Daily Brief

21 Days of Communion

21 Days of Communion

A number of saints have sensed the quickening of the Spirit to sit quietly before our Lord each morning for the next 21 days, partaking of the Cup of Communion in our homes. Beginning tomorrow (Wednesday, June 10) and ending 21 days later on Wednesday, July 1, we will honor our Lord together in this special time of individual prayer.

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

The study of a 15-year period on police data regarding racial differences is contained in AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF RACIAL DIFFERENCES IN POLICE USE OF FORCE by National Bureau of Economic Research's Roland G. Fryer, Jr., an African American Harvard professor of economics, July 2016. The study found that Blacks are 23.8% less likely to be shot at by police relative to whites, but Blacks are harassed far more in police interactions.

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

Fox News' Pete Hegseth said he spent some time serving with the Guard in D.C. during the unrest. 
"I was there for three nights on the streets of Washington, D.C.," Hegseth said. "At one point, it was me and a handful of other guys standing at the Vietnam War Memorial to defend it from people who would want to deface it, after the Lincoln Memorial." Hegseth said that while he was stationed at The Wall, he prayed and began to think how similar the situation was to that experienced by troops returning from Vietnam in the 1960s and 1970s, many of whom received hostile welcomes in the U.S.

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

"We need to recognize that we, the American people, are not each other's enemies," Carson told "The Story." "We should not succumb to those who are trying to make us believe that we are enemies, to divide and conquer," he said. "I've never seen a situation where violence, activity of this nature accomplishes something good, it only accomplishes bad." 

The Daily Brief--Part One

The Daily Brief--Part One

"All people of good faith agree that what happened to George Floyd was heinous and depraved, it was murder," Ingraham began, "But that's not what we are seeing on our violent streets. We are not seeing outrage really expressed about that. And that's not what the criminals and the domestic terrorists are perpetrating as they use Mr. Floyd's killing to try and murder America.

The Daily Brief Special Edition

The Daily Brief Special Edition

A divided Supreme Court on Friday rejected an emergency appeal by a California church that challenged state limits on attendance at worship services that have been imposed to contain the spread of the coronavirus. Over the dissent of the four more conservative justices, Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court's four liberals in turning away a request from the South Bay United Pentecostal Church in Chula Vista, California, in the San Diego area.