“A Night of Healing” with Pastors Billy Burke, George Pearsons, and Gene Bailey.

by

“A Night of Healing” with Pastors Billy Burke, George Pearsons, and Gene Bailey.

The Victory Channel
“A Night of Healing” – 2.26.21

“A Night of Healing” with Pastors Billy Burke, George Pearsons, and Gene Bailey. Expect YOUR Miracle! Share the feed with your friends.

+++

1. Desktop & Mobile Home Page

https://www.facebook.com/PBillyBurke

https://www.youtube.com/c/BillyburkeOrg/videos

“8BELIEVE8” #8BELIEVE8

19 Responses to ““A Night of Healing” with Pastors Billy Burke, George Pearsons, and Gene Bailey.”

  1. rosettasister Says:

    “A Night of Healing” with Pastors Billy Burke, George Pearsons, and Gene Bailey.

    “A Night of Healing” with Pastors Billy Burke, George Pearsons, and Gene Bailey.

    #unido #8BELIEVE8

  2. rosettasister Says:

    “Can’t Find My Way Home Radio”

    #unido #eine #kleine #nachtMusik

  3. rosettasister Says:

    http://khrisrecords.com/lp-33rpm-45rpm/salsa-latin-folclore/

  4. rosettasister Says:

  5. rosettasister Says:
  6. rosettasister Says:
  7. rosettasister Says:

    https://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/04/20/ufo.conference/index.html

  8. rosettasister Says:

    https://lifeonotherworlds.com/the-wannabelievers-prayer/

    The Wannabeliever’s Prayer

    Originally titled
    A QUESTION OF GOD

    If all men are equal, then why am I blind?
    If others have found God, then why cannot I?
    Do all who have God feel the same thing inside
    Or is every man’s God of a different kind?
    Does He form an awareness of strength alongside
    To protect from all fear and to serve as a guide?

    Is it truly so easy to have this perception
    Of God as a fact with no room for deception?
    A Being Supreme, who is strong where Man’s weak,
    Who will offer His hand as protection from grief,
    Is one that I cannot in truth comprehend
    For I sense no such Being and cannot pretend.

    In grief I am reckless, longing to hide,
    For who can I lean on to make it subside?
    All men are made equal by sorrow and pain
    And I see in myself where another may fail.
    Consoled is the one who has God by his side
    For he isn’t alone when it’s his turn to cry.

    Faking prayer and devotion is merely a lie
    That I speak to please men who are helpless as I.
    I should not pray at all if I can’t pray alone,
    And I can’t pray alone so my words are my own.
    I know what is real, and my conscience is boss;
    My eyes and my ears draw the line I can’t cross.

    Yet I long for a Being much stronger than I,
    Whose powers aren’t failing and won’t be denied.
    But how can I believe what I can’t sense or see?
    Or put faith, hope and trust into what may not be?
    My mind and my conscience won’t let me succumb
    Until I’ve the proof that I need to be won.

    Must I wait for a sign that’s not earthly but real
    To make me aware of the God I conceal?
    Shall I sense Him around me, or dwelling inside?
    Is He someone I have that I scornfully hide?
    The strength He gives others is something I need,
    So must I look for God, or will God find me?

    —Saskia Praamsma, written in 1968, before she found God

  9. rosettasister Says:

  10. rosettasister Says:

    https://www.ladonnataylor.com/

  11. rosettasister Says:

    https://stephenlendman.org/2021/02/biden-bashes-russia/

  12. rosettasister Says:

    https://balthazarkorab.com/

    https://pledgetimes.com/

    https://aw-journal.com/

  13. rosettasister Says:

    https://www.mk.ru/politics/2021/02/28/gosdepartament-otricaet-peregovory-s-frg-po-severnomu-potoku-2.html

    https://tass.com/economy/1261095

    Earlier, the German government’s deputy government spokesperson, Ulrike Demmer said that the German government was exchanging views with partners, including the United States, on the construction of the #NordStream2 gas #pipeline.

    During the briefing, representatives of the U.S. State Department stressed that the word “exchange” shouldn’t be construed as a negotiation and that the Biden administration, in the course of normal diplomatic conversations, had registered its concerns about the pipeline with the Germans, the portal said.

    #unido

    [We broke Ukraine w our meddling. This between Germany and Russia.]

  14. rosettasister Says:

    https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/202102271082206197-us-syria-strikes-a-very-mixed-message-to-iran–return-to-regime-change-op-against-damascus/

    @MaxRParry: “In regards to Syria, it makes clear that Biden has reset US policy back towards the proxy war which the Obama administration waged for 6 years against #Damascus before Trump took office”

    Washington “once again willing to act as an AF for terrorist proxies in Syria targeting Iranian militias that were at the forefront in the fight against Daesh and other jihadists used as strategic assets for the US foreign policy goal of #regimechange to oust Assad”

  15. rosettasister Says:

    BARCELONA.- If there were no longer an adjective like “pyrrhic” -referencing King Pyrrhus of Ancient Greece- to refer to agonizing victories that taste like defeats, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad could lend his name to linguistic posterity .

    A decade after the beginning of the popular revolt in Syria that turned into a civil war, Al-Assad can boast of having denied the multiple analyzes that predicted his inevitable fall. However, the price he had to pay is so onerous that even his survival is not guaranteed in the long term.
    Ads by

    The Syrian war experienced one of its main turning points with the capture of Aleppo, the country’s second city, by troops loyal to Al-Assad in 2016. Since then, it is unlikely that the Syrian rebels could reverse the balance of forces and bring down the regime.
    The first protests, like this one in Idlib, were peaceful demonstrations quickly suppressed by the regime.
    The first protests, like this one in Idlib, were peaceful demonstrations quickly suppressed by the regime HANDOUT – X80001

    For this reason, international and local analysts and observers almost five years ago proclaimed Al-Assad as the virtual winner of a warlike conflagration that became a geostrategic board in which numerous world and regional powers participated.

    Currently, only a significant pocket of resistance remains in Idlib province, controlled by a coalition of Islamist militias with the permission of Turkey, which occupies a wide swath of territory adjoining the border between the two countries. In addition, the Rojava region, located in the northeast of the country and administered by a coalition of Kurdish parties and militias and where the United States has a dozen small military bases, also escapes the control of Damascus.

    Although the regime and its allies in Moscow and Tehran made some progress in recent years in their attempt to regain both northern territories of the country, these were limited. In essence, the war remains stagnant and it seems that, without the acquiescence of Ankara and Washington, Damascus will not be able to re-exercise its sovereignty over the entire territory of the country. In practice, these two powers enjoy a veto on the terms of the armistice.
    The first militias were those of the Free Syrian Army, made up of deserters from the Armed Forces
    The first militias were those of the Free Syrian Army, made up of deserters from the Armed Forces HANDOUT – X80001

    From Al-Assad’s perspective, the loss of his independence and of a part of the national territory is the heaviest toll he had to pay to retain power. Above all, considering that his party, the Baath, is of Arab nationalist ideology. The culprits of this situation are not only the United States and Turkey, but also their own allies: Russia and Iran, without whom they would not have been able to prevail in the civil war, and for that they took their toll.

    Moscow allowed Al-Assad key hegemony in the skies, from which he mercilessly bombarded enemy enclaves. Tehran, for its part, provided the cannon fodder in the fiercest land battles. Both determine today in a decisive way the politics in Syria.

    Negotiations with the Kurds and with Turkey depend on Moscow’s national interests, which can use Syria as a bargaining chip to obtain revenue in other scenarios such as Libya.

    As for the Ayatollahs’ regime, it has bases that serve as an arms supply to Hezbollah, its Lebanese ally, causing repeated Israeli bombardments on Syrian territory. Or from the United States, like the one that happened last Thursday. In that case, it was a Pentagon retaliation against pro-Iranian militias that had attacked US positions in Iraq.
    Aleppo was the scene of war most punished by all sides. His fall in 2016 at the hands of Assad’s forces marked a turning point
    Aleppo was the scene of war most punished by all sides. Its fall in 2016 at the hands of Assad’s forces marked a turning point ABDALRHMAN ISMAIL – X03740

    However, the main concern of the Syrian president these days is not the sovereignty of the Arab country, but its ailing economy. All economists agree that the Syrian productive fabric is at its worst since the start of hostilities. The World Food Program, a UN agency, warned that 60% of Syrians, some 12.4 million people, are at risk of famine, an unprecedented situation.

    Prices have doubled in the last year and a few weeks ago the Syrian pound reached its lowest value against the dollar on the black market, sending the price of imports skyrocketing.

  16. rosettasister Says:

    Prices have doubled in the last year and a few weeks ago the Syrian pound reached its lowest value against the dollar on the black market, sending the price of imports skyrocketing. Right now, a doctor receives a salary of about $ 50 a day, and an informal worker must settle for just five dollars, not enough to feed a family.
    An unusual mural by Diego Maradona in Idlib, a region that still resists the reconquest of Assad’s troops
    An unusual mural by Diego Maradona in Idlib, a region that still resists the reconquest of Assad’s troopsMUHAMMAD HAJ KADOUR – AFP

    The causes of this collapse are diverse, and they combined into a kind of perfect storm. In addition to the destruction of infrastructure caused by the war, there were robust Western economic sanctions, the very severe financial crisis in neighboring Lebanon – where the wealthy Syrian classes kept their savings – and the slowdown in activity due to confinements due to the Covid-19 pandemic. On top of that, both Russia and Iran are going through a delicate economic crisis, which is why they cannot assist their ally in the Middle East.

    Thus, in part, Western countries hold the key to reviving the Syrian economy and sealing the return of Damascus to the international community as a full member. However, for the moment, neither Washington nor the European Union (EU) seem inclined to remove Syria from its pariah state status without the implementation of profound political reforms. Al-Assad’s dream of turning the clock back a decade, as if the Arab Spring had been a mere nightmare, has no prospect of materializing.

    After having drowned the popular revolt of 2011 in a bloodbath, leaving a balance of more than six million refugees, as many internally displaced people, almost half a million civilian victims, including hundreds due to chemical attacks and thousands of other opponents Tortured and murdered in Syrian prisons, Al-Assad probably crossed too many red lines to be pardoned by the international community.

    Although perhaps all these victims do not torment his conscience today, this is the most onerous and indelible toll of his Pyrrhic victory.
    Ricard gonzalez

  17. rosettasister Says:

    Source: https://www.lanacion.com.ar/el-mundo/diez-anos-de-guerra-en-siria-la-amarga-victoria-de-bashar-al-assad-nid27022021/

  18. rosettasister Says:

    “[An Iran deal] should allow for the greater normalisation of economic relations, because… for the first time in modern history, the governments of Iran and Iraq, Syria and Lebanon are friendly,” Landis said.

    “Now they’re all aligned. And for Iran, you would want to see a giant pipeline built from Iran, right across the Arabian Desert, between Iraq, Syria, and to the coast that would then send that oil and gas to Europe, avoiding Turkey,” Landis continued. “This would be the super-smart thing to do.”

    Such a pipeline would take time but would bring significant income to Syria and its neighbours.

    “This would be good for Europe and it’d be good for Iran and Iraq and Syria – but America is stopping all that by keeping all transit trade stumped by having its troops on the major borders and continuing its sanctions, and you name it – just it’s not going to happen,” Landis said.

    “But in theory, that’s what Iran would want, because it would allow it to connect with the world and become a major trading partner and enrich itself and its neighbours, including Syria.”

    Source: https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/biden-syria-policy-bashar-assad-diplomacy

  19. rosettasister Says:

    “[An Iran deal] should allow for the greater normalisation of economic relations, because… for the first time in modern history, the governments of Iran and Iraq, Syria and Lebanon are friendly,” Landis said.

    “Now they’re all aligned. And for Iran, you would want to see a giant pipeline built from Iran, right across the Arabian Desert, between Iraq, Syria, and to the coast that would then send that oil and gas to Europe, avoiding Turkey,” Landis continued. “This would be the super-smart thing to do.”

    Such a pipeline would take time but would bring significant income to Syria and its neighbours.

    “This would be good for Europe and it’d be good for Iran and Iraq and Syria – but America is stopping all that by keeping all transit trade stumped by having its troops on the major borders and continuing its sanctions, and you name it – just it’s not going to happen,” Landis said.

    “But in theory, that’s what Iran would want, because it would allow it to connect with the world and become a major trading partner and enrich itself and its neighbours, including Syria.”

    Source: https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/biden-syria-policy-bashar-assad-diplomacy

    [Irony of ironies, BUT this is exactly what SHOULD happen.]

Comments are closed.