$ FIVE POINT THREE MILLION PAYED ! 👍🤗 PASTOR TOM HUGHES

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TheBestBeer_Root
MainframeSupertasker wrote:

True Spirit of Christmas grin.png

Dang Skippy! “,

TheBestBeer_Root

lol simple as that .

TheBestBeer_Root

This is Tom Hughes

SoulMate333

Dr.Clear... if you take any day of the year, there is somewhere in our history pagan roots.  You have missed the point altogether.. God looks to our heart motives.  It is not wrong to celebrate the birth of Christ.  What is wrong is the commercialism that stems from it.  But retailers strive to make money off every holiday, legit or not, which has nothing to do with the holiday and everything to do with the heart of man.  Christmas is a unique opportunity to share the unconditional love of Jesus.  These are very good:

https://www.gotquestions.org/Christian-Christmas.html

https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/biblical-topics/new-testament/how-december-25-became-christmas/

SoulMate333

The gesture by that church is definitely a model to follow.  It is a really good bang for buck way to help people financially. 

TheBestBeer_Root

Thank you for your wonderful posts, Lesley !

TheBestBeer_Root
DrClear wrote:

 

.....just remember folks the masses go the wrong way even when dealing with the churches wrong way.. etc.

Just quoted yours making sure you see the recent posts by @SoulMate333 regarding paganism.

Any debate needs to be started by selecting ‘chat’ and message them, and Lesley is right on.

TheBestBeer_Root
TheBestBeer_Root wrote:

Here.... THIS IS CHRISTMAS ! ! ! 
                  ✨🎄✨🎁✨🥰✨

 

Eagle Rock church erases $5.3 million in medical debt for poor L.A. area families

Christian Assembly Church is working with a debt-forgiveness nonprofit to help erase bills for 5,555 low-income households in 28 L.A. County neighborhoods

In an astounding Christmas gift, an Eagle Rock church is wiping out $5.3 million in medical debt for thousands of low-income Los Angeles area residents. 

Using more than $50,000 worth of donations from parishioners, Christian Assembly Church is working with a debt-forgiveness nonprofit to help erase bills for 5,555 households who earn less than twice the federal poverty level. 

Twenty-eight cities in Los Angeles County were selected for the debt-relief program based on neighborhoods where church members live. Areas represented by 15 or more households from within the church community were chosen, including the city of Los Angeles, Azusa, Hollywood, San Gabriel, Sylmar and Glendale. 

“We are able to give a Christmas gift to the people of Los Angeles, no strings attached,” pastor Tom Hughes announced to cheers and a standing ovation during the church's Christmas services last weekend.

RIP Medical Debt, a nonprofit started in 2014 by two former debt collectors, uses donations to buy large bundles of medical debt for pennies on the dollar. Collection agencies typically sell debts for a fraction of the cost to bill collectors, who then pursue the original amount. It takes roughly $100 to erase $10,000 worth of debt. The church's $50,000 donation can forgive more than $5 million for those who owe.

Church member Jean Kellett of Sherman Oaks said when she learned of the debt-relief plans during Sunday's service, she wept.

"Everyone was really touched. Tears began streaming," said Kellett, who has been attending Christian Assembly Church since 2003. "There wasn’t any better expression of Christmas than what they have done."

Hughes said that as a church leader, he has seen how debt can weigh on people. Medical bills can add up for those without — or even with — health insurance and often are a contributing factor to personal bankruptcy and homelessness. 

When a pastor in Baltimore told Hughes, 45, about RIP Medical Debt, he reached out to the group and created a plan that would allow the church's donations to help a multitude of L.A. County residents. In 2016, the debt-forgiveness organization worked with "Last Week With John Oliver" to erase $15 million worth of medical debt for 9,000 people.

"Basically, every person I've ever met has probably known someone who has a medical condition that’s come out of the blue," Hughes said.

While the gift will have an expanded impact, it's not the largest donation Christian Assembly Church has made. In February, the church — which was founded in 1907 and has been at the Eagle Rock address since the 1970s — delivered $1.2 million in cash to open a hospice center in Kenya. 

But the medical debt donation has garnered perhaps the most attention in the church's history, as pastors from Seattle to San Diego have reached out to learn how their churches can do something similar. Hughes, who has served at the church since 2002 and in the position of co-lead pastor since 2007, thinks the interest may be because this gift resonates with so many.

Jill Rhodes, a community pastor at the church, said that staff members learned of the plan a couple of months ago and they worked hard to keep it a secret until the official announcement was made.

"I love that our church is doing this. I’m especially excited for all those who will receive letters," she said. "I can’t imagine what it will be like to get that news in the mail."

Recipients started receiving notifications last week, Hughes said. The names of those receiving the debt-forgiveness gift will remain confidential under federal medical privacy laws. Hughes said the letters would include an email address if any of the beneficiaries would like to share their story with RIP Medical Debt and the church.

"Even if we get a few people that write in, it would be great to tell their stories and hopefully inspire other churches to have compassion on the poor," the pastor said.

As word of the charitable contribution spread, many took to social media to applaud the activism.

“This is what a church’s money is for — not buildings and sound systems, but actually directly helping people in need,” one person wrote on Facebook.

One man said he shared the story with friends in Korea, and a person from Nashville said the inspiration to emulate the charitable act would be widely felt.

In addition to the debt-forgiveness program, the church plans to work with credit agencies to repair people’s credit scores. Hughes said he hopes the cancellation of people's medical debts will also put an end to bill collectors' phone calls and bring a source of comfort to those in need.

"Giving someone a tangible sense that I’m not alone, someone cares, someone sees me — that’s a win," he said.


✨🎄🎁🥰✨

 

 

 

TheBestBeer_Root

….Such Tidings Of Great Joy Shall Surely Be..

 👍

TheBestBeer_Root

That Fulfilled Removes Armageddon !
                                                                                     happy

 

                                        …anything further please feel free to pm me =)

TheBestBeer_Root

😂 Since I’m blocked to post on jr’s thread to respond to Mike’s recent post, I decided to here, lmao

https://www.chess.com/forum/view/off-topic/do-you-celebrate-christmas?page=2#last_comment 

 mikekelcey wrote:
8 hrs ago 
#25
Christmas is the only time we celebrate someone by doing the exact opposite to what that person wants.


That’s totally bs! Such celebration, (and not a damn thing to do with pagan worshiped absolute nonsense), is to BE COMPLETE JOY FOR EVERYONE! Yeah, certainly not the mad commercializing, definitely screw that, but such JOY that brings others to tears OF HAPPINESS, especially as the likes of this Wonderful expression of SUCH LOVING SHARED JOY that this Pastor Tom Hughes sure brought to several thousand homes! THAT IS CHRISTMAS! 👍

     

TheBestBeer_Root
SoulMate333 wrote:

Dr.Clear... if you take any day of the year, there is somewhere in our history pagan roots.  You have missed the point altogether.. God looks to our heart motives.  It is not wrong to celebrate the birth of Christ.  What is wrong is the commercialism that stems from it.  But retailers strive to make money off every holiday, legit or not, which has nothing to do with the holiday and everything to do with the heart of man.  Christmas is a unique opportunity to share the unconditional love of Jesus.  These are very good:

https://www.gotquestions.org/Christian-Christmas.html

https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/biblical-topics/new-testament/how-december-25-became-christmas/

Absolutely 

DrClear

Yes, our Creator knows our hearts. That is exactly why the Creator send apart of the Creator, in the form of a man. BECAUSE HE KNEW OUR HEARTS!  The “ He knows our hearts”, is in no way scripturally back up or even hinted at. That is just for Christian to lies to themselves so they can do whatever your want. My heart goes out to anyone that learns that crap from somebody. 

DrClear