Thursday, December 31, 2020

#3241 (12/31) "A Better 2021?"

 "A BETTER 2021?" - Cal Thomas / @CalThomas / December 31, 2020 / https://www.dailysignal.com/2020/12/31/a-better-2021/

     People walk past a display of glasses marking the upcoming 2021 new year on 6th Avenue Dec. 8, 2020, in New York City. (Photo: Gary Hershorn/Getty Images)

     I don’t like making predictions for a new year because they are just guesses and like palm readers, fortune-tellers, and “experts,” guesses are often wrong. The point was proved last year when I predicted Donald Trump’s reelection and could not foresee the COVID-19 virus, as few did, or its impact on the economy and our optimistic spirit.

   In a recent Wall Street Journal article, author Bob Greene recalled the 75th anniversary of the film “Meet Me in St. Louis,” in which Judy Garland sings “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.” The lyric contains the optimistic lines “someday soon we all will be together” and “faithful friends who are dear to us will be near to us once more.” After more than four years of World War II, that was a hopeful dream on which the country was asked to go ahead and “hang a shining star” on their Christmas trees.

   Is that optimism of generations past valid for our immediate future as we witness the country being torn apart by divisiveness? I am not sure. One line of that lyric, which Greene did not mention, is: “Here we are as in olden days, happy golden days of yore.” I’m afraid we will not return to those days during which self-control, personal responsibility, and living within one’s means were the norm and taught in our schools and mostly modeled by culture, including Hollywood films and the imminent influence of television. Those golden days are not only gone, they are largely forgotten.

   The national debt, an affront to previous generations, including Republican politicians, grows and is approaching $28 trillion. Former Vice President Joe Biden wants to spend more. No one is calling for an audit and an overhaul of unnecessary spending and failed programs. We are the divided states of America, no longer “under God,” but under suspicion of each other.

   It has gotten bad. Before Christmas, The Washington Post featured a nearly full-page cartoon on its op-ed page depicting certain Republicans as rats. The Post singled out Republican state legislators, state attorneys general, and others who sought to overturn the outcome of the November election. This reminded me of the dehumanization of Jews that led to the Holocaust.One of the “rats” was named Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., a member of the House GOP leadership. On June 14, 2017, Scalise and four other people were shot on an Alexandria, Virginia, baseball field by James Hodgkinson, a left-wing activist, a Bernie Sanders supporter, and a rabid anti-Trumper with a record of domestic violence. Did the hatred generated by our modern politics contribute to that act and the bile we sling at each other? It could be argued that it did.

   The original lyrics to “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” were anything but bright and optimistic. They were: “Have yourself a merry little Christmas// It may be your last // Next year we may all be living in the past.” Garland protested, saying they were too depressing and little Margaret O’Brien to whom she sang the song would cry and the world would consider her a monster.

  The lyrics were changed but the original ones may be more reflective of our current state of mind as we enter 2021. We can only hope that “next year all our troubles will be out of sight.” Given our present circumstances, I am doubtful.

 [italics and colored emphasis mine]

(C)2020 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Cal Thomas is a syndicated columnist, author, broadcaster, and speaker with access to world leaders, U.S. presidents, celebrities, educators, and countless other notables. He has authored several books, including his latest, “America's Expiration Date: The Fall of Empires and Superpowers and the Future of the United States." Readers can email him at tcaeditors@tribpub.com.

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



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

World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing recent successes against ISIS!
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/

Hope for the Middle East - Join our multi-year Hope for the Middle East Prayer Campaign and lift up requests from believers in Iraq and Syria as Christians heal and rebuild after civil war and ISIS. You can also visit ODUSA.org/  Pray4ME to learn more.

December 31 Pray God blesses the women’s and kids’ ministry Pastor Farah is starting in the Syrian Christian village of Kharaba, recently freed from extremist oppression.

*Representative name or photo used to protect identity.

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

#3240 (12/29) "C. S. Lewis and the Coronavirus"

 "C. S. LEWIS AND THE CORONAVIRUS" - John Stonestreet and Roberto Rivera, Breakpoint.org, 12/29/20; https://www.breakpoint.org/c-s-lewis-and-the-coronavirus-2/


[This commentary first aired March 13, 2020]  The news this week about COVID-19, known as the coronavirus, has certainly, to understate it, escalated: New infections, grimmer projections, lots and lots of cancellations (including—can you believe it?—March Madness). The news changes so quickly day by day, even hour by hour, that it’s hard to keep up, much less know, really, what to think about all of this.

   C.S. Lewis once said that we should read three old books for every new one. I think we should read three C.S. Lewis books for every new one. He never faced the coronavirus, of course, but in the late 1940s, the world was coming to grips with another threat: nuclear annihilation. The bomb was only a few years old, and in the hands of sworn national enemies. The uncertainty of what exactly could happen, not to mention what might happen, was palpable. In that context, C.S. Lewis wrote an essay entitled “On Living in an Atomic Age.” I’m grateful to one of my BreakPoint colleagues, Ashlee Cowles, for reminding us of this essay along with some sage advice: Whenever you hear “atomic bomb” in this essay, think “coronavirus.”

   “We think a great deal too much of the atomic bomb,” Lewis begins. To those who wonder how it’s possible to go on in the face of such a threat, Lewis recalls that theirs was not the first generation to live under a threatening shadow. In fact, if we’re honest, we all live under a sentence of death, and for some of us, that death could even be “unpleasant.” The important question, says Lewis, is not whether or how we will die but if in the meantime we will be doing “sensible” and “human” things like “praying, working . . . reading, listening to music, bathing the children.”

   Lewis asks his readers to consider the important but unsettling truth that “Nature does not, in the long run, favor life.” It’s an ominous observation that points to an essential worldview truth: “If Nature is all that exists—in other words, if there is no God and no life of some quite different sort somewhere outside of Nature—then all stories “will end in the same way: in a universe from which all life is banished without the hope of return.”

   How do we respond to this unsettling truth? Lewis saw only three options: The first is suicide, something not uncommon in Britain of the 1940s and 50s. The second, “simply to have as good a time as possible. The universe is a universe of nonsense, but since you are here, grab what you can.” Of course, as Lewis noted, “there is, on these terms, so very little left to grab—only the coarsest sensual pleasures.” Whether we’re talking about sex or listening to music, the pleasure is diminished by the knowledge that any enjoyment we might derive are merely “illusions,” the product of “irrational conditioning” determined by our genes.

   The third response, Lewis said, is to “go down fighting,” to live as if the universe has meaning. We can insist on being rational and merciful even when the universe is not. Of course, if we choose that option, there’s no way to actually prevail against the “idiocy” of the universe—it would still win. Our insistence on being rational and merciful has no real justification.

  The hopelessness of those three options should instead lead us to a different conclusion: “We must simply accept . . .,” said Lewis, “that we are spirits, free and rational beings, at present inhabiting an irrational universe, and must draw the conclusion that we are not derived from it.” In other words, we must reject naturalism and embrace “a much earlier view:” biblical theism. It’s the only grounds on which we can avoid the despair brought on by the knowing that we are under a “sentence of death,” whatever form that death takes.

   Lewis’ words are just as relevant today as they were seven decades ago. For people who believe there is a God, doing the “sensible” and “human” things are possible because we have hope. For those who don’t have that hope, no amount of toilet paper or cans of Spam stacked in the garage can make anyone truly safe, much less solve the ultimate question of meaning that haunts us all.

   Today as yesterday, the world is still in God’s hands. Nothing has changed. Whatever the next chapter of this coronavirus story might be, the same questions remain to us: Will we trust God? And then, will we love our neighbors? And finally, how shall we then live?

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

Resources: “On Living in an Atomic Age” - by C.S. Lewis - CSLewisDoodle | YouTube | September 21, 2013; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxFmkg5dcyk&feature=youtu.be

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



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

World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing recent successes against ISIS!
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/

Hope for the Middle East - Join our multi-year Hope for the Middle East Prayer Campaign and lift up requests from believers in Iraq and Syria as Christians heal and rebuild after civil war and ISIS. You can also visit ODUSA.org/  Pray4ME to learn more.

December 28 - One of our partners asks: “Please pray for a spiritual breakthrough in the churches of Syria, that people would come to meet the real Good Shepherd and know Him more.” December 29 - Pray for new believers seeking discipleship who can’t share their faith with family and friends.

*Representative name or photo used to protect identity.

Sunday, December 27, 2020

#3239 (12/27) "Always Winter, Never Christmas"

"'ALWAYS WINTER, BUT NEVER CHRISTMAS'" - Jerry Newcombe: Dec 20, 2020; https://townhall.com/columnists/jerrynewcombe/2020/12/20/always-winter-but-never-christmas-n2581690

Source: AP Photo/Andrew Medichini

     In C. S. Lewis’s book, "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe," he describes a beautiful place (Narnia) under the spell of an evil character (the White Witch) – who symbolizes the Devil. Lewis writes of her that it was she who has made it "always winter, but never Christmas." Always winter, but never Christmas" – what a great phrase to describe this world, without the loving, powerful, and positive influence of Jesus Christ.

   Could you imagine life in such an intolerable state where we had to endure the brutal conditions of the winter season – but never having Christmas to look forward to? Well, this winter, there are some tyrannical state and local officials who are using the coronavirus as a pretext for shutting down churches and family gatherings. To the degree that these regulations are imposed on the people in those states, it will be always winter, but never Christmas. At least this season.

   These are the same people who might as well have a sign on their desks for the world to see, declaring, "Do as I say, not as I do." We’ve all heard the stories of mayors and governors who urge people to stay home while they are out and about getting haircuts, shopping, and eating at restaurants with large groups. One mayor actually recorded a video urging people to stay home at Thanksgiving. The kicker—he recorded it while vacationing at a family timeshare in Mexico. We don’t have to make this stuff up. Thankfully, people are catching on to the hypocrisy.

   Meanwhile, the war on Christmas seems to continue this year, as always. Here are just some examples:

   • The woke now tell us that putting up Christmas lights demonstrates "systemic biases." An ordinary display of Christmas lights in Minneapolis triggered one snowflake neighbor to write an anonymous letter protesting the non-ostentatious display: "The idea of twinkling, colorful lights are a reminder of divisions that continue to run through our society, a reminder of systemic biases against our neighbors who don't celebrate Christmas or who can't afford to put up lights of their own….We must do work of educating ourselves about the harmful impact an outward facing display like yours can have." As if penning satire, the writer called for shutting down the display to "respect the dignity of all people, while striving to learn from differences, ideas, and opinions of our neighbors."

   • Abortion clinic staffers erected a sacrilegious Christmas tree display. Instead of a star or an angel at the top of the tree, they placed a forceps that is used to kill unborn babies. Christmas is all about celebrating the birth of a Baby; instead, abortionists use the celebration to promote their work of killing babies. As Lifenews.com notes of this incident: "It is not the first time abortion activists have sought thrills by mocking Christmas, a holiday celebrating the birth of an unplanned child to a young unwed mother. In 2010, a pro-abortion group sold 'Abornaments,' a desecration of plastic fetal models depicting unborn children at various stage of development before birth, online. Some of the ornaments were plastic fetal models decorated with red noses and reindeer antlers hanging from coat-hangers." Depravity knows no bounds in the abortion industry.

   • Fewer poor people will be helped this year, thanks to the grinches at one of the Christophobic groups that runs around our country looking to abolish any remaining vestiges of our Judeo-Christian heritage in public places. Onenewsnow.com (of the American Family Association) writes: "The Freedom from Religion Foundation (FFRF) put an early end to Liberty Middle School’s Operation Christmas Child program – a project organized by Samaritan’s Purse that allowed students at the school fill shoeboxes with Christmas gifts for underprivileged children living in oppressed and embattled nations around the world." Well done, FFRF. You successfully protected innumerable poor children from receiving Christmas cheer this year.

   A great contrast to these anti-Christmas sentiments can be found in the words and actions of many of this nation's founders and leaders. Just take one example. John Jay was a key founding father. He wrote some of the Federalist Papers, and he served as the nation’s first Chief Justice. He gave a Christmas address before his fellow representatives of the state of New York in 1776, in which he mentioned God and faith 33 times. For instance, he said, "And we should still have enjoyed the blessings of peace and plenty, if we had not forgotten the source from which these blessings flowed; and permitted our country to be contaminated by the many shameful vices which have prevailed among us."

   Ultimately, C. S. Lewis's novel is a beautiful Christian allegory showing how Jesus Christ has come into the world to undo the works of the Devil. Thank God for Jesus. Otherwise, it would be always winter, but never Christmas.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

Jerry Newcombe, D.Min., is the executive director of the Providence Forum, an outreach of D. James Kennedy Ministries, where Jerry also serves as senior producer and an on-air host. He has written/co-written 33 books, including George Washington’s Sacred Fire (with Providence Forum founder Peter Lillback, Ph.D.) and What If Jesus Had Never Been Born? (with D. James Kennedy, Ph.D.). 

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



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

World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing recent successes against ISIS!
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/

In Central Asia, the Christian deaf community is doubly ostracized—because of their physical disability, as well as their choice to leave Islam and follow Jesus. They suffer isolation and lack support. Five years ago, Open Doors had the honor of meeting these beautiful brothers and sisters. They shared they had prayed and asked God for the seemingly impossible: an opportunity to be trained and learn—things they are denied in society. Today, we support them with literacy projects, outreach activities for pastors and leaders, and income-generating projects.

December 27 - Pray the rest of Sarah’s family comes to faith through her courageous witness.

*Representative name or photo used to protect identity.

#3238 [12/26] "WATCH ; AMAZING PRO-LIFE VIDEO ENCOURAGES PEOPLE TO 'LOVE EVERY HEARBEAT'""

"WATCH: AMAZING PRO-LIFE VIDEO ENCOURAGES PEOPLE TO 'LOVE EVERY HEARTBEAT'" -  Maria Gallagher, DEC 23, 2020 | https://www.lifenews.com/2020/12/23/watch-amazing-pro-life-video-encourages-people-to-love-every-heartbeat/

     A powerful video can stir the emotions and prick the conscience, making one look at life from another point of viewSuch is the case with a dynamic video posted by Focus on the Family as part of its effort to encourage people to sign the pledge to “love every heartbeat.”

   In the video, we hear a child’s voice saying, “Hello, world! Do you see me?” The video is blurry, with the child noting that, though hidden, she is here. Then, in a rush of energy, a life bursts forth from the screen, culminating in the birth of a baby. The video then chronicles the milestones the girl will achieve on her way to adulthood—if only she is given the chance at life.

   Life can be messy and, at times, let’s face it, highly challenging. But it is also quite beautiful, poetic, musical—and always worth living. No one has the right to snuff out a human life—even at its earliest stages of development. This refreshing video is a testament to that. Please give yourself a ... Christmas gift and watch the video. [Go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZLuP46Suu8]

   Chances are you will be amazed and delighted—and more convinced than ever that pro-life is pro-love.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

LifeNews.com Note: Maria Gallagher is the Legislative Director and Political Action Committee Director for the Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation and she has written and reported for various broadcast and print media outlets, including National Public Radio, CBS Radio, and AP Radio.

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



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
----------------------------------------------------------------------
World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing recent successes against ISIS!
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/

In Central Asia, the Christian deaf community is doubly ostracized—because of their physical disability, as well as their choice to leave Islam and follow Jesus. They suffer isolation and lack support. Five years ago, Open Doors had the honor of meeting these beautiful brothers and sisters. They shared they had prayed and asked God for the seemingly impossible: an opportunity to be trained and learn—things they are denied in society. Today, we support them with literacy projects, outreach activities for pastors and leaders, and income-generating projects.

December 26 - Pray for wisdom and energy for those who run Timothy’s Crib as they care for young believers.

*Representative name or photo used to protect identity.

Friday, December 25, 2020

#3237 (12/25) MERRY CHRISTMAS! "The Power of Christmas"

"THE POWER OF CHRISTMAS"Cal Thomas / @CalThomas / December 23, 2020 / https://www.dailysignal.com/2020/12/23/the-power-of-christmas

     "If God wanted to be intimately a part of man, he moved correctly. For the experience of birth and familyhood is our most intimate and precious experience," says Harry Reasoner. Pictured: The "Adoration of the Christ Child," found in the collection of Palazzo Madama Torino. (Photo: Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images)

[Editor’s note: This is a “classic” Cal Thomas that was originally distributed in 1991 upon the death of newsman Harry Reasoner.]

    Of all the great and small events of 1991, the death of CBS News’ “60 Minutes” co-host Harry Reasoner probably rates near the bottom in the amount of attention afforded it by the public.Yet when a keen observer and a person of talent and grace leaves the planet, we are all diminished a little. Such gifts are not as easily replaced as they once were when reading, not watching, was thought to better nourish the mind and soul.

   When Harry died, I recalled a commentary he did when he worked for ABC News in the early 1970s. The commentary was an unlikely one for a man of his position. Most people believe that news people, particularly those at the network level, rarely think of much beyond current events and their own careers. But Harry was different, and his easy-going manner allowed him to address subjects others might approach with more difficulty. On Christmas Eve, 1973, in the midst of growing turmoil over the Watergate scandal, a troubled economy, wars and rumors of wars in the Middle East, and uncertainty over the future of U.S.-Soviet relations, Harry delivered the following commentary:

   “Christmas is such a unique idea that most non-Christians accept it, and I think sometimes envy it. If Christmas is the anniversary of the appearance of the Lord of the Universe in the form of a helpless baby, it’s quite a day. It’s a startling idea, and the theologians, who sometimes love logic more than they love God, find it uncomfortable. But if God did do it, he had a tremendous insight." “People are afraid of God and standing in his very bright light. But everyone has seen babies and almost everyone likes them. So, if God wanted to be loved as well as feared, he moved correctly here. And if he wanted to know people, as well as rule them, he moved correctly, because a baby growing up learns all there is to know about people.:" “If God wanted to be intimately a part of man, he moved correctly. For the experience of birth and familyhood is our most intimate and precious experience.

   “So, it comes beyond logic. It’s what a bishop I used to know called a kind of divine insanity. It is either all falsehood or it is the truest thing in the world. It is the story of the great innocence of God the baby. God in the power of man. And it is such a dramatic shot toward the heart, that if it is not true, for Christians, nothing is true.

   “So even if you did not get your shopping all done, and you were swamped with the commercialism and frenzy, be at peace. And even if you are the deacon having to arrange the extra seating for all the Christmas Christians that you won’t see until Easter, be at peace. The story stands. “It’s all right that so many Christians are touched only once a year by this incomparable story. Because some final quiet Christmas morning, the touch will take.”

   Christmas has a power over those who observe it, and those who do not, that is unlike any other holiday or event. The other 364 days of the year we can be caught up in affairs of world-shaking significance, but on Christmas it is as if all systems shut down and we are given a chance to focus on something of greater significance than the headlines or the vacuous babble of television. Perhaps for some this Christmas, the touch will take.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

(C)2020 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Cal Thomas is a syndicated columnist, author, broadcaster, and speaker with access to world leaders, U.S. presidents, celebrities, educators, and countless other notables. He has authored several books, including his latest, “America's Expiration Date: The Fall of Empires and Superpowers and the Future of the United States." Readers can email him at tcaeditors@tribpub.com.

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



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

World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing recent successes against ISIS!
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/

In Central Asia, the Christian deaf community is doubly ostracized—because of their physical disability, as well as their choice to leave Islam and follow Jesus. They suffer isolation and lack support. Five years ago, Open Doors had the honor of meeting these beautiful brothers and sisters. They shared they had prayed and asked God for the seemingly impossible: an opportunity to be trained and learn—things they are denied in society. Today, we support them with literacy projects, outreach activities for pastors and leaders, and income-generating projects.

December 25 Thank God for the hope we have in Jesus; ask Him to reveal Himself in a special way to persecuted believers around the world today.

*Representative name or photo used to protect identity.

Thursday, December 24, 2020

#3236 (12/24) "It’s Christmas Eve Again - What We Christians Have to Offer"

"IT'S CHRISTMAS EVE AGAIN - WHAT WE CHRISTIANS HAVE TO OFFER" - John Stonestreet and Roberto Rivera, Breakpoint.org, 12/24/20; https://www.breakpoint.org/its-christmas-eve-again/


      In his book, “The Triumph of Christianity,” (which, by the way, was one of Chuck Colson’s favorite books) historian Rodney Stark describes the Roman world of that first Christmas Eve.The gods, Stark writes, “were everywhere and thought to be undependable.” Apart from “some magical powers” and “perhaps the gift of immortality,” there was little to distinguish them from their human worshipers: “they ate, drank, loved, envied, fornicated, cheated, lied and otherwise set morally ‘unedifying examples.’” And, not surprisingly, they didn’t care one bit about those who worshiped them. All they wanted was to be propitiated.

   In other words, Christ entered into a culture in which the gods of the age were not worthy of worshipAnd Roman society was just as oppressive and undependable as its gods. For most people, life in the empire’s cities could be fairly described, to borrow a phrase from philosopher Thomas Hobbes, as “nasty, poor, solitary, brutish, and short.” This was world into which Christianity was born. And still Christianity triumphed, not least of which because it offered an alternative to the oppression of Roman society.  It offered another way than the dead-end of paganism, a way so compelling that it outweighed the obvious social disadvantages of being identified as a Christian.  As Stark writes, “in the midst of the squalor, misery, illness, and anonymity of ancient cities, Christianity offered an island of mercy and security.”

   I hope that when you hear Stark’s words, you realize that we also have something far more compelling to offer our contemporaries as well. Many of our contemporaries also worship deities that are undependable and scarcely distinguishable from their worshipers. The Oxford English Dictionary defines “worship” as “the feeling or expression of reverence and adoration for a deity.” Worship transforms the worshiper. As Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, “the Gods we worship write their names on our faces; be sure of that . . . thus, it behooves us to be careful what we worship, for what we are worshipping we are becoming.”

   Emerson wrote that without even foreseeing the age of “social media,” in which we increasingly worship what we’ve become or at least what we imagine ourselves to be. Many pages on Facebook and Instagram can, with almost no exaggeration, be called “shrines.” Our deities are as much of a dead end as the pagan gods of Rome. And like all idol worship, self-worship can be a lonely activity. Just like the Greek gods, who didn’t play well together, today’s pagans are far from anonymous, but just as isolated as their ancient predecessors. A 2011 Cornell study found that the average American has only two “good friends.”

   What Christians today have to offer is remarkably similar to what the early Christians had to offer: what Stark called an “intense community,” a place where, instead of being surrounded by strangers, they are surrounded by “brothers and sisters in Christ.” A place that when the hard times come, as inevitably they will, “there [are] people who care — there are people who have the distinct responsibility to care.” Stated succinctly, what Christians have to offer is a better way of being human than anything currently offered in contemporary society.

   That’s why, despite the often-distressing state of our culture, I remain hopeful. The Christian alternative is just as desperately needed today as when the early Church offered it to the Romans. Like them, we must proclaim and embody that alternative. And if we do, it could be another Christmas Eve all over again. ...

[A version of this commentary first aired on Christmas Eve, 2014.]

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

Resources:The Triumph of Christianity, Rodney Stark | Harperone | 2012 - https://colsoncenter.christianbook.com/the-triumph-of-christianity/rodney-stark/9780062007698/pd/007698?event=ESRCG


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



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

World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing recent successes against ISIS!
------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/

In Central Asia, the Christian deaf community is doubly ostracized—because of their physical disability, as well as their choice to leave Islam and follow Jesus. They suffer isolation and lack support. Five years ago, Open Doors had the honor of meeting these beautiful brothers and sisters. They shared they had prayed and asked God for the seemingly impossible: an opportunity to be trained and learn—things they are denied in society. Today, we support them with literacy projects, outreach activities for pastors and leaders, and income-generating projects.

December 24 - Pray the future hardships these believers face will bring them closer to Christ.

*Representative name or photo used to protect identity.