Archive for April 25, 2012


Most of you have heard of the disgusting Ashley-Madison.  Read the following and pledge to oppose Ashley-Madison any way that you can beginning with saving your own marriage!

I just thought that you ought to know the extent to which Noel Biderman (CEO and founder of Ashley-Madison) and his team will go to undermine purity, destroy marriage and tear children away from Mom and Dad.   There must be something more despicable, I just can’t think of what it is off hand!

CBS/New York reports the following:

NEW YORK (WFAN) Jets quarterback Tim Tebow has steadfastly maintained he is a virgin living the high-profile life of a professional athlete.

Well, controversial website AshleyMadison.com apparently wants to challenge one of Tebow’s core beliefs. They’re offering up big money to any woman who can prove she has slept with the NFL sensation.

CNBC sports business reporter Darren Rovell tweeted the rumblings of a $1 million bounty late Monday.

The company retweeted Rovell and on Tuesday morning issued a confirmation via Twitter: “@darrenrovell @TimTebow – It’s true Darren…we’re just worried it might cost us millions!”

Ashley Madison provides matches for those seeking an extramarital affair. The company is described on its homepage as the “most recognized name in infidelity.” WFAN

If  there is a more disgusting corporation in the world, I don’t know what it is.  My vote for that company would be Ashley-Madison.  We have reported on them before.

I know that many of you will want an action link.  There’s nothing I can offer you as you and I both know that it isn’t going to do any good to email AshleyMadison and to express our outrage.

I would suggest praying for Tim Tebow.  Choose your favorite contact medium at http://www.timtebow.com/ to let Tim Tebow that you are praying for him!

http://www.americandecency.org/archives/madison-offers-1m-for-proof-of-sex-with-jets%e2%80%99-tim-tebow/#more-6608


The sexual revolution of the last several decades has transformed any public conversation about sex and sexuality. The revolutionaries directed their attention to the dismantling of an entire edifice of sexual morality that had been basically intact for well over 2,000 years.

At one point in the sexual revolution, efforts were made to legalize prostitution as a “victimless crime,” a term that anyone could recognize as an oxymoron. Most of these efforts went nowhere in the United States and most of Europe, though “progressive” law enforcement officials often looked the other way and did little to curb the market for illicit sex.

Then something truly interesting started to happen. Influential forces in society began to notice the scale and magnitude of the market for sex. Law enforcement officials started to acknowledge the fact that women, along with under-age girls and boys, were being “trafficked” through international networks of gangsters. By the end of the last decade, American officials were aware that sex trafficking was taking place in cities large and small. Women, along with boys and girls, were being kidnapped in far parts of the world and on the streets of American cities, to be sold into what could only be considered as sexual slavery.

Over time, the shadow of international sex trafficking became evident in criminal networks that span the globe. Women and girls answering advertisements for models, maids, and child minders found themselves sold into slavery and transported around the world.

Wealthy Americans booked vacations to destinations where their sexual appetite of choice, including children, could be easily purchased. As recently as the 2012 Super Bowl, American officials warned that several hundred under-age sex workers might be brought into the host city. These developments make the international sex trafficking networks impossible to deny.

Then came the news that at least eleven Secret Service agents had been involved in a prostitution scandal in Cartagena, Colombia in advance of a visit there by President Barack Obama. It is believed that several members of the United States military were also involved. Even as that scandal began to break, the international media reported that cities like Cartagena have become magnets for the sex trade, with much of their business provided by lustful Americans.

Critics of the Secret Service suggested that a good many of its agents adopted a motto of “wheels up, rings off,” indicating plans to visit prostitutes in their destination city. They planned their involvement with prostitutes well in advance of their arrival to “advance” the President’s trip, it is alleged.

As if Americans were not sufficiently shocked, USA Today reported that the Secret Service scandal was “no aberration.” Kirsten Powers reported: “Men working abroad on behalf of our government engage in this kind of  behavior so frequently that the Pentagon was forced in 2004 to draft an anti-prostitution rule aimed at preventing the U.S. military from being complicit in fueling sex trafficking.”

It appears that the rule did not restrain those involved in the Cartagena scandal, nor many others. Powers also reported that the American government has been aware for some time that much of the energy in the international sex trafficking underworld comes from American government personnel, both in uniform and out.

Powers cited Rep. Christopher Smith (R-NJ), who declared that “women and girls are being forced into prostitution for a clientele consisting largely of military services members, government contractors and international peacekeepers.”

One report indicates that young girls have been kidnapped in Eastern Europe “specifically to be sold to the American contractors to use for sex.” Those contractors were there under the auspices of our government to establish peace and security in the aftermath of the Bosnian crisis.

As Kirsten Powers observed, “Representatives of the U.S. government should be setting the standard  for the world, not feeding the problem of sex trafficking. The chances  that the women or girls the Secret Service agents procured for their  pleasure were there by free will is very low. Most likely, they were sex  slaves.”

Thankfully, there is much less talk these days about prostitution and sex trafficking as a “victimless crime.” Few crimes offer such a dismal view of the human moral reality. There is a ready market for every form of lust, and criminal syndicates stand ready to sell anyone and anything for a price.

Bringing the story even closer to home, Nicholas Kristof of The New York Times reported the story of a sex worker in New York City. “If you think sex trafficking only happens in faraway places like Nepal  or Thailand, then you should listen to an expert on American sex  trafficking I interviewed the other day,” he wrote. “But, first, wish her happy birthday. She turns 16 years old on Thursday.”

Kristof told of “Brianna,” who had been effectively kidnapped and sold into the sex trade after she ran away from home for only one night at age 12. He also described the prominence of major Internet sex trafficking sites, one of which “accounts for about 70 percent of America’s prostitution ads.” Brianna reported that she had been offered on such a site, estimating that half of the business into which she was sold came through the site. Chillingly, Kristof also reported that major Wall Street financial firms were profiting by the business.

Kirsten Powers got it just right when she wrote, “We have a global epidemic of sex trafficking.” I can only wonder how many Americans understand that the “we” in that statement means us — the American people. When a congressman can admit for us all that women and girls are being forced into the sex trade for a clientele “consisting largely” of American government officials and contractors along with the U.S. military, that problem becomes the responsibility of every American.

American Christians, who understand the incomprehensible scandal and moral horror of sex trafficking must recognize that this is an issue of high moral priority.

We must demand the enforcement of laws meant to protect human beings from being sold into sexual slavery and the vigorous prosecution of those who are engaged in sex trafficking. We must demand that any American involved in such activities be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and that every effort be made to release women and young people from sexual slavery.

No American can rest with an easy conscience while this nation is known around the world for sending out officials, business associates, government contractors, and military personnel whose motto is “wheels up, rings off.”

This scandal has revealed that the concept of the Ugly American has taken on a humiliating new dimension.

http://www.albertmohler.com/2012/04/24/the-ugly-american-sex-trafficking-and-our-national-humiliation/


Now we have received . . . the Spirit who is from God, that we might know the things that have been freely given to us by God. —1 Corinthians 2:12

When it comes to communication, our world is becoming increasingly high-tech. The popularity of things like Twitter and Facebook might cause some to think the Bible is too old-school. The tech-savvy people of our world might feel deterred because there are no sounds and no nifty graphics in the Bible. But the truth is, there’s more high-tech power in God’s Word than in any cutting-edge communication tool our world will ever know.

It’s not uncommon for a pastor to be told, “When you said that in your message, it was just what I needed.” Somehow during the sermon, God spoke to the person’s heart with a message tailor-made for him or her. If you’ve ever read the Bible and sensed God speaking directly to you, you know what I’m talking about. God has hard-wired you with His Spirit, who illumines your mind to understand His Word.

Imagine getting a “text message” directly from the Creator of the universe telling you exactly what you need at exactly the right time. No matter how high-tech this world gets, you’ll never experience a more powerful mode of communication!

Rejoice in the reality that “we have received . . . the Spirit who is from God, that we might know the things that have been freely given to us by God” (1 Cor. 2:12).

Give me the insight, Lord, As I hear Your Word today, So I will truly understand Your message and Your way. —Monroe

The Bible may be old, but its truths are always new.

http://getmorestrength.org/daily/high-tech-communication/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+GetMoreStrength+%28Strength+For+The+Journey%29

“Ready in Season”

Posted: April 25, 2012 in Oswald Chambers

“Ready in Season”.


“He removed the high places, smashed the sacred stones and cut down the Asherah poles. He broke into pieces the bronze snake Moses had made, for up to that time the Israelites had been burning incense to it. (It was called Nehushtan.)” — 2 Kings 18:4

Having just witnessed their brothers and sisters in the northern kingdom of Israel being driven away to exile by the Assyrians, King Hezekiah of Judah begins to institute some sweeping reforms to turn the nation away from idolatry. As we see in our verse, he began by smashing all the sacred stones and cutting down the Asherah poles.

But then, Hezekiah seems to take his reforms a step further — he breaks into pieces the bronze snake that Moses had made. What? If this was something that Moses had made, surely it could not have been idolatrous, and so what right did Hezekiah have to break such a sacred object?

The rabbis provide fascinating insight into the nature of religious symbols based on this verse. As you may remember, the serpent appeared earlier in the history of Israel while the people were in the wilderness. They had just secured a victory over the King of Arad, but still had not made it to the Promised Land. They began to complain, and as punishment for their lack of faith, God sent poisonous snakes among them.

The people cried out to Moses to save them, and as God commanded him to do, Moses created a bronze serpent, attached it to a pole, and told everyone who was bitten to look at it. All who did were immediately healed. (Read the full account in Numbers 21:4–9.)

The rabbis ask how it is possible that a metallic serpent could heal the nation of Israel? They explain that it served as a symbol so that when Moses raised it up to the sky, the people remembered to pray to God. The prayer itself healed the people, not the metallic serpent. For centuries, the rabbis explained, the bronze snake served as the symbol and memorial to the need for constant prayer to God.

At the time of Hezekiah, however, the symbol became more important than what it symbolized — it became the object of worship, rather than as a reminder to worship. And that is the essence of idolatry. The people forgot that it served as a physical reminder to look toward God and began to worship the snake itself; so therefore, Hezekiah was justified to destroy it.

We can learn an important lesson about the value of physical religious objects from this story. Though we treat them with holiness, we must remember that they are always symbols that guide us toward the Divine, never objects of worship in and of themselves.

http://www.holylandmoments.org/devotionals/the-danger-of-symbols


A great tidal wave is bearing up the stranded ship, until she floats above the bar without a straining timber or struggling seaman, instead of the ineffectual and toilsome efforts of the struggling crew and the strain of the engines, which had tried in vain to move her an inch until that heavenly impulse lifted her by its own attraction.

It is God‘s great law of gravitation lifting up, by the warm sunbeams, the mighty iceberg which a million men could not raise a single inch, but melts away before the rays and the warmth of the sunshine, and rises in clouds of evaporation to meet its embrace until that cold and heavy mass is floating in fleecy clouds of glory in the blue ocean of the sky.

How easy all this! How mighty! How simple! How divine! Beloved, have you come into the divine way of holiness! If you have, how your heart must swell with gratitude! If you have not, do you not long for it, and will you not unite in the prayer of the text that the very God of peace will sanctify you wholly?

http://devotionals.ochristian.com/a-b-simpson-devotional.shtml


Possessing An Eternal Perspective on Sickness.


Ezekiel 30:1-26

The LORD God proclaims:      I will bring an end to the hordes of Egypt     through the power of Babylon’s King Nebuchadrezzar. He and his people with him,      the most terrible of the nations,      will be brought in to destroy the land.      They will draw their swords against Egypt

and fill the land with the slain. (CEB)

 

Increasingly in our day, the Bible is under attack. Prominent atheists sell millions of books denouncing Scripture as unworthy of our attention, let alone our loyalty. For example, five years ago I had the “privilege” of debating Christopher Hitchens for three hours on the radio. We focused on many of the anti-biblical charges in his book, god is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything. In that book, Hitchens wrote, “The Bible may, indeed does, contain a warrant for trafficking in humans, for ethnic cleansing, for slavery, for bride-price, and for indiscriminate massacre, but we are not bound by any of it because it was put together by crude, uncultured human mammals.” (Hitchens never felt the need to mince his words.)

I don’t remember if Christopher Hitchens mentioned Ezekiel 30 in his denigration of the Bible, but he could have. This chapter proclaims the coming destruction of Egypt with violent imagery. Not only might this make us personally uncomfortable, but also it forces us to ask tough questions about the Bible. Does the violence in Scripture justify acts of violence today? In particular, given the growing strife between Israel and Egypt, does Ezekiel 30 throw gasoline on that fire?

No, not if we take Scripture seriously and read it responsibly. Ezekiel 30 and passages like it do indeed portray God’s judgment through violent imagery. But they do not provide a warrant for us to be violent, to take matters of divine judgment into our own hands. Ezekiel did not say to God’s people: “Egypt is evil. Go attack it.” Rather, he spoke of God’s own choice to judge Egypt, as well as God’s ironic decision to use Babylon as his instrument of judgment. It would be a sorry misuse of scripture to use Ezekiel 30 as justification for acts of violence today.

Moreover, as Christians, we read all of scripture through the lens of Jesus, who called us to love our enemies, who taught us to turn the other cheek, and who forgave even those who crucified him. However we sort out the implications of Jesus for our life today, and there are a wide variety of “sortings-out” in the Christian community, it’s clear that the way of Jesus is not the way of vengeance and violence. God will indeed exercise his righteous judgment, but the kingdom of God comes through followers of Jesus who are peacemakers and messengers of the good news of salvation.

QUESTIONS FOR FURTHER REFLECTION: Do you ever worry about violent passages in Scripture? What concerns you? How do you make sense of them in light of your faith?

PRAYER: Dear Lord, you are a God of justice. You stand above all peoples and nations, judging wrongdoing and exercising appropriate discipline. At times, you have chosen to use one nation to judge another, and that is your prerogative. But this does not mean that I have the right to do violence to my enemies, including the violence of words. You have called me to love my enemies, to turn the other cheek, to walk the second mile, and to forgive even as you forgave. Help me, Lord Jesus, to obey and imitate you. Teach me how to be a peacemaker in my workplace, my family, my church, and my community. Amen.

http://www.thehighcalling.org/reflection/does-violence-bible-justify-violence-today?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheHighCallingDailyReflections+%28Daily+Reflection+%26+Prayer%29

Everything Is Beautiful

Posted: April 25, 2012 in Our Daily Bread
Tags: , , , , , , ,

The beauty of the black lacy design against the pastel purple and orange background grabbed my attention. The intricacy of the fragile pattern led me to assume that it had been created by a skilled artist. As I looked more closely at the photo, however, I saw the artist admiring his work from a corner of the photo. The “artist” was a worm, and its work of art was a partially eaten leaf.

What made the image beautiful was not the destruction of the leaf but the light glowing through the holes. As I gazed at the photo, I began thinking about lives that have been eaten by the “worms” of sin. The effects are ravaging. Sin eats away at us as we suffer the consequences of our own bad choices or those of others. We are all its victims.

But the photo also reminded me of the hope we have in God. Through the prophet Joel, God said to Israel, “I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten” (Joel 2:25). And from Isaiah we learn that the Lord appointed him to “console those who mourn in Zion, to give them beauty for ashes” (Isa. 61:3).

Satan does everything he can to make us ugly, but the Light of the World can make us beautiful—despite Satan’s best efforts.

Sin ravages a fruitful life When it is not addressed; But God restores and makes us right Once sin has been confessed. —Sper
God doesn’t remove all of our imperfections, but He makes us beautiful by shining through them.

Spiritual Truth Is Spiritually Discerned

Surely God has that to say to the pure in heart which He cannot say to the man of sinful life. But what He has to say is not theological, it is spiritual; and right there lies the weight of my argument. Spiritual truths cannot be received in the ordinary way of nature. “The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned” (1 Cor. 2:14). So wrote the apostle Paul to the believers at Corinth. Our Lord referred to this kind of Spirit-enlightened knowledge many times. To Him it was the fruit of a divine illumination, not contrary to but altogether beyond mere intellectual light. The fourth Gospel is full of this idea; indeed the idea is so important to the understanding of John’s Gospel that anyone who denies it might as well give up trying to grasp our Lord’s teachings as given by the apostle John. And the same idea is found in John’s first epistle, making that epistle extremely difficult to understand but also making it one of the most beautiful and rewarding of all the epistles of the New Testament when its teachings are spiritually discerned. The necessity for spiritual illumination before we can grasp spiritual truths is taught throughout the entire New Testament and is altogether in accord with the teachings of the Psalms, the Proverbs and the Prophets. The Old Testament Apocrypha agrees with the Scriptures here, and while the Apocryphal books are not to be received as divinely inspired, they are useful as showing how the best minds of ancient Israel thought about this matter of divine truth and how it is received into the human heart.

http://www.cmalliance.org/devotions/tozer?id=530