Pouring Salt in Our Wounds


“You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt loses its flavor, how shall it be seasoned? It is then good for nothing but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot by men. Matt 5:13 (NKJV)

This past week tragedy struck outside a Safeway grocery store in Tucson Arizona killing 6 and wounding 13. A lone gunman, Jared Lee Loughner, with a long history of disturbing behavior opened fire on a political rally hosted by

Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.), who police said was the gunman’s first target. Much has been written about the motives and causation of this tragic event. Many were quick to cite Sarah Palin and conservative talk-show hosts as the catalyst that ignited Jared’s shooting spree. Although no link could be found to ‘conservative ideology’ that did not stop the commentators from continuing the story line. The media was incessant in their attempts to give Jared an out, a reason for his heinous act. They desperately wanted to find a link between Jared and Sarah Palin, yet none could be found. Could it be that the heart of Jared was simply wicked? Was there anyone to blame other than Jared? Were their cries for help? I believe there were many but our “politically correct” society prevented Jared from getting the help he most desperately needed. A change of heart.

“The heart is deceitful above all things, And desperately wicked; Who can know it? Jer 17:9 (NKJV)

In an article published at crosswalk.com Kevin DeYoung, Senior Pastor at University Reformed Church in East Lansing, Michigan wrote in his commentary about this incident:

“The human heart is desperately sinful and capable of despicable sins. Of course, no one commends the crime, but few are willing to condemn the criminal either. In such a world we are no longer moral beings with the propensity for great acts of righteousness and great acts of evil. We are instead, at least when we are bad, the mere product of our circumstances, our society, our upbringing, our biochemistry, or our hurts. The triumph of the therapeutic is nearly complete.”

 

In his book The Death of Satan: How Americans Have Lost Their Sense of Evil by Andrew Delbanco. we read

A gulf has opened up in our culture between the visibility of evil and the intellectual resources available for coping with it. Never before have images of horror been so widely disseminated and so appalling-from organized death camps to children starving in famines that might have been averted. Rarely does a week go by without newspaper and television accounts of teenagers performing contract killings for a few dollars, women murdered on the street for their purses or their furs, young men shot in the head for the keys to their jeep-and these are only the domestic bulletins…

The repertoire of evil has never been richer. Yet never have our responses been so weak. We have no language for connecting our inner lives with the horrors that pass before our eyes in the outer world…

In our disenchanted world, one respected historian has recently remarked (and here he is perfectly representative) that mass murderers like Hitler and Stalin require us “judiciously [to] distinguish mental disorders that incapacitate from streaks of disorder that should not diminish responsibility.” This distinction would be meaningless to the scores of millions who died at their hands. What does it mean to say that the inventor of the concentration camps, or of the Gulag, was subject to a “disorder?” What does it mean to call these monsters mentally disordered, and to engage in scholastic debate over whether their brand of madness vitiates their responsibility? Why can we no longer call them evil? (3-4).

Kevin continues his commentary with these words:

“The world, and to a large extent the church, has lost the ability to speak in moral categories. We have preferences instead of character. We have values instead of virtue. We have no God of holiness, and we have no Satan. We have break-downs, crack-ups, psychoses,maladjustments, and inner turmoil. But we do not have repugnant evil as the Bible has it. And this loss makes the world a more dangerous place.”

With all the commentaries written this past week about the Tucsan shooter, the silence from the church was deafening. In one report a Catholic Bishop was quoted as saying:

“I wish I knew the answer. “But as the world continues to seek an answer to that question, we can, each in our own way, strive to respect others, speak with civility, try to understand one another and to find healthy ways to resolve our conflicts.”

Face it my friends, there is evil in the world because there is a real devil. The bible says Satan roams around seeking souls to devour and to spread death and destruction, to the individual as well as society (1 Peter 5:8). God loves; and Satan hates everything God loves.

In our politically correct society sin is no longer permitted to be called sin, evil must be explained away, and the secularist religion requires the removal of all judgments of any kind. The secularist sees the world as evolving and men as gods, while the Christian sees the world as fallen and in desperate need of a savior.

Where has the salt gone? Is there anyone left to stand in the gap? If not us then who is going to speak the truth? Who is left to “pour salt in the wounds” of society?

In our quest to get along we have been silenced by the thought police and our vocabulary has been corrupted by the PC society in which we live. We are no longer acting as the preserving agents. I am afraid we have lost our saltiness and therefore been reduced to worthlessness in a hurting dying world. Pouring salt in wounds stings a bit but it promotes faster healing.

Where does one go to find the saltiness needed to preserve moral order if the church has lost it? What hope does the world have if the preservative loses its power to preserve? Think about it!

eagle_feather_icon.gifAnd that is this week’s tail feather

But those who are waiting for the Lord will have new strength; they will get wings like eagles: running, they will not be tired, and walking, they will have no weariness. Isaiah 40:31Open Link in New Window (BBE)

Along for the journey

The Blame Game


pointing finger 

Image via Wikipedia

“How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when all the time there is a plank in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.” Matthew 7:4-5 (NIV)

Game shows abound on the television sets across America. Some have been around for a long time. ‘The Price is Right‘, ‘The Wheel of Fortune’, ‘Who Wants to be a Millionaire?‘ just to name a few of the most popular. The audience and contestants both enjoy playing the game if the look on their faces is any indication. Growing up as a child we would play made up games around the neighborhood. In fact playing games is a big part of growing up.

Adults play games as well. These may not be the familiar board games of our childhood but they are games none-the-less. A recent addition to the Television game show roster is the “Blame game.” The rules are simple enough that even a child can play it. In fact it is during our formative years that we learn how to play this game. The better we get at playing the game the more mischief we can achieve without getting caught. Who does not remember the “Not me” response most kids learn when asked who had done something. Johnny did you break this glass? I didn’t do it mommy? Well who did? I don’t know. I do not know seemed to get blamed for a lot of mishaps around our house when I was growing up. Unless of course a snitch lives in your house. The mole, the back stabber, the person who would be the first to run to mom or dad and tell on you. They were never the favorites in any misadventure. They were the tattle tale. The truth teller if you will. They were the ones who would expose our falsehood with the truth. The biggest enemy of a lie is the truth. Therefore those who like to play the “Blame game” avoid the truth at all cost.

Human nature has within it the innate desire to point the finger at someone else for it’s misadventures. Adam blamed God for giving him that woman. Eve blamed her fall on the serpent who tempted her. We blame others for our own shortcomings.

All last week we have been unable to escape this new game show as all the news outlets continually ran the story of the Tucson shooting incident. To listen to the commentators one would get the impression that anyone who listens to “talk radio”, supports Sarah Palin, is a member of a local TEA party, is conservative in their political ideology, or opposed to the Obama administration are all responsible for the shooting in Tucson. Not once did these original commentators blame the actual shooter for the offense.

Immediately Sheriff Clarence Dupnik of Pima County, started to point the finger of blame at Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin although there was absolutely no evidence that either of these national figures had anything to do with the shooting. All the networks ran with this story line and as of today have yet to apologize to all of us who by inference became victims of this “blame game.”

Although the Pima County Sheriff’s office had a history of encounters with the shooter, the sheriff was not indicated in anyway as being responsible for the shooting since they did nothing to stop the disturbed behavior of the suspect now in custody. There were numerous reports of the shooters erratic behavior for several years leading up to this event, and yet nothing was done. Instead fingers were pointed in many directions accusing the innocent of being accomplices after the fact, while all the while excusing the actions of the actual perpetrator. It was like he had no choice but to do what he did because of the actions of others. And the blame game continues even today.

Pointing the finger may not be new but God wants us to take responsibility for our own actions. We need to admit that we are  miscreants by nature and in need of saving ourselves from ourselves. If we are left to our own desires we will surely come to ruin. For we just like the original inhabitants of this third rock from the sun are unable to resist temptation. We need an an advocate to free us from the effects of sin. Jesus came to rescue us from ourselves. He came as the truth teller, to set us free from the results of the “blame game”. He forces us to face the truth, and admit our involvement in our misadventures. He forces us to face our own shortcomings and take responsibility for our own actions and choices. He forces us to point the finger of blame right were it belongs, our own sinfulness and shortcomings.

Satan is the original finger pointer, the accuser of the brethren, the original host of the ‘blame game”. He is the one who attempts to fault find at every opportunity he gets. With him constantly pointing a finger at us we need someone to take our side to come to our defense. Unless of course we just simply point the finger at someone else to take the fall for us. Someone who is weaker and unable to defend themselves. Isn’t that how the “blame game” is supposed to be played?

Well to those of us who call ourselves Christians the answer is found in the gospel according to Matthew where we are admonished to look in the mirror first and take responsibility for our actions before we attempt to point out someone else’s faults. To the news media, and Sheriff Dupnik, this means check out your own actions and responsibility before you attempt to push the blame of your own failings unto someone else. First take the plank of hypocrisy out of your own eye then perhaps you can see more clearly the cause of the others failings. If we all take responsibility for our own actions we will find there is not much room left over to play the “blame game.” Personal responsibility is the antidote to the “blame game.”

But those who are waiting for the Lord will have new strength; they will get wings like eagles: running, they will not be tired, and walking, they will have no weariness. Isaiah 40:31Open Link in New Window (BBE)

Along for the journey

The Insanity Continues


Since she gets blamed for every disaster anywhere in the United States it seemed only natural to the press that her influence over major disasters should be extended globally. Hey it’s not wise to fool with a grizzly mom.

“American Spectator” Says Palin Not Experienced Enough to be President


AND BARAK OBAMA IS?  This shows the lunacy of the left plain and clear. They seem to find fault with every Conservative on the planet and yet every Liberal gets a pass. I highlighted only three sentences of this whole article so that everyone could LAUGH OUT LOUD at the loony left.

This one surely has flown over the cuckoo’s nest several times and has landed on this WEEK’S LOON ALERT!

clipped from theweek.com

Sarah Palin isn’t experienced enough to be president, says Quinn Hillyer in the American Spectator, but that doesn’t mean she won’t be some day

Palin has a way of establishing a sense of connectedness with her backers — such a strong, attitudinal sense that she is not just like them but one of them — that she has created what amounts to a one-woman, conservative “identity politics” writ very, very large.
Yet if conservatives are to continue a political love affair with this admirable and galvanizing woman, we need to insist on more than mere identity. And more than mere attitude.

Six Things God Hates


 

These six things the Lord hates, Yes, seven are an abomination to Him: 17 A proud look, A lying tongue, Hands that shed innocent blood, 18 A heart that devises wicked plans, Feet that are swift in running to evil, 19 A false witness who speaks lies, And one who sows discord among brethren. Proverbs 6:16-19 (NKJV)
  1. A look of pride: A man ought not to think too highly of oneself. A haughty spirit goes before a big fall. God exalts the humble but resists the proud.
  2. Lying lips: misrepresentation of actual facts is lying. Leaving out important facts when asked specific questions is also lying. Twisting the truth to make yourself appear better is also lying. Failing to offer up proof to back-up assertions can also be considered lying. Deliberately misleading the public is lying.
  3. Hands that shed innocent blood: who among us is more innocent then the unborn child? Killing of babies is shedding innocent blood. A child has not done anything deserving of death.
  4. Heart set on devious plans: How wicked a web we weave when we practice to deceive. Purposefully planning on destroying an opponent to one’s own personal gain is devious and despicable.

  5. Feet swift to spread evil reports and bring evil upon others: 30 pairs of feet where swiftly dispatched to Alaska for the sole purpose of finding EVIL REPORTS to bring against Sarah Palin. A bevy of reporters and campaign workers set out to discredit Joe the plumber. Every attempt to shed light on a certain political party’s candidate for President is met with SWIFT destructive practices and policies.
  6. Bearing false witness. Lying about someone: Deliberate misrepresentation of someone’s character or positions is bearing false witness.
  7. Sowing discord amongst peaceful people: Turning people against each other by sowing distrust amongst people groups with the intent of furthering one’s own agenda is also despised by God. Causing fights to break out over supposed malfeasance all as a ruse to cover-up one’s own nefarious intent is hated by God.

Those who engage in such behavior as a matter of course or sanction it amongst their supporters and associates are not friends of God nor can they be counted among the faithful followers of God. Instead they stand in direct opposition to the ways of God and the very nature of God; therefore they are destined for eternal judgment and damnation from God.