Homebreware allows you to run the Homebrew application on your
Nintendo Wii SAFELY! Homebreware will also enable you to play backup games,
DVD's, and music SAFELY! Homebreware also enables your Wii to plat classic games
from SNES, N64, and Sega Genesis using emulators. It doesn't matter if you want
to use imported games, region-coded games, or backup games, Homebreware unlocks
you Wii so you can play them all.
Order Homebreware today and follow our simple and safe video instructions.
Homebreware will show you how to take your Wii to the next level and unlock the
hidden potential inside your Wii. Homebreware is a software unlock for your Wii
so you will not need to open your console to make any harmful hardware
modifications or use any mod chips.
Homebreware is by far the safest method available to unlock your Wii game
console and our video instructions will have you enjoying your Wii even more
than ever, in no time at all!
Features
With this package you will learn how to unlock the
following features on your Wii:
Play Your Backup Games, Play Imported Games that are region locked.
Make Copies
of Existing Games You Have.
Play N64, SNES, NES and Sega Genesis Games, as well as games
from other consoles.
Unlock Safely with NO Hardware Modifications or Mod Chips
Needed.
Homebreware Lifetime Membership, Get All Future Upgrades FREE.
Play Homebrew Games, Play
DVD Movies and Mp3 Songs.
Special Bonus
Demonstration
Still not convinced take a look at this demonstrationl
video.
Testimonials
Look what our customers are
saying:
Erick
 |
I was looking for a way
to unlock my Wii so I can play backup games,I was looking into
several methods to do this, the devices that allowed me to do this
were priced over 100$, and were hard to install, there was also the
risk that the warranty would be voided and my wii would be damaged
in the process. (view proof of this
testimonial) | |
Jason
 |
Homebreware solved all my
problems, by following the simple instructions I was able to unlock
my WII in less than 15 minutes, without even touching any hardware
components. (view proof of this
testimonial) | |
|
Promotional Discount
Homebreware is currently on a special
promotional 40% discount
While this special promotional offer
lasts, you can get Homebreware for almost half the price, Originally
priced at $55, Homebreware can be purchased for a limited time for
only $29.
That's nothing compared to amount that
you will save by being able to play backup and homebrew games. Don't
miss out on this limited offer because it won't last long.
NOTE: Due to the high demand because of
our promotional discount, our Credit Card system is experiencing
temporary outages! In case your credit card is declined, please use the
other payment options available through clickbank.
 |
Sincerely,
The Homebreware Team
For any inquiries contact:
admin(at)Homebreware.com
Blogger Choice: Certainly this clear perception of the meaning of death did add immensely to its terrors; but if we are even to begin to understand His trial, and begin is all we can do-we must bear in mind what Peter had just confessed, and what Jesus Himself knew-that He was the Christ. It was this which made the difference. Socrates could toss off the poison as unmoved as if it had been a sleeping-draught, because he was dying for himself alone. Jesus could only with trembling take into His hand the fatal cup, because He knew that He was standing for all men. If He failed, all failed. Everything hung upon Him. The general who spends the whole night pacing his tent, debating the chances of battle on the morrow, is not tormented with the thought of his own private fate, but with the possibilities of disaster to his men and to his country, if his design or his skill should at any moment of the battle fail. Jesus was human; and we deny His humanity, and fail to give Him the honour due to it, if we do not recognise the difficulty which He must always have felt in believing that His single act could save the world, and the burden of responsibility which must have weighed upon Him when He realised that it was by the Spirit He maintained in life and in death, that God meant to bless all men. It was because He knew Himself to be the Christ, and because every man depended upon Him as the Christ, and because, therefore, the whole blessing God meant for the world depended upon His maintaining faith in God through the most trying circumstances-it was because of this that He trembled lest all should end in failure. It was this which drove Him, again, and again, and again to the hills to spend all night in prayer, in laying His burden upon the only Strength that could bear it.
But in retiring in order, with deliberation, finally to dedicate Himself to death, this temptation must of necessity appear in all its strength. It is only in presence of all that can induce Him to another course that He can resolve upon the God-appointed way. As He prays two figures necessarily rise before Him, and intensify the temptation. Moses and Elias were God's greatest servants in the past, and neither of them had passed to glory through so severe an ordeal. Moses, with eye undimmed and strength unabated, was taken from earth by a departure so easy that it was said to be "by the kiss of God." Elijah, instead of removal by death, ascended to his rest in a chariot of fire. Was it not possible that as easy an exodus might befit Him? Might not this ignominious death He looked forward to make it impossible for the people to believe in Him? How could they rank Him with those old prophets whom God had dealt with so differently and so plainly honoured? Would people not almost necessarily accept the death of the cross as proof that He was abandoned? Nay, did not their sacred books justify them in considering Him accursed of God? Was He correct in His interpretation of the Scriptures-an interpretation which led Him to believe that the Messiah must suffer and die, but which none of His friends admitted, and none of the authorities and skilled interpreters in His country admitted? Was it not, after all, possible that His kingdom might be established by other means? We can see but a small part of the force of these temptations, but If the presence of those august figures intensified the normal temptation of this period, their presence was also a very effectual aid against this temptation. In their presence His anticipated end could no longer be called death; rather the departure, or, as the narrative says, the Exodu