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Showing posts with label Anti-Christian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anti-Christian. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

The National Cathedral Celebrates Gay Marriage Ruling

WASHINGTON (CBSDC/AP) — The National Cathedral is pealing its church bells to celebrate the Supreme Court’s decisions on gay marriage.

According to The Associated Press:  “Cathedral spokesman Richard Weinberg said the bells rang at noon Wednesday for 45 minutes to an hour.  The cathedral scheduled a prayer servicehttp://images.intellitxt.com/ast/adTypes/icon1.png for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender families Wednesday at 7 p.m. to celebrate the ruling.”

In a statement, the cathedral’s dean, the Rev. Gary Hall, says the church is ringing its bells “to celebrate the extension of federal marriage equality to all the same-sex couples modeling God’s love in lifelong covenants.”

Hall says the ruling should serve as a call for Christians to embrace religious marriage equality.

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On a day of "National Disgrace" our nation is celebrating it's own perversion!  

On this day five men in black robes have said with a clear and unmistakable voice "We will decide what is morally right, and what is morally wrong in this nation... For, we are wiser than even God!" 

I am reminded of what the apostle Paul once wrote about an eerily similar nation that celebrated it's own perversion, and that that has long disappeared from the earth as a result:

       "PROFESSING THEMSELVES TO BE WISE, THEY BECAME FOOLS..."


Grace for the Journey,  

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Stalin's Road of Bones



When Joseph Stalin took control of one of the largest landmasses on Earth, he did not neglect to make his presence felt in even the most remote of its corners. In the early 1930’s, the man of steel decided to embark on a project incredible not only for the scale of its engineering, but for the cruelty and inhumanity with which it would be carried out: the construction of the M56 Kolyma highway – the Road of Bones.
The road runs for over two thousand kilometres through the wildest terrain of the Asian continent, connecting Magadan and Yakutsk, and making an enormous loop through the Siberian mountains in order to reach the hundreds of gold mines that once operated there.
Forced labour was used to construct every inch of this incredible project – at first by inmates of labour camps, but later by the unfortunate denizens of the gulags that began springing up all over these near-uninhabitable provinces of Stalin’s Soviet empire. Many were Russian POW’s, banished to the region after being labelled German ‘collaborators’. 

Many were Russian Christians who refused to renounce their faith under the Communist regime.

 Prisoners were chained except when they were working their twelve-hour shifts. Many died during transport alone, and thousands were shot by the officers for not working hard enough. And any worker who died during construction of the road was ‘buried’ where he fell – survivors’ reports indicate that bodies were as common a sight as fallen logs.
Today, the road is in poor condition, and many parts of it are impassable for ordinary vehicles. It has become a challenge for off-road drivers and bikers to make a complete ‘run’ of the Road of Bones. Given the poor condition of the bridges that occur along the highway, common advice given is that the safest way to cross rivers along the route is to cross the ice when they freeze in winter!


The gulags that supplied the project with a seemingly-endless source of disposable labour – effectively slavery – were internment camps to which the Soviet regime banished any ‘undesirables’ – political prisoners, radicals, criminals, or persons who spoke out about (or even told jokes about) the government. Many gulags in remote places contributed to the Russian timber industry, or served as mining colonies.



 The Soviets were masters of propaganda, and cared deeply about how they represented themselves to the rest of the world. When a book of letters written by former gulag prisoners was published in the West in 1924, there was a worldwide demand for a boycott on Russian timber. Two reporters for the British Timber Federation were sent to Kotlas, where they were given a specially-commissioned tour of the facilities. The glowing report the two produced afterwards indicates that they were shown only what the authorities wished them to see, and no more. This practise is known as the ‘Potemkin village’ trick, as the earlier Tzarist regime supposedly constructed entire false villages to convince visitors that their system was just and fair.


It was only after the fall of the Soviet regime that many people within Russia and other countries learned of the sheer number of atrocities committed in the gulags and along the Road of Bones. For many people who still regarded Stalin as a great leader, this new relative freedom of information brought many uncomfortable facts to light.





Original Source at http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/featured/stalin-road-of-bones/

Thursday, January 06, 2011

Apple now calls Christian belief "objectionable and potentially harmful"

Dear Christian Friends, It is time to put your money where your mouth is!!!

Please read the following article and consider sending Steve Jobs an email expressing your shock and displeasure with Apple... I have made the personal decision that I will never buy one thing that is made by Apple. There are plenty of other technology companies around that make very good products that do not have the same Anti-Christian prejudice as Apple, and they will get my business from now on.

Pressing on, Apple now calls Christian belief "objectionable and potentially harmful"