Football has become the most unlikely place to provide a platform where Jesus is being glorified to millions.
It’s beautiful.
Well done to all those brothers for glorifying our God 🙏
https://t.co/fyl6cV6ucP
@BarackObama@MichelleObama@ObamaFoundation I love the art…I wish you were a better president though. Voted for you in 2008 but abstained from voting altogether in 2012. Good luck, Barry …you’re going to need it.
“I lay it at the feet of Jesus and give Him all the glory.”
This is AWESOME! Jaccob Slavin @Jslavin74 is a Stanley Cup champion. But he knows where the true victory is found and points to Jesus after their clinching Game 6 win.
🎥 WMFY News 2
Amid laughter and hugs, they took him to fulfill a dream: to see the sea.
His friends accompanied him to the shore, where happiness was reflected on his face and the waves seemed to celebrate with him.
Fans at UFC 250 acted with class.
They proudly sang O Canada for Aiemann Zahabi.
Meanwhile, the “Elbows Up” crowd at the FIFA World Cup game in Toronto booed the U.S. anthem.
One side acted petty.
The other showed respect.
That says a lot. 🇨🇦🇺🇸
@StealthMediaHD@BlueBoxDave I don’t care if she’s playing on the WNBA…no lady hustles down a flight of stairs like that nesting their ding ding dong from that quick change in elevation. I would never even think to move like that.
On June 13, 1777, a 19-year-old French teenager landed on a beach in South Carolina, uninvited, to fight in someone else's war. He would become one of the most important men in American history.
The Marquis de Lafayette was one of the richest young aristocrats in France. He had a beautiful wife, a fortune, and zero reason to risk any of it. But he believed in the American cause so fiercely that when the French king forbade him from going, Lafayette bought his own ship and sailed anyway. He literally went AWOL from a life of luxury to bleed for a country that didn't exist yet.
Congress was annoyed at first. Another foreign officer looking for a paycheck? Then Lafayette offered to serve for free and pay his own way. That got their attention.
He met Washington and the two formed one of the great father-son bonds in American history. Washington had no biological children. Lafayette named his only son George Washington Lafayette.
He took a bullet in the leg at Brandywine and kept rallying the retreat. He was instrumental at Yorktown, the battle that won the war. He went home a hero on two continents.
A foreign teenager believed in America before America did. 249 years ago today.