Spring is a time of rebirth and starting again after the cold of winter. We felt it was time for a rebirth of our website as well. Truth be told, the old site was so far out of date we were constantly scrambling to keep things secure. We were concerned if we didn't go ahead and make this leap to the latest software that it was only a matter of time before some hacker got lucky and damaged the site. But that has given us a chance to re-think what we want the site to do and how it should display information. So things will be a little awkward for the next month or so while we get everything just the way we want it. Please bear with us in this transition time. As we update elements of the site we will announce it here (and on our Facebook page and on Twitter) so you will be kept up to date with all the new things we have to offer.
A visitor from Portugal is baptized! April's Genesis Revelation Seminar in Christiansburg, Virginia produced some very interesting results. The format for the seminars was rather unique: there were two daily meetings, one at 11 am and one at 7 pm, to accommodate varying schedules for attendees. While that meant extra drive time and presentations for the team, it gave us two opportunities to video the seminar, so if something went wrong with one meeting's recording, we could use the other. There was a different crowd in the morning and evening meetings, very little overlap. And the marvelous part was that our attendees came day after day, all through the series. They learned if they couldn't make it to the morning meeting for some reason, they could come for the evening one and not have to miss the message.
Read more: Genesis Revelation Seminar Update

Our colleague in New Zealand, Ross Patterson, sent us this photo of the crowd that turned up last night for his seminar on the Red Sea Crossing site. The group of about 300 people came to the Hastings, New Zealand auditorium.
We are planning a tour to the Noah's ark site and surrounding areas of interest for September if we have enough people interested in coming along. Send a message to us using our contact form, or write to jerry @ anchorstone.com (removing the spaces in the address) for more details.
Read more: What NatGeo Left Out!