Saturday, June 9, 2012


I read this on View Point and reposted it here. Excellent article.

How to Ruin a Country

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Are we holding the door for a nation rushing to ruin?
What I have to deplore with mournful complaint is a general loss of good, a heaping up of bad. But no one should think that anything I say is said out of scorn for humanity or from a conviction that I am superior to all men. No, I sympathise with my country’s difficulties and troubles, and rejoice in remedies to relieve them.
A timely word
These words have a strikingly contemporary sound; indeed, many of us will agree wholeheartedly with them.
But these are not words from some conservative pundit or evangelical blogger. They were written in the middle of the 6th century by the monk, Gildas. He was reflecting on the decline of his beloved Britain, which was everywhere unraveling around him. Spiritually, morally, politically, economically — Britain, over a period of around a hundred years, descended from a superficial height of Roman splendor to the depths of medieval darkness.
And Gildas wept to see what he described as “The Ruin of Britain.”
Spiritual ruin
How do countries come to ruin? What causes them to lose integrity and descend into corruption, wickedness, and waste? We might be tempted to think the problem is chiefly political: corrupt politicians, radical judges, influential lobbies and corporations, and so forth.
That was not Gildas’ perspective, however. He laid the problem firmly at the feet of the Church.
As he saw the matter, the salt of Britain had become tasteless, and it was everywhere being thrown out and trampled under foot: “Britain has priests, but they are fools; very many ministers, but they are shameless; clerics, but they are treacherous grabbers...They do not reprimand the people for their sins; indeed they do the same things themselves.”
The ruin of Britain was, in the first instance, a spiritual ruin, and that came about because Christian people — led by their ministers — left off fearing God. “What daring of man,” Gildas asked, “can, now or in the future, be more foul and wicked than to deny fear to God...?” The ministers of Britain had become so consumed by their own projects and perks that they lost all fear of God and concern for instructing the people in the ways of His Law. These were the same ministers, by the way, who tried to keep Patrick from going to Ireland as a missionary and who, at the end of his enormously successful career, wanted to remove him from the field.
When ministers lose sight of their calling, the Church ends up denying its true identity and mission.
Greasing the skids
Abraham’s self-serving compromise in Genesis 20 was nearly the ruin of Abimelech and his nation. By turning from his calling and the fear of God, Abraham became more concerned about his present wellbeing than God’s plan for his future. He denied his true identity before the pagan king and thus opened the door for him to act corruptly toward Sarah, Abraham’s wife.
When ministers lose sight of God’s calling, to seek His Kingdom and build His Church, and when their own projects and prospects become their main objective in ministry, they deny their true identity and lead the people in their charge into a similar compromise. Thus they open the door for corruption and wickedness in the surrounding culture, and this greases the skids toward the judgment of God and the ruin of nations.

In his book, "Without God, Without Creed," James Turner, convincingly argues that Christian theologians and leaders in the mid-19th century, in an effort to save face with the intellectual community, denied their true Biblical identity, cozied up to Darwinism, and thus opened the household of faith to evolution’s corrosive powers. America went from being a people with a clear creed and a convincing faith in God to one where God hardly matters and the people believe, not anything, but everything and nothing.
Francis Schaeffer argued in "The Great Evangelical Disaster" that evangelical leaders at the beginning of the 20th century failed to show up when secularism and modernism began laying claim to all the arenas of thought and culture. The corrosive power of materialism and pragmatism spread through society and culture and now has begun to work its cancer even within the churches.
Helmut Thielicke reminded us, in The Trouble with the Church, that “today all the really vital questions that touch the depths of existence enter man’s consciousness through the medium of persons in whom these questions are, as it were, incarnated.”
Who is to blame?
The materialistic, pragmatic, and hedonistic followers of the pagan god of self have been more consistent, effective, and outspoken in embodying their worldview than we in the Christian community have our own. Have our pastors and leaders confronted us in our complacency? Challenged our lifestyle of “limping” between two worldviews – materialism and Christianity (1 Kgs. 18:21)? Failed to teach us the compelling vision and comprehensive glory of the Christian worldview? Have they, if only by neglect, encouraged us to believe that we can know the Lord and the pleasures of this age equally? And have they thus failed in making us true disciples and, instead, led us to deny our true identity and calling, and to exchange the glory of the Kingdom for the false hopes of ease and prosperity?
If our nation is on a course toward ruin, then let us not lay the blame at the feet of our secular neighbors or our political leaders. They have merely charged through the door to folly which we hold open to them every day.

The way to ruin a nation is for Christians to deny their true identity, compromise their calling, and do their best to fit in with however the winds of the age choose to blow. This was true in Abraham’s day and Elijah’s, as well as in Gildas’ generation.
And it is true for us as well.
If we ask who is to blame for the ruin of our nation, dear friends, let us look first to our own failure to repent of our folly, seek the Lord for revival, and be renewed in true worship, discipleship, and mission. Our nation will not awaken from the torpor of unbelief until the people of God are revived and renewed.
And we will not be revived and renewed until we seek these earnestly in prayer.
Pastors, church leaders: Will you lead us there?

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

9-11 was the rule, not the exception (OneNewsNow.com)

9-11 was the rule, not the exception (OneNewsNow.com): If there is any doubt as to what the Islamist faith is trying to do around the world and yes, here in America take it from someone who has been one of them. He is giving us a warning. Are we listening?

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Shooting in Florida hits a new low

Exploitation of a tragic death (OneNewsNow.com): Reading this story really turns my stomach! The parents are using this tragedy to make money! Also why can't we wait until the investigation is over before we decide who did what and who is guilty and who is innocent? From what I am hearing in the media of the crowds crying for an arrest, you would think we had vigilante justice in this country and a pure democracy! Thankfully we do not. We are a representative republic with a democratic form of government. We are also a nation of law and order. We need to let the system run it's course and find fault or if any laws were broken. The likes of Sharpton and Jackson and politicians, even the President weighing in on the matter helps no one. In fact it weakens our system of laws which some in this society think they can circumvent if it does not suit their needs or wants at the moment. There is no justice in that only a precursor to anarchy. 

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Bonhoeffer on Abortion - Desiring God

I am reading Bonhoeffer's biography by Eric Metaxas and am amazed by this man the more I learn about him. I read this quote by him on the Desiring God website Bonhoeffer on Abortion - Desiring God.. As is usual for Bonhoeffer he is blunt but sympathetic to all. We need more like him in todays world, men who will risk all for the Word of God and stand boldly against all odds to defend it. 

Where have all the bold pastors gone? (OneNewsNow.com)

I read this recently on One News Now website, here is the link,Where have all the bold pastors gone? (OneNewsNow.com):, It does seem that the churches  are increasingly worried more about losing their tax exempt status than standing up boldly for the Word of God. What I have been reading in articles by Randy Bright in the Tulsa Beacon, http://www.tulsabeacon.com/, is this is something that is being used increasingly against churches to silence them when they do speak out. 
      As the world becomes more hostile to the church, this is to be expected, but we must not compromise the truth of Scripture or the message contained in it. We must be bold and if it does cost the church a tax exempt status, that is a small price to pay for being a witness for Christ. For first century Christians, it cost them their lives in some of the most heinous ways imaginable. Who are we to back down at the threat of a tax break?



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Friday, July 15, 2011

Financing Terrorists

I found this link on Break Point, excellent article and link to a blog. Indeed why are we financing terrorism in the world when we have plenty of resources here at home. May God forgive us of this terrible sin against not only our children but our future as well. Financing Terrorists

Apathy in America

Just read this on Chuck Coulson's website Viewpoint and thought I would pass it along really makes you wonder about the future of America when we do not take more of a part in the political process. We stand the chance of losing our liberties if we don't exercise them. We like to complain, but are we willing to do anything about it? Apathy in America