Saturday, November 30, 2019

#2862 (11/30) PRO-LIFE SAT: "Pro-Life Nations Reject UN’s Cultural Colonialism on Abortion, Population Control"

"PRO-LIFE NATIONS REJECT UN'S CULTURAL COLONIALISM ON ABORTION, POPULATION CONTROL"Grace Melton / November 19, 2019 / https://www.dailysignal.com/2019/11/19/pro-life-nations-reject-uns-cultural-colonialism-on-abortion-population-control/ [NOTE: Another pro-life story ignored by the mainstream media.}
     Pro-life and pro-family activists hold a prayer rally Nov. 14 organized by CitizenGo to counter what they consider an abortion agenda at the International Conference on Population and Development in Nairobi, Kenya. (Photo: Simon Maina/AFP/Getty Images)

   Many Africans think that international efforts to promote abortion are a prime example of cultural colonialism.

Case in point: The just-concluded United Nations Population Fund’s Nairobi Summit to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the International Conference on Population and Development. Rather than staying true to the outcome of the 1994 conference, this summit served to showcase the U.N.’s promotion of abortion, contraception, and controversial comprehensive sexuality education. But member states from the developing world were not all on board.

   At a press conference, a prominent member of Kenya’s Parliament, Chrisantus Wamalwa, reminded attendees that the Kenyan Constitution requires that “every Kenyan has a right to life, and life begins at conception.” Another member of Kenya’s Parliament, Jennifer Shamalla, said that she and her colleagues were “deeply concerned” about the U.N.’s promotion of abortion under the banner of population and development policy.

   Yet, nearly all of the 85 sessions that took place during the Nairobi Summit advocated in one way or another for abortion and contraceptives. Thousands of abortion advocates, development specialists, and U.N. bureaucrats descended upon Kenya to attend the summit. It was ostensibly organized to improve health and education outcomes, particularly for women and children, based on promises made at the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development.

  But the U.N. Population Fund’s Nairobi Summit circumvented the proper U.N. process of negotiation and consensus-building by member states and instead became a vehicle for international abortion advocacy.

  Pro-life governments, including that of the U.S., and pro-life nongovernmental organizations, such as The Heritage Foundation, pushed back on the U.N.’s well-funded attempt to co-opt women’s empowerment by foisting a radical agenda on the developing world.
 The official U.S. commitment statement at the summit identified how the U.S. is promoting women’s empowerment and health throughout the world. U.S. Ambassador Kyle McCarter penned an opinion piece that ran in several Kenyan newspapers, expressing sentiments shared by many in Kenya that the challenges faced by women, girls, and families require solutions that do not come at the expense of the family and the unborn.
  The U.S. also released a joint statement with Belarus, Brazil, Egypt, Haiti, Hungary, Libya, Poland, Saint Lucia, Senegal, and Uganda, in which they articulated their strong commitment to improving women’s health while respecting the importance of life, family, and children.That statement categorically stated that “there is no international right to abortion,” and as the week went on, more countries decided to speak up in opposition to the Nairobi Summit’s priorities and tactics.
  The Kenyan Christian Professionals Forum, in cooperation with the Archdiocese of Nairobi, organized a conference called “Pro-life and Family Friendly Side Events to ICPD25.” It attracted representatives of many pro-life, pro-family, and faith-based groups from Africa, Europe, and the U.S., including those who were denied admission to the Nairobi Summit by the U.N.
  During the conference, The Heritage Foundation and other pro-life organizations facilitated a high-level intergovernmental panel, “Protecting Life in Global Health Policies,” which featured representatives of the U.S., Brazil, Hungary, Poland, Kenya, and the Holy See.

   Abortion advocates at the summit, including the leaders of International Planned Parenthood Federation and Marie Stopes International, as well as U.N. officials, made derisive comments about pro-life resistance to their efforts. Sadly, they have also succeeded in attaching purse strings to the U.N.’s development agenda. The summit organizers boast of having raised commitments of $1 billion from Austria, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the European Commission, as well as some $8 billion in pledges from the private sector. That places African leaders in the unenviable position of choosing between much-needed development assistance and upholding their people’s values.

   The international community demonstrated its monomaniacal focus on abortion when the director general of International Planned Parenthood Federation, Alvaro Bermejo, announced its commitments to the summit to thunderous applause.Those commitments included influencing 20 countries to change their laws on abortion, persuading 42 countries to adopt comprehensive sexuality education curriculums, and ensuring that at least six countries change their laws concerning sexual orientation and gender identity.

  The dismay of African nations and other pro-life countries is certainly warranted. The summit purported to address a broader range of issues important to women and girls, such as ending child marriage and female genital mutilation, fighting gender-based violence, and improving maternal health.
   But, in reality, the summit’s speakers’ list, highlighted commitments, and honorees illustrated the international community’s laserlike focus on abortion and population control in spite of the strong cultural, moral, and religious objections of many of those countries who are supposed to be the beneficiaries of the U.N.’s largesse.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

Grace Melton is The Heritage Foundation's associate for social issues at the United Nations. She is part of the think tank's DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society.

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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | SECRET PROJECTS - Sometimes the work Open Doors does is so risky we can’t speak about the details—to protect the believers involved and sometimes the work itself. This month as you join us in prayer, try to imagine being a Christian in an area so dangerous that things like owning a Bible, attending a Bible study or participating in a home church must be done in absolute secrecy. 

November 30 | SYRIA  Pray for unity between Syrian churches. The need for Christian congregations and denominations to work together for positive changes is urgent and great

*Names changed to protect identities

Friday, November 29, 2019

#2861 (11/29) "From Black Friday to Advent - Have A Merry (Offline) Christmas"

"FROM BLACK FRIDAY TO ADVENT - HAVE A MERRRY (OFFLINE) CHRISTMAS"by John Stonestreet and Maria Baer, Breakpoint.org,November 29, 2019; http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/11/breakpoint-from-black-friday-to-advent/
     Black Friday has certainly given America’s cultural reputation a black eye. The day after we pause to give thanks as a nation for God’s provisions, we trample security guards for iPhones and flat-screen televisions. It’s now an annual tradition: America’s big-box stores drop their prices and in response, shoppers go berserk. News stations everywhere lead with the requisite embarrassing video footage, showing shoppers crawling over each other, throwing elbows and curse words. Checkout lines at Walmarts and Best Buys nation-wide become dangerous places to be or to work. It’s not a good look. Of course, online Black Friday sales have already been going on for a month now, which allows us to indulge our consumerist tendencies without physical violence. I guess that’s an improvement…

   Dennis Prager once told me on a panel that if this is America’s biggest problem – scuffling with each other in a rush to buy presents for our loved ones – we could do a lot worse. I told him that I was not convinced these shoppers were altruistically buying for others, but still, I take his point. There certainly needs to be room for frivolity at Christmas time.

   All of this should remind us of the idols vying for our attention this Christmas season. Certainly there is the idol of stuff, but, looking through social media, there is also the idol of other people’s perceptions. Pinterest, Instagram, and Facebook is full of this idol, and we allow ourselves to feel the pressure. All those pictures of a perfectly decorated home… of perfectly well-behaved and perfectly matching children, complete with color, theme, and pattern-coordinating attire. Matching Christmas pajamas, shown off with a family lip-sync.

   All the Pinterest-worthy décor and Instagram-worthy celebration videos reveal a different kind of materialism – a materialism of experience. And it has become another distraction in a season meant for holy reflection.

   Throughout church history, the days leading up to Christmas celebrations were to be a time of fasting. Many liturgically-oriented Christians see Advent as a bookend to Lent, the liturgical season of fasting and prayer that occurs in the forty days before Easter. For Christians, Advent is a time to reflect on Jesus’ first incarnation and prepare for his second coming. The Bible doesn’t prescribe this outright, of course, but Advent does provide us with a different calendar to go by, something especially helpful today, in our hurried cultural moment.

   Unfortunately, for many of us, Black Friday settles into a rushed and hurried holiday-season rhythm. And for many, along with the chaos comes the melancholy. It’s a frustrating paradox: Feeling sad during what’s supposed to be the most wonderful time of the year.

  Jesus offers some insight in the Gospel of Matthew, when He calls the weary and burdened to come to Him. “I will give you rest,” He said. “For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” Obviously, Jesus isn’t saying that to follow Him means having an easy or comfortable life. After all, His own earthly life wasn’t easy or comfortable in any sense. When He says His “yoke is easy,” I think at least part of what he’s talking about is simplicity.

   Maybe our Christmastime melancholy is the byproduct of all the pressure to have a good time… and all the options we have in order to have a good time… and all the pressure we face to prove to others on social media that we’ve had a good time. After all, our culture implicitly convinces us, you’ll only know you’re having a wonderful, valuable life if you follow every Pinterest recipe, and constantly upload joyful moments to Instagram and Facebook, and get lots of likes.

   We’re afraid our lives won’t be full, but neglect that which will fill us: reflecting on holy things, like Mary’s obedience and Jesus’ sacrifice; embracing ordinary beauty like extra time with family and special traditions.

   By all means, enjoy the frivolity. But don’t lose the season curating online versions of holiday experiences, or by comparing your curated memories with theirs. Celebrate Jesus’ birth. Give gifts freely. Eat some extra calories.Have a Merry Christmas – just don’t feel the pressure to put it on Instagram.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | SECRET PROJECTS - Sometimes the work Open Doors does is so risky we can’t speak about the details—to protect the believers involved and sometimes the work itself. This month as you join us in prayer, try to imagine being a Christian in an area so dangerous that things like owning a Bible, attending a Bible study or participating in a home church must be done in absolute secrecy. 
November 29 | IRAQ - Pray with two elderly Christian women who suffered a horrible attack in their home. Armed assailants beat them and looted their home. Please pray for protection for those who have returned to the Nineveh Plain
*Names changed to protect identities

Thursday, November 28, 2019

#2860 (11/28) HAPPY THANKSGIVING! - "Gratitude for Everyday Miracles - The Blessings of Thanksgiving for All Concerned"

"GRATITUDE FOR EVERYDAY MIRACLES - THE BLESSINGS OF THANKSGIVING FOR ALL CONCERNED"by Stan Guthrie, Breakpoint.org, November 21, 2019; http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/11/thanksgiving-for-everyday-miracles/
     Miracles happen every single day in our universe, and you don’t have to be a Christian to believe in them—and to be thankful.

   Ponder the planet on which you live and move and have your being. It is situated at a “just right” distance from a slow-burning yellow orb dropped into the outskirts of an unimaginably massive, whirling collection of stars known as the Milky Way galaxy. Our solar system features a giant planet named Jupiter that protects Earth’s oxygen-and-nitrogen-swaddled surface from being bombarded with space debris. Without these and two hundred more finely tuned parameters, life would not exist here, and neither would you.

   The odds for the universe itself are even longer. According to Eric Metaxas, “astrophysicists now know that the values of the four fundamental forces—gravity, the electromagnetic force, and the ‘strong’ and ‘weak’ nuclear forces—were determined less than one millionth of a second after the big bang. Alter any one value and the universe could not exist. For instance, if the ratio between the nuclear strong force and the electromagnetic force had been off by the tiniest fraction of the tiniest fraction—by even one part in 100,000,000,000,000,000—then no stars could have ever formed at all.”

   G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936) didn’t know the physics of all this, but he did know the proper response to everyday miracles. “Children are grateful when Santa Claus puts in their stockings gifts of toys or sweets,” he said in “Orthodoxy.” “Could I not be grateful to Santa Claus when he put in my stockings the gift of two miraculous legs? We thank people for birthday presents of cigars and slippers. Can I thank no one for the birthday present of birth?” Chesterton also wryly observed, “The worst moment for an atheist is when he is really thankful and has no one to thank.”

   “Gratitude,” Psychology Today says, “is an emotion expressing appreciation for what one has. It is a recognition of value independent of monetary worth. Spontaneously generated from within, it is an affirmation of goodness.” Or as Robert Emmons of the University of California-Davis says, “Gratefulness is a knowing awareness that we are the recipients of goodness.

   We are all the recipients of goodness—and in our best moments, we know it. And expressing gratitude is not a chore to be checked off our to-do lists but is an undeniable privilege that provides benefits for ourselves and those around us.
     According to Psychology Today, gratitude makes you happier and promotes physical and mental well-being. This is true even for people with mental health problems. It also helps us fight the negative self-talk that comes so easily and can led to depression. “Studies show that practicing gratitude curbs the use of words expressing negative emotions,” the magazine says, “and shifts inner attention away from such negative emotions as resentment and envy, minimizing the possibility of ruminating over them.”

   While cable news and social media hangouts such as Twitter might lead you to believe that most Americans are angry, bitter, or entitled, Pew Research indicates that we are a grateful bunch, by and large. More than three-fourths of us nationwide “feel a strong sense of gratitude at least once a week.” Those who fall under the overly-broad category of “Christian” in the survey (Protestant, Catholic, Orthodox, Mormon, and Jehovah’s Witnesses) report that they feel this way the most, at 82 percent overall (including 87 percent of evangelicals, just behind LDS and JW adherents).
   Followers of “Non-Christian Faiths” (Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, and Hindu), meanwhile, are markedly less likely to experience this level of gratitude, at 73 percent overall. Bringing up the rear are “Unaffiliated” people (atheists, agnostics, and “nothing in particular”), at 67 percent overall. Still, most of us are grateful at least some of the time.

   And that assuredly is a good thing in a world seemingly spinning out of control. Expressions of gratitude, such as thank-you notes, help us and others. “It is well known,” write Sanjiv Chopra and Gina Vild, “that random acts of kindness percolate into the lives of others and incentivize them to replicate the goodwill many times over. Research shows that the recipient of a kind deed is unconsciously motivated to pay it forward as many as five times.”

   It’s no wonder then that Scripture enjoins followers of Christ, who modeled a life of thankfulness, to a life of gratitude. As 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 says, “Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.”

   Christians know, of course, that the ultimate aim of gratitude is not self-improvement, relief from depression, or a spur to good deeds—though these are undeniable and happy byproducts! It is to honor the One who calls all the stars by name and to whom all honor is due. If we can be grateful for a sunrise, a caress, a job, our health, a mountain vista, a friend—can we not be grateful to Him who gives us every good and perfect gift?

   Even more, we must be grateful because, through Christ’s atoning sacrifice and resurrection, we have been rescued, dead and undeserving in our trespasses and sins, and brought securely into the kingdom of light and adopted into the family of a thrice-holy and omnipotent God, who knows us and loves us anyway. We are not merely beggars telling other beggars where to find bread; we are criminals telling other criminals where to find pardon. This is a miracle of grace, and one worthy of thanks, today and every other day, in this world and the next.


[italics and colored emphasis mine]

   Stan Guthrie is author of the just-released book Victorious: Corrie ten Boom and The Hiding Place, available from Paraclete Press.
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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | SECRET PROJECTS - Sometimes the work Open Doors does is so risky we can’t speak about the details—to protect the believers involved and sometimes the work itself. This month as you join us in prayer, try to imagine being a Christian in an area so dangerous that things like owning a Bible, attending a Bible study or participating in a home church must be done in absolute secrecy. 
 November 28 | SYRIA - Thank God for everything the Open Doors team is doing in Syria. Pray for team members to grow in strength, faith and wisdom and for vacancies on the team to be filled quickly. 
*Names changed to protect identities

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

#2859 (11/27) "Talking Worldview at Thanksgiving -Tips for Good Conversations"


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"TALKING WORLDVIEW AT THANKSGIVING - TIPS TO GOOD CONVERSATIONS" by John Stonestreet and  G. Shane Morris, Breakpoint.org, November 27, 2019; http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/11/talking-turkey-at-thanksgiving-2/[AS I SEE IT; Here are some great suggestions of what to ask when awkward questions come up at your Thanksgiving table. The key to it all may be your being willing TO LISTEN to the other person BEFORE putting forward your own thoughts. Good conversatons need not be avoided from any Thanksgiving if we are able to engage with others  in a civil mannter.- Stan]
     A new holiday trend, as evidenced by Google searches, is “Friendsgiving.” Instead of having to talk politics or religion with that opinionated parent, aunt, or uncle over Thanksgiving dinner, some folks – especially younger adults – are choosing friends over family on Turkey Day. After all, why risk an argument that will ruin the day for everyone?

   Of course, there is nothing wrong with celebrating Thanksgiving with friends, but we shouldn’t shy away from conversations about things that matter, even if the topics are super-controversial—like, oh, I don’t know, same-sex “marriage,” the impeachment hearings, immigration, or the Dallas Cowboys.

   There are two keys to civil, interesting, and productive conversations. First, we need to be confident in our beliefs. If we are, we are far less likely to be threatened by opinions and ideas we know aren’t true. Second, we need to love our enemies. And since we aren’t facing any hostile foreign invasions this holiday season, that means our ideological enemies. Remember that Jesus loves even those we find intolerable, so we must decide to treat them with respect.

   And now, here’s a strategy for those tough conversations. Ask good questions. Questions turn monologues into dialogues, surface-level discussions into something deeper, and they might even open a closed mind or two. Here are six questions I’ve found extremely helpful in any conversation:

   First, What do you mean by that? The battle of ideas is always the battle over the definition of words. Thus, it’s vital in any conversation to clarify the terms being used. For example, a very important thing to clarify about whether Christians should support same-sex marriage is the definition of marriage. If the topic comes up, stop and ask, “Hold on, before we go too far into what kind of unions should be considered marriage, could you tell me what you mean by marriage?” Often, when it comes to these crucial issues, we’re using the same vocabulary as those with whom we disagree, but we’re not using the same dictionary.

   Here’s a second question: How do you know that is true? Too often, assertions are mistaken for arguments. There’s a vast difference between the two. An assertion is a definitive statement made about the nature of reality. An argument is presented to back up an assertion. By asking “How do you know that’s true?” you’ll move the conversation beyond two people merely asserting what they believe to why those assertions should be taken seriously.
   Of course, if you ask someone making an assertion this question, you’re going to have to be ready to receive that same question when you make an assertion. And that’s okay – Christians have good reasons for our faith that we can share. Our moral convictions make sense, and we should be ready to make the case for them whenever we get the chance.

   Here’s a third question: Where did you get this information? Once arguments are offered, it’s important to ensure the arguments are valid. For example, news reports love to shout that same-sex parents are better parents than straight couples—a talking point based on very limited studies, while plenty of other studies suggest the exact opposite.

   The fourth question: How did you come to this conclusion? Behind the person you are talking with and his/her convictions, there is always a story, maybe even a painful one. If you know where someone is coming from, it can help explain why they don’t find your views plausible. Plus, it’ll help you remember (see the second key above) that the person you’re talking with is a real, image-of-God bearing person.

   Two final questions: What if you’re wrong? and What if you’re right? Look, ideas have consequences. These questions help us follow ideas to their conclusions.

   Oh . . . and to get off to a great start tomorrow at the dinner table, here’s a seventh question, and one of the most important you can ask: For what are you thankful? It’s an easy transition from that question to “to whom are you thankful?”

From all of us at the Colson Center, Happy Thanksgiving. [This commentary first aired in November 2016.]

[itaics and colored emphasis mine]
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"WHAT WOULD YOU SAY?" VIDEO SERIESAnswers to the toughest worldview questions Christians face - https://whatwouldyousay.org/


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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | SECRET PROJECTS - Sometimes the work Open Doors does is so risky we can’t speak about the details—to protect the believers involved and sometimes the work itself. This month as you join us in prayer, try to imagine being a Christian in an area so dangerous that things like owning a Bible, attending a Bible study or participating in a home church must be done in absolute secrecy. 
November 27 | IRAQ - Our local ministry partners have shared health statistics, indicating that many young people are fighting cancer. Because of the difficult economic situation and the high price of cancer treatment, patients quickly feel depressed and hopeless.
*Names changed to protect identities

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

#2858 (11/26) "In Charts, How ‘Medicare for All’ Would Make Most Families Poorer"

"IN CHARTS, HOW 'MEDICARE FOR ALL' WOULD MAKE MOST FAMILIES POORER" - Marie Fishpaw / Jamie Hall / @Mr_Jamie_B_Hall / November 19, 2019 / https://www.dailysignal.com/2019/11/19/in-charts-how-medicare-for-all-would-make-most-families-poorer/
"Medicare for All" would require an additional tax of 21.2 cents on every dollar that every American earns.

      Under “Medicare for All,” three quarters of Americans would be worse off financially, according to new research from The Heritage Foundation. Here’s the bottom line: Most Americans, even many of those not making much right now, would pay more in new taxes than they would save from no longer paying for private health care.  

   That is the reality—but it’s not the story Medicare for All advocates are telling. Sen. Bernie Sanders promises most people will be better off with Medicare for All, and that’s why it’s worth it to make such a massive change to our health care system. The plan would abolish private coverage and force everyone onto a government-run plan. “Are people going to pay more in taxes?” Sanders asked at a Fox News town hall in April. “Yes. But at the end of the day, the overwhelming majority of people are going to end up paying less for health care because they aren’t paying premiums, co-payments, or deductibles.”

   Heritage Foundation scholars Ed Haislmaier and one of us, Jamie Hall, took a hard look at this claim, and found that the politicians are promising more than they can deliver. In fact, it turns out Medicare for All would cost some working families more than their budget for electricity; others, their gasoline budget; and others, even more than their food budgetAs a result, 73.5% of Americans will have less money in their pockets under Medicare for All. The cost of the new taxes they have to pay will be more than what they save on health care costs.
   Households that receive employer-sponsored coverage would be particularly hard hit. Their income after taxes would shrink by an average of $10,554, and 87% of them would be financially worse off.Even lower-income working families, which currently get health care through government programs like Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, would be worse off.  Their average household income after taxes would decline by $5,592 per year. That’s because fully paying for these programs requires taxes to go up—a lot.  

   Those pushing for Medicare for All have left out some essential details. No legislative sponsor of this plan has offered a way to fully pay for its promises. Instead, Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., have put out plans that don’t fully pay for what they’ve promised to provide, and they dramatically overestimate the revenue that new taxes on the rich could raise. Our study uses the same means to pay for government health care as basically every other developed country uses: payroll taxes.

We ran the numbers and found that Medicare for All would require an additional tax of 21.2 cents on every dollar that every American earns. (Right now, most workers and their employers pay 15.3 cents on the dollar in payroll taxes.)
   Adding that on top of other existing taxes would mean the average American would see almost half their income taken by the government. In real life, we know that if Americans faced that kind of tax increase, some would cut back on work hours or quit working altogether. But we decided not to include that speculation in our study. Instead, we assumed that all Americans would continue to work just as much as beforehand, while their employers convert current health insurance spending into additional taxable wages.

   Under these conditions, here’s how several sample families would fare with Medicare for All. 

Olivia Williams: an unmarried mother of two earning $31,000 a year. She would be worse off by $1,547. Under Medicare for All, Olivia would lose almost exactly the amount she spends on electricity every year. Today, she gets her health coverage through her job, and her children get their coverage through the Child Health Insurance Program. Under Medicare for All, her current health costs go away—but she’ll still lose $1,547, or 5.3%, of her disposable income.
The Suarezes: a median-income married couple earning about $98,000, with two kids and employer health benefits. They would be worse off by $9,201. 

Today, the Suarezes get their health coverage from dad’s employer. Under Medicare for All, their health costs go away, but they’d still lose $9,021, or 13.3%, of their disposable income—about as much as they spend on food today. 
   The Joneses: a lower-middle-income married couple earning nearly $50,000, with two kids and employer health benefits. They would be $1,619 worse off. Today, the Joneses get health coverage through mom’s job. Under Medicare for All, their health costs would go away, but they would still lose $1,619, or 4.4%, in disposable income. That’s about as much as they spend today on gasoline.
   John Johnson: a median-income unmarried man without dependents. He would be $3,542 worse off.  Today, John earns about $41,000 and gets health coverage through his job. Under Medicare for All, his health costs would go away, but he’ll still lose $3,542, or 13%, of his disposable income. That’s about as much as he spends today on car insurance and maintenance.
Less Money for Most People
   Medicare for All would make most Americans worse off financially, not better. What’s more, Americans would be getting a lower quality product, based on what we’ve seen in other countries with government-run health care. For example, wait times to receive care in Canada are longer than those in the U.S., and in Britain, morale among doctors is often low, since they face bureaucratic hurdles and larger workloads.

   However, the status quo in America is not the solution, either. Costs here are too high and choices are too few—and too many Americans feel that special interests and big government benefit from the current system, rather than them. Congress should work toward real solutions that address these concerns at their root causes. But Medicare for All won’t accomplish that, no matter what its advocates say. It needs to come off the table.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

Marie Fishpaw is director of domestic policy studies at The Heritage Foundation's Institute for Family, Community, and Opportunity. Jamie Hall is a senior policy analyst in empirical studies at The Heritage Foundation.

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"Doctor-Turned-Lawmaker Prescribes How to Improve Health Care" - Rachel del G"uidice / @LRacheldG / November 20, 2019 / https://www.dailysignal.com/2019/11/20/doctor-turned-lawmaker-discusses-how-to-improve-health-care/

---------------------------------------


PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | SECRET PROJECTS - Sometimes the work Open Doors does is so risky we can’t speak about the details—to protect the believers involved and sometimes the work itself. This month as you join us in prayer, try to imagine being a Christian in an area so dangerous that things like owning a Bible, attending a Bible study or participating in a home church must be done in absolute secrecy. 
November 26 | NIGERIA - Praise God for The Shalom Center, Open Doors’ long-awaited trauma center in Nigeria. Pray specifically with Rauta, the center’s hired staff counselor
*Names changed to protect identities

Monday, November 25, 2019

#2857 (11/25) "Adam and Eve Are Possible - A Second Bite at the Genetic Apple"

"ADAM AND EVE ARE POSSIBLE - A SECOND BITE AT THE GENETIC APPLE" - by John Stonestreet and G. Shane Morris, Breakpoint.org, November 18, 2019; http://www.breakpoint.org/2019/11/breakpoint-adam-and-eve-are-possible/


     An oft-repeated claim by skeptics is that geneticists have disproved the possibility of Adam and Eve. Because existing human genetic diversity is so great, there can be no original couple from whom all people are descended. Or, that’s what we’re told.

   Biology professor and author Dennis Venema summarizes this argument in his book, “Adam and the Genome.” In it, he claims that “every genetic analysis estimating ancestral population sizes has agreed that we descend from a population of thousands, not a single ancestral couple.”
Some Christian authors have reacted to this apparent consensus by proposing new ways of reading Genesis that make Adam and Eve either mythological or not really our first parents. The goal has been to accommodate theology and the Bible to what we’re told is “settled science.”

   But what if the science on Adam and Eve isn’t so settled? That’s the argument of a new paper by Discovery Institute senior fellow and developmental biologist Ann Gauger and Swedish mathematician Ola Hössjer, recently published in the journal, “BIO-Complexity.” In order to test whether it really is impossible to account for modern variation in human beings by starting with just two people, these researchers did something that, incredibly, no one had tried before: They started with just two people, and ran the numbers. Using accepted population growth and mutation rates, Gauger and Hössjer programmed a computer to start with a genetic Adam and Eve and replicate the known distribution of diversity in today’s human population. Their results, to put it simply, fly in the face of the much-touted consensus.

   According to their model, a couple who shared some genetic markers could generate all the diversity we see today within about 2 million years—which Venema and others claim is impossible. However, given two people who share no genetic markers—in other words, two people who weren’t born but were created with four unique sets of chromosomes—that time frame drops to a few hundred thousand, not millions, of years.

   Writing at Evolution News, Gauger points out that further tweaks in the rates of population growth, structure, mortality, birth, and mutation could place that theoretical first couple even more recently in history. In any case, the authors are careful to note that the point of their paper was not to date Adam and Eve, or even to prove from a genetic standpoint that they existed. Rather, they just wanted to demonstrate—contrary to the oft-repeated claim—that it is possible for all human beings to have descended from an original pair.

   Of course, much more work remains to be done, but the paper has served to clarify two things.
   First, scientists’ assumptions about the past can change their results. Gauger explains that once hurdles in computing power were overcome, this experiment was an obvious way to test existing dogma on human origins. But in her words, no one bothered because “They believed that starting from two was useless.” In fact, many researchers failed to use standard methods for modeling population genetics because of their baked-in evolutionary assumptions. For instance, one popular tool relies on comparisons between human and chimpanzee DNA to track mutations—something Gauger points out is useless if we don’t share a common ancestor with chimps.

   Second, and more importantly, this paper hints at how tentative so-called “settled science” can be. Christians who rush to revise their understanding of characters like Adam and Eve to make way for the latest consensus should think more about the theological consensus they’re tinkering with, like the fall, the image of God, original sin, and creation. They should also consider all the un-tinkering they may have to do one day when that scientific consensus changes.

 [italics and colored emphasis mine]

RESOURCES
"New BIO-Complexity Paper: We Could Have Come from Two"Ann Gauger Evolution News October 21, 2019;https://evolutionnews.org/2019/10/new-bio-complexity-paper-we-could-have-come-from-two
"From Ann Gauger and Ola Hössjer, a New Standard for the Science of a “First Couple” David Klinghoffer  Evolution News October 29, 2019; https://evolutionnews.org/2019/10/from-ann-gauger-and-ola-hossjer-a-new-standard-for-the-science-of-a-first-couple/
Discovery Institute - https://www.discovery.org/

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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | SECRET PROJECTS - Sometimes the work Open Doors does is so risky we can’t speak about the details—to protect the believers involved and sometimes the work itself. This month as you join us in prayer, try to imagine being a Christian in an area so dangerous that things like owning a Bible, attending a Bible study or participating in a home church must be done in absolute secrecy. 
November 25 | NIGER - Pray for a Christian woman in the city of Diffa who was kidnapped by Boko Haram. She was later released. Pray for her as she copes with her trauma in an area that has been repeatedly attacked. 
*Names changed to protect identities

Sunday, November 24, 2019

#2856 (11/24) SUNDAY SPECIAL: "Delivering the Male from Cultural Confusion"

"DELIVERING THE MALE FROM CULTURAL CONFUSION" - By Tony Perkins. Washington Updte, November 21, 2019; https://www.frcaction.org/updatearticle/20191121/delivering-male [AS I SEE IT: Our culture today acts as though things have not improved for women at all in the past hundred years. Few take note that around half of the heads of companies are now women as are the graduates of most universities. Even the equal pay mantra neglects to consider how many factors are involved in companies choosing to pay women what amounts to a little less than men. Despite what most feminists are spewing, women are not being oppressed.  But even as women continue to exalted in this country (I heard one woman shout that "The future belongs to women!"), I have wondered often if in promoting one sex over the other, our cultural elites realize they are in fact opprssing the opposite sex! Men have become intimidated into confusion as it's now politically incorrect to promote themselves. As this article points out, confused men do not a great society make. It in fact does great damage to it. It's time someone instead shouts "Enough - of all this lunacy that one sex is to be uplifted over another!" As this article points out, the very survival of our society may itself be at stake otherwise.  P.S. - Don't think this confusion has infected men in God's Church?; don;'t be surprised!- Stan]
, i
     If the ACLU really wanted to celebrate International Men's Day, maybe someone ought to explain to them what a man is. They certainly don't know. In a tweet that lit up social media, one of the country's "premier" liberal groups insisted, "There's no one way to be a man. Men who get their periods are men. Men who get pregnant and give birth are men." It's a good thing my wife never knew that. We have five kids. She'd have probably asked me to spend nine months carrying one or two of them around.

   Seriously though, if you want a picture of the gender insanity that's taken hold of this country, this is it. At least the backlash was fierce, proving that the ACLU's wacky views aren't exactly mainstream. Even the reaction from some of their own crowd was intense. Carol Sundahl, a liberal, was furious at the suggestion. "I, a woman and a lesbian, have been an ACLU member since 1989. No more. Men do not menstruate, men do not give birth. Women do both. Girls and women are females." Others tweeted back, "Open a biology textbook." One woman asked if this meant "everyone is a man?"

   On Wednesday's "Washington Watch," I asked FRC's Lt. General Jerry Boykin (Ret.) what he thought of the post. "It's lunacy," General Boykin insisted. "These people are, I think, so far out there drinking their own bath water, that they don't have a clue what reality really is. It's about feelings [to them] and not about facts." In a lot of ways, he said, it really underscores why FRC launched a new series of men's conferences.

   "Masculinity -- biblical masculinity -- is under assault," General went on. "It has been… over the last few decades, but it's intensified. It's intensified to where now International Men's Day becomes a platform for spewing forth this transgender nonsense. [So what FRC] is doing is very countercultural." But, based on these developments, necessary.

   "Families are falling apart because men are suffering. Men are hurting. It's not just that they're walking away from their families and not being the fathers that they're meant to be, but they're tied up with so many distractions. And what we've discovered… is that men are just waiting to unload that to get rid of the baggage. And obviously, porn is one of the leading distractions of men. But it's not just that, it's computer games and extramarital affairs and all that kind of thing with men…. So we're coming at [all of this] from a biblical perspective."

   FRC is about to release a book called Man to Man: Rediscovering Masculinity in a Confused World, but it's not "preachy," as General pointed out. And neither are our conferences. This is real men talking to real men. And we're getting a great response.

   FRC's Scott Hurley, who was at our Ohio event, explained how moved he was watching fathers and sons come forward together -- some crying, some accepting Christ for the first time, some asking for prayer, others rededicating their lives. All of them ready to become warriors again. That doesn't mean walking around with a baseball bat, General said, or AR-15s. "I'm talking about having a cause that you're willing to sacrifice for." It means being a defender, a protector standing for those things that are worth defending. And the term "warrior" doesn't necessarily mean something physical. In fact, where we're challenging men most is in the spiritual realm.

   "Our adversary is like a roaring lion, seeking whom he might devour. It's very clear," the General explained, "that we're in a spiritual battle when we come into a relationship with Jesus Christ, where our spiritual battle. And you better learn how to put that armor on. You better learn how to stand in the battle, stand toe to toe with the enemy."

   If you'd like to join us and Stand Courageous at one of our upcoming events, click over to the website and check out the dates and cities near you. It will be a transformative time, I guarantee you. [https://www.standcourageous.com/]

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

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PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Monthly Focus | SECRET PROJECTS - Sometimes the work Open Doors does is so risky we can’t speak about the details—to protect the believers involved and sometimes the work itself. This month as you join us in prayer, try to imagine being a Christian in an area so dangerous that things like owning a Bible, attending a Bible study or participating in a home church must be done in absolute secrecy. 
November 24 | NEPAL - Pray for Sashita,* whose husband left her and their children when she became a Christian. Thank God for Open Doors partners who provided her a buffalo and a calf. She’s able to sell the milk to care for her family.
*Names changed to protect identities