the lego movie huntsville tx

the lego movie huntsville tx

the lego movie humo

The Lego Movie Huntsville Tx

CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE




Starring: Nicholas Hoult, Felicity Jones, Anthony Hopkins MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for violence, frenetic action, some sexuality, language, and drug material Plot Summary: An American backpacker gets involved with a ring of drug smugglers as their driver, though he winds up on the run from his employers across Cologne high-speed Autobahn.Trailer: Watch the Trailer for Collide on IMDb× Collide Starring: Allison Williams, Lakeith Stanfield, Catherine Keener MPAA Rating: Rated R for violence, bloody images, and language including sexual references Plot Summary: A young African-American man visits his Caucasian girlfriend's mysterious family estate.Trailer: Watch the Trailer for Get Out on IMDb× Get Out Starring: Luke Wilson, Eddie Izzard, J.K. Simmons Genre: Animation, Comedy, Family MPAA Rating: Rated PG for action and language Plot Summary: When a radio falls from the sky into the hands of a wide-eyed Tibetan Mastiff, he leaves home to fulfill his dream of becoming a musician, setting into motion a series of completely unexpected events.




Trailer: Watch the Trailer for Rock Dog on IMDb× Rock Dog A Cure for Wellness Starring: Dane DeHaan, Jason Isaacs, Mia Goth MPAA Rating: Rated R for disturbing violent content and images, sexual content including an assault, graphic nudity, and language Plot Summary: An ambitious young executive is sent to retrieve his company's CEO from an idyllic but mysterious "wellness center" at a remote location in the Swiss Alps but soon suspects that the spa's miraculous treatments are not what they seem. Trailer: Watch the Trailer for A Cure for Wellness on IMDb× A Cure for Wellness Starring: Christina Hendricks, JoAnna Garcia Swisher, Jillian Bell MPAA Rating: Rated R for language throughout, sexual content/nudity and drug material Plot Summary: When one school teacher (Charlie Day) gets the other (Ice Cube) fired, he is challenged to an after-school fight. Trailer: Watch the Trailer for Fist Fight on IMDb× Fist Fight Starring: Matt Damon, Pedro Pascal, Willem Dafoe




Genre: Action, Adventure, Fantasy MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for sequences of fantasy action violence Plot Summary: When a mercenary warrior (Matt Damon) is imprisoned within the Great Wall, he discovers the mystery behind one of the greatest wonders of the world. As wave after wave of marauding beasts besiege the massive structure, his quest for fortune turns into a journey toward heroism as he joins a huge army of elite warriors to confront the unimaginable and seemingly unstoppable force. Trailer: Watch the Trailer for The Great Wall on IMDb× The Great Wall Starring: Bella Heathcote, Dakota Johnson, Jamie Dornan MPAA Rating: Rated R for strong erotic sexual content, some graphic nudity, and language Plot Summary: While Christian wrestles with his inner demons, Anastasia must confront the anger and envy of the women who came before her.Trailer: Watch the Trailer for 50 Shades Darker on IMDb× 50 Shades Darker The LEGO Batman Movie Starring: Seth Grahame-Smith, Chris McKenna




Genre: Animation, Action, Adventure MPAA Rating: Rated PG for rude humor and some action Plot Summary: Bruce Wayne must not only deal with the criminals of Gotham City, but also the responsibility of raising a boy he adopted. Trailer: Watch the Trailer for The LEGO Batman Movie on IMDb× The LEGO Batman Movie Starring: Britt Robertson, Dennis Quaid, Josh Gad Genre: Adventure, Comedy, Drama MPAA Rating: Rated PG for thematic elements and some peril Plot Summary: A dog looks to discover his purpose in life over the course of several lifetimes and owners.Trailer: Watch the Trailer for A Dog's Purpose on IMDb× A Dog's Purpose     Leaving Sunday John Wick: Chapter 2 Starring: Ruby Rose, Keanu Reeves, Bridget Moynahan Genre: Action, Crime, Thriller MPAA Rating: Rated R for strong violence throughout, some language and brief nudity. Plot Summary: After returning to the criminal underworld to repay a debt, John Wick discovers that a large bounty has been put on his life.




Trailer: Watch the Trailer for John Wick: Chapter 2 on IMDb× John Wick: Chapter 2     Leaving Thursday Director: F. Javier Gutiérrez Starring: Vincent D'Onofrio, Johnny Galecki, Laura Wiggins MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for violence/terror, thematic elements, some sexuality and brief drug material Plot Summary: A young woman finds herself on the receiving end of a terrifying curse that threatens to take her life in 7 days.Trailer: Watch the Trailer for Rings on IMDb× Rings     Leaving Thursday The Royal Ballet: The Sleeping Beauty The Metropolitan Opera: Rusalka ENCORE Moscow Young Generation Theater: The Black Monk Burlesque: Heart Of the Glitter Tribe All About Eve (1950) presented by TCM Revolution: New Art For A New World Sword Art Online The Movie: Ordinal Scale Sword Art Online The Movie - Ordinal Scale- Event The Sense of an Ending The Metropolitan Opera: La Traviata The Metropolitan Opera: La Traviata ENCORE




National Theatre Live: Hedda Gabler Bolshoi Ballet: A Contemporary Evening Exhibition on Screen: The Artists Garden: American Impressionism Case for Christ: LIVE RiffTrax Live: Samurai CopFebruary 2nd, 2017 / Raymond Ramirez (left) thanks chaplain Wayne Moss in sign language for all the things he has done for him in his time at W.J. Estelle Unit. photo by Matheus Oliveira/SWBTS Michael Rios, Billy Jones, chaplain Wayne Moss, Raymond Ramirez and Michael Ryan are the group responsible for the sign language ministry at Estelle Unit. HUNTSVILLE—“I’ve been in prison before,” Michael Rios humbly reflects. “I came in when I was very young. I had the right ideas, I had the right intents: get out, get married, have a life.” Dressed in a white prison uniform, Rios speaks slowly but directly, his tattooed hands gesturing to accentuate his points. He has been in prison longer than some of his fellow inmates have even been alive. Though Rios had the “right intents,” bad choices have kept him locked up, and he is currently serving a life sentence.




A sense of weariness can be detected in his voice, but curiously, it is overshadowed by a much stronger sentiment: hope. His years behind bars afford him unique insight into prison life, which opens doors for him to provide other inmates exhortations of eternal value. “I see a lot of myself in these guys,” Rios says. “They want to go home, but if they have no foundation in God, they’re going to fail. God gave me a chance and I failed, so I try to reach out to others so they won’t fail.” Rios serves as one of four “field ministers” at Estelle Unit in Huntsville, Texas. Deployed from Darrington Unit in Rosharon, these ministers are graduates of Southwestern Seminary’s undergraduate prison program, which equips life-sentence inmates with a theological education and sends them to other prisons across the state so that they may invest their lives in the inmates in those locations. They go forth as prophets of hope, preaching a message of repentance for the forgiveness of sins through the blood of the Savior who loved them, died in their place and is now alive and highly exalted, offering eternal life to all who put their faith in him.




In short, these ministers know that what those inside the prison walls need more than anything else is the gospel of Jesus Christ. “We weren’t born to live in this box,” Rios declares in his common counsel to fellow inmates. “We were born to be fathers, husbands, leaders and servants in our community. “You’ve made maybe 3,000 decisions to get you over here. All you have to do is make that one decision to help you get out, which is [to follow] Christ.” Southwestern launched its Darrington extension program in 2011, and Rios, along with fellow Estelle field ministers Raymond Ramirez and Michael Ryan, was part of the inaugural class. This first class of 33 inmates graduated in May 2015 with Bachelor of Science in Biblical Studies degrees. An additional 33 inmates—among them Billy Jones, Estelle’s fourth minister—graduated the following year. These 66 men have since been deployed to various units, which they view as mission fields. All four of Estelle’s ministers surrendered their lives to the Lord while in prison and attest that Southwestern impacted them greatly.




“It really has taken me out of my shell,” Rios says. “It’s molded me and shaped me to be what God wants me to be.” Ramirez adds, “A lot of my questions were answered. And that has impacted me so much that it has given me a desire to teach, to pass on what I’ve received. So now, that’s actually what I’m doing. I’m doing a lot of mentoring, a lot of discipling, a lot of teaching.” Since arriving at Estelle, the four ministers have each set about passing on what God has entrusted to them. Ramirez learned sign language in four months in order to minister to the prison’s deaf community. (He is often asked how he managed to accomplish such a feat, and his response is simply, “Man, I don’t know. I’m freaking out about it myself.”) Ramirez also works with the unit’s Spanish community and runs a “mini-seminary” within the English-speaking community, walking his students through a theological curriculum he himself wrote based on his seminary education.




The experience is complete with exams, quizzes, book reviews and presentations. Rios, meanwhile, has become the guards’ go-to counselor for inmates in need, even gaining access to the high-security wing of the prison; Ryan leads Bible studies and does room visitations in the medical facility; and Jones “tier walks” the north end of the prison, walking from cell to cell and engaging inmates in conversation. He also counsels and teaches a discipleship class, covering such topics as biblical history, text criticism and evangelism. Through the course of their ministry, these men have found that simply being there for the inmates and assuring them that they are loved can reduce even the most hardened criminals to tears. The experience of having such people open up and share their deep, intimate thoughts has led Rios to conclude that “it has to be God doing these things.” Ryan continues, “People over here really need somebody. So God didn’t just put me over here and give me this education for no reason;




He gave it to me not just for the knowledge, but so I can go be available for somebody.” Chris Carter, senior warden at Estelle, says the efforts of these ministers have transformed the culture of the prison. A basketball tournament this fall, for example, saw people of every race participate, and there were no fights or issues of any kind. Previously, the warden says, these inmates would have been unwilling to stay in the same room with one another, but because of the field ministers’ influence, they not only had fun together during the tournament, but in between periods of play, they all prayed together. “When you introduce God into a culture, they stop fighting; the aggression goes away,” Carter says. “They start looking for ways to build each other up as brothers. They don’t look at each other as enemies anymore.” In line with this changing of culture, the ministers have begun to observe an eagerness in their disciples to make disciples of their own. After teaching his class an evangelism method called the “3 Circles Life Conversation Guide,” Jones witnessed one of his students approach a member of a gang known as “the Aryan Circle.”




The student asked if the gang member had ever heard of “the three circles.” Intrigued simply because of the word “circle,” which he assumed related to his gang in some way, the gang member said “no” and then inquired about them. “And so the [student] was able to present the gospel using the three circles to him, and now the [gang member] comes to church every Sunday,” Jones says. He joyously reflects, “That [evangelism method] was something that I taught the guy.” Similarly, Rios is often told, “I want to do what you do. You need to go ask the warden if I can get a [security pass] and just come walk with you.” Although honoring such a request may not be possible, Rios nevertheless affirms the sentiment. “That’s one thing I try to do—encourage them to seek the gifts that God gave them,” he says. “And I try to help them grow and become good servants and good leaders and just stay humble.” A key verse for all the ministers is 2 Timothy 2:2, which says, “The things which you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses, entrust these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.”

Report Page