Computer Hackers and Women’s Profiles

Women’s Profiles are Computer Hacked on over 100,000 Websites

There are over 65% of the women’s profiles that are hacked on over 100,000 websites. The reason why these profiles are computer hacked is for the sole purpose of deceiving those who are on specified websites. For example, if a person who is seeking only friends online and or a relationship with a member of the opposite sex will encounter issues. The issues are as follows: a script that computer hackers use and read to each person that they are in direct communications with. To be completely honest, if a man is online talking to a woman on Mocospace, Blackplanet, Facebook, or Yahoo for instance, might end up getting used and confused. Men who are online on these websites; which are non secure, and does not provide any sense of security, will end up looking at multiple profiles as well as instant messages. The people who are responsible for hacking these profiles are inside of a room with many other people who copy and paste pictures of women’s faces and place them onto the website as a clone. Whereas, the female who has a profile on a non secure website is totally unaware that her picture and profile has been illegally duplicated, and copied by someone, who currently lives in the United States or a foreign country. The profile itself is used to deceive billions of people worldwide. Another thing that usually happens with the profile is that it is used by a man or a team of individuals who are inside of a unknown room on computers and laptops gathering information. The information that is collected is used for a specific person or group to gain money from men or other people. Some of these people pretend to be living in a certain city, when they are located in another country. An average computer hacker or scammer tends to earn up to $100,000 per week in Western Union Funds. The person or persons continue to use a female’s profile for a period of up to 2 years or as long as a scammer or hacker has gained enough money through deceiving people. They also make phone calls to each person that has been getting scammed. This is the reason why it is very important to monitor and examine your online profile very carefully to check for mistakes and errors.

Conversion to Christianity

Converting an agnostic to Christianity involves 

building a trusting relationship, fostering open dialogue, and presenting the Christian faith through personal example rather than forced arguments. Focus on addressing their specific questions through Christian apologetics, encouraging them to read the Bible (particularly the Gospels), and praying for them, as conversion is seen as a personal journey often requiring intellectual and spiritual exploration. 

Key Approaches for Engaging Agnostics:

  • Build Authentic Relationships: Approach conversations with love and respect, rather than attempting to “proselytize” or prove superiority. Listen genuinely to understand why they are agnostic.
  • Use Apologetics and Logic: Provide logical reasons for faith. Recommend resources like GotQuestions.org or books by apologists, which address questions about the existence of God and the reliability of the Bible.
  • Focus on Jesus: Shift focus from abstract theology to the life, claims, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
  • Encourage Scriptural Reading: Encourage reading the Bible, such as the Gospel of John, to let them engage with the text directly.
  • Live a Christlike Life: Demonstrate the impact of faith through actions, as a consistent life can spark curiosity.
  • Pray for Them: Consistently pray for the person, asking for God to open their heart and mind to the message. 

Common Pitfalls to Avoid:

  • Applying double standards in arguments.
  • Using fear or guilt as a primary tool for conversion.
  • Assuming the agnostic’s position is based on ignorance. 

Note: The ultimate decision to convert is personal, and the process often takes time and patience. 

Why Does God Allows Suffering?

Why Does God Allow Suffering?

By:

Bob Russell and Rob Suggs

Topic:

Everyday LifeSuffering

Perspective:

Engage

header for Why Does God Allow Suffering?
book cover for Acts of God

Let’s be honest: This is no easy question, the relationship of God to human suffering.

Why Does God Allow Suffering?

The wise and the devout have grappled with it throughout history, and not always to a victorious conclusion. St. Teresa of Avila said, “Lord, if this is the way you treat your friends, it’s no wonder you don’t have many!” At least hers was less an expression of doubt than of frustration.

Others have taken hold of the Question as a kind of checkmate in the game of rationalizing God out of existence—or at least diminishing our view of him. Their line goes like this:

  • God is purportedly good. Yet there is great human suffering.
  • Since God doesn’t intervene, he lacks either the will or the power.
  • If he lacks the will, he isn’t good after all. (If he’s God, he isn’t good.)
  • If he lacks the power, he isn’t God after all. (If he’s good, he isn’t God.)

It’s a striking line of reasoning. But it’s also a little too cut and dried, right? God, the world, and suffering: These are not simple issues. We all sense that there could be other reasons God would hold back from stopping anything and everything unpleasant in this world.

So we look for other reasons that evil and suffering may exist; we round up the usual suspects.

Six Suspects for Our Suffering

1. Discipline

Maybe it’s simple cause and effect. This is the “you had it coming” argument. Once Jesus came across a blind man, and his disciples immediately asked, “Who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” (John 9:2).

They are hoping, of course, for a lively philosophical debate with Jesus the teacher. They have been taught that disease or disability is mark of someone’s sin. So whose?

“Let’s be honest: This is no easy question, the relationship of God to human suffering.”

Jesus tells his disciples they’re asking the wrong question. It’s not about who sinned, but how the goodness of God can shine through the situation. And he proceeds to make that happen. As always, Jesus gets to the root of the subject in a startling way. He shows us an old question from a brand-new angle. As we’ll see, he has hit upon a key element of the problem of suffering.

We’d like to scoff at the disciples’ thinking and say that our God doesn’t work that way, punishing sin with suffering. The problem is, the Bible says that he does—sometimes. Moses wasn’t allowed to enter the Promised Land because of a certain incident in which he lost his temper and usurped God’s glory, a serious offense. Miriam, his sister, was temporarily struck with leprosy for undermining Moses’ leadership.

And those are not isolated incidents. There’s an important passage in Hebrews 12. It tells us that God disciplines us as a father disciplines his children—for our good. Discipline is simply a part of loving training. We do need to distinguish punishment from discipline. The former is simply a penalty dealt out for a misdeed; the latter is a loving form of training. We impose discipline on ourselves not as punishment but to be better people.

So God disciplines. But there are other angles, too.

2. Poor Decisions

Sometimes we suffer due to our own willful error. Maybe the warning was on the label all along, and we simply ignored it. The sign said the road was slippery, and we pushed the accelerator down.

Let’s say Uncle Bob’s bad report from the doctor concerned lung cancer. He smoked for years, everyone nagged him about it, and he really did mean to stop. But the fact is, he didn’t. He foolishly ignored the warning signs. So it’s not as if God is suddenly, arbitrarily inflicting this bad medical report like a lightning bolt of sheer wrath. Uncle Bob quite sadly brought this upon himself.

Sometimes we choose the wrong friends, eat the wrong foods, make the wrong decisions in business or in family. The old TV detective Baretta used to say, “Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time.”

But the Bible puts it better: “Be sure that your sin will find you out” (Numbers 32:23). Life comes with any number of hazard labels. We can’t rail against God when we’re given fair warning. Actions have consequences.

3. Satanic Attack

Could it be the devil?

It’s the simplest and most logical of arguments, in a way: All good things come from heaven, all bad things are the work of Satan. The Bible describes how he attacked a good man named Job, who suffered deeply and thoroughly.

Paul spoke of a “thorn in the flesh,” some unpleasant infirmity that God allowed Satan to use as a weapon against the apostle. From the devil’s perspective, it was an attack; from God’s, it was a tool to protect Paul’s humility.

“God must be God, and can’t be reduced to the easy and rational and comfortable.”

Again, here’s a compelling clue to how God relates to our pain. An attack could originate from hell, while shaping us for heaven. The devil himself—as much as he hates it—finds his own place in the vast plan of God, who is all-powerful, capable of using any element as part of the great tapestry he is knitting together.

4. The Sins of Others

The disciples suggested that the blind man may have been blind because of his parents’ sins. This was logical, from their perspective, because the man had been born with his infirmity; it couldn’t be his fault if he was born that way.

Sometimes relatively innocent people suffer out of all proportion to any argument of sin being the cause. A little child dies. A drunk driver steals the life of a promising young lady. An emotionally disturbed man opens fire in a theater or a school. A child is born with a drug addiction stemming from the mother’s use of cocaine.

Surely God is not dispensing “discipline” through such horrendous events; it would be mere punishment, serving no purpose for the victim. No, in these cases, people are clearly suffering for the sin of others. It’s an unavoidable conclusion, but not a very pleasing one: We may suffer as the consequence of others’ sins.

It brings us right back to the question of God’s place in this: Why would he allow the innocent to be victimized for someone else’s wrongs?

And yet we read in the Old Testament the idea that the sins of the fathers are visited on the third and fourth generations. It may not seem fair, but it’s the way the world turns. We must take into account that our sins put out ripples, in the world around us and the future ahead of us.

5. Persecution

Here is another striking idea from the Bible: “Everyone who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted” (2 Timothy 3:12). So maybe, bad things happen to good people because they’re good people.

Again, this checks out logically. We know that if we take a stand for biblical values in an anti-biblical world, we will face certain consequences: ridicule, rejection, possibly loss of work or even freedom, in some circumstances. People are still punished or even executed for their faith in some parts of the world. We’ve seen businesses lose income when their prominently Christian leaders stood firm for biblical values. Jesus said this would happen, and there’s never been a time when he wasn’t proven correct.

6. A Fallen World

There’s also the distinctly Christian idea that we live not just among fallen people, but in an entire fallen world. In other words, the rebellious sin of Adam and Eve caused all of creation to be corrupted. Paul teaches, in Romans 8, that all of this world “groans” as in childbirth pains, awaiting the birth of a new creation.

This helps us to account for natural calamities: tsunamis, earthquakes, diseases, floods, and even the attacks of vicious animals. We can suffer through non-human agency, and the Bible teaches us that even in these cases, we are feeling the consequences of a world that has rebelled.

As a matter of fact, we find this subject arising much more frequently in recent days. Monster storms have devastated New Orleans and New York; and even near my home, an F4 tornado twisted its way through the community at 170 miles per hour, killing eleven people and doing untold damage. These are the times when people come to me with haunted eyes and ask, “Why?”

The answer is that our planet and our people suffer from the fall of humanity. For this life, we will see the result of rebellion against God again and again, and we call the natural disasters “Acts of God.”

Even so, I suspect Jesus would point out that we’re still asking the wrong questions. We’re quick to brand horrendous things as acts of God, but what about all things bright and beautiful? What about a gentle spring rain, a day of glorious weather, a field of ripe corn? Are these not also acts of God?

In the same way, we look to the heavens in the midst of a bad day and say, “Why me, Lord?” Bad moments are quickly dubbed “God moments.” But when something good happens, we tend not to see it in that way. Fathers don’t tend to hold a first newborn child, look to heaven, and cry out, “Why me, Lord? Why do I deserve such a beautiful blessing?”

When was the last time you rose in the morning and asked God why he gave you another precious day of life? Three square meals? Family, church, health?

Maybe that’s one of the right questions.

The Question Remains

We can name all these sources of suffering and more, but none of them get to the root of the why question. Wherever the bad things came from—why didn’t God do something about them?

After all, we’re told that God has loved us with an everlasting love. The Bible goes into incredible detail to show us the depth of that love; the fact that he has loved us as his very children, that we are God’s handiwork, created by him to do good works. Meanwhile, we’re also told that God is infinitely powerful, that nothing is impossible with him. He is sovereign, which means that the buck stops here; he created everything, he knows when the smallest bird falls from a tree, and his hand utterly controls human destiny.

So how do we put these two realities together? How can God be both wonderfully good and ultimately powerful, while allowing all the evil that we see and experience?

Like everyone else, I wish God would phone me and clue me in. I know all the big theological issues, but I get frustrated; I long for him to just give me the short answer. I almost wish he wouldn’t trust me so much to handle the hard questions of faith—but that’s exactly what he does.

When I was in school, my mathematics text sometimes had the answers in the back of the book. I knew that no matter how difficult any problem seemed, no matter how inside out it twisted my mind, there was a wonderfully logical, perfectly neat answer on the final pages of that book. I do believe the Bible has the answers. The “back” of the book, known as the New Testament, has the solution to every problem. But these are not encapsulated in simple numbers or a few words. They must be worked out within the human heart, and held together by the glue of faith.

Each one of us, if we intend to be serious about pursuing God, must wrestle through the night with the mysteries of good and evil. Jacob did that in Genesis 32. At a crossroad moment of his life, a dark night of his soul, he was visited by a messenger of God. The two of them literally wrestled until sunset. Jacob fought for all he was worth, and wouldn’t let go until he had his blessing. Neither should we. I believe we are blessed by the courage we show when we squarely face our doubts. Conversely, we are diminished by looking the other way, closing our minds, and “protecting” our faith as if it were some weak and fragile thing.

The way to strengthen faith is to walk forward in it, facing all the hard questions and trusting in the goodness of God for resolution. I’ve tried to do that as long as I’ve known Christ, and here is what I’ve found: The mysteries, to some extent, endure. God must be God, and can’t be reduced to the easy and rational and comfortable.

“God wants me to know him; he even wants me to have intimacy with him.”

We can’t make him smaller and easier to carry around in our minds; instead, our own minds and spirits must expand. They must grow stronger and wider, so that they can allow for the things that must be taken on faith. As we walk forward in that way, we do find out just how good, and how powerful, God really is.

As a matter of fact, I find that this is even true of people. They too are mysterious in many ways. Every ordinary person you know is a unique creation, filled with surprises and impossible to pigeonhole— the living sum total of a life no one else has lived, a uniqueness no one but God could have designed. Should we expect to understand every little thing about the Creator himself, when his people are so wonderfully unpredictable?

So God wants me to know him; he even wants me to have intimacy with him. But he doesn’t want me to live under the illusion that I can get him all figured out—he would then be less than God. What he wants is for us to accept his mystery and trust his character. As I’ve sought to do that, I’ve discovered that the other questions often reveal their answers in startling and wonderful ways.

Published on December 10, 2021. Modified on January 6, 2022.

Missing Messiah

For Further Reading:

Acts of God

by Bob Russell and Rob Suggs

Bob Russell has seen it all—tragedy in his childhood church, broken families in his pastoral ministry, a world torn by war and injustice—the…

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My AA Journey & Autobiography

Good Evening Everyone!🙏  How are you doing tonight ?  My name is Anthony Joseph Hopkins and I am from Dayton Ohio.  I am 60 years old.  I have been clean and sober since Wednesday May 2, 1990 at 7:00PM.   I want to inform you that I was court ordered into the AA Fellowship by a Common Pleas Courts Judge in Dayton, Ohio on June 1, 1990.  I want to inform you that I used to have a very serious drug problem because I was taking all of my money and smoking marijuana and crack cocaine cigars on a regular basis.   I used to be married to a female harlot.  She refused to get help for her own drug problems.   I divorced my ex wife because she had infidelity related issues.   She was cheating on me with other men, and I caught her having sex with another man.   I was extremely angry with both of them.   I used to work 3 jobs during that time.  I was not paying my bills.  Instead, I had spent all of my salary on our drug habits.   My ex wife was worse than me at the time.   She was selling her own body for money just to support our drug habits.   During an 18 year period, I was drinking alcohol 🍸 and smoking marijuana on a daily basis.   Honestly, I was a fetal alcohol syndrome baby at birth.  This is simply because my mother used to drink 🍸 alcohol while she was pregnant with me.  Additionally, my mother suffered from post partum depression during that time when I was born.   When I was 3 months old, my mother took me to my grandmother’s house 🏠 to live for 7 consecutive years.   I remember staying with my grandparents.  My grandparents took me to church ⛪️ 3 times per week for 7 years.   My grandmother used to read my children’s Bible to me every single day for 7 years.   My grandparents home 🏡 was, and is still in the Lower Westside of Dayton, Ohio.   I was born on Thursday June 24, 1965 at the St. Elizabeth Medical Center in Dayton, Ohio at 7:30pm.   My mother’s name was Mary Lois Hopkins, and my biological father’s name was Joseph Odell Webb.   My mother 👩 👩‍🍼 didn’t marry my biological father.   I remember spending time with my grandfather, who was living out of state during the summers of 1968 through 1972.  My grandparents didn’t drink alcohol.  My grandfather attended church on a regular basis himself.  I do remember dealing with nature.  I used to watch Wild Kingdom on television 📺 at the time ⏲️.   I also used to watch Walt Disney movies and shows during the week.  Also, I want to inform you that my AA Journey really didn’t start until I was 7 years old.  During the year 1972, my grandparents took me to my own mother’s house to live.  This is when I started drinking 🍸 alcohol and beer as a child.   My mother 👩 married her husband Mr. Willie Andrew Russell Senior until September 18, 1967.  She had given birth to my half sister Patricia Russell.  She passed away on Friday June 2, 2017; from a rare blood disease due to kidney dialysis.  My half sister and I used to walk to Edison Elementary School located on 228 North Broadway Street Dayton, Ohio 45402.  At that time; the zip code was 45407.  My mother’s house 🏠 was located on 1119 West Third Street Dayton, Ohio 45407(45402) currently.   My mother had given birth to my half brother Willie Andrew Russell Junior on May 31, 1970.  One year later, she had given birth to my half brother named Dustin Eric Russell.  Afterwards, she gave birth to my half sister named Renee Lynn Russell.  When I started to live with my mother 👩; she was pregnant 🤰 with my half sister Renee.  During that time ⏲️: I had to get used to living in a dysfunctional family household.   My mother and her husband used to take me to bootleg joints as a child.  This is when I was introduced to alcohol 🍸 officially.  My cousin and I used to drink my mother’s beer all of the time.  This was also during the time when I started becoming a Juvenile Delinquent.   It had taken me at least 3 years to get used to going back and forth between my mother’s house 🏠 and my grandparents house located on 1018 West First Street Dayton, Ohio 45407(45402) currently.   I had suffered a great deal of physical, mental, emotional, and psychological trauma by my mother’s husband.   Just because I was not my mother’s husband child, he abused me the most.  I remember when he had put my head inside of a hot stove, and set my hair on fire 🔥.   My mother had shot her own husband for injuring me.  For a total of 7 additional years, my mother had given birth to my half sister Tina Marie Russell, Nathaniel Allen Russell, Daniel Allen Russell, and finally Johnny Lee Hopkins Russell.   We had moved around the city of Dayton, Ohio inside of houses along the Westside of Dayton, Ohio.   I had to attend Edison Elementary School 🏫 for a total of 7 years.  I also attended Franklin School 🏫 for 1 year.  After I had completed grade school 🏫,  I attended Nettie Lee Roth High School from 1979 through 1983.  I will admit that was a time ⏲️ when I started drinking 🍸 alcohol and smoking marijuana on a regular basis.   I had became a Juvenile Delinquent.  This was also during the time ⏲️ I was suspended from school 🏫 for fighting and becoming truant from high school.   I do remember on June 22, 1983, my mother sent me to the Grand Rapids, Michigan Job Corps Center for a short period of time.   I had only stayed there for a total of 4 months.  I got kicked out of Job Corps in Grand Rapids, Michigan because the Administration indicated that I had a very serious problem with drugs.  I had committed an assault on a staff members at the facility.   On Friday October 22, 1983: I was sent back to Dayton, Ohio from the State of Michigan.  My half siblings and I had a real large party at my mother’s house 🏠 located on 13 Edison Street; which was right directly across the street from Edison Elementary School 🏫.   My mother lived there for a total of 4 years.   From 1981 through 1985, my mother stayed at that address.  I do remember drinking heavily during that time because I was involved with street gangs in Dayton, Ohio from 1981 through 1990.  I had formed my own gang called the Automatic Boys 👦 😤.   This is because we were in possession of Automatic Weapons during that time ⏲️ 😤.   From June 10, 1986 until September 1, 1990; I graduated from Paul Laurence Dunbar High School at the Memorial Hall at 7:00PM.   Our graduation ceremony lasted until 9:30pm.   I had caught the bus to my grandmother’s house 🏠.  I had stayed with my grandmother until September of 1986.  I got a job working at Skyline Chili Restaurant and the King Cole Restaurant in Downtown Dayton, Ohio.  I was dealing with female prostitutes/harlots from June 24, 1986 until Friday July 2, 2010.  For a total of 24 years, I was paying for sex.  I had spent over $100,000 dollars on sex with female prostitutes/ female harlots.   I used to live in a Crack house 🏚 🏠 in the Toledo, Ohio Area for 3 years.  I didn’t drink alcohol or smoke any marijuana and crack cocaine cigars.   I attended the University of Toledo from Monday April 1, 1991 through June 14, 1996.  I had graduated twice from the University of Toledo with my Associates and Bachelors Degrees.  Subsequently, I ended up moving back to the Dayton, Ohio Area for a period of 1 year.  I was working at Sinclair Community College for 1 year.  I also worked at the King Cole Restaurant as a dishwasher.   I didn’t move to the Charlotte Mecklenburg Area until Sunday June 15, 1997.  I left the Dayton, Ohio Area; out of spite, but it was due to family problems.   Prior to that, I was working three jobs in the Toledo, Ohio Area.  I worked at the University of Toledo William Carlson Library on the Campus of the University of Toledo for 4 years.   I had worked at the Jerusalem Outreach Center as a Youth Counselor from 1993-1996.  The address at the Jerusalem Outreach Center was 445 Dorr Street Toledo, Ohio 43602.  The University of Toledo address is 2801 West Bancroft Street Toledo, Ohio 43606.  I used to reside at 126 Rosalind Place Toledo, Ohio 43610.  The Rosalind Place Area used to be a Bloodz Street Gangs turf.  This was located right down the street from Toledo Central Catholic High School 🏫.   The High School is still located on the corner of Cherry 🍒 Street and West Delaware Avenue in the Toledo, Ohio Area.  Right inside of the neighborhood is St. Vincent Hospital 🏥.   1997 to the present day: I used to live at the Men’s Uptown Shelter in Charlotte, North Carolina from June 17, 1997 until Wednesday February 17, 1998. For a total of 8 months; I was homeless.  I ended up living at the Men’s Shelter just to receive an address.  I attended church ⛪️ 🙏 🙌 ☺️ at the Solid Rock Missionary Baptist Church ⛪️ right across the parking lot from the shelter.   I lived and worked at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte from 2001-2009.  I used to live all over the city of Charlotte, North Carolina.  I also worked several jobs during my 12 years of living in Charlotte, North Carolina Area.  I ended up moving back to the Dayton, Ohio Area on Wednesday January 6, 2010.  I had lived all around the Dayton, Ohio Area.   My mother 👩 died on Thursday July 20, 2017.  My biological died on December 17, 2017.  Both of them were 73 when they had passed away.  My mother 👩 and biological father funerals were held at the House of Wheat Funeral Home located on North Gettysburg Avenue in Dayton, Ohio.  My Great Grandmother Funeral was held at McLin Funeral Home 🏡 in Dayton, Ohio.  Currently, I have been clean and sober for going on 36 years now.   I will admit that I suffer from Schizoid Affective Disorder, Diabetes Type 2, Convulsive Syncope, Glaucoma, Eczema, Heart Failure, and Cataracts in both eyes 👀 right now.  I am still working on the 12 Steps of AA Recovery for the past 36 years.  My favorite activities are as follows: Reading 📚 the Holy Bible, Traveling across the United States 🇺🇸 of America, visiting the Library in the Dayton, Ohio Area, and Attending Church ⛪️ and Bible Study 📖 📓 on a regular basis.  I also suffer from Breakthrough Seizures as well.  I am 60 years old.  My name is Anthony Joseph Hopkins, and I am a grateful recovering alcoholic.  I am highly intelligent and highly educated.  I have a real large family right now.  Currently, I have 5 half brothers and 2 sisters. I have a total of 40 neices and nephews right now.  I also have 15 great neices and nephews.  I have relatives in the Dayton, Ohio Area as well as relatives who are currently living in the lower 48 states inside of the United States of America 🇺🇸.  Thank you for keeping it real with me.  Thank you for reading my essay 🙏.