the best readers of Jane’s novels that we can be, the readers that she hoped for, then we have to take her seriously. We can’t make the mistake that the publisher Crosby made and let our eyes slide over what doesn’t seem to be important. We can’t shrug off apparent contradictions or look only for confirmation of what we think we already know. We have to read, and we have to read carefully, because Jane had to write carefully, because she was a woman and because she was living through a time when ideas both scared and excited people.
And once we read like this, we start to see her novels in an entirely new light. Not an undifferentiated procession of witty, ironical stories about romance and drawing rooms, but books in which an authoress reflects back to her readers their world as it really is—complicated, messy, filled with error and injustice. This is a world in which parents and guardians can be stupid and selfish; in which the Church ignores the needs of the faithful; in which landowners and magistrates—the people with local power—are eager to enrich themselves even when that means driving the poorest into criminality. Jane’s novels, in truth, are as revolutionary, at their heart, as anything that Wollstonecraft or Tom Paine wrote. But by and large, they’re so cleverly crafted that unless readers are looking in the right places—reading them in the right way—they simply won’t understand.
Jane wasn’t a genius—inspired, unthinking; she was an artist. She compared herself to a miniature painter; in her work every stroke of the brush, every word, every character name and every line of poetry quoted, every location, matters.
It’s here, in the novels, that we find Jane—what there is of her to find, after all these years, after all her family’s efforts at concealment. It’s here we find a clever woman, clear-sighted, a woman “of information,” who knew what was going on in the world and what she thought about it.”
— Helena Kelly, “The Many Ways in Which We Are Wrong about Jane Austen: Lies, Damn Lies, and Literary Scholarship”
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mcveigh1956 · 4 months
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It's Engineered to Trap You... It's All Planned! | Pastor Tom Hughes & B...   Watch  Very Very Very Very Very Very Very Very Very Very Importance
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Conformational news updates suppressed by the establishment and much more! Shared daily!!! Check out my show #SupplementalBroadcast 🎱#youtuberecommendedchronicles🔮 on YouTube & Rumble New episodes posted regularly!!! 🧩🕯️🎟️ #NewsUpdates #3DMatrix #Truth #currentevents #5DEarth #TheGreatAwakening 🧿🙏🫶🏼
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hbhughes · 3 years
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Thomas Davis
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Thomas Davis, 82, of Chestnut Street, Nanticoke, died on Saturday at Geisinger South, Wilkes-Barre.
Born in Kingston, he was the son of the late Arthur and Mary (Chervenitsky) Davis.
Tom had resided in Alden for the past 25 years. Prior to his retirement he owned and operated Thomas Davis Plumbing and Heating. Earlier he worked for the Pipefitters and Plumbers Local 524. He was a veteran of the US Navy. He was a member of Grace Independent Baptist Church, Wapwallopen.
He dearly cherished his wife Carol, who was the love of his life. He loved spending time with his children and grandchildren.
He enjoyed gardening ,all types of music ,and taking cruises with his wife .
Preceding him in death are his brothers, Arthur, Daniel, Harry, James, Barry, Ricky, Warren, Ned and sister, Jonelle.
Surviving are his wife of 19 years, the former Carol Hojnowski Davis; children, Jeffrey and Barb Davis, Exeter; daughters, Tami Mirigliani, Pittson, Kimberlee Corby and her husband, Charles, Tunkhannock, Kris Gavigan, Pittston; brother, Andrew Davis, Shavertown; sisters, Rita Galenty, West Wyoming and Audrey Emmert, Forty Fort; grandchildren, Erica, Kurtis, Brett, Sara, Trevor, Jessica, Emily, Zeb, Nicole, Ashley and Sydney; 12 great grandchildren; as well as, many nieces and nephews.
Funeral on Thursday at 10 A.M. from the Hugh B. Hughes & Son, Inc., Funeral Home, 1044 Wyoming Avenue, Forty Fort, with Pastor Brian Korner, officiating. The entombment will be in Saint Mary’s Cemetery, Hanover Twp.
Friends may call on Wednesday from 4 to 7 P.M. at the funeral home.
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