Posts Tagged ‘Orlando’

Barack Obama prayed with Northland pastor Joel Hunter on election night: And God Answered

Posted on 11/08/08

As Joel Hunter explains it, his telephone prayer session with Barack Obama on Tuesday, roughly 10 hours before Obama was declared winner of the presidential election, was not intended to be as intimate as it ended up. Obama, says Hunter, “just wanted to pray with some folks,” and his religious liaison arranged a conference call with Hunter, Dallas Pentecostal megapastor T.D. Jakes, Houston Methodist minister (and George Bush favorite) Kirbyjon Caldwell and Otis Moss II, the retired pastor of Olivet Institutional Baptist Church in Cleveland. But Obama was delayed, Jakes had to appear on live TV, and Caldwell had to board a plane, explains Hunter; so the candidate ended up praying with just Moss and Hunter.

Hunter won’t divulge the prayer’s content other than to say that Obama “trusts God and the American people and just wanted to commend himself to each.” The 60-year-old champion of what some call the New Evangelicalism also downplays the session’s possible importance for his own status, noting that Obama has always been “very good about keeping religious leaders in the loop.” Though he says he has prayed with Obama twice before, Hunter adds, “I find it hard to believe that I’m in the inner prayer circle.”

Perhaps not, but as the only white Evangelical in the prospective quartet, Hunter would be a good candidate for the next President’s bridge to white Evangelicalism, which he courted on Election Day but had only marginal success in winning over. Hunter is a bona fide megapastor in Orlando, Fla., and and a longtime mover in the Evangelical world. “For a long time now, Joel has been directly politically engaged as a Christian leader, in a nuanced and multifaceted way,” notes Andy Crouch, editor of the Vision Project at the Evangelical monthly Christianity Today. On a number of key positions, morevoer, he has shown his independence of the religious right.

Hunter shares his movement’s typical pro-life and anti-gay-marriage social commitments. But he became best known to the mainstream press in 2006 when an arrangement for him to take over as head of the Christian Coalition, the political machine founded by Pat Robertson, imploded as it became clear that Hunter intended to steer it into more moderate waters. He has since made a name (and Fundamentalist foes) combating global warming, championing comprehensive immigration reform and extolling a two-state solution for the Israeli-Palestinian dispute. Less ambiguously than any other leader (including Purpose-Driven Life author Rick Warren, who hedges more bets), Hunter is the avatar of the New Evangelicalism, which is increasingly contesting the priorities of classic religious-right figures like James Dobson. Given all this, it was not surprising that Hunter delivered the closing benediction at the Democratic Convention in August, or that he was asked to join Tuesday’s prayer circle.

Hunter says he got to know Obama last spring during a long phone conversation. During the call, Hunter made a pitch for the expansion of faith-based partnerships between government and church. Of course, says the preacher, “that was an easy sell, because [Obama] really does want to call forth the American people to do volunteer service.” He is aware that Obama’s support for faith-based projects currently includes an important post-Bush caveat: programs receiving government money can’t restrict their employees to co-religionists. Hunter opposes the restriction but maintains, “If we look hard enough, we can find suitable arrangements that really do protect both sides.” He adds, “If you don’t get into conversations that have never been entered into before, you will not win the kind of progress that has never been made before.”

In fact, Hunter, author of the book A New Kind of Conservative: Cooperation Without Compromise, sees Obama as a kindred spirit. They both, he says, believe that “people with differences working together without compromising our values or losing our distinctives is essential for progress.” Thus Hunter also plays down another potential bone of contention between the new President and Evangelicals — Obama’s July 2007 pledge to Planned Parenthood that “the first thing I’d do, as President, is sign the Freedom of Choice Act” — a bill that could wipe out many of the inroads conservatives have made into strict interpretation of Roe v. Wade. “I think [the FCA] is a horrible idea,” Hunter says. “But it’s just a bill in committee,” and it would take time to reach the presidential desk. “Circumstances and constituencies evolve, so I’m not sure that a promise he made to a particular constituency some time ago will even be relevant in two years.”

That assumption might well outrage Planned Parenthood just as much as Hunter’s position on global warming has infuriated some fellow Evangelicals. But if Obama wasn’t kidding when, a few hours after praying with Hunter, he decried the “temptation to fall back on the same partisanship and pettiness and immaturity that has poisoned our politics for so long,” he may find the Floridian an excellent partner in his quest.

He may also especially like part of the sermon that Hunter plans to deliver this Sunday to Northland flock. Speaking about Tuesday’s election results, Hunter will say, “God answered your prayers. If you pray, ‘God, put who you want in the White House,’ and you believe that God answers our prayers, then it is logical to assume that Barack Obama is God’s answer to our prayers.”

SOURCE: TIME/CNN

10/29/08 Barack, Bill, and Bono Same Stage SwingCity Rally Orlando Florida

Posted on 10/30/08

It’s 11pm, do you know where your presidential candidate is? If you’re a Democrat in Florida, the answer is likely to be yes. Approximately 35,000 voters gathered at Osceola Heritage Park in Kissimmee on Wednesday night for a political rally featuring not only presidential hopeful, Barack Obama, but also former president Bill Clinton.

Despite previous transgressions, including Obama’s victory over Clinton’s wife for the candidacy, the former leader made it clear who his choice was come November 4. “I think it’s clear the next president of the United States should be, and with your help will be, Barack Obama,” he said.

Clinton said Obama has the right philosophy, the right policies and the intellectual heft to handle the job of president. Taking a jab at President Bush, he said the past eight years should have taught Americans “that we want a president who wants to understand and who can understand.”

Bill Clinton wasn’t the only one waving the Obama flag last night. Tens of thousands of hopefuls from across Florida came out for the event, some arriving hours beforehand in hopes of getting a good seat.

Robert Mason traveled from Atlanta to see the Democrats’ biggest stars. Mason became sold on Obama after watching him during the meltdown on Wall Street in late September. “To be that even-keel in a crisis spoke volumes,” he said. “He truly appeared presidential.”

It seems to be the general consensus of Obama supporters that “He’s someone we can believe in.”

Orlando WalMart Shooting: WATCH FOR FALLING PRICES AND FLYING BULLETS

Posted on 10/01/08

A local pregnant woman is grazed in the back by bullets shot from an armed robber who was running through a Seminole County Walmart on Wednesday. It all started when police said the suspect robbed a nearby check-cashing store. He was trailed to Walmart, where he changed his shirt. The shooting began when authorities said the suspect spotted police.

Red Carpet Monday Event @ LUXAUTICA ORLANDO

Posted on 10/01/08


Red Carpet Monday, an elite social networking community, hosts another event at Luxautica: The 4th Annual Red Chair Affair – the event that kicked off the Arts and Cultural Season!

Car Wash Child Abuse Mom Issues Her Deepest Apology

Posted on 09/23/08

This woman decided the best way to “calm and relax” her daughter was to pull into a local do it yourself car wash and pressure wash her child with reclaimed water. FOX 35 Orlando was there to get her apology after she plead no contest to child abuse charges in a Orange County Florida courthouse.