

I have never seen anyone burst at the neck, veins exploding, when I have talked about the things of God. That was another 'hey, America, wake up hey, Christians, wakeup.' They are not anti-God. The Passion of the Christ burst out of the box office into the bank. RAY COMFORT: Eighty-seven percent of Americans didn't want 'Under God' removed from the Pledge of Allegiance, which dissipates our concern that everybody in America is anti-God.

I am just curious what prompted you to write your newest book, What Hollywood Believes, because it seems that with The Passion of the Christ people have been more open to talk about the faith. Ray is very serious about the state of evangelism in America and his sincere compassion for the soul's of the lost is the motivation behind his latest effort. I got the chance to meet this charismatic native New Zealander with the dry wit and the open smile in Atlanta, Ga.īut don't let his quirky sense of humor fool you. In fact, through research, Comfort has found some 114 well-known personalities who have shown immense interest in God, all nicely documented in his book What Hollywood Believes (Genesis Publishing Group, 2004) But author and evangelist Ray Comfort, who has teamed up with Growing Pains celebrity Kirk Cameron for an innovative and award-winning TV program called The Way of the Master that highlights a Bible-centered approach to evangelism, says that that is simply not the case.

Many conservative Christians have railed against Hollywood, claiming the stars to be keenly disinterested in the things of God and even going as far as claiming that Tinseltown is completely anti-God.
