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1-6 of 6
- Sold into slavery, delivered from a terrible storm at sea, a troubled young man finds amazing grace in the darkest moments and becomes driving force behind the move to abolish the slave trade.
- The year is 1732. John Wesley, an irritatingly self-righteous instructor at Oxford is offered the chance to go to the new colony of Georgia, where he hopes to preach to the Indians. During the voyage, the ship encounters a violent storm; overwhelmed with the fear of death, Wesley begins to doubt the validity of his faith In Georgia, Wesley's plans are waylaid: he is not able to do much preaching among the native tribes, and falls in love with Sophy Hopkey, the beautiful niece of the local magistrate. When the star-crossed romance fails to produce a proposal from the angst-ridden young minister, Sophy marries another; bitterness explodes between the two until one day Wesley publicly refuses to serve Holy Communion to Sophy. He is arrested for defamation of character - and is to be tried by Sophy's uncle! There will be no fair trial here. Escaping from Savannah, he returns to England in failure and shame. Back in London, he meets a Moravian missionary, Peter Boehler, who counsels the disturbed and depressed young man. John struggles with his failure and fears and is finally experiences the peace he longed for: "I felt my heart strangely warmed." Wesley begins to preach about his experience of saving faith, but is turned out of most churches in London. Undaunted, he begins preaching in fields, and discovers a hungry audience in the downtrodden poor of England. Appalled by the terrible needs of families overwhelmed with alcoholism, abuse, and poverty, John and his hymn-writing brother Charles begin revolutionary (and controversial) social ministries to better the lives of the poor while also preaching to them of the transformation of the heart. Despite opposition, mob violence that seeks to break up their meetings, Wesley and his "Methodies" establish social ministries to the poor that transformed the face of England. Today, almost 75 million people worldwide trace their spiritual heritage back to John Wesley.
- In an apocalyptic world, dark forces lead the desperate yet powerful, to clone Christ from the Shroud of Turin; a top secret effort to bring peace. The project is thought to have failed, yet the child survives and rises to power in a new United World Order. Our story picks up after the war is over. Only a few remain resistant to the UWO. Jude Stone, among the best soldier's of the war, finds himself a displaced detective in the New America's Division of the UWO tasked with the elimination of all resistance. Particularly, the Christians blamed for killing his wife in a vengeful attack. Confronted by Christ himself, Jude discovers that he has been fighting for the wrong side and turns his sights on the UWO and the World President himself. Will he succeed in destroying the Collossus the UWO has become before it's too late?
- Francis (Miller) Collins just misses his train to Memphis one stormy night. While waiting on the next train he meets three strangers - Eric, Constance and Violet. Will these four young professionals become friends, lovers; or will they simply go their separate ways and never see each other again? Like Schrodinger's Cat, all of the possible outcomes of this chance encounter are equally real, but only one will come to pass. Or will it? The story line is non-linear, moving back and forth in time over a six year period. These four strangers who meet by happenstance at a train station, are 'called back' to the train station to relive that initial meeting, where slightly different actions result in sometimes drastically altered futures. The decisions they make, the words they speak and the actions they take during this initial meeting dictate how their future relationships play out. The 'moral of the story' (if you will) is that all of our actions, even the smallest, have consequences - for good or for ill.
- When rising waters trap four very different travelers in a remote cabin, the reluctant team must survive wildlife, the elements, and each other.