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August 23, 2023

Actress Melissa Joan Hart recently opened up about her faith journey, a “Holy Spirit moment” that helped her to understand the Trinity, and how her recent work with a faith-based organization, World Vision, has changed her perspective on the power of prayer.

The Hollywood veteran has been outspoken about her faith in Christ for several years. Although she is best known for starring in 1990s TV shows likeSabrina the Teenage Witch, Clarissa Explains It All, and Melissa & Joey, her quiet devotion to God has become as she describes “deeper and closer and more fulfilling.”

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Hart, who was raised Catholic, began attending a Presbyterian church after meeting her husband, Mark Wilkerson, who was a Baptist.

But The Masked Singer performer told the Christian Post that she recently had a “born-again” moment that helped her to understand the Trinity.

“I did have a born-again, Holy Spirit moment,” Hart shared. “I never really understood the Holy Spirit or the Trinity in a sense. One day, we were in Bible study and it just hit, like the Holy Spirit made sense to me all of a sudden!”

“One day, I just felt it and I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, that’s the Holy Spirit talking to me. I get it now,’” she recounted. “Like a lightning bolt just hit me and I was like, ‘The Holy Spirit! I don’t know why it just hit me and I got it.’ Then I better understood the Trinity and all that.”

She shared withCBNthat prayer plays an important role in her life and her career, even though at one point she wanted to give up on it.

“I think that all through my life faith has always been there for me. As I talk to myself as I go through my day, I’m always going to God. It’s never just me talking to myself. I’m always talking to God about what the best course of action would be in a particular situation,” Hart said.

“I’m constantly asking the Holy Spirit to calm me down and quiet me. Being upset about something isn’t going to get me there any faster. I’m constantly just finding little moments throughout the day to spend with God,” she said. 

Hart added, “Of course, I fall to my knees when I come to a real crossroads when I have a major conflict in my life or something that is really on my heart. As a family, we make it a habit to go to church every Sunday. We don’t show any shame in our faith. Prayer is just a very important part of our family. Faith is all very much an important part of our lives.”

The mom of three says she has even learned how to handle anxiety through prayer.

“I actually wanted to stop praying for a while because I was having such terrible thoughts that would frighten me so badly,” she confessed. “I was like, ‘I’m not gonna pray anymore because I can’t handle these thoughts. It’s giving me anxiety. It’s keeping me from sleeping. It’s like, literally choking me with how scared it’s making me. When I pray, these other thoughts are coming in. And that’s when I realized that Satan is trying to take over so I have to keep doing it!”

“I fought through it and that doesn’t happen anymore,” Hart recalled. View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Melissa Joan Hart (@melissajoanhart)

Hart has put her faith into action in a variety of ways, even partnering with World Vision, a Christian humanitarian organization, over the years.

In June, she worked with the organization to help provide clean water to the people of Zambia.

She says that while she was there she had a conversation about prayer that changed her perspective. 

“It’s a Christian country and almost every household we went to they were praying with us. But they couldn’t understand why we pray,” Hart said.  

“They couldn’t understand why we pray when we have so much. They’re like, ‘It’s weird to see a family pray that already has everything, like what would you pray for, or how would you pray?’” she continued. 

“Sometimes I think, in our country, we hear people more likely say, ‘Why would I pray, everything’s a wreck? Everything’s falling apart around me. God doesn’t care. Why would I pray?’” Hart illustrated. “But what they’re doing, they’re like: ‘Well, we need to pray because we need our goats to be healthy. We need rain to come but not too much. We need our crops to do well. We need our children to be healthy. We need our school to be improved.”

Hart says through the ups and downs of her career she has learned to depend on Jesus. 

“One of the great things that I’ve learned is that darkness is just the absence of light and without Jesus, you just have this darkness and then Jesus is the light… so not having Jesus in your life just leaves this void,” she said.

***As the number of voices facing big-tech censorship continues to grow, please sign up forFaithwires daily newsletterand download theCBN News app, developed by our parent company, to stay up-to-date with the latest news from a distinctly Christian perspective.***el

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El Capitan Is Now the Fastest Supercomputer on the Planet

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El Capitan Is Now the Fastest Supercomputer on the Planet

The world’s most powerful supercomputer, El Capitan, has been officially launched at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in California. Built at a cost of $600 million, the system has been designed to manage highly classified national security tasks. The primary objective of the supercomputer is to ensure the security and reliability of the U.S. nuclear stockpile in the absence of underground testing, which has been prohibited since 1992. Research in high-energy-density physics, material discovery, nuclear data analysis, and weapons design will be conducted, along with other classified operations.

Performance and Capabilities

According to reports, El Capitan became the fastest supercomputer globally after achieving 1.742 exaFLOPS in the High-Performance Linpack (HPL) benchmark. The system has a peak performance of 2.746 exaFLOPS, making it the third machine ever to reach exascale computing speeds. The measurement, taken in floating-point operations per second (FLOPS), represents the ability of the supercomputer to perform one quintillion (10^18) calculations per second.

As reported by space.com, the second-fastest supercomputer, Frontier, located at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Illinois, has recorded a standard performance of 1.353 exaFLOPS, with a peak of 2.056 exaFLOPS. El Capitan’s significant advancement marks a leap in computational capabilities within high-performance computing.

Technical Specifications

As reported by The Next Platform, El Capitan is powered by over 11 million processing and graphics cores distributed across 44,544 AMD MI300A accelerated processing units. These units incorporate AMD EPYC Genoa CPUs, AMD CDNA3 GPUs, and shared computing memory. Each processing unit includes 128 gigabytes of high-bandwidth memory, designed to optimise computational efficiency while minimising power consumption.

Development and Commissioning

Reports indicate that construction of El Capitan began in May 2023, with the system going online in November 2024. The official dedication took place on January 9, 2025. The supercomputer was commissioned by the U.S. Department of Energy’s CORAL-2 program as a successor to the Sierra supercomputer, which was deployed in 2018 and currently ranks 14th in the latest Top500 list of most powerful supercomputers.

With El Capitan’s full-scale deployment, advancements in national security research and computational science are expected to reach unprecedented levels.

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Bank of England rate-setter sees no repeat of extended inflation spike ahead

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Bank of England rate-setter sees no repeat of extended inflation spike ahead

A member of the Bank of England’s rate-setting committee has made a case for a steeper cut to interest rates on expectations that an inflation “hump” ahead will be temporary.

Catherine Mann, an American economist, told an audience in Leeds that she currently did not see a repeat of an extended period of inflation in the months to come, such as that which followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

She described herself as an “activist” on the Bank’s monetary policy committee, having voted last week for a half percentage point interest rate reduction.

Ms Mann said her decision aimed to “cut through the noise” about the right stance for policy given the weaker outlook for employment and the economy than had been previously expected at the end of 2024.

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But she cautioned that while her policy path differed to the majority view for “gradual” rate reductions, the Bank rate, she said, would need to remain restrictive for longer.

Ms Mann had been considered the top hawk – a policymaker leaning towards higher rates – on the Bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC) until it emerged she had backed a half-point cut.

A 0.25 percentage point reduction was passed.

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Her earlier worries about rate cuts included a high pace for wage growth and budget-linked investment, stoking inflation down the line.

Last Thursday’s rate decision meeting minutes showed that she, and one other member of the MPC Swati Dhingra, had varied concerns relating to the Bank rate remaining too restrictive at a time of weak economic growth and a weakening employment outlook, with both likely to weigh on inflation naturally.

New Bank staff projections saw the economy growing by just 0.75% this year and inflation topping 3.7% – up from the current 2.5% rate.

Ms Mann told the audience at Leeds Beckett University: “In a speech last February I said, ‘Do not be seduced by the deceleration in headline inflation’. This February, I say, ‘Do not be dismayed by the hump… yet’.”

She expected much of the anticipated increase in inflation this year to come from energy and food, with contributions from other elements such as water bills, phone bills and insurance.

These are factors outside the Bank’s control.

What it wants to avoid is a price spike that forces up wage growth to counter the higher costs – as happened after the energy-led start to the cost of living crisis in 2022.

She said that elements such as budget tax rises on employment would, as Bank surveys have suggested, weigh on both wage growth and therefore inflation.

“I chose 50 basis points now, along with continued restrictiveness in the future, and a higher long-term Bank Rate
to ‘cut through the noise’,” she added.

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Affirm plans to bring Buy Now, Pay Later debit cards to more users through deal with FIS

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Affirm plans to bring Buy Now, Pay Later debit cards to more users through deal with FIS

PayPal Inc. co-founder and Affirm’s CEO Max Levchin on center stage during day one of Collision 2019 at Enercare Center in Toronto, Canada.

Vaughn Ridley | Sportsfile | Getty Images

Affirm, the online lender founded by Max Levchin, expanded beyond credit and entered the debit market four years ago with a card that let users pay over time. Now the company is making it possible for banks to offer that service to their customers.

Affirm, which pioneered the buy now, pay later business (BNPL), has partnered with FIS in a deal that will allow the fintech company to offer the pay-over-time service to its banking clients and their millions of individual customers.

Any bank that partners with FIS will be able to provide its own version of the Affirm Card, which launched in 2021, without asking customers to adopt a new piece of plastic. Consumers can access Affirm’s biweekly and monthly installment plans and have the money automatically deducted from their checking account.

There are approximately 230 million debit card users in the U.S., according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. BNPL services have traditionally been tied to credit cards or standalone financing products, rather than to debit offerings.

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“Consumers today are looking for innovative and user-friendly experiences that give them flexibility and control over their money,” Jim Johnson, co-president of banking solutions at FIS, said in the press release. Affirm’s offering can help banks “offer more competitive, differentiated services through their own banking channels,” he said.

Affirm has over 335,000 merchants in its network, ranging from travel booking sites and concert ticket providers to jewelry stores and electronics providers. By bringing BNPL into the debit world, Affirm aims to provide consumers more alternatives to credit.

In its earnings report last week, Affirm reported better-than-expected quarterly revenue and posted a surprise profit from the holiday period. The stock rocketed 22% after the announcement.

Affirm’s active consumer base grew 23% year over year to 21 million users. The Affirm Card now has 1.7 million active users, up more than 136% from the year-ago quarter. Card volume has more than doubled.

In June, Affirm and Apple announced plans for U.S. Apple Pay users on iPhones and iPads to be able to apply for loans directly through Affirm.

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PayPal shares plunge 12% despite earnings beat as growth slows in card processing

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