From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Bush Heading to Jerusalem

Dear God’s people...
Please help the Team (Jerusalem Prayer Team) to support them by voting your 
opinion.
I think we, Indonesian Christian, have the rights to vote this as well...
Psalm 122:6 (!)
Blessings
Twinny Rambers
=================================================

President Bush will be in Jerusalem on January 9th to push his "Palestinian 
State in '08" proposal forward with East Jerusalem as the capital. This is 
President's Bush first trip to Israel since becoming president. His goal is to 
convince the Israeli public that a Palestine State with East Jerusalem as its 
capital is in their best interest and he has the support of the American 
people.  21,150 people have signed the urgent petition to the president. Send 
this to everyone on your list and ask everyone to do the same. We need 100,000 
signatures so President Bush knows that we will not support the U.S. dividing 
Jerusalem. He has mobilized virtually the entire world behind this plan. If 
everyone will just get four friends to sign this we will have the 100,000.

Vote your opinion now: 
http://tool.donation-net.net/CTBF/AnnapolisVote.cfm?dn=1032&refer=5&ecode=39925 

If you have friends that don't have access to the internet, please print a copy 
and have them sign it and mail it in: 
http://jerusalemprayerteam.org/pdf/vote.pdf 
-------------------------------------------- 
Join the Jerusalem Prayer Team Now! 
http://tool.donation-net.net/ctbf/register.cfm?dn=1032&refer=5&ecode=39925 

Do not reply to this email. Please address email inquiries to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Jerusalem Prayer Team 
P.O. Box 210489 
Bedford, TX 76095 
FAX: 817-285-0962 
1-800-825-3872 
http://jerusalemprayerteam.org 

Dr. Tim LaHaye, Mrs. Anne Graham Lotz, Mr. Pat Boone, Mr. Bill McCartney, Ms. 
Kay Arthur, Rev. Tommy Tenney, Dr. A.R. Bernard, and Dr. Jay Sekulow are just a 
few of the more than 300 Christian Leaders who are part of the Jerusalem Prayer 
Team. 

The Jerusalem Prayer Team is a non-profit organization with 501c3 tax exempt 
status. The Jerusalem Prayer Team is a prayer movement of people around the 
world. It is a non-denominational organization. It receives no support from the 
Nation of Israel. Donations are tax deductible. 

The mission of the Jerusalem Prayer Team: To guard, defend and protect the 
Jewish people and Eretz Yisrael until Israel is secure, and until the Redeemer 
comes to Zion. 
===========================================
From: Jeanne Kaligis 

Colo Gunman - had been killed out


COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - The gunman believed to have killed four people at a 
mega church and a missionary training school had been thrown out of the school 
a few years ago and had been sending it hate mail, police said in court papers 
Monday. 

The gunman was identified as Matthew Murray, 24, who was home-schooled in what 
a friend said was a deeply religious Christian household. Murray's father is a 
neurologist and a leading multiple-sclerosis researcher.
 Five people — including Murray — were killed, and five others wounded Sunday 
in the two eruptions of violence 12 hours and 65 miles apart.

The first attack took place at Youth With a Mission, a training center for 
missionaries in the Denver suburb of Arvada; the other occurred at the New Life 
Church in Colorado Springs, where Murray was shot by a security guard, though 
investigators said he may have died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

 "Through both investigations it has been determined that most likely the 
suspect in both shootings are one in the same," police said in court papers.

Colorado Springs police said the "common denominator in both locations" was 
Youth With a Mission. The training center maintains an office at the 
10,000-member church.

 "It appears that the suspect had been kicked out of the program three years 
prior and during the past few weeks had sent different forms of hate mail to 
the program and-or its director," police said.

In a statement, the training center said health problems kept Murray from 
finishing the program. It did not elaborate. Murray did not complete the 
lecture phase or a field assignment as part of a 12-week program, Youth With a 
Mission said.

 "The program directors felt that issues with his health made it inappropriate 
for him to" finish, it said.

Police gave no immediate details on the hate mail. And the training center said 
that Murray left in 2002 — five years ago, not three — and that no one there 
can recall any visits or other communication from him since then.

 Earlier Monday, a law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity 
said it appeared Murray "hated Christians."

Investigators have not said whether Murray singled out his victims. But the two 
people killed at the church — sisters Stephanie and Rachael Works, ages 18 and 
16 — frequented the training center, their uncle Mark Schaepe of Lincoln, Neb., 
told The Gazette of Colorado Springs.

Authorities searched the Murray house on a quiet street in Englewood on Monday 
for guns, ammunition and computers. No one was home when a reporter visited the 
split-level brick home early Monday. Murray's father, Ronald S. Murray, is 
chief executive of the Rocky Mountain Multiple Sclerosis Center in Englewood.

 Matthew Murray lived there along with a brother, Christopher, 21, a student at 
Oral Roberts University in Tulsa, Okla.

A neighbor, Cody Askeland, 19, said the brothers were home-schooled, describing 
the whole family as "very, very religious."

Christopher studied for a semester at Colorado Christian University before 
transferring to Oral Roberts, said Ronald Rex, dean of admissions and marketing 
at Colorado Christian. He said Matthew Murray had been in contact with school 
officials this summer about attending the school but decided he wasn't 
interested because he thought the school was too expensive.

 Police said Murray's only previous brush with the law was a traffic ticket 
earlier this year.

Senior Pastor Brady Boyd of New Life Church said the gunman had no connection 
to the church. "We don't know this shooter," Boyd said. "He showed up on our 
property yesterday with a gun with the intention of hurting people, and he 
did." 

The gunman opened fire at 12:30 a.m. at the Youth With a Mission center. 
Witnesses said the man asked to spend the night there and opened fire with a 
handgun when he was turned down. They described him as a young man, perhaps 20, 
in a dark jacket and cap. 

Later, at New Life Church, a gunman wearing a trench coat and carrying a 
high-powered rifle opened fire in the parking lot and later walked into the 
church as a service was letting out. 

 Jeanne Assam, a church member who volunteers as a security guard, shot Murray, 
who was found with a rifle and two handguns, police said. 

Assam said she believes God gave her the strength to confront Murray, keeping 
her calm and focused. 

"It seemed like it was me, the gunman and God," she said at a news conference. 

The pastor credited her with preventing more bloodshed. 

"There could have been a great loss of life yesterday, and she probably saved 
over 100 lives." 

Boyd said the gunman had a lot of ammunition and estimated that 40 rounds had 
been fired inside the church, leaving what looked like a "war scene." 

 About 7,000 people were in and around the church the time of the shooting, 
Boyd said. Security had been beefed up after the shootings hours earlier in 
Arvada, he said. The church had a total of 15 to 20 volunteer security officers 
inside at the time of the attack, he said. 

Some members of the congregation reacted with compassion and forgiveness, in 
keeping with their faith. 

Ashley Gibbs was getting into a car with David Harris when they heard the 
gunshots. They stayed in the vehicle. 

"It was obvious that he was in some sort of pain and going through a lot," 
Gibbs told "Today." "I just prayed God would bring him peace." 

New Life, with a largely upper middle-class membership, was founded by the Rev. 
Ted Haggard, who was dismissed last year after a former male prostitute alleged 
he had a three-year cash-for-sex relationship with him. Haggard admitted 
committing unspecified "sexual immorality." 

The two people killed at the missionary center were identified as Tiffany 
Johnson, 26, and Philip Crouse, 24. 

Johnson, who grew up in Chisholm, Minn., loved working with children and wanted 
to see the world, said family friend Carla Macynski. 

 "Tiffany was a well-liked, easygoing 26-year-old. She was friendly, 
adventurous and a definite leader," Macynski said as she choked back tears. 
Johnson had traveled to Egypt, Libya and South Africa with the missionary 
group. 

Crouse, of Alaska, was a former skinhead who went through a dramatic spiritual 
conversion at 18. He had helped build a foster home at a Crow Indian 
reservation in Montana, said Ronny Morris, who works with a Denver chapter of 
the mission. 

"Whenever somebody asks me to give a specific situation where a kid's life has 
been changed or transformed, I always think of Phil, because he had such a 
radical transformation of life," said pastor Zach Chandler in Anchorage, 
Alaska. 

Youth With a Mission was started in 1960 and has 1,100 locations with 16,000 
full-time staff, said Darv Smith, director of a Youth With a Mission center in 
Boulder.  

The Colorado shootings came days after a 19-year-old gunman opened fire at a 
busy department store in Omaha, Neb., killing eight people and himself. 

===============================================

From: hesti biaktika 

DAYS OF ELIJAH

These are the days of Elijah
Declaring the words of The Lord
These are the days of Your servant, Moses
Righteousness being restored
And tough these are days of great trials,
of famine, of darkness and sword,
still we are voice in the desert, crying,
preparing the way of The Lord...

Behold He comes, riding on the clouds,
Shining like the sun, at the trumpet calls.
Lift your voice, it's the year of Jubilee
Out of Zion's hill salvation comes....

......Come Lord Jesus...my 'Super Hero'...!

Kirim email ke