“and My people who are called by My name humble themselves and pray and seek My face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”
2 Chronicles 7:14
For over 50 years, Kathy Kelly has helped bring thousands of Gibson guitars to life including yours.
Now, hear her story in the debut episode of Backstage Heroes, a new Gibson TV series shining a light on some of the longest-serving artisans at Gibson craftories in Nashville, Tennessee, and Bozeman, Montana.
Kathy’s story is a reminder that the people behind the guitars are the heart and soul of Gibson, and what makes Gibson so special.
▶️ Watch the full episode here: https://t.co/902ObXKKhf
#GibsonTV #BackstageHeroes #Handcrafted
The first man, the head of the human race, rebelled against God bringing sin and death into the world.
But God loved man so much, He provided a way of salvation for man so his sin could be forgiven and be able to spend eternity with the eternal God.
“For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life” (John 3:16).
In 1963, the largest crowd ever recorded at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and Sports Arena was not for a football game or concert. It was for a Billy Graham Crusade, with 134,254 people inside and another 20,000 listening outside.
Many Christians deviate from a literal interpretation of the Bible. They create their own interpretations and often use parts of the Bible, but distort the context or add human rules to serve their own purposes.
2 Peter 2:1: Warns against false prophets who secretly introduce destructive heresies.
Galatians 1:6-9: Paul curses every doctrine that deviates from the gospel he brought (the "other gospel").
1 John 4:1-3: Gives a test: anyone who denies that Jesus Christ came in the flesh does not come from God.
A new 1959 Les Paul Standard Reissue with a rosewood fretboard, inspired by Gibson Custom, the ideal choice for players who crave the vintage vibe of a 1959 Les Paul Standard
New finishes just landed for select Inspired by Gibson Custom models. 🔗 https://t.co/GKuDPr8V6f
"The Prosperity Gospel’s Greatest Lie Isn’t What You Think It Is"
The church in Laodicea wasn’t condemned because it was wealthy but because it no longer recognized its need for Christ. May we never become so financially secure that we fail to depend on the One who provides “every good and perfect gift” ( James 1:17 ). https://t.co/qHRGkR66zA
@SIRIUSXM - the top 250 on 50’s Gold this weekend has been outstanding. What a great mix of music many/most of them I had never heard before. Really great stuff! Thanks for a great weekend of music 👍🏻
On this day in 1778, a 25-year-old frontiersman conquered a huge chunk of what would become the American Midwest on Independence Day, and he did it without firing a single shot. Almost nobody knows his name, and he may have doubled the size of the country.
His name was George Rogers Clark, older brother of the Clark who would later lead the Lewis and Clark expedition. With only about 175 men, he made a grueling secret march through the wilderness to a French village called Kaskaskia in the Illinois country, then held by the British. He arrived at night on July 4 and slipped in completely undetected.
Here's the genius part. The village was full of French settlers, and Clark was carrying a piece of news they hadn't heard yet: France had just allied with the Americans against Britain. Instead of storming the place, Clark told them. He promised them freedom of religion and won over the local priest, Father Pierre Gibault. The stunned villagers rang the church bell in celebration, a bell now remembered as the "Liberty Bell of the West," and swore allegiance to Virginia. The next day his men took the nearby town of Cahokia the same bloodless way.
That quiet Fourth of July night helped pry the entire Illinois country loose from British control. When the war ended, American claims to the vast Northwest Territory, the future states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin, rested heavily on what Clark had grabbed out here. One young man, 175 tired soldiers, and a well-timed piece of news, and the map of America changed forever.
“If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.” (2 Chronicles 7:14)