Mar 31, 2019

The Night Mexico Became My Samaria


The Spreading Order Of The Great Commission

"And he (Jesus) said unto them .... Ye shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth." Acts 1:7-8.

In Luke's record, of the Actions of the Apostles, in the first few paragraphs, he quoted the Great, Good News Commission Jesus gave his disciples to preach His Gospel. They were to begin where they were, in Jerusalem first, and then spreading outward into all of Judaea, their homeland, and from there into their bordering, neighbors' lands, and finally   "unto the uttermost parts of the earth".

After Bettie and I moved our family to Florida and founded a new church, which I pastored for nearly 30 years, it had grown large enough to expand our outreach with several additional ministries. The congregation was ready to spread out and we founded several extension ministries in and around Tallahassee. These included three Christian Schools, the City Food Bank, a TV station and Lighthouse Childrens' Home. The real purpose of these ministries was to reach the people of North Florida with the Gospel. 

Our church membership had become a missions minded body of fantastic disciples of Christ and gladly supported these ministries. They were always ready to reach out, beyond the church, to obey the Great Commission and to reach the lost  with the Gospel of Christ. We were already supporting Bible Schools, foreign Missionaries, and helping found new churches, but I felt the need to put the next step of our expansion into our southern neighbor, Mexico.
Being a pragmatic man, I could see several advantages in missionizing Mexico.  It requires the least effort for the most results; It could be easily visited by our church members on missions trips; I could stay better informed on exactly what was happening in Mexico with our Church's missions investments. The Mexican people already knew who Jesus was and Christianity was not some foreign religion to them, but the vast majority of them thought more of Mary than of Jesus and didn't really know how to put what they knew about the Bible and God all together, or how to be truly born again. So they were prime prospective candidates to accept Christ as their personal Savior. It appeared to me to be the most fertile, receptive and productive place for our sacrificing members' giving.

So as a the Pastor, of a very supportive church, I began to look to Mexico as our next, major, ministry. About that time, Missionary Ralph McCoy called me to asked that I come down and join him on an outreach into a mountain village, not the one I mentioned in my last blog named Tlapa. This one was unique in that it had no Catholic church or priest and strangely was inhabited by light skinned, almost pure Castilian Spanish DNA. Most of them had blond, brown, even red hair and many had blue eyes. Their village was located in a high mountain valley within driving distance of Cuerna Vaca. I went. When I arrived, we drove to within three or four miles of the village and had to walk in on a trail. We took two lanterns for an evening service. When we arrived, we met with the leader of this enclave who were scattered in the nearby mountains surrounding the village. He was thrilled to welcome us and asked that we take his little shack of a house for the rest of that day and sleep there that night. His family would sleep outside. We didn't want to do that but he insisted. Then he chose an open spot at the edge of the village and we strung a rope between two trees and hung the lanterns on it. The word, that "two men of God" would speak in the village that evening, was carried by a bunch of boys to every corner and person on those surrounding mountains. Just at sundown, an interesting thing began to happen. Ralph and I were sitting on two boxes awaiting the arrival of whoever was coming. I was concerned that those who came down those mountains wouldn't be able to walk, in the dark, over such rocky trails, as we came in on, and I asked the Leader if they had flash-lights. He simply said none of them had flash-lights but they would be there shortly with "no problemo". As it got dark, we saw one of the most amazing things I have ever seen. There were a couple of hundred little lights bumping down those hills on a couple of dozen trails. I could see they were not flashlights and must be candles. As they began to pour into the village, we saw short little candles about an inch high and half an inch wide stuck on the big toe-nails of all the adults. They extinguished them with their fingers and left them where they were for their return home later.

I preached Jesus to that crowd; Ralph translated, and probably improved on my words, and nearly every one of those precious, Castilian Mexican people came to Christ that night. Ralph's two sons were there, with their father, to receive the converts, and strengthen their commitment and faith in Christ. Again, I must repeat ... truly, my life has been a blessed, interesting experience. Praise God.

From that amazing night, Mexico became my Samaria; the "bordering nation" at our back door.  Another of the tremendous blessings God has given me, for many years, through Mexico, is the story of my friend and fellow laborer Armondo Lopez. Armondo, who pastored our first church and mission station in Mexico, and whom some of you have met, when he shared that ministry with our church, in Tallahassee. A dozen of you men also helped us built that church building. God willing, I will share the story of Armondo soon. 

A Common Sense caveat:
Yes, I love the Mexican people, but we cannot survive, as a Socialistic nation, which we have become, with an open border to the many, desperately poor and poorly managed nations south of us. We can send the Gospel and food and material to build their need for Bible churches. But, Socialism's free everything  for everybody, will soon enough destroy a Socialist nation, and even sooner if that nation has open borders to the the world's billions of poor. We will all soon become equally poverty stricken and empty all the built up resources of our forebears ... even in the United States. We are already 21 $trillion in cash loan debt and another 150-200 $trillion of unfunded, contractual, debt liabilities such as Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Federal retirement programs, etc. etc. To fulfill new Democrat proposed promises would require more than the total value of the United States, land, infrastructure, all the buildings, homes, vehicles, and all the stocks, bonds and savings of all our citizens. Trying to fulfill even a tenth of those promises will soon result in a dysfunctional nation which cannot repay its debts or fulfill welfare and other commitments ... much less protect our people from foreign warmongers. Even the debt our government now has will do so in time if not defaulted on or inflated away by printing enough monopoly money to pay that debt. Pray and Vote. RB

Mar 28, 2019

An Experience In The Mountains Of Southern Mexico

Life Has Been So Blessed Interesting...

In my younger years, as a Pastor, I often made missions trips into Mexico to preach and to learn more about a prospective mission work. On one such occasion I flew into Cuerna Vaca south of Mexico City to attend a missions conference at the missions ministry of Ralph McCoy. Ralph spent his life winning souls to Christ and establishing churches all over that part of far southern Mexico in its land mass bending eastward.

On our first day of the conference, Ralph told the gathering of Pastors that a crisis had arisen at the Childrens' Home ministry his family had founded in a mountain village about 150 miles south of where we were meeting. It seems the Catholic Priest there had told the villagers that those Baptists running that home for homeless children were going to burn his Catholic church and build a Baptist one. Of course, the villagers were up in arms and were threatening to burn the Childrens' Home. So Ralph asked for two volunteers to accompany him and his pilot to fly down and try to appease the Priest and his parish, which he considered to be everyone in the village. 

The next morning another Pastor and I joined Ralph and the pilot on their flight into the small village of Tlapa, in the Guerrero Mountains, where the Rio Tlaplaneca ran through it. About noon we flew over a mountain about 2500 feet high and the pilot immediately dropped down the eastern side of the mountain to a dirt road, leveled off and landed on the road which was angling up the next hill. We taxied up to where the man in charge of the Home awaited us with an ancient car. We spent the rest of the day encouraging the fearful missionaries and talking to the Priest, who would not be pacified but ranted about Baptists raising his Mexican children in his village. Fortunately, we were notified the next day, after we left, the Government told the Priest to calm the villagers or he would be responsible for any further trouble.

We had dinner and breakfast with the children ... black beans both times. When I got back home, we sent support for a wider variety of food for those beautiful children, some of whom went on to follow the Lord in His service.

The day before, when we were approaching Tlapa, the pilot had switched from the near empty gas tank to the near full one so we wouldn't have any problem when we took off. And, after landing, he had parked the plane crosswise to the road and on a slant, leaning downhill. That was a mistake. While we were there, the full tank on the uphill side drained down into the near empty tank on the downhill side. So when we took off, on our return to Cuerna Vaca, we were on the now near empty tank. 

We took off going down the hill and turned sharply to the right to miss the mountain and headed home but didn't get many miles when the engine began to sputter. Our pilot began to adjust the throttle, check his gages and look desperate. He turned and said, "We're going down". The engine was so noisy that the other Pastor shouted to me, "What did he say?" I answered, "We are going down".... and, of course, he began to pray .... as did we all.
Then the engine stopped and the desperate pilot was frantically switching things and futilely looking for a place to land. As a last resort, he switched back to what he thought was an almost empty tank and the engine caught and we began to climb out of a valley between two mountains. Only then did he realize what had happened.

I have flown in small planes eight or ten times but have never had a good experience in one until Fred Good and I hired a pilot to fly us over a large glacier in northern Canada or Alaska, I don't remember which. If you are in Tallahassee, ask Fred about that flight. Fred has the gift of storytelling. 

Mar 26, 2019

DemoTalk: The Narrative Is Dead...Long Live The Narrative

Narrative Defined: A Story or account of an event or experience, true or false.

Insanity Defined: Habitually continuing to tell the same failed lies expecting a different result and doubling down with each failure.

Its like the Democrat train is on an iron railed track headed full speed left, down hill, to a dead end with no brakes and a broken throttle.

FOX News is secular not spiritual, but thank God its news and talk show hosts are fair and balanced and free from Democrat control, as are all the other Major News outlets. Here is the FOX reaction to all those left-wing news organizations who are now pointing the guilty finger at the right wing for getting the story wrong. RB

FOX News: The debate over news coverage about Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report has turned into a battle of right and wrong. Not surprisingly, the many journalists who were wrong about Mueller’s investigation continue to claim their conduct was right.
It is now clear that those in the media who assumed Mueller would conclude that President Trump or his campaign colluded with Russia to win the 2016 presidential election were as wrong as anyone possibly could be.
In a summary of the Mueller report, Attorney General William Barr wrote Sunday: “The Special Counsel investigation did not find that the Trump campaign or anyone associated with it conspired or coordinated with Russia in its efforts to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election.”
Or to state it more succinctly, after almost two years of investigation, Muller is not challenging the repeated claim by President Trump that “there was no collusion.” We now know the president’s statement was true all along.

Yet after harassing President Trump with bogus RussiaGate claims on an almost daily basis, the anti-Trump media continue to stubbornly maintain that their critics are the ones who are 100 percent wrong.
CNN President Jeff Zucker gave the standard media line we’ll hear for the rest of time when he said this week he is “entirely comfortable” with how CNN covered RussiaGate.
Zucker’s claim is similar to the narrative chosen by CNN’s Chief Media Correspondent Brian Stelter. He knocked “partisans on the right” who “are saying the media, the evil media was wrong all along.”
Stelter’s claim got even more ridiculous on his “Reliable Sources” program on Sunday. “The job of the nation's news media is to ask, to question all sides, to scrutinize all sides, and report on opposing points of view, and to only take the side of truth and decency,” Stelter told viewers.
That’s the press as priesthood worldview, which would be wonderful if it were true. Only it’s not. It’s a mixture of living in a liberal bubble and outright falsehood. It denies that most of the media take the liberal position on every issue, supporting Democrats and demonizing Republicans.
But it feels great to claim you’re the good guy, so there’s a lot of it.
New York Times Editor Dean Baquet echoed the Zucker sentiment. “I’m comfortable with our coverage,” Baquet told The Washington Post. Of course he is. If he wasn’t, his paper might have been, you know, fair.
Washington Post media columnist Margaret Sullivan was even more strident in her defense of the news business. Her latest pro-press anti-Trump diatribe was headlined: “Serious journalists should be proud of – not bullied over – their Russia reporting.”
To emphasize her neutrality, Sullivan blasted Trump because his reaction to the report was “to attack reporters for doing their jobs.”
“It’s a predictable political strategy – an ugly, undemocratic one – that works as a way to feed raw meat to his base,” Sullivan complained.
Completely non-partisan.
MSNBC host Joy Reid even claimed the president can’t critique media. “Attacking the media, which isn't a crime, but it's a violation of the First Amendment in a lot of ways,” she told viewers.
Some outlets decided to blame the right … for reacting to reporting that was wrong.
The Associated Press seemed stunned to report that Trump’s “allies also intend to use the moment to heighten attacks on the media.” Go figure. The story claimed that “many Trump supporters” will depict reporters and outlets “as biased and untrustworthy.”
Politico even reported that “Republicans gleefully pounced” (a new take on the “pounced” meme) in response to the report. Remember, critics say “pouncing” to undercut fair criticism.
It’s worth noting that two of the most prestigious newspapers in the nation – The Washington Post and the New York Times – even shared a 2018 Pulitzer Prize “for deeply sourced, relentlessly reported coverage” on “Russian interference” and “its connections to the Trump campaign.”
They can’t admit they did a biased job. The Post already had to return its 1981 Pulitzer Prize for what turned out to be a fictional report by Janet Cooke masquerading as accurate reporting.
My comment: But there was one ray of light escaping the black hole which broke free in the words of an honest reporter amongst a host of liars. RB
Perhaps the most ironic reaction to Mueller’s conclusion came from CNN’s “Reliable Sources” newsletter Tuesday. CNN Business Managing Editor Alex Koppelman wrote: “It's a basic responsibility: Don't print something you don’t know to be true, and for God’s sake, don’t assume anything.”
He’s absolutely right. He should share his advice in an email to all of his CNN colleagues.
It’s curious that CNN publishes this that after hyping 25th-Amendment solutions to removing President Trump from office, having reporters resign for an inaccurate Russia story and spinning for Democrats at 3 million rpms.

Mar 23, 2019

Democrat "Boom" Turns Into Its Own Doom & Gloom Boomerang

And Hits Them In The Mouth 

The Democrats' original charge against Trump was "Russian Collusion". The gallows they built it on, with the slick help and greasy skids of the Main Street Media, was engineered and constructed by Hillary and her crooked cohorts.  They began their tower of charges with two or three rusty, bent nails picked up from one of Trump's construction sites and built their case of lies on fog, smoke and mirrors. They turned those three rusty nails over to Democrat Mueller with all their 10,000 suspicions, imaginations, and accusations to investigate and they sang his praised night and day for two years. Now, finally, their singing has turned into screaming, and their 747 boomerang has run out of time, made its two year loop and returned to hit the devious Demos in the mouth, the source of the Trumped up charges against the President.

In my opinion, this Not Guilty of Collusion finding renders all else Mueller's investigation discovered, in the process, illegally obtained and therefore inadmissible and not prosecutable.

My reaction, and that of reasonable Americans, is amazement that the Democrat investigator, and his staff of other dyed in the wool Liberal Democrats, weren't able to discover, or manufacture, in the longest and most costly investigation in history, of any public official, anything convictable or even indictable. 

The reaction of Democrats, on the other (left) hand, is unbelief that their hero, Mueller, couldn't find any truth in their original charges against Donald Trump, their arch enemy and whipping boy. Their screaming against one of their own, Mueller, and his team, which they must think will awaken the dead charges is, instead, killing them in the eyes of literally all fair minded Americans. The Main Street Media's reaction is full of "ifs", "buts", and "maybes". The "tingle" that ran up Chris Matthews leg when Obama was elected... ran back down his leg into his shoe. RB

"The investigation did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities." Robert Mueller.

Attorney General William Barr delivered a report of the special counsel’s Russia investigation to Congress on Sunday. By far the most significant finding in the four-page letter is that the special counsel did not find evidence that President Trump or members of his campaign conspired with Russians to influence the 2016 election. Barr also said that evidence was not sufficient to establish that Trump obstructed justice during the investigation.

FOX News reported today

 The mainstream media seemed to suffer a collective shock Friday evening after the office of Special Counsel Robert Mueller handed its final report of its Russia investigation to the Department of Justice.
MSNBC host Chris Matthews seemed livid that neither President Trump, his children, nor his “henchmen” would face any criminal charges from the special counsel. “Maybe he missed the boat here,” Matthews said of Mueller. “Because we know about the Trump Tower meeting in June 2016, we know about the meeting at the cigar bar with Kilimnik [Konstantin Kilimnik, a Russian political consultant]. My God, we know about all of those meetings with Kislyak [Sergey Kislyak, a Russian diplomat] at the Republican convention in Cleveland. All these dots we’re now to believe don’t connect.”
Congressional Democrats vowed Friday to keep investigating President Trump, his family, and associates despite Special Counsel Robert Mueller wrapping up his Russia investigation with no new indictments.
Attorney General William Barr notified key congressional leaders in a letter Friday evening that Mueller finished his investigation, adding that a summary of the probe’s findings may be provided to lawmakers as soon as this weekend.
Both the investigation's end and the lack of any new indictments struck at the core of the Democrats’ messaging for the last two years that led people to believe the Mueller probe would uncover evident collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia.
This prompted House Democrats to somewhat downplay the Mueller probe and suggested that the left-leaning lawmakers themselves might take on the job of trying to prove collusion, not ruling out the possibility of Mueller being asked or subpoenaed to testify before congressional committees.
My Comment: Are we surprised at the Dem reaction? No, it is exactly what we expected, but it exposes the complete lack of moral content from the left wing. Mueller's conclusion is based on his legal knowledge that any false charge he made would be proven to be false and his reputation would go down with any false charges if those false charges were prosecuted.

We need not a single new revelation, to immediately lift up our prayers and throw our support to Trump and all true Conservative Candidates in next years elections. RB

Mar 21, 2019

Defending US History Is Not Defending What Was Done But The Fact Of It

It is the Same As Defending Truth...Good Or Bad 
It is the truth which is at stake here, not the event.


It is ludicrous to have to defend what everyone knows is truth. We should not, of course, defend the bad things which happened, but to defend the truth of what happened is a cardinal precept. Especially when everyone knows the thing really took place. Tearing down statues and monuments is the same thing as trying to rewrite the facts of history. Revisionism of historical fact is the same thing as lying about it. And yet, even many university professors brainwash their students into believing that if they allow a certain monument to a Civil-War battle or General, or soldier to stand is a compromise of anti-slavery conviction. Here is an article from Hillsdale College
Imprimis Publication addressing another Liberal, Politically Correct, cultish, malfunction. (Subscription free) RB


Shall We Defend Our Common History?
Roger Kimball is editor and publisher of The New Criterionand publisher of Encounter Books. He earned his B.A. from Bennington College and his M.A. and M.Phil. in philosophy from Yale University. He has written for numerous publications, including The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times Book Review, and is a columnist for The Spectator USA, American Greatness, and PJ Media. He is editor or author of several books, including The Long March: How the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s Changed AmericaThe Rape of the Masters: How Political Correctness Sabotages ArtTenured Radicals: How Politics Has Corrupted Our Higher Education, and Vox Populi: The Perils and Promises of Populism.
The recent news that the University of Notre Dame, responding to complaints by some students, would “shroud” its twelve 134-year-old murals depicting Christopher Columbus was disappointing. It was not surprising, however, to anyone who has been paying attention to the widespread attack on America’s past wherever social justice warriors congregate.
Notre Dame, a Congregation of Holy Cross institution, may not be particularly friendly to its Catholic heritage. But its president, the Rev. John Jenkins, demonstrated how jesuitical (if not, quite, Jesuit) he could be. Queried about the censorship, he said, apparently without irony, that his decision to cover the murals was not intended to conceal anything, but rather to tell “the full story” of Columbus’s activities.Welcome to the new Orwellian world where censorship is free speech and we respect the past by attempting to elide it.Over the past several years, we have seen a rising tide of assaults on statues and other works of art representing our nation’s history by those who are eager to squeeze that complex story into a box defined by the evolving rules of political correctness. We might call this the “monument controversy,” and what happened at Notre Dame is a case in point: a vocal minority, claiming victim status, demands the destruction, removal, or concealment of some object of which they disapprove. Usually, the official response is instant capitulation.As the French writer Charles Péguy once observed, “It will never be known what acts of cowardice have been motivated by the fear of not looking sufficiently progressive.” Consider the frequent demands to remove statues of Confederate war heroes from public spaces because their presence is said to be racist. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, for example, has recently had statues of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson removed from a public gallery. In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio has set up a committee to review “all symbols of hate on city property.”
But it is worth noting that the monument controversy signifies something much larger than the attacks on the Old South or Italian explorers.
In the first place, the monument controversy involves not just art works or commemorative objects. Rather, it encompasses the resources of the past writ large. It is an attack on the past for failing to live up to our contemporary notions of virtue.
In the background is the conviction that we, blessed members of the most enlightened cohort ever to grace the earth with its presence, occupy a moral plane superior to all who came before us. Consequently, the defacement of murals of Christopher Columbus—and statues of later historical figures like Teddy Roosevelt—is perfectly virtuous and above criticism since human beings in the past were by definition so much less enlightened than we.
The English department at the University of Pennsylvania contributed to the monument controversy when it cheered on students who were upset that a portrait of a dead white male named William Shakespeare was hanging in the department’s hallway. The department removed the picture and replaced it with a photograph of Audre Lorde, a black feminist writer. “Students removed the Shakespeare portrait,” crowed department chairman Jed Esty, “and delivered it to my office as a way of affirming their commitment to a more inclusive mission for the English department.” Right.
High schools across the country contribute to the monument controversy when they remove masterpieces like Huckleberry Finn from their libraries because they contain ideas or even just words of which they disapprove.
The psychopathology behind these occurrences is a subject unto itself. What has happened in our culture and educational institutions that so many students jump from their feelings of being offended—and how delicate they are, how quick to take offense!—to self-righteous demands to repudiate the thing that offends them? The more expensive education becomes the more it seems to lead, not to broader understanding, but to narrower horizons.
Although there is something thuggish and intolerant about the monument controversy, it is not quite the same as the thuggishness of the Roman emperor Caracalla, who murdered his brother and co-emperor Geta and had statues of Geta toppled and his image chiseled off coins. Nor is it quite the same as what happened when Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin exiled Leon Trotsky, had him airbrushed out of the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, and sent assassins to Mexico to finish the job.
Iconoclasm takes different forms. The disgusting attacks on the past and other religious cultures carried out by the Taliban, for example, are quite different from the toppling of statues of Saddam Hussein by liberated Iraqis after the Iraq War. Different again was the action of America’s own Sons of Liberty in 1776, who toppled a statue of the hated George III and melted down its lead to make 40,000 musket balls. It is easy to sympathize with that pragmatic response to what the Declaration of Independence called “a long train of abuses and usurpations.” It is worth noting, however, that George Washington censured even this action for “having much the appearance of a riot and a want of discipline.”
While the monument controversy does depend upon a reservoir of iconoclastic feeling, it represents not the blunt expression of power or destructiveness but rather the rancorous, self-despising triumph of political correctness. The exhibition of wounded virtue, of what we now call “virtue-signaling,” is key.
Consider some recent events at Yale University, an institution where preening self-infatuation is always on parade. Yale recently formed a Committee to Establish Principles on Renaming and a Committee on Art in Public Spaces. Members of the former prowl the campus looking for buildings, colleges, faculty chairs, lecture programs, and awards that have politically incorrect names. The latter police works of art and other images on campus, making sure that anything offensive to favored groups is covered or removed.
At the residential college formerly known as Calhoun College, for example—it’s now called Grace Hopper College—the Committee ordered the removal of stained glass windows depicting slaves and other historical scenes of Southern life. Statues and other representations of John C. Calhoun have likewise been slotted for removal. Calhoun, an 1804 Yale graduate, was a leading statesman and political thinker of his day. But he was also an apologist for slavery, so he has to be erased from the record.
Of course, impermissible attitudes and images are never in short supply once the itch to stamp out history gets going. Two years ago it was Calhoun and representations of the Antebellum South. More recently it was a carving at an entrance to Yale’s Sterling Memorial Library depicting an Indian and a Puritan. The Puritan, if you can believe it, was holding a musket—a gun! Who knows, perhaps he was a member of the NRA or at least could give inspiration to other members of that very un-Yale-like organization. According to Susan Gibbons, one of Yale’s librarian-censors, the presence of an armed Puritan “at a major entrance to Sterling was not appropriate.” Solution? Cover over the musket with a cowpat of stone—but leave the Indian’s bow and arrow alone!
Actually, it turns out that the removable cowpat of stone was only a stopgap. The outcry against the decision struck a chord with Peter Salovey, Yale’s president. “Such alteration,” he noted, “represents an erasure of history, which is entirely inappropriate at a university.” He’s right about that. But if anyone has mastered the art of saying one thing while doing the opposite it is President Salovey. He spoke against “the erasure of history.” But then, instead of merely altering the image, he announced that Yale would go full Taliban, removing the offending stonework altogether.
In the bad old days, librarians and college presidents were people who sought to protect the past, that vast storehouse of offensive attitudes and behavior that also just so happens to define our common inheritance. In our own more enlightened times, many librarians and college presidents collude in its effacement.
Someone might ask, “Who cares what violence a super-rich bastion of privilege and unaccountability like Yale perpetrates on its patrimony?” Well, we should all care. Institutions like Yale, Harvard, and Stanford are among the chief drivers of the “progressive” hostility to free expression and other politically correct attitudes that have insinuated themselves like a fever-causing virus into the bloodstream of public life. Instead of helping to preserve our common inheritance, they work to subvert it.
Spiriting away stonework in the Ivy League may seem mostly comical. But there is a straight line from those acts of morally righteous intolerance to far less comical examples of puritanical censure.
Consider the case of James Damore, the now former Google engineer who wrote an internal memo describing the company’s cult-like “echo chamber” of political correctness and ham-handed efforts to nurture “diversity” in hiring and promotion. When the memo was publicized, it first precipitated controversy—then it provided Google CEO Sundar Pichai a high horse upon which to perch, declare Damore’s memo “offensive and not OK,” and then fire him. For what? For expressing his opinion in a company discussion forum designed to encourage free expression!
In one way, there was nothing new about Google’s actions. Large companies have always tended to be bastions of conformity. Decades ago, everyone at IBM had to wear a white shirt and was strongly encouraged to espouse conservative social values. Today, everyone in Silicon Valley has to subscribe to the ninety-five theses of the social justice warrior’s creed, beginning with certain dogmas about race, fossil fuels, sexuality, and the essential lovableness of jihadist Muslims. If you are at Google and dissent from this orthodoxy, you will soon find yourself not at Google.
The violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 was a godsend to the self-appointed hate police. In its immediate aftermath, companies around the country took pains to declare their rejection of “hate,” and ProPublica, the Southern Poverty Law Center, and other leftish thugs expanded their witch hunts beyond such targets as the “Daily Stormer”—a vile anti-Semitic website. After Charlottesville, for example, “Jihad Watch”—hardly a hate group website—was dropped by PayPal until a public outcry induced PayPal to reverse its decision. There have been other such casualties, and there will be many more.
Let’s step back and ask ourselves what motivates the left-wing virtuecrats attempting to enforce their new regime of political correctness. Christian theologians tell us that the visio beatifica—the beatific vision of God—is the highest pleasure known to man. Alas, that communion is granted to very few in this life. For the common run of mankind, I suspect, the highest earthly pleasure is self-righteous moral infatuation.
Like a heartbeat, moral infatuation has a systolic and diastolic phase. In the systolic phase, there is an abrupt contraction of sputtering indignation: fury, outrage, high horses everywhere. Then there is the gratifying period of recovery: the warm bath of self-satisfaction, set like a jelly in a communal ecstasy of unanchored virtue signaling.
The communal element is key. While individuals may experience and enjoy moral infatuation, the overall effect is greatly magnified when shared. Consider the mass ecstasy that at first accompanied Maximilien Robespierre’s effort to establish a Republic of Virtue during the French Revolution’s Reign of Terror in 1793.
The response to Donald Trump’s comments about the murderous violence that erupted in Charlottesville provides another vivid example. Trump’s chief crime was to have suggested that there was “blame on both sides” as well as “good people” on both sides of the protest. I am not sure there was an abundance of “good people” on either side of the divide that day, although Trump’s main point was to distinguish between lawful protest and hate-fueled violence. But forget about distinctions. The paroxysms of rage that greeted Trump were a marvel to behold, as infectious as they were unbounded. One prominent commentator spoke for the multitude when he described Trump’s response as a “moral disgrace.”
I didn’t think so, but then I thought that the President was correct when he suggested that the alt-Left is just as much a problem as the alt-Right. Indeed, if we needed to compare the degree of iniquity of the neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klanners, on the one hand, and Antifa and its fellow travelers on the other, I am not at all sure which would come out the worse. Real Nazis—the kind that popped up like mushrooms in Germany in the 1920s and 1930s—are scary. But American neo-Nazis? They are a tiny bunch of pathetic losers. The Ku Klux Klan was a terrorist group with millions of members in its earlier incarnations. Now it too is a tiny bunch—5,000 or 6,000 by most estimates—of impotent malcontents.
Antifa, on the other hand, has brought its racialist brand of violent protest to campuses and demonstrations around the country: smashing heads as well as property. I suspect that paid-up, full-time members of the group are few, but the ideology of identity politics that they feed upon is a gruesome specialty of the higher education establishment today.
I also thought that the President was right to ask where the erasure of history would end. At Charlottesville it was a statue of Robert E. Lee. But why stop there? Why not erase the entire history of the Confederacy? There are apparently some 1,500 monuments and memorials to the Confederacy in public spaces across the United States. According to one study, most of them were commissioned by Southern women, “in the hope of preserving a positive vision of antebellum life.” A noble aspiration, inasmuch as the country had recently fought a civil war that devastated the South and left more than 700,000 Americans dead. These memorials were part of an effort to knit the broken country back together. Obliterating them would also be an attack on the effort of reconciliation.
And what about Thomas Jefferson and George Washington? They both owned slaves, as did 41 of the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence. What about them? To listen to many race peddlers these days, you would think they regarded George Orwell’s warning in 1984 as a how-to manual: “Every record has been destroyed or falsified,” Orwell wrote,  "every book has been rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street and building has been renamed, every date has been altered. And that process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped."
Plato was right when he said that politicians are essentially rhetoricians. Rhetoric succeeds or fails not because of its logic or intellectual substance, but on the question of its emotional appeal. By that standard, I’d say that Donald Trump, though often rhetorically effective, missed an important rhetorical opportunity at Charlottesville. He didn’t understand that the politically correct dispensation that rules academia, the media, the Democratic Party, and large swathes of the corporate world requires a certain ritual homage to be paid to its reigning pieties about “racism” in America.
Doubtless there are things to criticize about Donald Trump. But being racist isn’t among them. What infuriates his critics—but at the same time affords them so many opportunities to bathe in the gratifying fluid of their putative moral superiority—is that Trump refuses to collude in the destructive, politically correct charade according to which “racism” is the nearly ubiquitous cardinal sin of white America. He is having none of that, and his refusal to go along with the attempted moral blackmail is driving his critics to a fever pitch. They scream “racism” but, unlike other politicians, Trump refuses to cower in the corner whimpering. That he goes against their script infuriates them.
Back in 1965, the Frankfurt School Marxist Herbert Marcuse wrote an essay called “Repressive Tolerance.” It is a totalitarian classic. Marcuse distinguished between two kinds of tolerance. First, there is what he called “bad” or “false” tolerance. This is the sort of tolerance that most of us would call “true” tolerance, the sort of thing your parents taught you and that undergirds liberal democracy. Second, there is what Marcuse calls “liberating tolerance,” which he defined as “intolerance against movements from the Right and toleration of movements from the Left.”
So here we are. The old idea of tolerance was summed up in such chestnuts as, “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” The new dispensation is: “I disapprove of what you say, therefore you may not say it.”
The Marxist-tinged ideology of the 1960s has had a few decades to marinate the beneficiaries of our free-market society, steeping them in the toxic nostrums that masquerade as moral imperatives in our colleges and universities. Today we find the graduates of those institutions manipulating the fundamental levers of political and corporate power.
The monument controversy shows the susceptibility of “liberating tolerance” to fanaticism. And it reminds us that in the great battle between the partisans of freedom and the inebriates of virtue, freedom is ultimately negotiable—until it rouses itself to fight back. At stake is nothing less than the survival of our common history.

Mar 17, 2019

How Good Must We Be To Get Into God's Heaven?

And escape eternal condemnation ...

The accuracy of your estimation of your own human holiness is a reflection of the accuracy in your understanding of the awful extent of the wretchedness of sin itself. Sin is so bad it sends the unredeemed sinner to a devil's hell separated eternally from our Creator, God. It was our sins which had no righteous remedy in the universe except the substitutionary, horrific and excruciating sacrifice of the very Son of God on that cruel cross. So when we judge ourselves, let us not use the flawed and false standard of the world, comparing our goodness to that of others, which Apostle Paul warned us about in  2Cor.10:12.    "For we dare not make ourselves of the number, or compare ourselves with some that commend themselves: but they, measuring themselves by themselves, and comparing themselves among themselves, are not wise."    Paul understood that the assumed goodness or badness of others, based on "appearances" was an inaccurate measurement.    "The LORD seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the LORD  looketh on the heart." 1 Sam.16:7.     God alone sees and knows the truth of us all and not a single soul qualifies, by their own goodness, for heaven and deliverance from eternal condemnation.  Jesus made that point clear in,     Matt.19:17 "There is none good but one, that it God...."  "For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God". 
Rom.3:23

Yes, many religions teach that we get to heaven by our good works, but God's word refutes that over and over again and cautions us that salvation is based on faith in Jesus and not in our good works.         
"Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law: for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified." Gal.2:16. 

A single sin, not covered by the blood of Jesus and unforgiven, if spread equally among the entire population of the earth, would render all unclean, unredeemed and is enough to send them all to hell. That is how bad sin is. But Jesus' death is more than sufficient to cleanse and sanctify the worst of sinners and give them the spiritual new birth experience through their faith and repentance. That is how powerful the life and death of Jesus is.

The only way to measure the full extent of the awfulness of sin is by its consequences of eternal punishment in an equally awful hell and the enormous price God paid for its forgiveness... the suffering and death of His sinless Son, Jesus.     
That is how bad sin is.       Let us keep that in mind when judging holiness or lack of it.

"For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is quilty of all. For he that said, Do not commit adultery, said also, Do not kill. Now if thou commit no adultery, yet it thou kill, thou art become a trangressor of the law." James 2:10-11.         
That dear friend is how bad a single sin is.

The good news is this ...    
"If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." 1 John 1:9    And that is how powerful the faith of sincere repentance is.

Mar 14, 2019

Leading Democrat Presidental Candidate Questions Relevance Of US Constitution

But If Elected He Must Swear To Defend And Uphold It 

So, having lost the US Senate race to Ted Cruz, Beto O'Rourk, after claiming it as his "destiny", tells Vanity Fair Magazine, concerning his run for the Presidency, that "I was born to do this"... And casts his frisbee into the Democrat ring with those other ungoverned, adult, juvenile delinquents. Pelosi and Senator Schumer had better keep that bunch of immature, Spring-breakers separated lest they turn on each other and leave the capital grounds looking like Woodstock after the orgy.

Several sources say Beto is the most likely compromise, Democrat candidate since his views are not quite as appallingly ridiculous as
all the others, and, being from Texas, might carry the state against New Yorker, Trump.  So what does Beto believe?  Other than spiritual matters, I think the most important difference in Beto and Trump is their views on our U.S. Constitution. Trump swore to "uphold and defend" it and is doing the best job in years of doing so. Beto, will also swear the same oath and then violate it as did Obama. To me that is the biggest lie ever told by an American.

Obama called it a "flawed document", swore to defend it, but violated it repeatedly without consequences. Will Beto also lie ...
with his hand on the Bible, his fingers crossed, and his heart failing the Constitutional polygraph?

Here is a very young man who is campaigning for the most powerful position in the world and will be more loyal to the world than to our country.  He earned his proper Nom De Guerre as per my comment of "Adult Juvenile Delinquent" when he was running against Cruz. On at least one stop he made his "very presidential" stage entrance on a skate board. But that, of course, is nothing compared to his lack of leadership experience, inability to answer vital questions on world and national problems, past history of zero major accomplishments, and saying he would "tear down all border walls". Unlike the Berlin wall, our walls are not to keep people in but to keep drugs, criminals, disease and human trafficing out. Beto's drunk driving and fleeing the scene of an accident doesn't count as an accomplishment. It would be funny if not so tragic how Democrats seem always to promote the least qualified candidates to the land's highest offices. Establishment Republicans, on the other hand, try to disqualify their most competent candidates in favor of another inbred member of the Republican Establishment family clique. That is what may cost them the next election so vote out the RINOs also. They are only about 6 degrees off of North better than Socialist Democrats. RB

Beto O'Rourk Offers Few Answers 
In Wide Ranging Policy Interview

Former Texas Senate candidate Beto O'Rourke faced across-the-board criticism on Tuesday after an unflattering interview in The Washington Post portrayed him as equivocal and unsure on a variety of substantive policy issues -- and included a comment that seemed to question the modern-day relevance of the U.S. Constitution.
O'Rourke, 46, is widely considered a possible 2020 presidential contender, after falling only a few percentage points shy of dethroning incumbent Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz in the 2018 midterm elections. But his relative lack of experience and expertise has emerged as a central objection to his prospective candidacy.
Speaking in El Paso, Texas, O'Rourke added fuel to those concerns by repeatedly demurring when asked for a direct answer on his positions on everything from visa overstays to whether President Trump should withdraw military forces from Syria.
And at one point in the two-hour chat with The Post's Jenna Johnson, O'Rourke openly wondered whether the U.S. can "still be managed by the same principles that were set down 230-plus years ago" in the Constitution.   (Tell me exactly which part of this nation building, inspired instrument of law and liberty is immoral, inappropriate or inadequate. RB)
The comment drew harsh rebukes on Twitter.
"This may make it difficult to take any future oath of office to 'preserve, protect and defend the Constitution,'" Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., wrote.

Mar 13, 2019

Are There Any Peaceful And Harmless Muslims?

If so, why don't they speak out and condemn Muslim Terrorists?
Islam is so internally divided, fragmented and tangled up with Religious differences, Jihad militancy, politics and poverty that It is beyond understanding and makes no sense. Fanatically aggressive elements are constantly at war with each other and with non Muslims. Christianity is also divided into denominations, but is generally peaceful and often even cooperative with each other. Right now, the ISIS branch of Islam is in the news every day and warring in Syria and other locations in the Middle East. It appears that ISIS is defeated in Syria but, put out the fire in one place and it breaks out somewhere else.
I won't try to accurately explain Islam except to say it is very obviously a counterfeit of Christianity with a lot of copy-cat doctrine. The ISIS, who has been doing most of the fighting in the last few years has become the strongest element of Islam, but may now be beaten back and maybe disintegrating ... temporarily. But be sure, it will rise up again.

So what does ISIS mean? The proper name, Isis, capitalized, followed by lower case letters, is the name of a goddess from the polytheistic pantheon of Egypt. That is not the same as ISIS, an acronym, all capital letters which stands for Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. Wikipedia says, "It is a Salafi jihadist unrecognized proto-state and militant group."

ISIS declares itself to be a "state" but is stateless, without a country. It is also a fanatical advocate of the Islamic doctrine of Jihad which has come to mean "Holy War".  They also claim to be the proto (original) "State" of Islam and are a very warlike branch of Islam but unrecognized as a state.

Islam is not a nation, or state either, but I often treat it as one in my writing. It is, however, more than a religion. The religion itself contains political, military and economic arms. It is composed of several offshoots of which two are most prominent, Sunni and Shiite. Several Middle Eastern nations are predominately one or the other of these two. Some of these Islamic nations are rigidly dominated and controlled by their Islamic majority. But ISIS is at the moment a stateless nation of hard-core Muslims seeking to destabilize, conquer and then unify several Muslim nations into a Muslim State called by the historical name Levant.  I am not an authority on the subject but maybe not too far out of focus. I don't think anyone really understands the multitude of undercurrents running through Islam.

It is hard to tell who the ISIS, and many other Muslims, hate worst, one of the other branches of Islam, or Israel or America.

It is plain to see that most harmless Muslims will not openly condemn their terrorist haters. They should, but they don't and probably never will. For that reason, I, myself, sometimes border on lumping all Muslims into the same hateful class. However, not all Muslims are terrorists or sympathizers.  But if that is true, why don't they speak out against Muslim terrorists? I have met Muslims in Israel and surrounding nations who were peaceful and harmless ... but they dared not criticize those who were not ... for fear of suffering the consequences.

To understand many of those silent Muslims, imagine yourself and family as residents of Nazi Germany or Japan during WWII when peaceful citizens would be severely punished if they spoke against their fanatic, hateful and dangerous leaders. Or, if you were Chinese or Russian, living under Mao or Stalin's Communism; would you speak out against their vicious ruthlessness? What if you lived in a New York ghetto; would you condemn or witness against drug dealers or killers who lived next to you, when your children must go to school and play in the streets? There is a high price to pay sometimes for doing what every good citizen should do, but doesn't do, to stop such intimidation and brutality. 

Many Muslims, though drastically misled, brain-washed, and eternally lost, are harmless and in fear of their own safety, in their own neighborhoods.  It is easy for us to criticize them ... but what would we do?
If I lived in a Muslin country... would I condemn terrorists and fanatics who cut off peoples' heads? Or if I lived in a New York ghetto, would I openly confront, report or witness against these U.S. murderous, gangs or drug dealers, and risk my wife and children's lives ... or mine? No, probably not. What I would probably do is acquire a snipers rifle with a scope, find a very private roof-top and solve the problem for everyone... in the name of Law and Justice. But, you say, I would be arrested and sent to prison. So what? I am 88. How long a life sentence would I have to serve?  Besides, with the resulting headline, "Elderly Pastor Executes Notorious MS13 Gang Chief Who Threatened His Family", I could probably get elected Mayor of the city.  I'm not even sure God would blame me. Would I really do that?  I'm not sure of that either... but I think about it.

The bottom line is to love the eternal souls of all people, stand your ground against thugs, criminals and terrorists, assist and unite with reasonable, law abiding citizens, speak out against cowardly, criminal politicians and always get out and vote.  I don't advocate violence against any religion or race but Jesus used a whip to drive the irreverent moneychangers out of the Temple.That time may come in America.