Épisodes

  • TheVision_S02EP17(41)_JordanAllen
    Jan 17 2026
    This episode of *The Vision* centers on worship, truth, and generational faithfulness as host Destiny Yarbrough and co-hosts Day Gardner, Dr. Alveda King, and Ginger Howard welcome a new generation of worship leaders from the Church at Warhill: Jordan Allen, Jacob Jeffords, and Andrea Camacho. The program opens with a candid discussion among the hosts about the cultural shift away from reverent worship and biblical truth, emphasizing that while Jesus is love, He is also truth, holiness, and justice. They reflect on the danger of reducing Christianity to sentiment alone, stressing that authentic love must be anchored in repentance, obedience, and the full counsel of Scripture. Personal testimonies are shared about stepping outside comfort zones—ministering across faith boundaries and cultures—reminding viewers that believers are often the only representation of Christ others may encounter. Throughout this opening dialogue, the hosts affirm that God’s redemptive nature is woven throughout Scripture, from judgment to mercy, and that Jesus came precisely to offer humanity the choice of life and restoration through Him.

    The conversation transitions to worship as preparation for eternity, noting that heaven itself is marked by continual praise. The worship team is introduced not as performers, but as ministers who have grown together since childhood, serving side by side for over a decade. Their lifelong relational bond is highlighted as a foundation for unity, humility, and spiritual depth. Jordan Allen shares that their worship style intentionally blends older hymns with modern sounds, explaining that the theological richness and emotional depth of historic hymns often reflect lyrics forged through suffering, prayer, and perseverance. By weaving these timeless truths into contemporary worship, they aim to honor past generations while speaking clearly to the present one. The discussion also addresses the role of technology and artificial intelligence, acknowledging its usefulness as a tool while affirming that nothing can replace the God-given gifts, discernment, and spiritual authority carried by worshipers who rely on the Holy Spirit rather than automation or performance.

    A significant portion of the episode focuses on the heart posture required of worship leaders. Jordan explains that worship preparation begins privately, not on stage, and that leaders cannot guide others into places they have not personally walked with God. The team describes intentional practices such as prayer, communion, spiritual alignment, and surrendering personal agendas before each service. They stress that worship is not about drawing attention to musicians, but about creating space for God’s presence to move freely among the congregation. The hosts affirm this distinction between performance and anointing, noting that true worship shifts atmospheres, brings conviction, and ushers people into genuine encounters with God. Honest discussion follows about spiritual warfare, particularly the attacks worship leaders face because of their frontline role. Jordan shares vulnerably about stepping away from ministry for a season after intense struggle, only to be restored by God and called back, emphasizing that humility, prayer, accountability, and continual surrender are essential defenses against discouragement and pride.

    The episode’s spiritual high point comes through live worship, as the team performs “Who Else” by Abby Gamboa—a declaration that no one but Jesus is worthy of praise. The lyrics center on Christ as the Lamb of God, the Anointed One, and the eternal King, reinforcing the episode’s core message that worship belongs solely to Him. Following the song, the hosts offer encouragement and prophetic affirmation, recognizing the trio’s unity as a “threefold cord” strengthened by the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. They speak blessings over the worship leaders’ families, creative gifts, and future influence, declaring that their obedience, authenticity, and faithfulness will impact their generation with courage and truth. The episode closes by reminding viewers that worship is both a calling and a responsibility, meant to point hearts heavenward and anchor lives in God’s vision, not the world’s view.


    A message from Executive Producers Dr. Alveda King, Destiny Yarbrough and Day Gardner. The Vision TV Show is only one part of our mission to spread God's Vision throughout our community. To that end, we are looking for sponsors to help us in this endeavor. To learn more about The Vision TV Show and how you can be a part of our mission, visit us at www.thevisiontvshow.com.
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    29 min
  • Elder Abuse: Warning Signs with Special Guest Angelique Fawcette
    Jan 1 2026
    The episode of The Vision featuring Angelique Fawcette centers on the urgent and often hidden crisis of elder abuse in the United States, particularly within conservatorship and guardianship systems. Hosted by Ginger Howard, Dr. Alveda King, Day Gardner, Destiny Yarbrough, and Katie Holmes, the program opens by welcoming Angelique Fawcette, CEO of ArchAngel Film and founder of Elderly Lives Matter USA, whose advocacy work exposes systemic failures that strip elderly Americans of their dignity, autonomy, and rights. The hosts frame the discussion within the reality that America is aging rapidly, making elder protection not a niche issue, but a national moral and legal concern affecting millions of families.

    Angelique explains that approximately 1.3 million Americans are currently under conservatorships or guardianships, with an estimated $50 billion in assets controlled through these systems. She outlines common patterns of abuse, including isolation from family, over-medication or denial of medication, financial exploitation, retaliation against elders who assert their rights, and, in extreme cases, cremation to conceal evidence of neglect or mistreatment. The conversation underscores that many families are unprepared for how quickly a loved one can lose their rights through probate court actions, often without meaningful due process or the ability to speak on their own behalf.

    Drawing from personal experience, Angelique recounts her close relationship with Nichelle Nichols, the legendary actress known for her role as Lieutenant Uhura on Star Trek. She describes how Nichols was placed into a conservatorship against her will, isolated from trusted friends, and denied access to court, despite clearly expressing her wishes. Angelique details how property and personal belongings disappeared, how Nichols was moved out of state, and how abuse escalated once conservatorship was granted. Her testimony illustrates how conservatorships can be weaponized, even against high-profile individuals, when oversight fails.

    The hosts contribute deeply personal reflections about caring for their own mothers, sharing experiences as caregivers and emphasizing the importance of family presence, preparation, and legal clarity. These stories contrast sharply with cases where families are excluded entirely, reinforcing Angelique’s warning that even power of attorney documents can be challenged or overridden in abusive situations. The discussion highlights the emotional toll on families who are left searching for loved ones while facing unresponsive courts and aggressive legal opposition.

    Angelique outlines practical warning signs families should watch for, including inappropriate questioning by hospital social workers, misuse of “mini-mental” evaluations, and sudden legal actions following medical visits. She stresses the importance of accompanying elderly loved ones to medical appointments and understanding ADA rights, which protect individuals with cognitive decline and require that previously stated wishes be honored. She also explains her organization’s legislative efforts, including state-level anti-isolation laws such as the Kasem-Nichols-Rooney Law, and ongoing work toward a federal solution that includes judicial oversight, accountability, and an end to unchecked judicial immunity.

    The episode concludes with a call to awareness, compassion, and action. Angelique emphasizes that caring for the elderly is both a biblical mandate and a societal responsibility, urging viewers to protect their loved ones as fiercely as they once protected us. The hosts affirm the need for reform, prayer, and education, closing the program with a collective commitment to advocate for those who can no longer advocate for themselves, reminding viewers that the measure of a society is how it treats its most vulnerable members.


    A message from Executive Producers Dr. Alveda King, Destiny Yarbrough and Day Gardner. The Vision TV Show is only one part of our mission to spread God's Vision throughout our community. To that end, we are looking for sponsors to help us in this endeavor. To learn more about The Vision TV Show and how you can be a part of our mission, visit us at www.thevisiontvshow.com.
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    29 min
  • The Bible, Jesus and Politics with Special Guest Bunni Pounds
    Dec 24 2025
    This episode of The Vision centers on an in-depth conversation with Bunnie Pounds, CEO of Christians Engaged and visionary leader of the nationwide initiative America Reads the Bible, as she joins host Destiny Yarbrough, Dr. Alveda King, Day Gardner and co-hosts Katie Holmes and Ginger Howard. Bunnie shares her personal journey from being a homeschooling mother to spending nearly two decades working in government and running congressional campaigns, including her own run for Congress in 2018. Though that race did not end in victory, she explains how God used it as a turning point, redirecting her into ministry with a clearer purpose: activating Christians to faithfully engage culture through prayer, voting, and civic involvement grounded in a biblical worldview. Through Christians Engaged, she has helped build a national network of hundreds of thousands of believers committed to living out their faith in the public square, offering training, curriculum, and practical tools to help Christians participate in local government, school boards, and leadership roles with wisdom and Christ-like character .

    The heart of the episode focuses on America Reads the Bible, a historic seven-day public reading of the entire Bible—from Genesis to Revelation—scheduled for April 18–25, 2026, at the Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C., coinciding with the 250th anniversary of the United States. Bunnie explains that the vision was inspired by the biblical account of Ezra and Nehemiah, when the public reading of God’s Word reawakened a nation to its identity and prepared the people for restoration. She describes this moment as a needed “Ezra moment” for America, believing that widespread biblical illiteracy has weakened the Church’s confidence, identity, and moral clarity. By reading Scripture aloud continuously for 84 hours, streamed nationwide through platforms such as Pure Flix, churches, homes, businesses, and personal devices, the initiative aims to call Americans back to the foundational truths that shaped the nation’s principles of law, liberty, and justice .

    Throughout the discussion, the hosts and guest emphasize that this effort is intentionally inclusive of denominations, generations, and spheres of influence. National leaders, members of Congress, pastors, ministry leaders, artists, business leaders, celebrities, and everyday believers will each read assigned portions of Scripture, a process Bunnie says has been prayerfully guided and already marked by personal confirmations. Worship is woven into the event through scheduled “Selah” moments—intentional pauses for reflection and prayer—led by well-known worship leaders, reinforcing that this is not merely a reading, but a spiritual encounter. Special attention is also given to younger generations, including a Gen Z Day and summit designed to engage young adults who, according to Bunnie, are hungry for authenticity, depth, and the transforming power of God’s Word rather than superficial faith expressions .

    The episode also addresses themes of identity, obedience, and perseverance. Bunnie speaks candidly about sacrificing a successful political consulting career to follow God’s call into ministry without financial security, testifying that every previous season of her life prepared her for this moment. The panel underscores that many believers feel unqualified or discouraged, yet Scripture itself renews the mind, breaks generational patterns, and restores confidence in God’s calling. As the conversation builds, Dr. Alveda King leads a fervent prayer, declaring that this nationwide reading of Scripture will usher in repentance, revival, and spiritual awakening “from sea to shining sea,” restoring America’s identity as one nation under God. The episode concludes with a strong encouragement to viewers to participate, pray, and return daily to God’s Word, affirming the central message of The Vision: while the world has its own view, God’s vision—revealed through Scripture—still calls, heals, and transforms individuals and nations alike.


    A message from Executive Producers Dr. Alveda King, Destiny Yarbrough and Day Gardner. The Vision TV Show is only one part of our mission to spread God's Vision throughout our community. To that end, we are looking for sponsors to help us in this endeavor. To learn more about The Vision TV Show and how you can be a part of our mission, visit us at www.thevisiontvshow.com.
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    29 min
  • 2025 Christmas Special
    Dec 22 2025
    The Vision TV Show 2025 Christmas Special is a faith-centered, multi-segment broadcast that weaves together worship, Scripture, testimony, music, ministry outreach, and heartfelt conversation to reaffirm that Jesus Christ is the true meaning of Christmas. Hosted by Evangelist Alveda King alongside co-hosts Destiny Yarbrough, Day Gardner, and Ginger Howard, the program reflects on the show’s growth, award-winning impact, and expanding mission to deliver hope, truth, and encouragement through Christian media. From the outset, the hosts express gratitude to viewers and supporters, emphasizing that The Vision exists to unite communities across generations, cultures, and backgrounds through faith grounded in grace.The hosts share updates on their books, creative projects, and ministries, underscoring the belief that media, business, publishing, and everyday work can all serve as platforms for ministry when aligned with God’s purpose. Conversations openly address cultural resistance to Christian expression, affirming religious liberty while boldly declaring the Gospel without apology. The panel stresses that faith should never be hidden out of fear, but expressed with love, humility, and respect, modeling how believers can stand firm without diminishing others.A significant portion of the program focuses on the responsibility of passing faith to younger generations. Through candid discussion, the hosts reflect on parenting, grandparenting, and mentoring in a digital age shaped by social media, technology, and shifting cultural norms. They emphasize the importance of teaching biblical truth clearly, especially around repentance, forgiveness, and salvation, highlighting that grace—not condemnation—is central to the Christian message. These reflections are reinforced by personal stories involving children and grandchildren, illustrating how faith is lived, taught, and modeled daily.Personal testimony forms the emotional core of the Christmas special. Angela Stanton-King, founder of Auntie Angie’s House, shares her powerful journey of redemption and how her ministry provides housing, restoration, and discipleship to pregnant women choosing life. Her testimony highlights Christmas as a season of hope, second chances, and God’s grace reaching beyond past mistakes. Elizabeth, founder of Lambs Academy, recounts decades of “Happy Birthday Jesus” celebrations and a moving encounter where God orchestrated a chance meeting that allowed her to bless a mother and child who had missed Christmas due to illness, demonstrating God’s perfect timing and compassion.Additional reflections come from guests such as Pastor Jearlyn, who shares how Christmas centers on family, life, and gratitude after her own post-abortive healing journey, and Kim Crabill, who tells the deeply moving story of a battered, tattered Christmas tree that symbolizes the fragility of life and the enduring importance of presence, memory, and love. These testimonies reinforce the message that Christmas is not about perfection or material abundance, but about embracing each moment as a gift from God.The program is richly interwoven with worship, Scripture, and celebration. Toni, Alveda King’s granddaughter, reads Luke Chapter 2, recounting the birth of Jesus with clarity and reverence, reminding viewers of the biblical foundation of the season. Musical segments, communal prayer, and shared communion further anchor the broadcast in remembrance of Christ’s birth, sacrifice, and redemptive power. Lighter moments—including festive recipes, baking demonstrations, and holiday traditions—add warmth and joy, reinforcing that Christian fellowship can be both reverent and celebratory.The special concludes with reflections from musical guest Babbie Mason, who shares memories of Christmas music, faith, and family, along with insights into her Christmas recording project, and Dr. BJ Arnett, who recounts early ministry experiences that highlight the beauty of simple fellowship during challenging seasons. Eartha Sims leads the cast in a rendition of Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee back by the band. The entire cast and audience join in the celebration.Together, the hosts and guests encourage viewers who may feel lonely, grieving, or burdened during the holidays, offering reassurance that Jesus sees them, loves them, and desires a relationship with them. Ultimately, the Vision TV Show 2025 Christmas Special stands as a testimony to faith lived out in community, declaring that Jesus is not only the reason for the season, but the source of life, joy, redemption, and hope every day of the year.A message from Executive Producers Dr. Alveda King, Destiny Yarbrough and Day Gardner. The Vision TV Show is only one part of our mission to spread God's Vision throughout our community. To that end, we are looking for sponsors to help us in this endeavor. To learn more about The Vision TV Show and how you can be a part of our mission, visit us at ...
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    1 h et 29 min
  • The Holy Spirit During Times of Grief with Special Guest Pastor Jearlyn Dennie
    Dec 15 2025
    The episode opens warmly as host Day Gardner welcomes viewers to a heartfelt edition of The Vision, joined by co-hosts Ginger Howard, Dr. Alveda King, and Destiny Yarbrough. Their guest is Pastor Jearlyn Dennie, affectionately called Pastor J, introduced by Dr. King as a dynamic pastor, activist, wife, and mother whose ministry extends through service and empathy. The discussion centers on the seldom-addressed topic of grief, especially among leaders who are expected to stay strong even while suffering. Pastor J explains that many pastors must “lead while bleeding,” continuing to comfort others while quietly enduring their own heartbreak. She recounts her most personal trial—the loss of her twenty-year-old daughter—speaking with emotional honesty yet unwavering faith. Though she prefers the word transitioned to died, she finds comfort in knowing her daughter accepted Christ. The best gift she gave her daughter, she says, was introducing her to Jesus; the best gift her daughter gave in return was accepting Him. Recalling her daughter’s final words—“Mom, I’ve known Jesus all my life. How do people live without Him?”—Pastor J illustrates faith as the anchor that sustains her through pain.She describes how the Holy Spirit became her “comforter” in those early days of grief. The day after her daughter’s passing, she still led her prayer call, deciding simply to pray instead of taking requests. Like a veteran relying on “muscle memory,” she drew upon faith memory—automatic trust in God born of years of prayer. When the news came, her immediate reaction was to pray; she called upon God, then her husband, then a friend from Rotary who owned a funeral home, telling her simply, “Go get my baby.” She shares how even as a pastor she felt crushed by sorrow until she recognized the destructive power of words. Hearing repeated condolences—“I’m sorry”—magnified her pain, so she began instructing friends to say only, “I love you” or “I’m praying for you.” That shift helped her reclaim emotional stability through affirming words rather than sorrowful ones.Pastor J also reflects on her past abortions and the deep healing required to confront them. As a teen she once faced a decision between buying shoes and having an abortion—a stark picture of misplaced priorities in youth. Though she chose life for that child, she later endured abortions whose grief she had long suppressed until her daughter’s death brought it all to the surface. She realized she had never forgiven herself even though she knew God had forgiven her. Comparing the process to scrubbing a rug where stains reappear, she explains that healing means allowing God to expose hidden pain so it can be cleansed. Her message to young women is direct and compassionate: life in the womb is sacred, not “a lump of clay,” and those who ignore that truth will one day face its spiritual consequences. Yet she emphasizes that grace and forgiveness are available for everyone willing to surrender their past to Christ.The conversation deepens as she describes how each of her seven children coped differently with their sister’s death. She refused to let tragedy define time, saying she does not “mark life by death.” Her husband, St. Clair Dennie, is portrayed tenderly as a man of quiet strength who would rock her to sleep as she wept, sometimes wordlessly, sometimes reminding her, “She knew you loved her.” Their faith preserved their marriage where many couples falter after losing a child. Pastor J laughs through tears describing him as “all that, a bag of chips, a Nehi soda, and a chocolate-chip cookie."A highlight reel follows, showcasing Pastor J’s accomplishments: 2024 Inspirational Woman of the Year, producer of the Telly-Award-winning Miracle of Christmas, radio host of Today with Pastor J, and founder of She Leads Florida, a faith-based women’s leadership network affiliated with She Leads America. Discussing this movement, she explains that membership cannot be bought or applied for—“the Holy Spirit whispers your name in someone’s ear.” Initially skeptical of women’s groups, she found unexpected healing at a She Leads retreat when other women surrounded her in prayer. In the closing segment, Pastor J leads a powerful prayer, asking God to comfort the grieving, rescue the lost, and protect young girls considering abortion by reminding them that every life has worth. She petitions for God to lift hearts burdened by sickness, depression, or despair, affirming that Jesus carried all pain to the cross and rose with victory over death itself. The hosts thank her for her vulnerability, humor, and strength, calling her presence a blessing. As the episode ends, the panel joins together in the familiar benediction that encapsulates the show’s purpose:“The world has a view—but God has The Vision.”A message from Executive Producers Dr. Alveda King, Destiny Yarbrough and Day Gardner. The ...
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    29 min
  • The Vision TV Show with Special Guest Apostle Leon Benjamin: Empowering Families Through Faith
    Dec 15 2025
    The episode opens with host Destiny Yarbrough and co-hosts Ginger Howard, Day Gardner, Katie Holmes, and Dr. Alveda King reflecting on the meaning of faith. Each shares how faith anchors their daily lives—contrasting it with fear, quoting Hebrews 11:1 on “the substance of things hoped for,” and describing faith as the sustaining force that shapes gratitude, perseverance, and trust in God through all circumstances. They emphasize passing this faith to younger generations so that their children, like the hosts once were, grow up grounded in spiritual conviction. Dr. King notes that while love is the greatest virtue, faith and hope accompany it, setting the stage for the day’s guest: Apostle Leon Benjamin, whose ministry exemplifies faith in action.Apostle Benjamin introduces himself as a Navy combat veteran, husband of 34 years, and longtime pastor with churches in Richmond, Virginia, and Tulsa, Oklahoma. He recounts running for Congress in 2020 and 2022 and remaining active in community and national prayer efforts. Ginger Howard asks about his morning prayer call, which began in 2016 as a 30-day initiative before a presidential inauguration and evolved into a permanent weekday call at 8 a.m., uniting believers nationwide. He explains that this intercessory network originally featured well-known pastors such as Paula White, Franklin Graham, Jentezen Franklin, and Bishop Harry Jackson. What began as “news updates” has transformed into “prayer updates,” where participants testify about answered prayers instead of repeating discouraging headlines. Benjamin stresses that believers must interpret current events through Scripture, not fear, and apply biblical truth to modern challenges—trusting God to shift national atmospheres and spark revival.When the conversation turns to the future, Benjamin envisions a church entering deeper spiritual warfare. Drawing from Revelation 12, he describes a new generation of “SWAT” believers learning to battle principalities through both prayer and the authority of Christ (exousia). The modern church, he warns, still functions on an elementary level, often misidentifying fellow Christians as enemies rather than confronting demonic influences. He parallels spiritual discipline with military readiness, explaining that true victory requires engagement in unseen realms, not merely discussion of them. Asked about spiritual armor, Benjamin likens it to the equipment of a soldier: the helmet guarding thoughts, the breastplate of righteousness protecting the heart, the belt of truth fortifying integrity, the shoes of peace promoting reconciliation rather than conflict, the shield of faith for defense, and the sword of the Spirit, the Word of God. He cautions that ministers fall when they neglect righteousness, succumb to pride, money, or sexual temptation, or stop reading Scripture. Authentic armor, he says, begins with personal deliverance—believers must cleanse themselves before ministering to others.A musical interlude follows with the song “If I Could” underscoring the theme that human strength is limited but Christ’s power is limitless. Returning from the song, the hosts discuss the lack of deliverance ministry in many modern churches. Benjamin agrees, teaching that salvation (soteriology) involves ongoing deliverance—not only forgiveness of sin but liberation from attachments and spiritual strongholds. He describes how demonic influence exploits emotional wounds and memories, creating thought patterns that only the truth of God can break. Deliverance, he emphasizes, sometimes requires spiritual discernment rather than medical or psychological intervention.When asked about the shofar, Benjamin provides a vivid lesson: the ram’s horn symbolizes both sacrifice and purification. He explains that crafting a shofar requires gutting out filth, boiling, and fire—paralleling the believer’s refining process through heat, cleansing, and surrender. The final act, piercing a hole, represents the necessity of open praise; without brokenness, true worship cannot sound. Blowing the shofar, he notes, mirrors the trumpet that will herald Christ’s return, a sound so powerful it reunites body and spirit and terrifies the enemy, who mistakes it for the resurrection call of the saints.Apostle Benjamin prays over the hosts and audience, asking God to restore spiritual sensitivity, courage, and unity across the nation. He petitions for believers to wear the armor of God, embrace the mind of Christ, and walk fearlessly into their assignments. He speaks of a coming “wealth transfer”—a redistribution of resources from disobedient to obedient stewards—representing both material and spiritual restoration promised to God’s people. He urges the audience to stay consecrated so that revelation will not corrupt them but empower them. The hosts end in gratitude and blessing.A message from Executive Producers Dr. ...
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    29 min
  • The Importance of Prayer in Our Lives with Special Guest Peggy Nienaber
    Nov 5 2025
    The episode of The Vision TV Show, hosted by Day Gardner, Pastor Tracey Armstrong, and Destiny Yarbrough, briefly acknowledges absent co-hosts Dr. Alveda King, Katie Holmes, and Ginger Howard, before transitioning to updates on their kingdom work. Destiny shares excitement for the September SHIFT:LA media gathering and premiere of The Last Evangelist, with tour stops in Dallas, Nashville, Orlando, and Atlanta. Pastor Tracey discusses his monthly Hollywood "master sessions" for secular industry professionals, where God's power manifests, supporting Destiny Channel's growth. Day touches on her DC-area hospitality, hosting prayer gatherings with family, including grandsons Leander and Orion, and celebrating Tracey's children's milestones, like daughter Sophia's recent 19th birthday. The hosts emphasize rejoicing daily in God's made day and pursuing fruitful callings, including Destiny's planned churches in D.C. and L.A.

    A stirring clip of Dr. Alveda King's "Pray for America" plays, an anthem invoking 2 Chronicles 7:14 for national healing through humility, prayer, and repentance. Lyrics plead for mind renewal over world-changing, standing for life—especially unborn children—and interceding for people, peace, love, and unity amid trials, with choruses urging lifted hands for America's families and land.

    The spotlight shifts to guest Peggy Nienaber, state leader for She Leads America (with Day and Destiny involved via She Leads Georgia under Alveda and Ginger), a movement empowering women in faith, leadership, and advocacy. Peggy details its open-door policy for church involvement: contacting the office for youth groups, pastors' conferences, Bible marathons (public Scripture readings), nativity volunteers (featuring a live baby annually), and D.C. tours with prayers and introductions to new Congress members or chaplains. She highlights "coffee dates" for praying with staffers, offering to connect groups with representatives for targeted intercession, fostering bridges between local and national efforts. Pastor Tracey expresses eagerness for his Washington state prayer team to volunteer, praising Peggy's relational approach. Day inquires how churches can support, and Peggy emphasizes practical ways to engage, from event volunteering to policy advocacy, underscoring women's vital role in standing for life, families, and beliefs at the cross.

    At Day's invitation, Peggy leads a profound closing prayer, thanking Jesus for unshaken faith growth and daily mercies. Referencing the angel at the empty tomb, she affirms women's bold stand for life and convictions, praying for discernment, protection, and proclamation among the hosts and viewers. Peggy intercedes for D.C.'s Congress, administration, young adults, and interns as the next generation to declare Christ; for peace, kindness, compassion, and love; comfort for Texas flood victims drawing nearer to God; and safety, encouragement, and heart-filling presence for all. The episode ends with a call to courage, persistent prayer for America, and trust in God's national plan, reiterating that He has a vision for every life, far beyond the world's view.


    A message from Executive Producers Dr. Alveda King, Destiny Yarbrough and Day Gardner. The Vision TV Show is only one part of our mission to spread God's Vision throughout our community. To that end, we are looking for sponsors to help us in this endeavor. To learn more about The Vision TV Show and how you can be a part of our mission, visit us at www.thevisiontvshow.com.
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    29 min
  • We Are Revival with Special Guest Lindy-Ann Hopley
    Nov 2 2025
    This episode of The Vision, hosted by Pastor Tracey Armstrong (guest host), Destiny Yarbrough, and Day Gardner, opens with warm greetings and acknowledgments of absent co-hosts Dr. Alveda King, Ginger Howard, and Katie Holmes, who send their love while engaged in kingdom work. The hosts share excitement about their respective books: Day discusses her 5-year-old work If Not For Grace, loosely based on her grandmother's life, revealing family secrets and skeletons uncovered after her passing; Destiny previews her upcoming Media for Kingdom Purpose, emphasizing mentorship, alignments, assignments, and her journey from a nervous TV guest at WATC to a confident host, highlighting obedience to God's call; Pastor Tracey talks about his latest project Kingdompreneurs, a step-by-step guide for Christians launching or scaling businesses online, applying biblical principles from Jesus and His disciples to give permission for wealth creation without fear of divine displeasure. They note the prevalence of online entrepreneurship and the importance of doing it biblically, encouraging viewers to pursue God-ordained marketplace ventures.

    A motivational video clip rolls in, urging activation of prophetic destiny for marketplace impact, addressing business decisions, leadership conflicts, and scaling through God's direction, with a call to embrace one's calling now for greater influence. The hosts introduce guest Lindy-Ann Hopley, a writer, media expert, evangelist, and prophetic voice to the nations, who shares her powerful testimony of backsliding as a worship leader, struggling with hypocrisy and rejection, culminating in a face-to-face encounter with Jesus. In her room, He appeared in a white robe, offering a ring and proposing marriage with eyes full of love, not shame, delivering her from deep-seated issues and affirming His pursuit, akin to seeking Adam and Eve in the Garden. Hopley stresses that shame drives hiding, but God's kindness invites return, transforming lives through His unconditional acceptance.

    Hopley promotes her book Beautiful Witness, available at beautifulwitness.com/book, which encourages sharing personal stories as testimonies of freedom, noting that revival—rooted in resurrection—is available for marriages, families, health, and more, as all creation awaits believers' manifestation. She delivers a prophetic word for the hour: a "turnaround" in America, where what seemed like political or satanic takeovers will spark revival, uncapping the Church from religious smiles without supernatural power. Having traveled to 34 countries, she foresees an eruption of signs, wonders, and kingdom manifestations, including an LGBTQ revival, with unlikely sources overthrowing principalities like Jezebel's downfall by eunuchs. Hopley blesses viewers, affirming God as the answer and open door, urging pursuit of His vision.

    A clip of Dr. Alveda King singing "People Need the Lord" reinforces the episode's evangelistic theme, emphasizing humanity's emptiness without God and the Church's role in sharing salvation. The hosts praise Hopley's joy amid trials, affirming Jesus as the only way out of messes, and close by reiterating the show's mantra: the world has a view, but God has the vision, encouraging viewers to seek His guidance and get Hopley's book.


    A message from Executive Producers Dr. Alveda King, Destiny Yarbrough and Day Gardner. The Vision TV Show is only one part of our mission to spread God's Vision throughout our community. To that end, we are looking for sponsors to help us in this endeavor. To learn more about The Vision TV Show and how you can be a part of our mission, visit us at www.thevisiontvshow.com.
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    29 min