The National Proclaim Hope! Campaign
National Campaign of Hope
The National Proclaim Hope! Campaign

Christ Is All! Book
Click Here To Order
David's Latest Book

Christ Is All! Book


Selected Audio Messages

In this section we offer you a number of opportunities to hear David Bryant for yourself. You may want to listen to some of his recent messages focused on various facets of personal, congregational and community-wide Christ-awakenings. Or, you may choose to drop into some of David’s recent broadcasts of HOPE FOR AMERICA heard daily on nearly 300 stations nationwide. These selections are updated bi-monthly.

If you would be interested in having the HOPE FOR AMERICA broadcast on a Christian radio station near you, please email your interest to us at: BryantDirect@aol.com.

If you would like to order our brand new CD containing David’s three-part series on A CALL FOR A NATIONAL CHRIST AWAKENING, it is available for $6 (postage paid) by sending a check made out to PROCLAIM HOPE! and addressed to PO Box 770, New Providence, New Jersey 07974.

Help On Downloading Audio Files

"MP3" is a digital file type that is widely used to transmit audio content across computer networks, including the internet. MP3 file names usually end with the extension ".mp3" (in the same way that PDF files end with ".pdf", Text files end with ".txt" and many graphics files end with ".gif").

MP3s are "compressed" audio files, processed through a complicated mathematical algorithm that discards portions of the original sound that are judged to be non-critical. The resulting MP3 files can be as little as one-tenth the size of the original, and can vary widely in sound quality compared to the original, depending on several factors chosen at the time of processing. The basic trade-off is file size vs. sound quality. For longer spoken-word content, lower-quality settings are often acceptable in return for more manageable file sizes. Songs of standard length are often compressed at higher-quality settings, or "bit rates" (often stated as "kbps", meaning "kilobits per second").

Most personal computers are configured to recognize files with the ".mp3" extension as audio files, and will launch an application such as Windows Media Player, Winamp, QuickTime, iTunes, or one of dozens of other similar media players, when the user clicks on an MP3 file. Your web browser might be configured to begin playing an MP3 file as soon as you click on it. This might occur either within the browser itself or by launching a separate media player application.

To download an MP3 file to your hard drive, right-click on the link and choose "Download Link To Disk", "Save Target As", or "Save Link As" (depending on your browser). If your mouse only has one button, click and hold down until the necessary menu pops up. (If you're using a Mac, you can also hold down the Control key and click to bring up the menu.) Select a location on your computer and save the file. After that, you can play the material using your media player software, or you can transfer it to an iPod or other hardware MP3 player to take with you.