DOCTORS AROUND THE WORLD WARN PEOPLE
DON'T TAKE THE CHINA-19 VACCINE
THE VIDEO BELOW WAS CENSORED
ONE OF MY SCOUTS FOUND IT AGAIN
https://www.freedomman.org/doctors-unite-against-covid-19-vaccine/
SPIRITUAL DISCERNMENT
A GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIRIT
WITH BECCA GREENWOOD
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3w_U_g3xNdo
“It is no use
saying ‘we are doing our best.’ You have got to succeed in doing what is
necessary.”
WINSTON CHURCHILL
"The
Joy of Christmas with Bill & Gloria Gaither and Friends [YouTube
Premiere]" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/rU_f_xNKZkY
Trump:
Reports of Martial Law Are More ‘Fake News’
Why America–and the
World–Needs Trump to Serve a Second Term
Trump: Supporters Should Join ‘Wild’ Protest in DC on Jan.
6
Trump Praises Navarro Report on Alleged Election
Irregularities
STOP THE STEAL
ALERT: Patriot Judge RESTORING FAITH
In Trump Win!
Rudy Giuliani: Let Team Examine Voting Machines to Prove
Trump Won
Rep. Matt Gaetz Says He Will Challenge Electoral
College Votes on Jan. 6
SIDNEY POWELL
SCOTUS Dragging Feet On SIDNEY
POWELL Emergency Petitions!
FRANKLIN GRAHAM
Franklin Graham
on Election Claims: Trump ‘Has a Track Record of Being Right’
CRIME, VIOLENCE & TERRORISM
https://www.newswars.com/trump-rally-crowd-chants-lock-her-up-potus-agrees-100/
https://www.newswars.com/nearly-300-illegals-arrested-in-18-hours/
BIDEN CRIME FAMILY
JOHN DURHAM
Special
Counsel John Durham Making ‘Significant Progress,’ Barr Says
DOMINION
Redacted Information in Dominion Audit Report Shows Races
Were Flipped: Analyst
Joe Biden
Appears to Outperform in Counties Using Dominion or HART Voting Machines: Data
Analyst
VACCINE
General: 2.9
Million COVID-19 Vaccine Doses Distributed, More On Their Way
Healthcare Worker HOSPITALIZED After
Suffering COVID Vaccine Reaction!
GEORGIA
Georgia
Republicans Ask Court to Immediately Order Stronger Signature Matching
Georgia
County Elections Board Dismisses Challenges to Voter Roll
ARIZONA
• Full
Video: Trump Supporters Protest at Arizona State Capitol to Demand Election
Integrity
PROPHECY
Tracy
Cooke talks about the gifts of the Holy Spirit
In
2021 everything will be “shaken”
God
will draw us back to him
The
center of our attention should be on what God has promised us
Our
mind is the battleground, “Jericho”, in this supernatural war
We
must overcome supernatural warfare to reach “Jordan”
We
must cleanse & purify ourselves to receive God’s double portion of glory
We
must circumcise our hearts to hunger for God
Matthew
6:4 that your charitable deed
may be in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will Himself reward you openly.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMES6DTgFZc
DON JR. BLASTS DEMS
Video:
Turning Point USA Featuring Trump Jr, Tucker Carlson, Charlie Kirk
Go
to the 27:35 mark on the video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZ6VoyMoW6w
INFLATION
READER COMMENTS
Thanks for your
prayers. My cousin's husband has awoken from his coma!
How sweet
that we can proclaim this good news to our church family members on this first
day of the week when we are accustomed to proclamations of the Gospel Good News
of resurrection life, and during the week of our celebration of our Savior's
birth into human life on Earth. Let us rejoice and be exceedingly glad!.......................S
SOLAR WINDS
Trump Says Voting Machines May Have Been Breached by
SolarWinds Hack During Election
CENSORSHIP
Former Wisconsin Judge: ‘Our Court System Has Been
Deeply Intimidated by the Left’
RED CHINA
Treasury Under Fire for Trying to Soften Trump’s Ban on
Chinese Securities
Bill
Gertz: Leaked Database Suggests Widespread CCP Infiltration; China Silences
Hong Kong Activists
PROPHETIC EVENTS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mzRtgE3oG4I
CHRISTIANITY
The
modern world has suddenly become reacquainted with the oldest traveling
companion of human history: existential dread and the fear of unavoidable,
inscrutable death. Because this experience has become foreign to modern people,
we are, by and large, psychologically and culturally underequipped for the
current coronavirus pandemic.
To
find the moral resources to tackle COVID-19, both its possible death toll and
the fear that stalks our communities alongside the disease, we have to look at
the resources built in the past. For me, that means examining how people
of my tradition, Christians, and especially Lutherans, have handled the plagues
of the past. And while people of all faiths, and none, are facing the
disease, the distinctive approach to epidemics Christians have adopted over
time is worth dusting off.
The Christian
response to plagues begins with some of Jesus’s most famous teachings: “Do
unto others as you would have them do unto you”; “Love your neighbor as
yourself”; “Greater love has no man than this, that he should lay down his life
for his friends.” Put
plainly, the Christian ethic in a time of plague considers that our own life
must always be regarded as less important than that of our neighbor.
During
plague periods in the Roman Empire, Christians made a name for themselves.
Historians have suggested that the terrible Antonine Plague of the 2nd century [Antonine Plague of 165
to 180 AD, also known as the Plague of Galen,] which might have killed off a quarter of the
Roman Empire, led
to the spread of Christianity, as Christians cared for the sick and offered an
spiritual model whereby plagues were not the work of angry and capricious
deities but the product of a broken Creation in revolt against a loving God.
But
the more famous epidemic is the Plague
of Cyprian [of the 3rd century, 249-262 AD] named for a bishop who
gave a colorful account of this disease in his sermons. Probably a disease
related to Ebola,
the Plague of Cyprian helped set off the Crisis
of the Third Century in
the Roman world. But it did something else, too: It triggered the explosive growth of
Christianity. Cyprian’s sermons told Christians not
to grieve for plague victims (who
live in heaven), but to redouble efforts to care for the living. His
fellow bishop Dionysius described how Christians, “Heedless of danger . . . . took charge of the sick,
attending to their every need.”
Nor
was it just Christians who noted this reaction of Christians to the plague.
A century later, the actively pagan Emperor Julian would complain
bitterly of how “the Galileans” would care for even non-Christian sick people,
while the church historian Pontianus recounts how Christians ensured that “good was done to all men, not merely to the
household of faith.” The sociologist and religious
demographer Rodney Stark claims that death rates in cities with Christian
communities may have been
just half that of other cities.
This
habit of sacrificial care has reappeared throughout history. In 1527, when the Bubonic Plague hit
Wittenberg Germany, Martin Luther
refused calls to flee the city and protect himself. Rather, he
stayed and ministered to the sick. The refusal to flee cost his daughter
Elizabeth her life. But it produced a tract, “Whether
Christians Should Flee the Plague,” where Luther provides a clear articulation of the
Christian epidemic response: We die at our posts. Christian doctors
cannot abandon their hospitals, Christian governors cannot flee their
districts, Christian pastors cannot abandon their congregations. The
plague does not dissolve our duties: It turns them to crosses, on which we must
be prepared to die. [Bubonic Plague Black Death swept through Asia, Europe, and Africa and killed
50 million people, or 25% to 60% of the European population.]
For Christians, it is better that we
should die serving our neighbor than surrounded in a pile of masks we never got
a chance to use.
And if we care for each other, if we share masks and hand
soap and canned foods, if we “are our brother’s keeper,” we might actually
reduce the death toll, too.
To
modern people acquainted with the germ theory of disease, this can all sound a
bit foolish. Caring for the sick sounds nice, but it’s as likely to
infect others as to save lives. In an intensely professionalized medical
environment, should common people really assume a burden of
care?
Here,
a second element of the Christian approach appears: strict rules against suicide and self-harm.
Our bodies are gifts from God and must be protected. Or, as Luther
says in his essay on the topic, we must not “tempt God.” The catechism
Luther wrote for Christian instruction elaborates on the Fifth Commandment
(“Though shalt not murder”) by saying that this actually means
we must never even endanger others through our negligence or
recklessness. Luther’s essay encourages believers to obey quarantine
orders, fumigate their houses, and take precautions to avoid spreading the
sickness.
The Christian
motive for hygiene and sanitation does not arise in self-preservation but in an
ethic of service to our neighbor.
We wish to care for the afflicted, which first and foremost means not
infecting the healthy. Early Christians created the first hospitals in
Europe as hygienic places to provide care during times of plague, on the
understanding that negligence that spread disease further was, in fact, murder.
Since
religious bodies in South Korea, Singapore, Iran, Hong Kong, and even
Washington, D.C., have been at the forefront of coronavirus transmission, this
injunction is worth remembering. Motivated by this concern, I have
prepared an exhaustive
handbook for churches about
how they can fortify their services to reduce coronavirus transmission,
informed by guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and
my experiences working as a missionary in Hong Kong. The first sacrifice
Christians must make to care for our neighbor is our convenience, as we
enthusiastically participate in aggressive sanitation measures and social
distancing.
This
kind of humble care for others is a powerful force. I’ve seen it at work
in my neighbors in Hong Kong, whatever their beliefs. The ubiquitous
surgical masks may not actually prevent infection, but they serve as a visible
reminder that we’re all watching each other’s backs. When good sanitary
procedure stops being about saving our own skin and starts being about loving
our neighbor, it becomes not just life-saving but soul-enlivening.
This
brings me to one of the more controversial elements of historic Christian
plague ethics: We don’t cancel church. The whole motivation of
personal sacrifice to care for others, and other-regarding measures to reduce
infection, presupposes the existence of a community
in which we’re all stakeholders. Even as we take communion from separate
plates and cups to minimize risk, forgo hand-shaking or hugging, and sit at a
distance from each other, we still commune.
Some
observers will view this as a kind of fanaticism: Christians are so obsessed with church-going that they’ll risk epidemic
disease to show up.
But
it’s not that at all. The coronavirus leaves
over 99.9
percent of
its victims still breathing. But it leaves virtually every member of
society afraid, anxious, isolated, alone, and wondering if anyone would
even notice if they’re gone. In
an increasingly atomized society, the coronavirus could rapidly mutate into an
epidemic of despair. Church attendance serves as a societal roll call,
especially for older people: Those who don’t show up should be checked
on during the week. Bereft of work, school, public gatherings, sports and
hobbies, or even the outside world at all, humans do poorly. We need the moral and mental support
of communities to be the decent people we all aspire to be.
The
Christian choice to defend the weekly gathering at church is not, then, a
superstitious fancy. It’s a clear-eyed, rational choice to balance
trade-offs: We forgo other
activities and take great pains to be as clean as possible so that we
can meaningfully gather to support each other. Without this moral
support, as the citizens of Wuhan, China, can attest life can quickly become
unendurable. Even non-Christians who eschew church-going can appreciate
the importance of maintaining just one lifeline to a community
of mutual care and support.
Be
eager to sacrifice for others, even at the cost of your own life.
Obsessively maintain a scrupulous hygienic routine to avoid infecting
others. Maintain a lifeline to a meaningful human community that can care
for your mind and soul. These are the guiding stars that have shepherded
Christians through countless plagues for millennia. As the world
belatedly wakes up to the fact that the age of epidemics is not over, these ancient
ideas still have modern relevance.
Lyman Stone is a
research fellow at the Institute for Family Studies and an advisor at the
consulting firm Demographic Intelligence. Institute for Family
Studies, P.O. Box 1502, Charlottesville, VA 22902,
info@ifstudies.org , 516.242.6812.
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