"The Last Word Rev.22:21"

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"The Last Word Rev.22:21" Promoting and Proclaiming
The Gospel of Jesus Christ
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"The Last Word Rev22:21"
Broadcast: Friday, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PST, King James Version (KJV)Listen via Internet link:
The Gospel of Jesus Christ. Encouraging and inspiring through the direction and power of The LORD God's,
"Holy Spirit."

18/10/2025
14/10/2025

On November 3, 1957, The Ed Sullivan Show ran long — and a young singer named Sam Cooke was cut off mid-song.
He had just begun to sing, “Darling, you… send me,” when the show abruptly ended.
The backlash was immediate. Viewers flooded CBS with complaints, demanding that Cooke return.
So, on December 1, 1957, Ed Sullivan made it right.
“Sam,” he said, “here’s the time.”
Wearing a dark suit and quiet confidence, Cooke stepped up to the microphone.
With nothing but soft backup vocals behind him, he sang “You Send Me.”
Every note glowed — smooth, pure, effortless.
By the end of the week, “You Send Me” hit No. 1 on the Billboard charts, and America had a new voice — one that blended the grace of Nat King Cole with the soul of the church pew.
Ed Sullivan brought Sam back again that night to apologize on air, saying,
“I did wrong one night here on our stage.”
Cooke smiled, forgave, and sang “(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons.”
In that moment, he became not just a performer — but a pioneer.
In his short life, Sam Cooke would shape the sound of modern soul, inspire the birth of Motown, and give the Civil Rights Movement its anthem with “A Change Is Gonna Come.”
He was only 33 when he died. But his voice — that mix of warmth, hope, and defiance — never faded.
It still sends us.

~Old Photo Club

14/10/2025

Percy Julian was born in Alabama in 1899—a time and place where the odds were stacked impossibly high for a young Black boy to become a scientist.

But he didn’t just defy the odds.
He rewrote the rules of chemistry.

Julian became a pioneer in synthetic chemistry, figuring out how to create essential hormones like cortisone, testosterone, and progesterone—not in expensive labs, but from plants.

His breakthroughs helped make arthritis treatment affordable, opened new doors in hormone therapy, and changed the future of medicine.

And yet…
he wasn’t allowed to teach at most universities.
He was denied jobs—not for lack of genius, but for the color of his skin.

Even when he bought a home in an all-white neighborhood, it was firebombed.
Still, he rebuilt.
And kept going.

Julian became one of the most accomplished chemists in American history, and the first Black scientist inducted into the National Academy of Sciences.

Today, millions benefit from the medicines he made possible.
And finally—his name is being remembered.

He wasn’t just a chemist.
He was a force.


~Weird but True

04/10/2025

Save the date: October 6
The Full Harvest Supermoon will shine its brightest glow of the year 🌾🌕
Gather your friends, step outside, and capture the magic of the night sky.
Full guide in the first comment 💬👀 👇 💬

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