1500 breast implant before and after

1500 breast implant before and after

>> wendy: today...will the lone star state light one up? >> there is a lot of opportunity for money to be spent and for the government to collect it. >> wendy: hear what is behind the push to

legalize marijuana. >>> plus...a broken fall and a broken arm. >> it snapped. >> wendy: watch her defy her doctors and get healed. >> i said, jesus is going to heal me.

>> wendy: and from bravo's "thicker than water," the godfather of gospel joins today. * >> pat: well, welcome, ladies and gentlemen. terry, there is a breakthrough we're going

to talk about. lorie johnson has discovered about 18 steps that can be taken to prevent alzheimer's. >> terry: wow, that is huge! >> pat: it is very, very significant.

we're going to have it on this program today. >> terry: absolutely. lots of people contending with that. >> pat: it is a hideous disease, and people haven't known what to do. apparently the researchers

have discovered something that is going to be very, very important. shifting, though, are we at risk of a hack attack? the f.b.i. is afraid that we are. they're telling the state officials that they need

to boost their cyber-security because russian hackers may have stolen information out of election computers. >> terry: well, those attacks targeted systems in illinois and arizona. and it may be the opening

salvos in a new type of cyber-warfare. charlene aaron has the story. >> charlene: the f.b.i. is warning state officials to boost their election security in light of evidence that hackers

targeted data systems in arizona and illinois. in a confidential flash alert, first reported by yahoo news, they advised states to scan their systems for specific signs of hacking. officials described the

hacker threat at credible and significant, an eight on a scale of one to 10. in illinois in july, hackers breached the state board of elections. the "washington post" reporting they put up to 200,000 personal voter

records at risk, including voters' names, addresses, birth dates, and other personal information. in arizona, hackers forced the state to shut down its voter registration system for nearly a week. both breaches are the

latest indication of possible russian interest in u.s. elections and party operations. earlier this year, hackers compromised the computers of the democratic national committee, producing embarrassing e-mails for

the d.n.c. on the eve of hillary clinton's nomination at the party's presidential candidate. russian hackers have also managed to hack into the computers at the "new york times". the hacks are the latest

potential of cyber-warfare against the u.s., something that threatens the u.s. military, businesses, and more. something the white house has acknowledged in the past. >> this is a very serious

matter. it does pose a significant threat, not just to the american people, but also to our national security and to our economy. >> charlene: now the obama administration is seeking to put more

emphasis on developing cyber-weapons to try to prevent such attacks and punish intruders into u.s. networks. reuters reports the plan calls for e elevating the stature of the pentagon's cyber-command, equal to

combat branches of the military, such as the central and pacific command. they have already carried out cyber-attacks against isis. so the hacking warning by the f.b.i. is only a

latest of the future warning that the warfare won't be just on the battle field. it will be carried out by computers and could cover every aspect of life. charlene aaron, cbn news. >> pat: thanks,

charlene. in the political news, it looks like donald trump is moving ahead very dramatically against hillary clinton. he is up about seven points in the reuter-ipsos poll.

so the gap has gone from 12 to five percentage points. in some polls, actually, trump is ahead, which is amazing in the short length of time. donald trump has linked national security to uma

abadin's decision to separate from her husband over his latest sexting scandal. >> efrem: huma aba dirnbin has been at clinton's side for decades. she was humiliated in 2011, when her husband,

former congressman anthony weiner was caught sexting. she has announced that the two are now separating, and donald trump is blasting clinton over the incident, suggesting that weiner's actions could is endangered national

security. because weiner may have had close proximity to highly classified information. but he didn't offer any evidence that weiner had evidence to classified material.

pat? >> pat: i wonder what is wrong with weiner. he apparently had some psychological quirk. he texted he was next to a little baby, and he had his underwear on and he was texting to some women

and describing all of the stuff that he does. he is just terrible. but it is not just the fact that she is married to a sex addict, but she also has a mother who is a dedicated, hard-core muslim, who has written

books about the treatment of women, which is horrifying to the average woman. and you wonder when that's going to come out, and how a woman who has that kind of tendency, or a family with a family that has

these tendencies, could possibly be considered as the chief-of-staff of a clinton white house. it doesn't make any sense at all. john? >> john: pat, hillary clinton has been the

subject of endangering national security, coming under fire in recent months for her use of an unsecured personal computer server for her government e-mails when she was secretary of state.

now more of those e-mails will be released next month by order of a federal judge. one small watchdog group has been behind the move to get those records released. jenna browder brings us

this look. >> reporter: new investigation into hillary clinton's e-mailsment. >> hillary clinton's e-mails, again the topic of a hearing in washington. >> reporter: more than

15,000 e-mails uncovered by the f.b.i. >> the intermingleing interests. >> judicial watch, the watchdog organization. >> judicial watch. >> reporter: the group behind it all, judicial

watch, a small but influential watchdog, made up of only about 50 people. >> we've been busy. it is as a result of our perseverance and our litigation. >> reporter: president

tom finton heads up the team that is helping to shape the political and media discussion with these latest revelations. >> judicial watch is a non-profit educational foundation. we're non-partisan.

we're neither republican nor conservative. our goal is to educate the american people of what its government is up to. >> reporter: he showed this around the d.c. office, and at work mostly lawyers and investigators

nose-deep in litigation. >> the great old american system allows us to get access from the courts, if the government doesn't turn over documents. and judicial watch is doing things in terms of getting access information

about the i.r.s. scandal and benghazi, and of course, the clinton e-mails that congress wasn't able to get, or its uninterested in getting, and the rest of the media isn't terribly interested in getting.

>> reporter: judicial watch scooping 60 minutes, 2020, and other mainstream investigative units. >> i can't tell you how oftentimes we'll see something in the news that is extraordinary and penal people are talking about,

but we're the only ones asking the followup questions to the agencies to find out the detail. >> reporter: and from both sides of the aisle -- >> we sued the bush administration twice as much as we sued the

clinton administration. but they're completely opposed to transparency. >> donald trump hammered clinton on this specific issue that will not go away from her campaign. >> reporter: and for those skeptical about the

timing of the release of these latest e-mails -- >> she tried to suppress this for years. the coverup unraveled. a lot of the documents we're talking about, the foundation, were given to the state department in

september of 2015, and we're only getting them now? >> reporter: finton says we can expect more revelation in the days leading up to the election and even after. >> we're going to keep on

pursuing these clinton e-mails, and keep on asking questions of the government, no matter who wins, trump or clinton. >> reporter: so in the end, the american people don't get burned. in washington, d.c., jenna

browder, cbn news. >> john: thanks, jenna. pat, judicial watch may be small, but it has proven to be very effective. >> pat: it certainly is. and judges are part of the heat. but the fact is they've

held this stuff and held it and held it, and what are they trying to do? there is a coverup of massive proportions. wikileaks claim they have a big revelation coming out before the election.

it used to be the major elections to the national elections started after labor day. it has been heated up during august at an intense pace. but donald trump is starting to spend millions

of dollars on tv ads and other ads, starting after and, of course, clinton is going to do the same thing. but, nevertheless, we have been seeing an enormous amount of activity, and judicial watch has been at

the center of it. it will be amazing what will happen if wikileaks have a bunch of other things. i would think that the clintons are down a fox hole, but who knows. they can brazen anything

out. this drip, drip, drip, chinese water torture is just beginning to have an impact. and people are beginning to say, wait a minute, something is wrong. >> john: pat, disturbing

news to report here, yis buried thousands of bodies in at least 72 mass graves across iraq and syria. the majority of the victims are yazidi. 17 of the 72 graves have been located. the number of known

victims is anywhere from 5,000 to perhaps more than 15,000. activists believe there are hundreds of other mass graves to be found, but say they can only be explored where the fighting stops.

cbn news has reported on these mass graves with correspondent chuck holton reporting in march that will were more mass graves in sinjar than there are families living there. >>> turning to health news, right now five

million americans are suffering with alzheimer's disease, thunder numbe and that number is expected to grow as baby-boomers age. but as lorie johnson explains, a comprehensive new treatment plan is being offered that could

stop alzheimer's in its tracks or reverse it. >> lorie: dr. dale bretttison and his team of researchers discovered that alzheimer's is caused by 36 different factors that all need to be addressed.

>> imagine you have a roof with 36 holes in it. if you take a drug, for example, which is fine, and that could potentially help, but it is only going to cover one of the 36 holes. so we want to be able to

cover the others. >> lorie: the doctor and his team developed a series of tests to determine exactly what's causing a person's alzheimer's. >> this includes things like looking at your

exercise and things like looking at your diet and your nutrition, your homocystein level, your pregninalone level and on and on and on. we gather all of the perimeters we have in a computer based algorhythm,

and we design an initial plan. >> lorie: based on those results, they formulate an individualized plan to correct the problem. lifestyle changes, like more sleep, no sugar, and stress management are a

big part. they tried it on 20 people in the early stages of the disease. 19 of them regained their memory. >> so it really gives us a very different look at what alzheimer's disease

is. and instead simply saying alzheimer's disease, period. we say alzheimer's disease due to what? and we look for all of the different underlying causes and we address each

one of those. >> lorie: he says if caught earlier enough, alzheimer's can be reversed, even prevented. >> for example, there are seven million americans who are e-4 homozigus, which means they have two

copies of an als alzheimer's risk disease. currently people say don't get it tested because there is nothing you can do. we would argue that is changing and there is a lot you can do.

>> lorie: more trials are planned in the u.s. and the u.k. lorie johnson, cbn news. >> john: you can watch lori's entire report at cbnnews.com. >> pat: everybody said alzheimer's is a

mysterious thing and we don't know how to treat it. and these doctors are saying there is about 20 risk factors and we'll show you. pregnetalone, for example -- i take some of

that. why not. but there is the homosis seen -homocystein and all of these levels that can cause it. somebody who has alzheimer's goes into another world, he or she.

i think it is wonderful this institute is coming up on these things. we'll bring you up to date on that. i'll ask lorie johnson to please keep us going on that story. i think there are so many

people who are affected, one way or the other, by either they have a family member who has this terrible disease, and it just breaks your heart to see what happens when people get it. but if there is some way

it can be prevented or reversed, thank the lord. >> terry: it is like so many things we talk about on this show, it does require a lifestyle change. >> pat: that, it does. there are all kinds of

things that they have been posting, pregnatalone -- you can get these things in a vitamin store. >> terry: yes. but one of the things that is surprising to me is there are tests you can have access to that tell

what your specific needs are. because you don't want to just start pumping things into that you don't need. >> pat: well, i pump. >> terry: i know you do. so far so good. >> pat: it seems to be

working. >> terry: well, oil prices have dropped in recent years, so now some texans are saying it is the perfect time to get high by legalizing marijuana. >> the marijuana industry

in texas brings more revenue and taxes with it. and this industry knows it is going to be taxed, and they welcome it. >> terry: but not everyone is on board. hear both sides of this issue when we come back.

>> pat: we're going to give you a story right now, and i want to preference that story by saying, i think the texans are too smart to do anything as stupid as this story suggests. so i want to tip my hat to

my friends in texas and say, whatever it is, don't do it. but according to the news, the low price of oil has been great for those who drive cars, but it has been devastating for the budgets of oil-rich states

like texas. and so the industry people are seeing in texas -- they're saying why don't we legalize marijuana and tacks that. tax that. and i'm saying, don't do but caitlin will tell you

what people are arguing. >> reporter: states that depend on energy revenue never predicted oil prices would go below $30 a barrel, or worse, stay at these record levels. several states like alaska and louisiana have seen

credit ratings downgraded. texas, another major oil producer has been able to balance its budget thanks to a more diverse economy. experts, however, say that a state like texas can only weather this economic storm for so long.

one industry taking notice of this problem is offering a new solution. >> marijuana brings new taxes with it. whether it is cultivation or manufacturing or production, there is a lot of opportunity for money

to be spent and the this industry knows it is going to be taxed and they welcome it. >> reporter: last year they passed a state law allowing for very limited use of cannabis oil or marijuana for patients

suffering from seizures or epilepsy. now advocates for legalizing marijuana say it is only a matter of time before more legislation gets through. >> i think we have tremendous opportunity to

improve our community, and to make it healthier. >> reporter: according to the marijuana business facts book, the legalized weed industry could pump as much as $44 billion into the national economy by the end of 2020.

>> we're eager to see this opportunity seized in the we have to study it, understand it a little better, and show lawmakers, this is a real opportunity we have. >> reporter: a majority of conservative lawmakers

aren't quite as optmistic. governor abbott says texas won't legalize marijuana as long as he is in office. dan patrick opposes it as well. physicians agree with that position.

>> why would we legalize something we know is so incredibly bad for you. >> reporter: this doctor works at a drug and alcohol rehab center in dallas. he says the notion that marijuana can be safe

simply isn't true. >> we see people here all the time on marijuana. probably a good 40% of our addicts are primary marijuana addicts or have it as an important part of what they're using. >> reporter: besides

obvious sight effects, such as slow reaction time and the change and perception and the inability to make quick decisions, it could pose other health risks. >> the risk of lung cancer is four times greater with

marijuana than a cigarette. >> reporter: the state's powerful sheriff's association is also taking a stand, says it doesn't support making a gateway drug legal. they think

decriminalization would free up cops to focus on more significant crimes. >> there is a law we have been considering that would remove jail time for a small possession of marijuana and replace it with a fine.

we found that 88% of serious crimes in texas went unsolved in 2012. if we let the cops focus on the real things that matter, i think people support that. led a number of texas police departments and

says he disagrees. >> just because something is legalized doesn't mean enforcement is going to go away. we have officers who have to enforce alcohol consumption. many times it bleeds over

into domestic violence. those officers are still doing that, but they're not enforcing whether you had that beer legally. >> reporter: marijuana affects drivers much like alcohol. but there is a major

difference on how long it stays in your system. >> the important difference between marijuana and alcohol is this: alcohol stays in your brain for about 12 to 18 hours. marijuana stays in your

brain for between seven days to six weeks. >> reporter: still, even in conservative texas, there are signs of shifting opinions. one bill passed last year allowed cannabis oil in the treatment of e epilepsy

patients. caitlin burke, cbn news, dallas, texas. >> pat: thanks, caitlin. our friends in texas have got better sense. and it looks like greg abbott and his team are saying, no, no, no, no,

no, we're not going to do the price of oil has gone up a little. it is crowding now $50 a barrel. so texas is going to come back. they're doing just fine. if i can use the term gold

rush is the permium, to get acreage to drill because they think that is very prolific. texas does not have to depend on marijuana to make it. i'm telling you that is just not the case.

terry? >> terry: up next, after lynne's broken arm won't heal on its own, doctors told her she needed surgery. >> and i said, no, i'm not going to need an elbow replacement.

jesus is going to heal me. >> terry: watch how he did just that. plus, we're going to be praying for you. so don't go away. we'll be back in a moment. >> pat: well, on this beautiful day, you're

watching "the 700 club," and we're delighted to have you with us. good things are happening all over. and we're going to tell you about them, if we can. one is coming up right now.

if you had heard lynne lucas' shout from a few blocks away, you might have thought she was in pain. but you would be wrong. lynne wasn't screaming. she was celebrating. and at that moment her arm

didn't break. it was healed. watch this. >> reporter: on easter sunday, 2015, lynne lucas fell while stepping out of her truck. >> i ended up bracing my fall with the arm and

proceeded to fall directly on the blacktop, the pavement. >> reporter: x-rays showed lynne had minor fractures in her rest, elbow, and forearm. requiring her to wear a splint and sling for six

to eight weeks. that was hard enough. >> being a right-handed individual, all of the things i took for granted i definitely did not take for granted anymore. >> reporter: then one night, a few weeks later,

lynne stepped in a hole in her yard and tripped, landing on her injured arm. >> i knew i had done more harm. i knew it. it was, i think, snapped. >> reporter: afterwards,

she saw an orthopedic specialist, michael wilson. >> this is the radius bone that miss lucas has fractured. that bone rotates and it causes a great deal of discomfort when you move

your arm. >> reporter: lynne had to wear a metal brace that restricted her arm. she couldn't do what she really wanted. >> i had a grandson five months old at that point. and just wonderful.

and i was not able to hold him. and that was really tough. >> reporter: lynne went for a followup, and by now it had been three months since she first fell. the news was not good. >> most time when you see

this bone not healed at three months, it is not going to heal. that's kind of where she was at. so we had the discussions of doing further treatment, such as surgery and replacement of that

aboubone because i did not think it would heal. >> reporter: but lynne thought differently, because she always believed god would heal her. >> i prayed to him from the beginning that it

would be healed. i never doubted that it would. immediately i stood up and i said, no, i'm not going to need an elbow >> reporter: at her doctor's recommendation, she agreed to meet with a

surgeon. then a week before the appointment, lynne was watching "the 700 club." >> gordon: have faith in god. >> sitting there with that brace on, all of a sudden gordon robertson starts

with a word of knowledge. >> gordon: there is someone, you have a very painful right elbow. you've had a fall and it is swollen. god is healing you. he is taking away all of that pain, all of that

chip, and everything is being restored right now. begin to do what you couldn't do before. begin to move it and realize you have no more >> you could hear me probably three blocks i'm praising my savior and

shouting, wow, i knew it. >>> and i took that thing off. i just took it off. boom, it was done. >> reporter: lynne kept the appointment with the surgeon, but as michael explains, there was no

need for surgery. >> this is one month after the initial injury, and three months from this time, this extra demonstrates complete healing. and you can see the fracture here and the

displacement of the bone. this bone should be in the center. and then three months later, you see that the bone has essentially fully healed and it has gone back to anatomical alignment.

she went from this to this, four months after she initially broke it, with no surgery. >> reporter: lynne has had no problems since, and she is able to do everything she could do before the injury,

including playing with her grandson. >> to keep up with him, to run with him, to know i can lift him and there is no discomfort. to be secure in the fact that he is safe in my arms is absolutely the icing on

the cake to all of this. >> reporter: lynne gives all of the credit for her healing to god. >> no matter what you face, whether it be financial or physical or personal, there is nothing he can't handle.

>> pat: broken bone, a joint that doesn't articulate properly, and god almighty just reached down and touched her like wow, he is so powerful. >>> for many years, mariana from california was suffering from a back

it was difficult for her to sleep at night. years prior she was advised that the bones in her vertebra were thinning. nothing was successful in bringing help. one day she heard terry

say there is something with a spinal condition. it is something that you've had for a long time. and after that, after praying, her back started to feel better. she has now slept

comfortably and apparently everything is okay. >> terry: this is linda, who lives in oregon, and she had been suffering from terrible bed sores. one day she was watching this program, and, pat, you had a word of

knowledge about someone who needed a healing from painful bed sores. linda claimed the word and said she was healed right praise the lord. >> pat: terry and i are going to pray right now, and we're going to pray

for you. listen, there is nothing impossible. the god we serve is so powerful. the things we're asking him to do are so miniscule in relation to the overall power of god, it is almost

laughable. with god, all things are possible. i want you to believe god with us right now. terry and i will join hands and we'll believe father, i join with my sister in christ in the

name of jesus. god is healing 10 cases of lupus right now, all across this audience, wherever you are. lupe bulupus is being healed. >> terry: there are people who have suffered concussion from skull

fractures, being healed now in jesus' name. >> pat: night sweats healed in jesus' name. >> terry: someone else, i don't know what caused this, but you've lost your sense of smell and it has even impacted your act to

enjoy food. god is restoring that to you completely right now. just receive it. >> pat: spinal stenosis, the lord is healing. you'll feel like a hand right now on your spine, and all of a sudden

everything is right. the swelling is down, and and it art tic calculates articulates properly. >>> in jesus' name, my brothers and sisters, be made whole. touch! amen.

please give us a call and tell us what god has done the telephone number is there. more than telling us, you tell the lord and thank because there are people all over this audience that have been touched by

just raise your hands and say thank you, lord. i praise you for what you have done. if you want further prayer, go to the phones. somebody is here. >> terry: well, still ahead, he is a speaker, a

musician, a basketball player, and a reality star. "thicker than water's" ben tanker joins us live, so stay with us. >> and welcome back to "the 700 club." a transgender bathroom

battle in virginia may be on its way to the u.s. supreme court. a virginia school board is asking the high court to decide if it must allow a transgender male student to use the men's restroom. the supreme court has

temporarily blocked the student from using the men's bathroom until it decides if it will review the case. >>> belgium was the first country to legalize euthanasia, and now people are travelling there so

they can end their lives. belgium provides assisted suicide for visitors, and it is often free because it is covered by the european union's health insurance program. the bills are sent to french health care

providers. the patients are killed with a lethal injection administered by a doctor. even children are allowed to undergo euthanasia in belgium. and last year more than 2,000 people were

euthanized there. >>> remember, you can always get the latest from cbn news by going to our website at cbnnews.com. pat and terry are back with more of "the 700 club." it is coming up right

after this. >> terry: when it came time for ben tanker to pick a college, he had 35 scholarship offers for basketball and 30 others for playing the tuba. who knew? he is a true renaissance

man. and if you want to know his secret, it's because he lives a full tank light. >> reporter: ben tanker is the king on breast bravo tv "thicker than water." with his many talents, ben

says he is doing what he was born to do. in his book, "full tank of life," he shares the changes that clear you for take you've and fuel your takeoff and fuel your tank. >> terry: ben, it is

wonderful to have you here. >> thank you. >> terry: i want you to talk about your beginnings. because sometimes wect0t let the story had happens around us define us.

but that didn't happen for you. but your beginnings were very, very lean. >> we were poor when i grew up. i was 6' 6" when i was in eighth grade. and they're saying, tank,

how many years did you stay back? i'm not dumb; i'm just tall. but we were very, very poor. public assistance, powdered eggs and powdered milk.

and i thought that my way out of the ghetto would be pro-basketball. but i was a tuba player. so i loved the music, but i liked the basketball. but the basketball was just because i was tall. >> terry: i mean, that

would seem logical. anyone seeing a young guy that has that kind of height as part of his gift would say, nba. >> my parents, they didn't help matters because we were so poor, when i wanted to choose between

the basketball and the tuba scholarship, i wanted to go with the tuba. >> terry: i love what your dad said. >> he said, son, we're black, you're tall, we're poor, play ball. [laughter]

>> terry: a wise man. >> and so i went the basketball route, not because that was my true heart. i went the basketball route because i felt that would be a meal ticket. i went to college, and

dropped out after one year, and went pro in the minor league. here i am with an opportunity to work out with jack ramsey, the coach of the portland trailblazers. i might be the guy coming

off the bench behind collidclydethe glide. who knows. but i got injured. i got injured in camp, and they cut me from the team. here i am with no education, no money, and a jerry curl.

>> terry: wow! i want you to talk about what happened to you then. you were alone in a dark room. wuv got to feel like you've played all of your cards, and this is what you're left with.

everybody can look back and have thoughts about, gee, if i could do it over again. but what happened to you in that dark room? >> i felt kind of like i'm on my own cross. and god, why has thou

forsaken me. but i had enough sense to get myself up and go to church. i was born in church, and my parents were ministers, but i never accepted the lord for myself because i was kind of living off

their wings. but away from home, nothing to turn to but i went to church really to get something to eat. i knew they would have chicken dinners. i went to get a chicken sandwich and messed around

and god saved. the minister called me up and told me to put my hands on the keys. i hadn't played keyboard. i played tuba. >> terry: that was a prophetic force for him. >> and he told me to put

my hands on the keys because god had a new destiny for me. >> terry: did he knew you had a music background? >> he knew nothing but i was a former basketball player who hobbled into

this church. and i put my hands on the keys and i began to play like a jazz musician. i don't know if it came that night or if it was in me the whole time. but if it was in me the whole time, i wouldn't

have known it because i was chasing the basketball. my mission in life is then to encourage people who are at that crossroads, who don't know what they're supposed to be when they grow up, there

is life after death. i'm the biggest failure in the room. but god blessed me. i've had two divorces. i've had bankruptcy. i had my parents both die within a year of one another.

but now... >> terry: but now, yeah >> a tv show, a great wife, five kids, grandkids. i am happier than a witch in a broom factory with a 90% off coupon. >> terry: what do you

say to people who are -- we get questions like this all of the time here in our "bring it on", how doi find out what my destiny is, what my purpose is in life? what do you say to people? >> look at your left hand,

and put in your left hand what makes you tick. what do you lose time doing? time gets away from you because you love it. that makes you tick. and in this hand, look at what makes you mad.

for me, i love music and motivation, and here i hate poverty and sickness and depression. so somewhere between what makes you tick and what makes you kick is your purpose. that's where you find it.

>> terry: you know, you could have missed yours. and that is true for a lot of us. we pursue our dream, rather than asking god, what did you create me with in mind? >> exactly.

i think we get caught up with goliath. i don't think goliath was sent to defeat david. i think goliath was sent to make david famous. the bigger the problem, the bigger the victory on the back side of that

problem. jesus died, and there was life after that death. there was life after the death of my basketball career. had i known that god had all of this planned for me, i would have never

dressed up for p.e. i was hijacked by my own dreams, which were not really god's plan for me. >> terry: maybe that is part of the struggle because it brings us to surrender, do you think? >> absolutely.

i think in times of depression, in times of confusion, that's where our character is developed. because riches can be deceitful. >> terry: may be the worst.

>> as a motivational speaker, i speak to nba players, and the reason they asked me to come and talk to the players, they said it takes somebody with money to tell somebody with money that it is not about the money.

>> terry: boy, that's the truth. that's the truth. god has given you an amazing platform, an amazing gift on many levels, but music is one of them. so i'm going to let you go

get ready because you're going to give us a treat today. >> terry: i want to tell people about your book, and the book is called "the full tank life." and don't forget to check your local listings for

"thicker than water," and his lace latest c.d. now to play us to break, here is the very gifted ben tanker with "how great is our god." >> terry: "orphans' promise" has helped more than 100,000 orphans in

more than 60 countries. each child has a personal like the little boy you're about to meet. his life was in danger every day until people like you came to his rescue. >> reporter: each

morning abu prays with his classmates at this center which is supported by "orphans' promise." he thanks god for friends because just a few months ago he didn't really have any friends. [speaking a foreign

language] >> every day, when he saw the other children going to daycare, he would ask, mommy, why can't i go? it broke my heart to tell him i didn't have enough money. he was so lonely.

>> reporter: while his sister went to school and his mom looked for work, he occupied his time playing in the narrow walkways near his home. >> many times i would come home to find him playing in dirty water by the

creek. he started getting sick from that. >> reporter: abu's father abandoned him and his mother when he was just six months old. when she couldn't find work, she begged some

neighbors for some porrage. >> i know they didn't have enough food for themselves. they gave me what they could because they knew my baby was hungry. it was times like that

that i felt like god doesn't exist. >> reporter: then a local family found out about the church and told today he and 23 other kids are sponsored by cbn to come to this center for free.

>> i can see that abu has changed. he tells new stories from the bible and talks about the 10 commandments. >> reporter: she found a job and has a steady income. and now people come to her

when they're in need, and she always helps them. >> now i know that god exists. everything has changed because of you. thank you, cbn. >> terry: abu is one of hundreds of precious

children like him who are receiving an education, knowledge about the love of god, and they're thriving in a safe place. they're being fed nutritious food every day, and their mothers are being given hope and

opportunity. we say thank you. if you are a "700 club" member, you make that i want you the know that. what does it cost to do that? 65 cents a day, $20 a month.

you can change the world. you really can. and that's what we're out to do. join us, won't you? you can call our toll-free number right now today. don't put it off anymore. if you thought about it

but haven't called before, this is the day to do it. 1-800-759-0700. and just say, i want to join "the 700 club." when you join today, we are going to send you "victory through life's storms."

you're going to love this. storms happen to all of us. how do we walk through them to victory? pat shares on here lots of wonderful testimonies on people have been sharing this with family and

friends, and it is ur gift to you when you join "the 700 club" today. call now, we're waiting to hear from you. and we need to hear from you, so we welcome your call. want to "bring it on"?

>> pat: let's do it. >> terry: emma says, "this past year my friend and i struck a bond with a lady who used to go to our i'm 16 years old and have found when i have questions or problems with my faith, i turn to her

and ask her what god would say. i have a hard time hearing the lord myself, and the encouragement she gives me is so helpful. my parents don't like her spontaneity, and they're not okay with the fact i'm

close to someone who goes to oopt another church. i feel like they're closing me off to the only christian community outside the church that i have. my parents don't dislike she just don't feel she is

responsible enough. i'm starting to feel sheltered. what do i do?" >> pat: you've got to remember you're 16 years old. your parents are protective.

they feel responsible for and there can be a lot of foreign influences that can prey on young people. they want to protect you. so recognize they love this is an act of love. you need to vet this lady a little bit more.

she sounds like a wonderful friend, but at the same time, you need to know a little something about her because, you know, you read today about, i met so and so on the internet, and the next thing you know, so and so

on the niesme internet is a child molester, so you never know. >> terry: and she says, this is the only christian community outside of the and if she is in the church, there must be groups and friends.

>> pat: the parents don't like her because she doesn't go to their in today we've got open borders, so to speak, and the denomination walls are falling down. what else? >> terry: karen is, "two

years ago, i was diagnosed with a rare neurological disease calling me great pain and inability to walk. i thought with my loving husband and my relationship with god, i would get through this.

i was put in a nursing home for intense therapy. during this time, my husband had an affair and fell in love and left me. that was worse than the we are still married. since i did not want the divorce, i refused to go

forward with filing and he hasn't either. that was two years ago. >> pat: i think you've got to move on. it's been two years. the fact that he abandoned you when you were ill, got this girl pregnant -- he's

probably looking after a child now and starting another family. you need to take some legal action, if nothing else, to get support. he is supposed to support you either need a decree of some kind where you get

a divorce or a separation or something. but there needs to be a legal determination of your status. because if you keep on going, you're going to get worse and worse and it's not going to do you any

good. >> terry: deb says, "pat, the internet has many people saying that the u.s. dollar will fail soon. i understand our economy is in serious trouble, but why september 27, 2016 is

the date?" >> pat: look, there are a bunch of nut cases. >> terry: how do you really feel about that? >> pat: you can get on the keyboard and start typing something and send it out on the internet.

they have no validity whatsoever. i don't know about september 26th failure. >> terry: this is vartician, who says, "those who sleep will rise first and then will be caught up with them.

i thought to be absent from the body is to be immediately in jesus presence. what am i missing? which is correct?" >> pat: you're talking about the second coming of jesus.

when he comes back, the dead will rise and we who remain will be caught up with him in the air. but those who died are with the lord. >>> that's all of the time we've got for those questions.

thank you very much. >>> we leave you with today's power minute from psalm 34: "those who seek the lord shall not lack any good thing." >>> well, tomorrow football season is here, and we'll hit the grid

iron with virginia tech's standout linebacker, and the pac will be back, and the cheeseheads will and >> terry: time to be one. >> pat: that's all of the time we've got. thanks for being with us.

for terry and wendy and all of us, this is pat robertson, and we will see you tomorrow. bye-bye.

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