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How Maine brothers found deliverance from an abusive church pastor – Press Herald

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Identical twins Steve and Nate Smith of Cumberland each split with the church, one as a teenager, the other many years later.
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Steve Smith and his twin brother wrote a book about being raised in a fundamentalist Bible cult. His twin brother chose to leave when he was a teenager while Steve stayed. Smith left the church over a decade ago and now lives with his family where he grew up in Cumberland. Brianna Soukup/Portland Press Herald
For most of his childhood and into his adult years, Steve Smith was the spiritual successor at the Faith Baptist Church in North Yarmouth.
The chosen one.
Pastor Wesley Harris identified him among congregants early on and began to mold the boy in his image.
“He even sent me to his barber to get the same haircut,” Smith said. “It was that level of shaping and control … and I was very pliable.”

Harris, by contrast, was rigid, both in posture and in his lessons from the pulpit. As far as Smith was concerned, the pastor spoke for God. And who was he to question God?
“Everybody is searching for love, and security, and meaning,” he said. “And a cult, big or small, provides all of those things if you follow the rules.”

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It took a long time for Smith, now 44, to find the right language for what he endured. He believes the church was a cult and Harris was its leader. But his experience fits into a broader category of what psychologists call religious, or spiritual, abuse. It’s harder to explain than physical or sexual abuse, but no less insidious.
“Everything I thought was true was either twisted or an outright lie,” he said.
Harris’ questionable leadership of the small, suburban Maine church made news more than two decades ago when a feud between the pastor and a Sunday school teacher led to false allegations of sexual abuse.
But that story receded quickly into the background.
Smith and his identical twin brother, Nate, are shedding new light on what happened in the church, how it tore their family apart, and how it has shaped their lives.
It’s a story about the bond between brothers and their faith.

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And about how both were tested.
Faith Baptist Church on Route 9 in North Yarmouth in a 2002 file photo. John Patriquin/Portland Press Herald
The Faith Baptist Church was a small but handsome brick sanctuary set back from Route 9 in North Yarmouth not far from the town border with Cumberland.
Harris arrived there in the mid-1980s from Texas. He had been a Sunday school teacher before, never a pastor, but his knowledge of the Bible was deep and his conviction unquestioned. The congregation narrowly voted to approve his hiring.
It didn’t take long for Harris to adopt an authoritarian style. He took over the finances, started enforcing a dress code and told church members to stop celebrating holidays, including Christmas. The church, he said, needed to be the focal point in their lives.
Steve Smith was among the congregants, along with his parents, older sister and Nate.
Even as a young child, Steve remembers fissures in the church. People who spoke out against Harris’ ways were quickly exiled. He vaguely remembers a big split in the late 1980s when he was 8.

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“By the end of the summer, half the church was gone,” he said.
A few years later, a tense encounter between Harris and a member led to an investigation of his leadership by the regional branch of the Conservative Baptist Association, which led to the church’s expulsion. The congregation shrank again.
Steve and Nate Smith were in high school by then and had developed disparate feelings about their pastor.
Steve still saw a mentor and believed Harris when he said that it was good that people were leaving the church. It meant only the most pious remained.
Nate, however, started to see holes in the puritanical beliefs Harris espoused.
“In my mind, it had crossed the line into a very inappropriate domineering abusive environment,” he said in a phone interview from his home in suburban Atlanta. “I knew it wasn’t going to get better, and I knew I couldn’t stay.”

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Leaving the church meant leaving his family, too.
In December 1997, Nate moved in with a friend across town. The only time he saw his twin brother was at school. His family – at Harris’ insistence – shunned him.
Shortly after Nate graduated from Greely High School, he enrolled at Virginia Military Institute. After that, he enlisted in the Marines. He’s the first to acknowledge the parallels between the strict church he fled and the controlled military environment he ran toward.
“For a long time, I did choose environments that were black and white,” he said.
Steve didn’t understand his brother’s decision. How could he turn his back on the church? On God?
But he was also envious. Steve had wanted a military career, too. Both brothers remember with great reverence the stories of their grandfather, who served in World War II.

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Pastor Harris had different plans for him.
Nate (left) and Steve Smith pose for a picture at their childhood home in December 1988. Photo courtesy of Steve Smith
The same year Nate and Steve graduated from high school, Harris attended training in Kentucky on theophostic counseling, which involves recovered memory therapy and deliverance from demons. It’s not a widely accepted form of counseling within the broader Baptist church.
Armed with this new technique, he began counseling church members, mostly women, and in almost every instance they were found to have repressed a memory of sexual abuse. Harris would then talk about this abuse from the pulpit, Steve Smith said, often in lurid detail, even with children among the parishioners.
“It was a paradigm shift, I can still remember it,” Steve said. “Just the darkness of what he was sharing.”
Not everyone embraced Harris’ new methods.
Thomas Wright, once a Sunday school teacher at Faith Baptist, left the church in 2000 after challenging Harris.

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Two years later, Wright was arrested. He was accused of molesting a boy who attended the church. Later, six other church members claimed Wright had abused them, too. All had been counseled by Harris.
The criminal charges against Wright brought the inner workings of the church into the public.
The Press Herald and other media organizations started digging. Wright denied the allegations and said it was Harris retaliating against him. Other former church members spoke out about the pastor’s methods.
Prosecutors later dropped the charges against Wright, saying there was no credible evidence and citing the internal feuding in the church and the questionable use of repressed memory therapy.
At the time, Steve Smith was attending Taylor University, a small Christian liberal arts college, but he said he remembers the stories as another point of friction among congregants.
Steve remained fully under Harris’ power. Even from thousands of miles away, the pastor controlled much of his life. He warned him against socializing too much. Dating was out of the question. And he used guilt and fear to keep Smith in line.

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Laura Anderson, a psychotherapist and religious trauma expert in Tennessee, said religious abuse is more common than people think. She speaks from experience. She, too, grew up in what she calls a “high control” church and didn’t break away until she was a young adult.
Three years ago, she founded the Center for Trauma Resolution and Recovery, a network of 18 practitioners that counsel hundreds across the country.
Religion, or Christianity even, is not a monolith. Not every church is led by pastors like Harris, but “at its core, trauma is trauma regardless of the preemptive event or experience,” she said.
Nate Smith (center) stands with officers of Company K, 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marines in June 2005 after an operation in Iraq’s Al Anbar Province. One Marine was killed and several more injured. Photo courtesy of Nate Smith
It was easy enough for Nate Smith to forget about Faith Baptist Church and Pastor Harris.
Letting go of his family was more complicated, especially when he was deployed in a war zone.
“It was unspeakably tragic in many ways,” he said.

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Nate’s first deployment was in 2005 after Saddam Hussein had been captured and the Bush administration abandoned its search for weapons of mass destruction.
It was an uncertain time, and Nate was in an infantry unit, which often meant there was little daylight between him and danger. Snipers. Improvised explosive devices. He both saw death and escaped it.
During his second deployment, in 2006, the moral toll started to weigh heavy.
As a platoon leader, he couldn’t express weakness to his soldiers, so he started writing instead.
Even though he left his childhood church as a teenager, Nate still considered himself a man of faith. But he admits that during his second deployment, he stopped talking to God, and even blamed God for putting him there.
In time, he’s let most of that go. Being a civilian, a husband and a father has smoothed his edges.

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His departure from the military also prompted him to consider reaching out to his estranged family.
“If I wasn’t going to reconnect then, I never would,” he said.
Nate was transitioning to civilian life when he wrote his parents a letter, opening the door to reconciliation.
He was surprised when they gave him a call.
That’s how he learned that the church had disbanded. His parents and siblings were reckoning with the same things he faced as a teenager.
Steve Smith never felt particularly called to ministry.

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“It was just ordained,” he said.
Harris went to Dallas Theological Seminary, so that’s where Steve would go. The church was paying part of the cost, so he felt indebted.
Still, he could feel himself breaking away, especially as he learned more about his pastor’s descent into repressed memory therapy.
After counseling most of his congregants, Harris decided he would counsel himself, Smith said, using his wife as a “kind of medium to talk directly to God.”
“It became an extreme downward spiral that led to a complete breakdown,” Steve said.
Harris was admitted to a psychiatric hospital.

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Shortly thereafter, two deacons at the church met and decided the congregation should vote on whether to remove their pastor. The vote was unanimous.
By the time Harris was ousted, Steve already had begun writing down all the things he thought needed to change at Faith Baptist Church.
“I was planning on being an internal reformer like Martin Luther. I would nail my grievances to the door,” he said, referring to the 16th-century theologian who defied the Catholic Church and gave birth to Protestantism.
Steve never saw Harris again, although he did write him a letter outlining the ways in which he felt Harris had poisoned his mind.
Harris later called Steve and left a message.
“He said, ‘I’m sorry you feel I’ve hurt you,’ sort of a classic non-apology,” Steve said. “And then he said, ‘If it’s God’s will, maybe we can get together.’ ”

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They never did. Harris died in 2014 at a nursing home in Yarmouth.
Nate (left) and Steve Smith in Houston, Texas, in October 2011, about a year and a half after they reunited after being estranged for 13 years. Photo courtesy of Steve Smith
Faith Baptist Church operated with part-time pastors for a few months after Harris’ departure but then closed. A new congregation later moved in, called White Pine Community Church, that still operates today. The Smiths’ parents are among the congregants.
“When the church did finally fall apart, my mom was happy,” Steve said. “I think my dad was a little more bewildered but then also came around pretty quickly to recognize that it had been a toxic and abusive place.”
The Smiths weren’t the only family upended by the church’s collapse.
David Harris, the oldest of Wesley Harris’ three children, said his father’s reign over the church and eventual breakdown was devastating for them, too.
“There was so much pain and hurt to go around,” he said.

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Harris lives in South Carolina where he moved less than a year after the church closed. The last time Harris set foot in Faith Baptist Church was when he got married in the summer of 2010. The small towns of Cumberland and North Yarmouth became unfriendly places for his family.
Harris said he now sees that his father was a narcissist and a destructive force on the church community.
“The hardest thing was that dad could or would not see how he had hurt people,” he said. “I think anytime we overextend and control what isn’t ours to control, that’s only going to cause pain.”
Harris, 50, has never really told his part of the story publicly.
“I’ve spent the last 12 years trying to heal,” he said. “And I think I have.”
If anything, his faith is stronger now than when his identity was tied to his father’s profession.

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“I came to a point where I would try to reason something without God, I can’t do it. I can’t understand this world without God,” he said.
Steve and Nathan Smith’s book at his workshop in Cumberland. Brianna Soukup/Portland Press Herald
Nate and Steve’s reconciliation was gradual.
Each had taken to writing to process what they had gone through – Steve’s focused more on religious trauma and processing his break with Pastor Harris; Nate’s on the cruelty and banality of war.
They sometimes shared parts of journal entries each had written via email.
“We both found those writings fascinating and helpful because neither of us had experienced exactly what the other had,” Nate said. “And we weren’t at a place where we would sit down and talk about it over a beer.”
After a while, though, they knew they were headed for an in-person meet.

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Steve was living in his seminary apartment in Texas and Nate said he’d come to see him. It was May 2010. They hadn’t seen each other in 13 years, but they were identical twins. It was still like looking in a mirror.
“Hello brother. It’s been a while,” Nate said.
They hugged for a long time.
Shortly after, Nate started putting his writings on a blog he titled “The Soldier’s Load.” Steve launched his own blog, “Liberty for Captives.”
Neither website had a massive following, but both brothers said they found catharsis in writing and connecting with others who had similar experiences.
It was from those entries they developed the idea to collaborate on a book titled “Men of God, Men of War,” that published this summer.

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“I think crystallizing the story in the book and sharing that with my brother and having my family read it, it was a real point of healing,” Steve said. “We tell stories to make sense of the world.”
Steve Smith hand-hews a log at his home in Cumberland. Brianna Soukup/Staff Photographer
How do you find faith again when all you know of religion is steeped in control and abuse?
“The idea that you should just renounce faith and make fun of people who have it, that doesn’t really get at the complexity,” said Anderson, the religious trauma expert. “Atheism might be where someone lands, but how we deal with trauma is different than how we end on our own spiritual path.”
Nate said his faith never went away, it was just recalibrated.
“I never doubted the existence of God,” he said. “There was a period of time in Iraq when I stopped talking to God, but I never lost faith.”
These days, he’s still surrounded by people of what he calls healthy faith. And he doesn’t mind talking about his own spiritual journey.

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“Knowledge is always the antidote,” Nate said.
He has a wife and three young children. After his military service, he worked for years at a veterans’ nonprofit and now is the chief operating officer of a financial planning firm in Atlanta.
His life is in Georgia now, but he still thinks of Maine.
“It’s my dream at some point to spend part of the year there,” he said.
Steve didn’t become a pastor. Today, he works for himself, hand-hewing timber, which means turning round tree logs into square beams using only an axe. They are used as mantels, ceiling beams or other interior accents. His company, Renaissance Timber, operates out of the old barn on his homestead and is the only commercial hand-hewing business in Maine.
He and his wife, Teresa, have two children. They met at Dallas Seminary and started dating soon after the church crumbled.

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After seminary, they moved to Ohio, where she attended college. But Maine always felt like home, Steve said.
“My folks were thinking of maybe selling the place and we were like, ‘you know what, let’s just move next to them,’ ” he said.
So, they did.
Steve knows he’ll never reembrace the beliefs of conservative, fundamentalist Christian groups or come under the control of a pastor like Harris.
But like his brother, his faith wasn’t destroyed. It’s just simpler now.
“There is a reason I work in the woods, a reason I’m working with my hands and in nature,” he said. “That’s my happy place … that’s where I commune with God, in my own way.”
As children, the Smith brothers spent a lot of time at their grandparents’ property in Eddington, on the banks of the Penobscot River.
Steve still thinks a lot about the river, about how it’s always moving, down to the sea on its ordained path. That’s how he sees his life now.
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Even NASA Can't Explain The Alarming Surge in Global Heat We're Seeing – ScienceAlert

The world has been getting hotter for decades but a sudden and extraordinary surge in heat has sent the climate deeper into uncharted territory – and scientists are still trying to figure out why.
Over the past two years, temperature records have been repeatedly shattered by a streak so persistent and puzzling it has tested the best-available scientific predictions about how the climate functions.
Scientists are unanimous that burning fossil fuels has largely driven long-term global warming, and that natural climate variability can also influence temperatures one year to the next.
But they are still debating what might have contributed to this particularly exceptional heat surge.
Experts think changes in cloud patterns, airborne pollution, and Earth’s ability to store carbon could be factors, but it would take another year or two for a clearer picture to emerge.
“Warming in 2023 was head-and-shoulders above any other year, and 2024 will be as well,” said Gavin Schmidt, director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, in November.
“I wish I knew why, but I don’t,” he added.
“We’re still in the process of assessing what happened and if we are seeing a shift in how the climate system operates.”
Carbon dioxide (CO₂) averaged 424 ppm in October 2024
10 years ago October averaged about 397 ppm
Preliminary NOAA data: gml.noaa.gov/ccgg/trends/ 🧪⚒️
[image or embed]
— Zack Labe (@zacklabe.com) Dec 7, 2024 at 12:17 PM

When burned, fossil fuels emit greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide that trap heat near the Earth’s surface.
As fossil fuel emissions have risen to record highs in 2023, average sea surface and air temperatures have curved upwards in a consistent, decades-long warming trend.
But in an unprecedented streak between June 2023 and September 2024, global temperatures were unlike anything seen before, said the World Meteorological Organization – and sometimes by a considerable margin.
The heat was so extreme it was enough to make 2023 – and then 2024 – the hottest years in history.
“The record global warmth of the past two years has sent the planet well into uncharted territory,” Richard Allan, a climate scientist from the UK’s University of Reading, told AFP.
What occurred was “at the limit of what we would expect based on existing climate models”, Sonia Seneviratne, a climatologist from ETH Zurich in Switzerland, told AFP.
“But the overall long-term warming tendency is not unexpected” given the amount of fossil fuels being burned, she added.
Scientists said that climate variability could go some way to explaining what happened.
2023 was preceded by a rare, three-year La Nina phenomenon that had a strong cooling effect on the planet by pushing excess heat into the deep oceans.
This energy was released back to the surface when an opposite, warming El Nino event took over in mid-2023, boosting global temperatures.
But the heat has lingered even after El Nino peaked in January.
Temperatures have not fallen as fast as they rose, and November was still the second-warmest on record.
“It is difficult to explain this at the moment,” said Robert Vautard, a member of the UN’s climate expert panel IPCC. “We lack a bit of perspective.
“If temperatures do not drop more sharply in 2025, we will really have to ask ourselves questions about the cause,” he told AFP.
Scientists are looking for clues elsewhere.
One theory is that a global shift to cleaner shipping fuels in 2020 accelerated warming by reducing sulphur emissions that make clouds more mirror-like and reflective of sunlight.
In December, another peer-reviewed paper looked at whether a reduction in low-lying clouds had let more heat reach Earth’s surface.
At the American Geophysical Union conference this month, Schmidt convened scientists to explore these theories and others, including whether solar cycles or volcanic activity offered any hints.
There are concerns that without a more complete picture, scientists could be missing even more profound and transformational shifts in the climate.
“We cannot exclude that some other factors also further amplified the temperatures… the verdict is still out,” said Seneviratne.
Scientists this year warned that Earth’s carbon sinks – such as the forests and oceans that suck CO2 from the atmosphere – had suffered an “unprecedented weakening” in 2023.
This month, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said the Arctic tundra, after locking away C02 for millennia, was becoming a net source of emissions.
Oceans, which have acted as a massive carbon sink and climate regulator, were warming at a rate scientists “cannot fully explain”, said Johan Rockstrom of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.
“Could this be a first sign of a planet starting to show a loss of resilience? We cannot exclude it,” he said last month.
© Agence France-Presse

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NASA and Axiom Space accelerate plans for free-flying space station – Space Daily

Under a contract awarded in January 2020, Axiom Space began developing a habitable commercial module to attach to the ISS, with the eventual goal of establishing an independent space station in low Earth orbit (LEO). This aligns with NASA’s broader push to commercialize space station operations and ensure a smooth transition before the ISS’s planned retirement in 2030.
The revised plan shifts the launch priority to the Payload, Power, and Thermal Module, enabling Axiom Station to detach from the ISS as early as 2028. Once in free-flight, additional components – including Habitat 1, an airlock, Habitat 2, and a Research and Manufacturing Facility – will be integrated to complete the station.
Angela Hart, manager of NASA’s Commercial Low Earth Orbit Development Program, emphasized the importance of this collaboration: “The updated assembly sequence has been coordinated with NASA to support both NASA and Axiom Space needs and plans for a smooth transition in low Earth orbit. The ongoing design and development of commercial destinations by our partners is critical to the agency’s plan to procure services in low Earth orbit to support our needs in microgravity.”
The new sequence facilitates earlier operations for Axiom Station, ensuring ISS resources remain focused on preparing for the U.S. Deorbit Vehicle and the station’s final years of service.
Reflecting on the ISS’s legacy, Dana Weigel, manager of the International Space Station Program, stated, “The International Space Station has provided a one-of-a-kind scientific platform for nearly 25 years. As we approach the end of space station’s operational life, it’s critically important that we look to the future of low Earth orbit and support these follow-on destinations to ensure we continue NASA’s presence in microgravity, which began through the International Space Station.”
NASA is fostering the development of multiple commercial space stations, such as Axiom Station, through partnerships and agreements. These initiatives are part of NASA’s strategy to transition LEO operations to commercial entities, leveraging decades of human spaceflight expertise to sustain microgravity research and advance future exploration objectives.
Related Links
NASA Low Earth Orbit Microgravity Strategy
Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News

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5 Surprising Facts About ‘A Love Supreme’ by John Coltrane – That Eric Alper

Some albums change the way we hear music; A Love Supreme by John Coltrane changes the way we feel it. Released in 1965, this masterpiece isn’t just about saxophone solos or complex jazz—it’s about spirituality, gratitude, and transformation. From its iconic chant to its soaring improvisations, it’s an album that speaks to the soul as much as the ears. This is more than music—it’s a statement, a journey, and a revelation. Let’s dive into the brilliance of A Love Supreme.
The sheer brilliance of A Love Supreme came together in just one recording session on December 9, 1964, at Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey. This highlights not only the extraordinary talent of John Coltrane but also the seamless chemistry of his quartet, featuring McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison, and Elvin Jones.
2. The Influence of Spirituality
Coltrane saw A Love Supreme as a spiritual declaration, expressing gratitude and acknowledging his musical gift as coming from a higher power. The album’s devotional nature has even inspired the creation of the Saint John Coltrane African Orthodox Church in San Francisco, where this record is considered sacred.
3. The Chant Was a Last-Minute Addition
The iconic chant of “a love supreme” on the first track, “Acknowledgement,” wasn’t planned. Coltrane overdubbed his voice nineteen times to create this chant, turning a simple four-note motif into one of the album’s most memorable and unifying features.
4. A Rare Live Performance
For decades, the only known live performance of A Love Supreme was from the Festival Mondial du Jazz Antibes in France in July 1965. However, a second live recording was discovered, captured at The Penthouse in Seattle on October 2, 1965. This rare set was released in 2021, providing an even deeper insight into the masterpiece.
5. A Hidden Homage to African-American Preachers
The fourth movement, “Psalm,” is a musical interpretation of a devotional poem included in the liner notes. Coltrane “plays” the words on his saxophone, and scholars believe this was a nod to the sermon style of African-American preachers, blending music with spoken word in a deeply spiritual way.
A Love Supreme is a spiritual journey, a masterclass in improvisation, and a bold declaration of gratitude. John Coltrane poured his heart, soul, and genius into every note, creating a work that continues to resonate with listeners and musicians decades later. It’s more than music; it’s a moment in time that changed everything.

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Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Locks in February 4th Release Date – RPGFan

Hear ye! Hear ye!
Come one, come all, fans of gritty medieval action RPGs! Warhorse Studios and Plaion have released a new story trailer for Kingdom Come: Deliverance II, as well as an updated release date.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II launches February 4th, one week earlier than the previously scheduled date, for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC via Steam.
The trailer delves into the chaos, brutality, and intrigue of a late-medieval world. Kingdom Come: Deliverance II follows Henry, a young man seeking justice for his murdered parents. With blood feuds raging and political conspiracies unraveling (this is the Middle Ages we’re talking about, after all), Henry’s morality and integrity will be tested. The game promises that the player’s choices will ultimately shape Henry’s destiny.
You check out the trailer for yourself below, as well as an overview and screenshots showcasing Henry and his Bohemian world.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is an exhilarating Action RPG, set amidst the chaos of a civil war in 15th Century Bohemia.
You are Henry of Skalitz – an ordinary man doing extraordinary things – caught in a gripping tale of revenge, betrayal, and discovery as he embarks on an epic journey, ‘from a humble blacksmith’s forge to the court of Kings’, searching for purpose in this beautiful but brutal medieval world. From bustling city streets to lush forests, explore this open-world Medieval Europe through an unforgettable adventure filled with action, thrills, and wonder.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II is set in Bohemia, Early 15th Century: chaos has befallen the kingdom.
As invaders pillage this ungoverned land, sowing fear and terror, Henry of Skalitz seeks revenge for his murdered family.
Now a trusted member of the rightful king’s allies, Henry is sent to escort Sir Hans Capon on a diplomatic mission. After they are ambushed and nearly killed, the two young men embark on a series of perilous adventures, putting their skills, character and friendship to the ultimate test.
A Tale of Love and Revenge
Live life through the eyes and actions of Henry, a young man on a quest to avenge his murdered parents. His story – illustrated with over five hours of stunning cinematics – takes him from aspiring warrior to rebel, crossing paths with a charismatic cast of characters and an unforgettable set of adventures, as he faces off against the King of Hungary, Sigismund the Red Fox, and his fearsome allies.
A True RPG Experience
Your actions shape Henry’s destiny and how the world will react to him. Customize his appearance, skills, and equipment freely while taking a moral stance on the events around you. Travel around the land engaging in unique activities, such as blacksmithing and archery, to fully immerse yourself in this vibrant region of Europe that will remember your actions forever.
Live a Medieval Life
This stunningly authentic rendition of 15th Century Bohemia allows you to experience this fascinating setting like never before. Get lost in a sprawling city, interact with peasants, and converse with nobles while exploring a vast and rich countryside with taverns, bathhouses, castles, and more.
Authentic First-Person Combat
Feel the clash of steel and visceral combat as you engage in thrilling real-time battles. There’s a range of authentic weapons and combat styles to suit every player. Whether on foot, horseback, or through stealth, you can specialize in elegant sword mastery, brutal blunt weapons, or deadly ranged attacks.
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II arrives February 4th, 2025, on PC (via Steam), Xbox Series X|S, and PlayStation 5. For all the pre-order details, check out Tin Manuel’s excellent summary from our last bit of coverage.
Bohemia awaits in Kingdom Come: Deliverance II, along with the next chapter in the epic story of Henry of Skalitz. If you haven’t played the original, check out our review of the PS4 version for what we thought of the game’s uniquely challenging combat system and the world of Bohemia as a whole.
Be sure to check RPGFan’s main page daily for the latest in RPG news and announcements!

Kyle Cantelon
Kyle is just embarking on his main quest at RPGFan and couldn’t be more excited to join the team. He discovered the RPGFan community a couple of years ago and, after growing up in Western Canada as a “jock,” was thrilled to realize that there were others in the world who learned roman numerals as a teenager thanks to the Final Fantasy series. Contributing to the news team is his main objective at the site and it is his goal to project the confidence of Ron Burgundy while keeping everyone from realizing he might just be Brick Tamland.
Kyle Cantelon’s Full Bio
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Bitget Launches Round 6 of Diamond Thursday with 50,000 BGB Airdrop – Block Telegraph

Victoria, Seychelles, December 20th, 2024, Chainwire

Bitget, the leading cryptocurrency exchange, and web3 company is pleased to announce the return of its popular Diamond Thursday event. In its sixth round, the promotion offers participants the chance to share in a pool of 50,000 BGB tokens by meeting specific trading and deposit requirements.
The Diamond Thursday event aims to reward active traders and participants within the Bitget ecosystem. Running from 18 December 2024 at 16:00 (UTC) to 25 December 2024 at 15:59 (UTC), the promotion is open to eligible users who register and meet the outlined criteria.
How to Participate
Participants must meet the following requirements:
Each qualifying trading activity earns participants one share of the airdrop pool, with rewards distributed as follows:
Airdrop Allocation: 50,000 BGB ÷ Total Shares Earned by Participants
Additional Details:
For more information on Diamond Thursday users can visit here.
About Bitget
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California nets large population increase in 2024 — nearly returning to pre-pandemic level – The Mercury News

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California’s population grew by almost a quarter of a million residents this year, nearly bouncing back to the record-high population levels the Golden State had reached before the pandemic, though the state is growing more slowly than the country as a whole and other large states in the South, the U.S. Census Bureau reported Thursday.
“As the nation’s population surpasses 340 million, this is the fastest annual population growth the nation has seen since 2001,” the Census Bureau wrote in a statement. “The growth was primarily driven by rising net international migration.”
After consistent population growth through the 2010s, California’s population peaked at 39,556,000, according to the 2020 decennial census, before losing nearly 1% of its population by July 1, 2021, amid pandemic restrictions.
Between 2020 and 2022, the so-called California exodus had significant impacts on the state. In 2021 the state lost one congressional representative, dipping from 53 to 52 seats in the House of Representatives. Critics of the state’s leadership had cited crime rates, high taxes and high property costs as reasons residents fled to other less regulated states, including Texas and Florida.
The Census Bureau’s Vintage 2024 population estimates show California’s population on July 1, 2024, was 39,431,000, an increase of 233,000 from the year before and just 125,000 short of the 2020 high. Revised figures also show a population increase in 2023.
For Jeff Bellisario, executive director of the Bay Area Council Economic Institute, there are two ways to look at the new data.
“There’s the optimistic look that in the past year, we have seen the population increase … bigger increases than we have in a decade, so I do think there is some truth to the narrative of folks coming back to California,” he said.
On the other hand, California is still far behind the population gains made in Florida and Texas over the past half decade.
“We are still trying to claw back to where we were pre-pandemic,” Bellisario said. “It’s going to take us a few more years to get to solid population growth numbers.”
California had the third most new residents, with the population growing by about 0.59% from July 1, 2023, to Jul 1, 2024. Florida and Texas notched more new residents and top the list of states with the largest increases by raw numbers.
The District of Columbia had the largest percent increase, with 2.2% more residents in 2024. Following Florida and Texas, Utah and South Carolina round out the list of places with the five largest percent increases in their population, all with at least 1.7% more residents than 2023.
Overall, the population of the whole country grew by about 0.9%, slightly outpacing California’s growth. There were an estimated 3.3 million more United States residents in 2024, reaching just over 340 million.
Between the decennial census population counts, the agency releases estimates on July 1 of each year, recording natural population change, such as births and deaths, and then factoring in migration to calculate what it calls the Vintage estimates. And each year the estimates for previous years in that decade are revised based on new information.
For the first time this year since 2020, California’s net migration returned to the positive, according to the data the census bureau calculates, spurred by slight decreases in the number of residents the state loses to other states each year and a continued increase in net international migration.
This new census data affirms data released earlier this year from the California Department of Finance, which also showed a reverse of the California exodus. Data from the state’s demographics professionals estimated more residents on Jan. 1, 2024, than the previous year, the first year of gains since before the pandemic.
With this year’s update, the Census is catching up to what the state data already hinted at. Last year’s Census update showed another year with slight population decreases in California. But the Census revised the 2023 population as part of this year’s update, which showed a slight increase from 2022 to 2023. The revision makes 2024 the second consecutive year of population growth for the state.
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This Advent, don’t run away from darkness—spiritual or literal – America: The Jesuit Review

It is difficult not to join the chorus of people bemoaning the 4:15 p.m. sunsets we have been experiencing in the Northeast. Even the most hardened New Englanders seem to agree, very few people like the darkness this time of year. Recently, however, I found myself reflecting on one of my favorite memories from this year—seeing the Milky Way for the first time on a rural Rhode Island shore.As light pollution increases and the night sky becomes on average 10 percent lighter each year, the Milky Way is something that only 20 percent of people in North America can see. And I remembered: This magnificent view of God’s glorious creation is only possible in darkness.
We have an instinct toward warmth and light, both spiritually and physically. As Christians, after all, we are a people made for light, a people called to draw near to and bring about the light of Christ in the world. Yet we sometimes forget, or perhaps choose to ignore, that Jesus was born in the midst of the darkness. Under the imperial grip of Rome, in poverty, with the threat of persecution already looming, Jesus came into the world. And there he stayed, joining himself with the poor, the widowed, the orphaned, those who have experienced deep darkness.
We know that God’s light often shines brightest for those who have been through and can recognize real darkness, as God’s radiant peace and gratuitous love stand in sharp contrast to evil, oppression and injustice. We can look to the story of the Israelites for an example. Their time wandering in the darkness of the desert made the light of God’s faithful promises shine even brighter: “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who lived in a land of deep darkness—on them light has shined” (Is 9:2). To encounter true light, we must also grapple with and confront true darkness.
Our culture today is far too good at avoiding the discomfort of darkness. Constantly scrolling on social media, impulsively shopping for the next best thing, mindlessly reaching for yet another drink at the end of a long day—these are common ways of numbing ourselves to difficult internal and external realities that we do not want to deal with. We fill our lives with artificial light, both literally and figuratively, in an attempt to drown out the darkness.

Advent, a time of quiet preparation, instead invites us to do the hard work of sitting with the darkness in the hope of encountering Christ’s authentic light. As Christmas coincides with the winter solstice (in the Northern Hemisphere) and the anticipation of longer days to come, we are invited to reflect in community on the darkness that exists both in the world and in ourselves, and on our collective longing for light. We are called to remove the artificial lights in our midst and make way for the brightness of God’s transformative light. Prayer services and liturgies often help us approach this through more embodied practices. I often think of the times when lights are turned off in the church, and we sit together in silence while one person lights the candle of another, and slowly and quietly, the entire space is filled with the light of each individual’s candle. It is a beautiful and peaceful sight, one that wouldn’t be visible if not for the initial darkness of the church.
We might also consider what it looks like to do this work outside of the walls of the church—how can we bring more natural light into our world? Organizations like DarkSky International and the National Parks Conservation Association, and federal agencies like the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, are working to limit light pollution and protect dark-sky zones and parks as sanctuaries where people can see the natural night sky and experience the grandeur of God’s creation. These spaces also serve as important ecological zones; preserving natural darkness is important for healthy wildlife habitat and migration, as well as reducing unnecessary energy usage.
If you are one of the few people who have been lucky enough to witness a natural night sky, you know just how awe-inspiring it is. I will always remember that night I first saw the Milky Way. We had to wait late into the night to make the trek down the beach and get far away enough from the houses to have an unencumbered view. I remember stumbling through bushes and tripping over rocks as the artificial lights faded away and we went deeper into the darkness. It was then, and only then, that the darkness gave way to the stunning light. Against the backdrop of the dark sky, the glistening stars and resplendent swirls of color and light reflected the glory and beauty of our God: “The heavens are telling the glory of God, and the firmament proclaims God’s handiwork” (Ps 19:1).
My prayer this Advent is that when both the literal and the spiritual darkness of the world feels overwhelming, we do not turn away. May we resist the temptation to drown out the darkness with the artificial light of the world of screens, consumption and individualism. May we instead courageously and creatively confront the darkness, and do so in community with a spirit of radical love and hope, much like Christ himself. For that is the path to the kind of light reflected in the stars against the darkest of skies—the authentic, transformative light of God.
Katie Glenn Brown is a climate advocate and policy professional working for the National Religious Partnership for the Environment. She received her bachelors in Political Science and philosophy from Saint Mary’s College of Notre Dame, In., and her master’s in theological studies from Boston College Clough School of Theology and Ministry.
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'Chrismukkah': A Time to Stand Against Antisemitism, Bless Israel, and Celebrate God's Deliverance – CBN.com

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Ever heard of Chrismukkah?
This year, Christmas and the first day of the Jewish festival of Hanukkah coincide on Dec. 25 for a rare alignment of the two celebrations — unofficially known as “Chrismukkah.”
It doesn’t occur often because the dates for Hanukkah vary according to the Jewish calendar.
Why is it significant this year?
Both Christmas and Hanukkah celebrate God’s deliverance. Christmas, of course, celebrates the Messiah coming to earth as a baby in the manger to save the world from sin and eternal punishment. Hanukkah, also known as the “festival of lights,” marks the deliverance of the Jewish people from foreign oppression during the 2nd century B.C.
Fast forward more than 2,000 years and the Jewish people again find themselves oppressed and under siege from all sides. The State of Israel is under attack from Iran-backed terror organizations. And Jewish people everywhere face rising antisemitism, including in America where we’ve seen anti-Israel protests on college campuses and attacks on Jewish students.
As a Messianic Jew, I believe in Yeshua (Jesus) as Israel’s Deliverer, Savior, and Messiah, as foretold in the Old Testament and revealed fully in the New Testament.
If ever the Jewish people needed divine deliverance and the support of Bible-believing Christians, the moment is now. Israel needs to see that the God of Israel and Yeshua (Jesus) the Messiah, the Babe of Bethlehem and the Deliverer foretold by the Old Testament prophets, is the One who will vanquish their enemies and bring true peace. As Zechariah prophesied, “It will happen in that day that I will seek to destroy all the nations that come against Jerusalem.”
Just as Christmas and Hanukkah are “intertwined” this year, so is the future deliverance of all those — Jews and non-Jews — who believe in Yeshua as Messiah.
As Messianic Jews, we humbly and gratefully accept the awesome gift of God, the complete deliverance from the eternal consequences of sin that the baby born in a lowly stable in Bethlehem has provided for us.
It is, therefore, particularly ironic that Bethlehem, the town where Yeshua was born, is not celebrating Christmas this year.
Bethlehem: Empty This Christmas?
Ongoing conflict in the Holy Land has turned Bethlehem into a virtual ghost town. Typically, at this time of the year, Bethlehem would be bursting at the seams with excited pilgrims, eager to visit the Church of the Nativity and soak in the atmosphere.
But, this year, the streets are largely deserted. There are no decorations, no festivities, virtually no visitors.
And the people of Bethlehem are suffering.
Many struggle to pay for food and other essentials for their children. Anxious parents don’t know where to turn. Many see no alternative but to leave Bethlehem — or stay and face a dire Christmas and desperate winter.
Just as Joseph, the biblical patriarch, prepared to avert a humanitarian disaster in ancient Egypt, the Joseph Project International is staving off hunger and suffering in Bethlehem and across the Holy Land this Chrismukkah.
As the largest humanitarian aid importer in Israel, the charitable organization has distributed $23 million worth of vital supplies since last year’s unprecedented Oct. 7 terror attack, and is helping Jews, Arabs, Muslims, and Christians across Israel and the West Bank (Judea and Samaria), where Bethlehem is located.
“Many families in Bethlehem are not working due to the decline in tourism,” says the organization’s local operations manager. “Families (are) simply not able to provide for their kids. Our goal is to support the Christians, encourage them to stay, and renew their peace.”
‘I Will Bless Those Who Bless You’
This Chrismukkah, as you celebrate Christmas or Hanukkah, remember God promises a special blessing for those who support Israel, speak out against antisemitism everywhere, and stand with God’s chosen people:
“My desire is to bless those who bless you, but whoever curses you I will curse, and in you all the families of the earth will be blessed” (Genesis 12:3, TLV).
— Joel Chernoff is the founder and executive board chairman of Joseph Project International, the largest importer of humanitarian aid into Israel. He is also general secretary and CEO of the Messianic Jewish Alliance of America.
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