Trinity Mount Ministries

Monday, June 1, 2026

Trinity Mount Ministries - NCMEC - AMBER Alerts - Active Missing Children Posters - UPDATE - 06/16/2026

Help Find Missing Children. Let's Put An End To Child Abuse And Exploitation... Care.



Active Missing Children Posters Below.

Active AMBER Alerts
NameMissing FromIssued ForAlert Date
Daleyza FregosoLos Angeles, CACAMay 25, 2026
Allen FischerMonteview, IDIDJun 23, 2025
Rachelle FischerMonteview, IDIDJun 23, 2025
Calliope GodwinAlbuquerque, NMNMJun 8, 2026


Active AMBER Alert cases will remain on this page updated to 6 months from activation.  Following that, active missing child posters can be found by using the search tool
here.

Notice: The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children® certifies the posters on this site only if they contain the NCMEC logo and the 1-800-THE-LOST® (1-800-843-5678) number. All other posters are the responsibility of the agency whose logo appears on the poster.


Saturday, May 30, 2026

Agape: The Relentless, Sacrificial Love of God

 


By Brett Fletcher

​If you ask ten different people to define “love,” you will likely get ten different answers. In English, we use the same word to describe how we feel about our spouses, our children, our friends, and our favorite pizza. But the ancient Greeks were much more precise.

​When the writers of the New Testament needed a word to describe the love of God, they didn't reach for eros (romantic love) or philia (brotherly affection). They reached for a relatively obscure word and elevated it to describe the most powerful force in the universe: Agape.

​Here is an in-depth look at what agape means from a biblical viewpoint, where it came from, and why it changes everything about how we understand God.


​The History and Etymology of Agape

​In pre-biblical classical Greek, the verb agapao and the noun agape were not particularly popular. They appeared occasionally to denote a general preference, a greeting with affection, or a sense of being contented with something. It lacked the fiery passion of eros and the deep relational bond of philia.

​However, when Jewish scholars translated the Old Testament Hebrew into Greek (the Septuagint) around the 3rd century B.C., they needed a word to capture the Hebrew concept of ahab—a love that was deeply volitional and covenantal. They leaned heavily on agape.

​When the New Testament was written, the early Christians essentially hijacked this quiet, unassuming word and flooded it with new, divine meaning. In the New Testament alone, agape and its derivatives appear over 300 times. It became the exclusive term used to describe a selfless, sacrificial, unconditional love—the exact kind of love demonstrated by Jesus Christ on the cross. The early church even used the plural agapai to describe their communal "love feasts" where believers shared meals and took communion together.

​What Makes Agape Different?

​To understand agape, we have to strip away our modern, emotionally-driven definitions of love.

1. It is Unconditional

Agape is not derived from the merit of the person being loved. You cannot earn it, and you cannot lose it by being unlovable. It is a love that originates entirely within the character of the one who loves. Romans 5:8 perfectly captures this: God loved us while we were still sinners, not after we cleaned ourselves up.

2. It is an Act of the Will

We often talk about "falling in love," as if it's a ditch we stumble into by accident. Agape is never an accident. It is a deliberate, conscious choice to seek the ultimate well-being of another person, regardless of the cost to yourself.

3. It is Sacrificial

Agape is love in action. It does not merely sit in the heavens and feel warm affection for humanity; it steps down, puts on flesh, and goes to a cross. It gives up its own rights for the sake of the other.

​What the Christian Leaders Say

​Throughout history, theologians and pastors have marveled at the sheer weight of God's agape.

Saint Augustine of Hippo (Antiquity):

"God loves each one of us as if there were only one of us to love."

Augustine recognized that God's love isn't just a broad, generic blanket thrown over humanity; it is intensely personal and focused.


C.S. Lewis (Modern Era):

"Christian love, either towards God or towards man, is an affair of the will."

In his classic work The Four Loves, Lewis perfectly captures that agape (which he translates as Charity) operates completely independently of whether we find the other person attractive or agreeable.


R.C. Sproul (Contemporary):

"Genuine love for Jesus manifests itself in obedience to His commandments."

Sproul reminds us that agape is not a one-way street. When we experience God's unconditional love, the only appropriate, reciprocal agape we can offer back is a life of joyful obedience.

​Agape in the Scriptures

​If you want to study agape directly from the source, here are the foundational scriptures that define it:

  • 1 John 4:8: "Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love [agape]."
  • John 3:16: "For God so loved [agapao] the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life."
  • Romans 5:8: "But God shows his love [agape] for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us."
  • 1 Corinthians 13:4-7: "Love [agape] is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things."
  • Matthew 5:44: "But I say to you, Love [agapao] your enemies and pray for those who persecute you..."

​God doesn't just have agape; He is agape. It is the very engine of the gospel.




Friday, May 29, 2026

Operation Soteria Shield: A Massive Strike Against Online Child Exploitation in North Texas

 


By Brett Fletcher

​In a powerful, coordinated response to one of the most serious threats facing our communities, law enforcement agencies across North Texas recently concluded Operation Soteria Shield. This massive, multi-agency initiative, led by the FBI Dallas Division and the North Texas Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force, specifically targeted the digital pipelines of online child sexual exploitation.

What was Operation Soteria Shield?

​Operation Soteria Shield was not a single raid, but a sustained, intelligence-driven surge designed to identify predators, rescue victims, and disrupt the networks that facilitate the online exploitation of children. Named after the Greek goddess of safety and deliverance, the operation reflects the core mission of the participating agencies.

​This initiative prioritized a proactive approach, utilizing advanced cyber investigative techniques and forensic analysis to track illicit activity across the internet, including the dark web.

The Power of Collaboration

​The success of Operation Soteria Shield hinged entirely on unprecedented collaboration. It brought together the specialized expertise of federal agents, state investigators, local police departments, and prosecutors.

​The FBI Dallas Division provided critical resources, including its Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Forces and cyber capabilities. The North Texas ICAC Task Force, which is housed within the Dallas Police Department and comprises numerous local partner agencies, offered invaluable ground-level intelligence and community connections.

​By pooling resources, sharing intelligence in real-time, and coordinating efforts, the multi-agency coalition was able to cast a much wider net and achieve significantly greater impact than any single agency operating in isolation.

Impact and Outcomes

​While specific operational details and final numbers often remain sensitive during ongoing investigations, operations of this magnitude typically result in:

  • The Rescue of Victims: The foremost priority is always identifying and securing the safety of children being victimized.
  • Numerous Arrests: Predators targeting children online are identified, investigated, and facing serious federal and state charges.
  • Seizure of Evidence: Digital devices, computers, and servers containing exploitative material are seized for forensic analysis, strengthening prosecutions and identifying further networks.
  • A Strong Deterrent Message: Operations like Soteria Shield send a clear warning to potential offenders that law enforcement is actively working, interconnected, and dedicated to finding them.

The Ongoing Fight

​Operation Soteria Shield represents a significant victory, but it is also a stark reminder of the persistent and evolving threat posed by online child exploitation. Criminals continuously adapt their methods, making the specialized, technological, and collaborative approach demonstrated in North Texas more critical than ever.

​The dedication of the men and women of the FBI, the North Texas ICAC Task Force, and all participating law enforcement partners remains unwavering. Their commitment to protecting the most vulnerable members of our society—our children—ensures that initiatives like Operation Soteria Shield will continue to dismantle exploitation networks and deliver justice.

​References and Resources

​If you have information regarding the online exploitation of children, please contact your local law enforcement agency or submit a tip to the FBI at https://tips.fbi.gov/ or the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) at 1-800-THE-LOST.

​For more information on the agencies and initiatives mentioned in this article, please visit:

  • FBI Dallas Division Official Website: [Insert Link to FBI Dallas Division Page]
  • North Texas Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force: [Insert Link to North Texas ICAC Page]
  • FBI Crimes Against Children program: [Insert Link to FBI CAC Page]
  • National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC): https://www.missingkids.org/

​Visuals from Operation Soteria Shield

​Below are images detailing the scale and operational focus of law enforcement during Operation Soteria Shield.

Image 1: FBI Command and Coordination

Caption: Inside the Joint Operations Center (JOC) at the FBI Dallas Division, Special Agents and analysts manage intelligence and coordinate logistics for Operation Soteria Shield. The command post provided real-time support to the field teams across North Texas.

Image 2: Multi-Agency Response

Caption: Law enforcement officers, representing a multi-agency coalition including the FBI and the North Texas ICAC Task Force, execute a tactical entry during a critical phase of Operation Soteria Shield. The operation utilized coordinated efforts to apprehend targets across the region.