Monday, February 28, 2011

The Middle East: Worlds in Collision

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.


The Middle East: Worlds in Collision
الشرق الأوسط في نبؤات الكتاب المقدس




Table of Contents


Introduction: World's in Turmoil

Terrorist attacks that have shocked the entire world also brought home the fact that the Middle East impacts all of us, regardless of where we live.



The Middle East: Worlds in Collision



The Sons of Abraham

We cannot understand the Middle East today without going back to the roots of the problem, which began long ago with the offspring of Abraham.



The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel

Much of biblical history revolves around the astounding rise and equally astounding fall of the kingdom of Israel—all foretold in Bible prophecy.



The Four Empires of Daniel's Prophecies

God revealed to the Hebrew prophet Daniel the rise and fall of the empires that would rule the Middle East. History confirms his astounding prophecies.



The Coming of Islam

Abraham's descendants through Ishmael were to become a "great nation." The rise of Islam brought the remarkable fulfillment of this prophecy.



The Jews: From the Dispersion to the Modern Israeli State



The Creation of the Modern Middle East

The 20th century brought huge changes to the Middle East—the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the creation of new countries and the birth of Israel.



A Rising Tide of Arab Nationalism



Fundamentalist Islam Resurges

The changes of the 20th century brought another unexpected development—the resurgence of a militant Islam in fundamental conflict with the West.



Anger Mounts Following Gulf War



Not Enemies Forever



"Why Do People Hate Us So Much?"



War and Peace in the Middle East

Prophecy reveals two more enormous developments here—a conflict that will engulf the entire globe, followed by mankind's long-sought peace for all.



What Is the "Abomination of Desolation"?



Prophecy of an Arab Confederation



What Should You Do?



















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Friday, February 25, 2011

What's Next for Oil-Rich Libya?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.

What's Next for Oil-Rich Libya?



A commentary by Mike Bennett

UCG editorial content manager
For Libya, the oil-rich North African dictatorship between Tunisia and Egypt, it was only a matter of time before the unrest in the Arab world ignited antigovernment protests. Colonel Muammar Gadhafi has ruled the country with an iron hand since he overthrew King Idris in 1969.



Fight, not flight?

After nearly a week of protests and reports of hundreds being killed, some by government fighter jets, speculation broke out that Gadhafi was fleeing to Venezuela. But he appeared on television Feb. 22 to debunk that rumor.



The Telegraph reported Gadhafi's fighting words: "I will fight to the last drop of my blood. The Libyan people are with me... I'm not going to leave this land. I am going to die here and die here as a martyr."



Protesters seem equally adamant. Ali Zeidan, a senior member of the Libyan League of Human Rights, told The Guardian: "Libyans used to be afraid. But after they saw the blood, they aren't afraid anymore, they are angry."



That anger was partly fueled by the prediction by Gadhafi's son Saif of "rivers of blood" if protesters did not back down.



"Everybody knows somebody who has been killed or injured, everyone is very angry. What Gaddafi's son said made people furious... Now they feel no fear, if there are deaths people accept that we must carry on. Protesters will go to the centre again today and keep demonstrating until the job is done," Ali Zeidan said.



The protesters received support in the form of a fatwa against Gadhafi. New York magazine reported: "An influential Muslim cleric named Yusuf al-Qaradawi issued a fatwa yesterday through Al Jazeera saying, 'Whoever in the Libyan army is able to shoot a bullet at Mr. Qaddafi should do so.' Qaradawi, the spiritual leader of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, also urged Libyan soldiers 'not to obey orders to strike at your own people,' and urged Libyan ambassadors to disassociate themselves from Qaddafi."



Worldwide impact

Beyond the human cost, other nations are fearful of the impact on the fragile world economy. New York magazine also reported: "Libya, Africa's third-largest oil producer, pumps out around 1.6 million barrels of oil per day and is responsible for roughly 2 percent of global demand. Oil prices rose 9 percent in one day as analysts anxiously monitored the situation. If unrest spreads beyond Libya to other oil-rich countries, industry experts warn that gas prices could hit $5 a gallon by peak summer driving season."



With Gadhafi's days numbered, what will be next for Libya? How will it affect the rest of the world?



Libya in Bible prophecy

The Middle East plays a major role in end-time events leading to the return of Jesus Christ. Libya is mentioned in connection with the conflict between a Middle Eastern power and a European power. Consider these excerpts from our booklet The Middle East in Bible Prophecy:



"Returning to Daniel 11:40, we see that the forces of these two end-time leaders, the kings of the North and South, will clash: 'At the time of the end shall the king of the south push at him: and the king of the north shall come against him like a whirlwind, with chariots, and with horsemen, and with many ships; and he shall enter into the countries, and shall overflow and pass over' (King James Version).



"The word 'push' is translated from the Hebrew word nagach, which can mean either 'to push' or 'to attack.' It is used of a bull or ram attacking with its horns. Figuratively, this means 'to war against.' The form this 'push' or 'attack' may take isn't spelled out.



"What is evident, however, is that this end-time leader from the south will attack the north in such a way as to warrant a major military invasion of the Middle East. Considering the ways Islamic extremists have attacked the Western powers in recent years, something like a series of major terror attacks against European targets could be the 'push' referred to here. From this point on the king of the South is no longer specifically mentioned in Scripture. What happens to him isn't spelled out.



"The same chapter shows that the king of the North, the European-centered Beast power, will be the victor, as he invades the Holy Land and overthrows 'many countries' (verse 41). Among them are Egypt and the Libyans and Ethiopians (understand that these biblical names for peoples and places may not be precisely identical with today's national borders, although the regions are certainly the same.)"



You need to understand the framework for these prophecies, and the solution to these worldwide calamities. Read or download The Middle East in Bible Prophecy now, and learn more about God's plan for the Middle East and for you.

Monday, February 21, 2011

America's Astounding Destiny: Was It Foretold in the Bible?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.

America's Astounding Destiny: Was It Foretold in the Bible?


The rise of the United States of America from British colony to superpower is an incredible story worth retelling. Equally incredible is the fact that the rise of the United States and the British Empire was foretold thousands of years ago.

by Melvin Rhodes

Few people can remember a time when the United States did not dominate the world. At the dawn of the 20th century the country had only just emerged on the world scene after victory in the Spanish-American War of 1898. Forty years later, on the eve of World War II, the nation's military strength still ranked below that of Portugal and Greece, its army the size of Romania's.



Today it is indisputably the world's greatest power. Ten years after the demise of its Cold War rival, the Soviet Union, the United States is the only superpower.



Power and influence are not measured only in terms of military capacity. American culture is pervasive. Movies made in Hollywood are dubbed into countless languages and shown all over the world. Television stations in Prague, Hong Kong, Kampala, Melbourne, Johannesburg, Barbados and just about everywhere else broadcast American television shows. In most of the world's capitals fast-food outlets sell America's favorite junk foods, often washed down by those symbols of American imperialism, Coca-Cola and Pepsi.



No matter what you might think of the United States, the world would be a much different place if it did not exist. Without the United States the world would have succumbed to one or other of the two despotic tyrannies that struggled for world dominance for several decades from the 1940s through the 1980s.



Fascism and communism both threatened the peace and security of the world during that span of 50 years. Victory for either would have meant the end of life as we know it. The basic freedoms many take for granted today would have been denied this generation and future generations had not these twin evil ideologies foundered on the strength of American resolve.



Yet few people 200 years ago could have imagined that America's position of global leadership would be the destiny of the fledgling republic.



How did America reach a point of global dominance? Is it possible that the United States was overlooked in the biblical prophecies about our time? Or was everything foretold a long time ago? What does the future have in store for the nation?



America might not have been

Some years ago America's noncommer cial Public Broadcasting System televised a series of documentaries on the American Revolution. The historians researching and presenting the series came to the interesting conclusion that the Revolution should not have happened. Others through the years have said the same.



Gordon Wood, a professor of history at Brown University, wrote in his 1991 book The Radicalism of the American Revolution: ". . . The social conditions that generically are supposed to be behind all revolutions— poverty and economic deprivation—were not present in colonial America. There should no longer be any doubt about it: the white American colonists were not an oppressed people; they had no crushing Imperial chains to throw off. In fact, the colonists knew they were freer, more equal, more prosperous, and less burdened with cumbersome feudal and monarchical restraints than any other part of mankind in the eighteenth century" (p. 4).



Modern American history goes back 400 years to the founding of the English-speaking colonies of Virginia and Massachusetts. Later other colonies were added, settled primarily by people from the British Isles. Americans before the Revolution saw themselves as Englishmen and were proud of their heritage.



"In the year 1775, when the War of Independence began, the thirteen colonies had a population of perhaps 2,418,000 people, of whom possibly one fifth were black. Small Dutch, German, and Swedish minorities were included in these statistics, but the vast majority of white inhabitants were of British stock" (Russell Kirk, America's British Culture, 1994, p. 69).



The land of the free

In the 18th century the English were the freest people on earth. Englishmen living in English colonies were even freer than their kin at home. They enjoyed freedom of the press, free right of assembly and freedom to trade without the restraints that governments placed on people in other nations. Each colony had its own parliament. Eighty to 90 percent of all free (nonslave) men could vote. By virtue of an act of the English Long Parliament (1640-42), before the English Civil War, they even had the right to bear arms, without which the American Revolution could never have started.



The colonies were also the home of religious diversity. The colonial governor of New York, Thomas Dongan, wrote in 1687: "Here bee not many of the Church of England; few Roman Catholicks; abundance of Quakers preachers . . . ; Singing Quakers, Ranting Quakers; Sabbatarians; Antisabbatarians; Some Anabaptists[;] some Independents; some Jews; in short[,] of all sorts of opinions there are some, and the most part [are] of none at all" (Jon Butler, Becoming America: The Revolution Before 1776, 2000, p. 185).



Religion had played a major role in the development of the American colonies. The first British colony at Jamestown, Virginia, was planted by Anglicans; the Pilgrims set- tled at Plymouth 13 years later; the Puritans arrived at Boston in 1630—while Calvinists spread elsewhere throughout New England. Catholics followed in Maryland in 1634 and Quakers in New Jersey and Pennsylvania in 1682. Baptists and Methodists came later.



With all these basic freedoms, why did the Revolutionary War take place? The answer is quite simple: in order that Bible prophecy should be fulfilled.



The outcome of the Revolutionary War was far from certain. Historian Thomas Fleming, in a chapter titled "Unlikely Victory: Thirteen Ways the Americans Could Have Lost the Revolution," states: "When a historian ponders the what ifs of the American Revolution, chills run up and down and around the cerebellum. There were almost too many moments when the patriot cause teetered on the brink of disaster, to be retrieved by the most unlikely accidents or coincidences . . ." (What If? The World's Foremost Military Historians Imagine What Might Have Been, Robert Crowley, editor, 1999, p. 157).



But the Bible prophesied that the American and British peoples would separate.



Ancient prophecies fulfilled in recent times

In the book of Genesis we read of a time when the descendants of the two sons of Joseph, the 11th son of Jacob (also known as Israel), would become "a multitude of nations" and a "great" single nation (Genesis 48:19). This prophecy was never fulfilled by the people who now live in the Middle Eastern nation of Israel, either in ancient times or recently.



At the beginning of Genesis 49 we read: "And Jacob called unto his sons, and said, 'Gather yourselves together, that I may tell you what shall befall you in the last days'" (verse 1, emphasis added throughout). This was not a prophecy to be fulfilled in ancient Israel, but by the descendants of Jacob "in the last days"—before the second coming of Jesus Christ and the establishment of the Kingdom of God.



(We might note here that many people erroneously assume that when the Bible mentions Israel it refers only to the Jewish people. Biblical and secular history, however, shows that this common belief is wrong. In fact, the first time the Bible uses the term Jews, in 2 Kings 16:6-7 in the King James Version, they are at war with the kingdom of Israel! The story is spelled out in greater detail in our free booklet The United States and Britain in Bible Prophecy.)



Genesis 49 lists the strengths and weak- nesses of each of Jacob's sons. In verse 22 Jacob prophesies of his son Joseph's descendants: "Joseph is a fruitful bough, a fruitful bough by a well; his branches run over the wall." From Joseph's two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, were to come "a multitude of nations" and the "great" single nation that would be incredibly fruitful, industrious and productive, spreading out from their boundaries to other parts of the earth.



God had promised Jacob that his descendants would number "as the dust of the earth," spreading in all directions, and that "all the families of the earth" would be blessed through his offspring (Genesis 28:14). His descendants would also be blessed with great material and agricultural wealth and abundance and dominate other nations of the earth (Genesis 27:28-29).



Thousands of years were to pass before these prophecies would be fulfilled. Their fulfillment came in relatively recent times with the rise of the British Empire and Commonwealth, the "multitude of nations"; and the United States of America, the greatest single nation.



A separation prophesied

Until the 1770s the 13 American colonies were content to be a part of the British Empire. The colonists had recently fought alongside the mother country against France, winning a war that gave the English-speaking peoples domination of the eastern seaboard of North America. George Washington had fought in that war.



The British Empire was continuing to grow, with colonies and strategic sea gates around the world. Americans'security clearly lay within the empire, their freedoms protected by the Royal Navy and British armies. Each colony looked to the mother country rather than to neighboring colonies.



Then friction suddenly arose over taxation, the levies the British tried to raise to pay for the recent war against France. This discord rapidly escalated and led to the events of the Revolution and the eventual birth of the United States.



The events recorded in Genesis 48 show us that, for prophecy to be fulfilled, the United States had to separate from the British Empire. A distinction would eventually become apparent between the "multitude of nations" and the "great" single nation.



A rising empire

The British Empire, later to become the British Commonwealth, was then in its early stages. It would go on to encompass countries scattered around the globe. Some would be colonies ruled from London, represented locally by a British governor. Some would be protectorates, territories that in some cases had asked to be a part

of the empire and retained their own traditional leaders.



The Indian Empire, with its 320 million people, was to be the jewel in the imperial crown. The dominions of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa would become independent, sovereign nations, joined by the self-governing Colony of Southern Rhodesia. Altogether more than 60 countries around the world, each with its distinct culture and way of life, would form an empire upon which the sun never set.



These nations traded heavily among themselves. All benefited from considerable British investment. They enjoyed a common security backed up by the Royal Navy. But, above all, one institution united them—the British crown. Even the independent dominions, by their own choice, recognized the British monarch as their head of state.



For prophecy to be fulfilled America had to break away from this growing multitude of nations and sever its tie with the crown. There was no immediate demand for that drastic step when disputes arose between England and the colonists. The dispute was with the British government, not the king. The king was a constitutional monarch, seen as the guarantor of liberty against ambitious politicians, the symbol of unity for English-speaking peoples every- where regardless of their political affiliation.



Once the violence started, however, the bitterness between the belligerents grew so great that a total break—a severing of the tie with Great Britain and the crown—was inevitable.



John Adams, one of the leaders of the Revolution and America's second president, wrote to his wife,Abigail, on the day after Congress's approval of the Declaration of Independence: "It is the will of heaven that the two countries should be sundered forever" (William Federer, America's God and Country Encyclopedia of Quotations, 1996, p. 9).



After the war George Washington discussed with Charles Thomson, secretary of the Continental Congress, the idea of writing their memoirs. Historian Thomas Fleming writes that "between them the two men probably knew more secrets than the entire Congress and Continental Army combined."



But the two men decided that their memoirs would be a bad idea. "It would be too disillusioning if the American people discovered how often the Glorious Cause came close to disaster. They jointly agreed that the real secret of America's final victory in the eight- year struggle could be summed up in two words: Divine Providence" (Fleming, p. 186).



Birth of the republic

Some Americans, aware that the English Republic of the 17th century and others before it did not last long before succumbing to dictatorships, still wanted a king. Some put forth the name of George Washington, leader of the Continental Army, which had defeated the British.



Here we should note America's biblical name, Manasseh, the great single nation (Genesis 48). Manasseh means "forget." Americans were to turn their backs on Europe, forgetting their past. They were to build themselves up into the world's greatest single nation, expanding westward, developing a wilderness into the most powerful economy in history.



Washington, America's first president, was to warn against "foreign entanglements," alliances that would have been inevitable if America had adopted a monarchical system of government. The children of monarchs marry the children of other kings to cement alliances. Had America adopted such a system, it would have looked backwards rather than to the future. But Washington had no heirs, making the possi- bility of a monarchy much more difficult.



The fledgling nation's form of government remained an issue. No republic in history had lasted long. At the end of the Constitutional Convention, when the delegates emerged from the meeting hall in Philadelphia, a leading lady of Washington society called out to Benjamin Franklin: "What is it to be, Mr. Franklin? A monarchy or a republic?" Was the United States to be a constitutional monarchy, or a republic— a nation without a king? His answer: "A republic, ma'am, if you can keep it."



Stability: Key to a nation's success

America had already had representative government in colonial times. Now the new nation was to step out and boldly attempt representative government without a king. Here George Washington's leadership was crucial. After two terms as president—a total of eight years—he voluntarily stepped aside, setting a precedent that contributed substan- tially to America's stability as a republic.



This was no minor accomplishment. Often other nations that have adopted republican forms of government have failed in arranging the peaceful transfer of power from one president to another. America's political stability, however, has been a key to its success. The United States, without a doubt, has been the most successful republic in history, the country Sir Winston Churchill would call "The Great Republic."



Political stability was essential for prophecy to be fulfilled. Without stability, the country could never have become the greatest single nation in history.



The nation's spiritual beginnings played a crucial role in its stability. The United States did not have one official religion as other nations had. Instead, virtually all people belonged to various churches that shared a high regard for the Bible. The United States was founded on Christian ideals by men who for the most part were strongly and deeply religious and convinced God was guiding the country.



Almost 40 years after the events that surrounded independence, John Adams wrote Thomas Jefferson that "the general principles, on which the Fathers achieved independence, were the only Principles in which that beautiful Assembly of Gentlemen could Unite . . . And what were these general Principles? I answer, the general Principles of Christianity, in which all these Sects were United: And the general Principles of English and American Liberty, in which all these young Men United, and which had United all Parties in America, in Majorities sufficient to assert and maintain her Independence" (Federer, p. 12).



Separation of church and state did not mean that the country was not to be a Christian nation, based on Christian principles and the Ten Commandments. Rather, it meant that no one church should enjoy a special status as was the case in England.



The oath of office, written by the founding fathers, states: "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of the president of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."



Washington, the first president to take the oath of office, spontaneously added, "I swear, so help me God," and kissed the Bible—a tradition that his successors have followed for more than two centuries. The sincere desire of America's founding fathers was that the republic would last. Built on Christian principles, with the Ten Commandments as its basic law, it would endure.



With a successful system of government in place,America was on course to fulfill its destiny as the greatest single nation in history.



In the next issue we will examine the astounding story of how the United States rose from newly independent former British colony to world superpower. GN





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Recommended Reading

Where does the United States of America appear in Bible prophecy? Does Bible prophecy neglect to mention major nations such as the United States, Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom? In fact, many prophecies do mention these nations. But, without an understanding of history and the Scriptures, few can identify them and understand what lies ahead for them. The publishers of The Good News have produced an astounding, eye-opening book, The United States and Britain in Bible Prophecy.

Friday, February 18, 2011

America's Growing Debt Crisis

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.
America's Growing Debt Crisis


A commentary by Melvin Rhodes

Good News writer, and regional pastor, Ghana

The amount of U.S. debt, federal and state combined, that has been placed by government legislation on the shoulders of every U.S. taxpayer is staggering.



When all of America's long term financial obligations are considered, the recent billions of dollars that have been added to that debt by the current Wall Street financial crisis are merely the tip of the iceberg.



Only by dividing the total of that government debt into each citizen's share can we even begin to comprehend the seriousness of the problem for every U.S. man, woman and child.



Earlier this year USA Today writer Dennis Cauchon wrote: "Taxpayers are on the hook for a record $57.3 trillion in federal liabilities to cover the lifetime benefits of everyone eligible for Medicare, Social Security and other government programs, a USA TODAY analysis found. That's nearly $500,000 per household. When obligations of state and local governments are added, the total rises to $61.7 trillion, or $531,472 per household. That is more than four times what Americans owe in personal debt such as mortgages.



"The $2.5 trillion [growth] in federal liabilities [in 2007] dwarfs the $162 billion the government officially announced as last year's deficit, down from $248 billion a year earlier. 'We're running deficits in the trillions of dollars, not the hundreds of billions of dollars we're being told,' says Sheila Weinberg, chief executive of the Institute for Truth in Accounting of Chicago.



"The reason for the discrepancy: Accounting standards require corporations and state governments to count new financial obligations, even if the payments will be made later.



"The federal government doesn't follow that rule. Instead of counting lifetime benefits for programs such as Social Security, the government counts the cost of benefits for the current year. The deteriorating condition of these programs doesn't show up in the government's bottom line, but the information is released elsewhere—in Medicare's annual report, for example" (usatoday.com, May 18, 2008, emphasis added throughout).



Inflation also compounds the problem. A Wall Street Journal news alert on June 3, 2008 stated: "Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Tuesday put the U.S. dollar squarely on the Fed's radar screen, saying its slide against other currencies has led to an 'unwelcome' rise in U.S. inflation and may be a factor in inflation expectations."



The unintended consequence of low interest rates has been that they contributed not only to the dollar's slide against other currencies in the current financial crises on Wall Street but they also fueled global inflation, especially in oil and food prices. Higher costs have led to increased debt.



This accumulating debt problem is not without parallel in history. At the end of World War II financially devastated Britain turned its back on global responsibilities and started dismantling its empire. The world's greatest nation prior to World War II, Britain saw her position of preeminence pass to the United States. Not only was Britain tired of endless war, her people also wanted free medical care and a more equal distribution of wealth.



This is comparable to what the United States is facing today. The twenty seven nations comprising the European Union already rival the United States in economic power. The EU's currency is used by more people than the American dollar and is arguably more sought after the world over.



Interestingly, the European Central Bank's purpose differs from that of the U.S. Federal Reserve's policy in recent times. The role of the ECB is to control inflation, which means currency must be kept strong, thereby limiting borrowing.



America's Federal Reserve since 1978 has had the responsibility of ensuring continuing growth and full employment, a recipe for over spending and higher rates of inflation. The United States is now paying the price for continuous overspending.



History indicates that positive economic change nearly always precedes the development and exercise of great political and military power. Europe today is in position to begin exerting such power in almost all spheres of influence. As U.S. economic dominance weakens, the EU will be there to fill the gaps. And Bible prophecy indicates that is just what will happen—though those prophecies do not reveal precisely when that will occur.



To stay up-to-date concerning Bible prophecies relating to today's world altering trends simply subscribe to, download or read online each issue of our free magazine: World News and Prophecy. Also request, download or read online our free, informative booklet: The Book of Revelation Unveiled.











Whose Economic Plan Is Superior?

In this time of U.S. presidential and vice-presidential debates, whose plan for solving the world's long term economic problems will work best?



God's Bailout Plan to Solve Permanently Our Economic Problems

The fundamental cause of the recent economic developments in the United States is not economic but spiritual—human nature.



Why Are the Big Issues Not Being Discussed?

The Bible warns of economic consequences when a nation's citizens turn away from God.







Bible Study Lessons

Only one book gives us the answers to life's crucial questions: Why are we here? Where is the world headed? What does the future hold? Our eye opening 12-lesson Bible Study will make the Bible come alive as it leads you through the biblical answers to these and other questions.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Spend, Cut or Change Our Thinking?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.

Spend, Cut or Change Our Thinking?


A commentary by Peter Hawkins

United Church of God pastor, British Isles


The U.S. government is pumping a lot of borrowed money into the U.S. economy with the hope that it can be kick-started before it cools off. In the United Kingdom, on the other hand, the new coalition government under David Cameron has decided to take the "bull by the horns." The Economist reports that the budget cuts and work towards decentralization are "a great gamble."



"Throughout the rich world, government has simply got too big and Mr Cameron's crew currently have the most promising approach to trimming it" ("Radical Britain," The Economist, Aug. 14-20, 2010, p. 9).



Expecting our grandchildren to pay?

The article contrasts the American and British approaches to the debt crisis, explaining that "despite the Tea Partiers' zeal, the Republicans seem as clueless as Mr Obama in producing a credible medium-term plan to balance America's budget." And here is the critical part: "But pretty soon, as in Europe, somebody will have to come up with one―and Britain, for better or worse, is likely to be the place they will come to for ideas."



There is no doubt the world is still in an unstable economic state. We should not dismiss current attempts made by sincere leaders to keep the global economy afloat. But past overspending, easy credit and now spending ourselves out of a stalling economy means that we expect our grandchildren to pay for our excesses. That is not ethical.



We have to realize that the thinking that led us to this precipice has to change.



Prime Minister Cameron's actions to reduce the involvement of the state, to put more responsibility into the hands of the local community, will help to cut budget deficits. It remains to be seen whether the right values will be sufficiently practiced at the community level to make it work.



Imagine applying ancient Israel's laws today

Real change would come from understanding our need for God's revealed way of life. If the civil laws of the nation of ancient Israel were enforced as the laws of our lands today—and many U.S. and British laws do hearken back to those statutes and judgments—our society would be remarkably different.



The economic laws, for example, ensured that high interest rates were illegal within the country (usury). Family land was to be returned to its original owners every 50 years (the Jubilee year), which would create a different frame of mind in the sale of land.



A flat 10 percent (tithe) of productive increase was collected to make education possible by providing the needs of the teachers (Levites).



Many financial principles in the book of Proverbs and other sections of the Bible teach careful and sensible stewardship. God promises: "Now it shall come to pass, if you diligently obey the voice of the Lord your God, to observe carefully all His commandments which I command you today, that the Lord your God will set you high above all nations of the earth" (Deuteronomy 28:1).



But our people and our leaders have turned away from the laws of God. We have permitted activities that are "politically correct," but are sinful in God's eyes. Please download or request our booklet The Ten Commandments.



Prophetic end-time economy

We may continue to try our own way of fixing problems, economic and otherwise, but the time will come when we run out of workable ideas. The Bible speaks of a time when, for the sake of stability, nations within Europe will surrender their sovereignty to a powerful leader. Personal liberty will depend on submission to laws that the prophesied end-time leader will enforce—including restrictions that will exclude those who obey the laws of the Bible (Revelation 13:16-17).



This prophesied vibrant economy may sound like a positive development to many. The loss of liberty will be the price that our people will pay for the world's new order. This is explained in our booklet The Book of Revelation Unveiled, which shows a sequence of global events that will soon develop, and are even now shaping up behind the scenes.



Our responsibility is to provide the news of a different kind of government. The message Jesus Christ brought from His Father to mankind tells of a society motivated by a realignment of values. We will be preparing for our children and grandchildren's future rather than spending it.



Moses described the benefits of living God's way: "Surely I have taught you statutes and judgments, just as the Lord my God commanded me, that you should act according to them in the land which you go to possess. Therefore be careful to observe them; for this is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the peoples who will hear all these statutes, and say, 'Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people'" (Deuteronomy 4:5-6).



Find out more about the message Jesus brought about a new society. It is based on the eternal laws of God, flowing from God's desire to share eternity with us. Read this hope-filled good news in The Gospel of the Kingdom.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Will America's Billions in Military Aid to Egypt Backfire?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.

Will America's Billions in Military Aid to Egypt Backfire?


A commentary by Don Hooser

Good News magazine writer, Dallas, Texas


Most of America's founders had great faith in God and relied on Him much more than do the present leaders and citizens of the United States.



For a nation to be persistently blessed with God's provision and protection, the people must be faithful to God, and they must trust in and rely on Him.



We are to be at least as faithful to God as a person should be to his or her spouse. Our Creator is rightfully jealous. He regards any unfaithfulness to Him as spiritual adultery.



This requires more than lip service. Actions speak louder than words.



The problems of foreign aid and political alliances

One example of spiritual infidelity is when our country's leaders have more trust in political and military alliances than they have in God. And the obvious evidence of this is when we unnecessarily send hard-earned tax dollars to other countries as political and military foreign aid (as opposed to disaster relief and humanitarian aid).



Tragically, much foreign aid is siphoned off to enrich the leaders rather than to benefit the common citizen. In fact, the aid often props up corrupt leaders, enabling them to retain their power over the people.



Most of America's foreign aid and military aid to other countries is an effort to buy cooperation and friendship. In doing so, the United States has "hired lovers" (Hosea 8:9).



But "friends" who are purchased are not real friends. The "aid" is like a bribe. They know you don't have real love for them. They know you have the selfish motive of buying their favors.



In fact, the United States often sends more money to unreliable "friends" than to its reliable friends! We reward nations for being unreliable! We choose strange bedfellows.



But the most serious aspect of this mess is failing to rely on God's guidance, provision and protection.



Egypt a dangerous example

Peace treaties and other negotiations with dictators usually come to an end when the dictator dies or is ousted. That shows how futile it is to rely on countries that are ruled by dictators.



Egypt has been one of the top recipients of American assistance, receiving about $1.5 billion in aid each year. But the violent demonstrations against the Mubarak regime show that no amount of aid can guarantee stability, prosperity or even a reliably pro-American foreign policy.



Much of the aid to Egypt has been military aid. Egypt has an incredibly strong military. It is larger than Israel's, although some of Israel's military is more advanced and sophisticated. If control of Egypt falls into the wrong hands, that military power could easily be used against us.



With the recent enormous uprising in Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood is trying to get its foot in the door hoping to gain control of the government. It was the Muslim Brotherhood that murdered Hosni Mubarak's predecessor, Anwar Sadat. A government that involves the Muslim Brotherhood will be hostile to personal liberties, repudiate Egypt's treaty with Israel and threaten the United States. It could refuse traffic through the Suez Canal to anyone at any time.



And although a majority of Egypt's people say they want democracy, 84 percent of them also say you should be killed if you leave Islam. With that belief, Egypt won't be a land of freedom—a land that guarantees the right to life, the rule of law, property rights, the protection of minorities, respect for human dignity and the right to worship God according to one's conscience.



Through His prophets, God frequently reprimanded Israel and Judah for committing spiritual adultery and "playing the harlot" with neighboring nations. Instead of being loyal to God and putting their full trust in Him to provide and protect, they relied instead on alliances with various nations (see Jeremiah 3:1-15 and Ezekiel 16:15-63).



God warned Israel that their alliances would backfire. He said, "I will stir up your lovers against you" (Ezekiel 23:22). After the fall of Judah to the Babylonians, God's prophet wrote, "Among all her lovers she has none to comfort her. All her friends have dealt treacherously with her; they have become her enemies" (Lamentations 1:2).



Would that America would rededicate herself to a committed covenant relationship with God!



But it is not going to happen soon enough to prevent calamity. Our nation's increasing infidelity toward our Creator will be our undoing. Bible prophecies tell us that America and her Western allies will eventually suffer terribly because of their unfaithfulness to God.



However, God promises that He will provide for and protect every individual who faithfully obeys, serves and trusts in Him! For more understanding of these prophecies and of the volatile Middle East, see our free booklets The United States and Britain in Bible Prophecy and The Middle East in Bible Prophecy

Monday, February 14, 2011

Before You Ask Someone to Be Your Valentine...

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.

Before You Ask Someone to Be Your Valentine...


Millions send Valentine’s Day cards to express their affection for someone special. But how did this holiday originate? And does Valentine’s Day represent what true love is all about?

by Jerold Aust

Every year, more than a billion Valentine cards are bought and sent throughout the world. The act of sending a nice card seems to fill a natural yearning to express how much we care for someone.



But does Valentine's Day really celebrate true, caring love? Or does this popular holiday actually promote something else?



Origins of Valentine's Day

When we think of Valentine's Day, we call to mind hearts, chocolates, flowers and expressions of love. Yet before joining in the fun, wouldn't it be wise to know where this tradition came from?



First, we should understand that Valentine's Day began when the early Roman Catholic Church tried to Christianize an ancient pagan Roman holiday called Lupercalia. That celebration was a licentious festival that honored Lupercus, the hero-hunter of wolves. This festival was so immensely popular among the Roman people that church leaders included it in their calendar, hoping to retain their new parishioners and turn them from sexual licentiousness to morality by linking it to a saint.



The saint they chose for this mid-February Roman festival was St. Valentine. One source explains: "St. Valentine is believed to have been a Roman priest who was martyred on this day [February 14] around [A.D.] 270. How he became the patron saint of lovers remains a mystery, but one theory is that the Church used the day of St. Valentine's martyrdom in an attempt to Christianize the old Roman Lupercalia, a pagan festival held around the middle of February.



"Part of the ancient ceremony entailed putting girls' names in a box and letting the boys draw them out. Couples would thus be paired off until the following year. The Church substituted saints' names for girls' names, in the hope that the participant would model his life after the saint whose name he drew.



"But by the 16th century, it was once again girls' names that ended up in the box. Eventually the custom of sending anonymous cards or messages to those one admired became the accepted way of celebrating St. Valentine's Day" (Helene Henderson and Sue Ellen Thompson, editors, Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary, "Valentine's Day," 2005, p. 576).



Although all historical sources contain some of the same notions about how Valentine's Day developed, each one highlights another facet of the story. Another states: "Some people have tried to connect the historical Saint Valentine with the later practices of Valentine's Day by saying that the saint married couples despite the emperor's prohibition, or that he sent a note signed 'from your Valentine' to the daughter of his jailer.



"However, the early Christian saint Valentine probably had nothing to do with the traditions later celebrated on his feast day; it is simply by his placement in the Christian calendar that his name became associated with it. Later, the word valentine may have been confused with the Norman French word galantine, meaning lover of women, as the g and v were often interchangeable in common pronunciation.



"In any case, February 14 gradually became a traditional date for exchanging love messages, and Saint Valentine became the patron saint of lovers" (Macmillan Profiles: Festivals and Holidays, 1999, p. 363).



Theories differ as to how a holiday for lovers developed in February. Some think the mating of birds at that time of year is connected with the tradition:



"One is based on the belief throughout rural Europe during the Middle Ages that the birds began to mate on February 14. Chaucer, in his 'Parliament of Foules,' refers to the belief in this way: For this was Seynt Valentyne's day. When every foul cometh ther to choose his mate" (Stephen Christianson, The American Book of Days, 2000, p. 139).



Regardless of the varied sources and ambiguous history of Valentine's Day, a few identifiable points continue to surface: Valentine's Day originated with an ancient pagan Roman feast called Lupercalia. That festival was based on fertility and sexual licentiousness. In the third century, the Roman Catholic Church attempted to Christianize the ancient festival practice by naming it after a martyr.



The hope was that the festival adherents would thereafter follow the examples of church saints, no longer engaging in the ancient practice of free sex while honoring an ancient god. Despite some success, the holiday still contributes to immorality among many and promotes a wrong view of love.



A counterfeit holiday

Something that is counterfeit always indicates there is something real that it stands in place of, the genuine article. Could the same be true of a holiday? The roots of Valentine's Day lie in a pagan festival, not the Bible. In the Catholic Church's efforts to "Christianize" a pagan festival to gain adherents, did it overlook the real thing—holidays that reflect God's perspective on love and giving?



In fact, what was overlooked in the adoption of pagan holidays was God's true Holy Days and what they mean. We can find all of God's Holy Days or festivals listed in Leviticus 23. And you can also find in the New Testament that Jesus Christ, the apostles and the entire early Church all kept those exact same festivals. Jude is apparently referring to these when he writes of "your love feasts" in Jude 12.



In contrast, the holidays that are widely celebrated in modern Christendom, including Valentine's Day, are not found in the pages of the Bible. Instead, they are largely rooted in ancient pagan holidays that have been given a veneer of Christianity. (If you want to know more about God's festivals, please request or download our free booklet God's Holy Day Plan: The Promise of Hope for All Mankind.)



Where does God stand on Valentine's Day?

We learn from the Bible that God is strictly opposed to any religious or secular holiday that keeps humankind blinded from His precious truth. Jesus said, "And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free" (John 8:32). God wants people to be truly free, not held captive by false beliefs and ideas.



The Bible reveals God's Holy Days and festivals. Each one illustrates a significant part of His ultimate love for humanity and His plan to save mankind—a love that led Jesus Christ to die for us while we were yet sinners. Valentine's Day has no part in the salvation of humanity. In fact, it stands in contradiction to it—originating as it does in sinful, pagan worship.



Valentine's Day may be acceptable to millions of people, but not to God. It substitutes human reasoning for God's truth. It focuses the attention of people on infatuation, not a deep abiding love, on "getting love," not giving or sacrificing for others.



God warns all who claim to represent Him, who claim to be Christians, to avoid the ways of the ancient pagans and their counterfeit holidays and feasts: "Observe and obey all these words which I command you, that it may go well with you and your children after you forever, when you do what is good and right in the sight of the Lord your God.



"When the Lord your God cuts off from before you the nations which you go to dispossess, and you displace them and dwell in their land, take heed to yourself that you are not ensnared to follow them, after they are destroyed from before you, and that you do not inquire after their gods, saying, 'How did these nations serve their gods? I also will do likewise.'



"You shall not worship the Lord your God in that way; for every abomination to the Lord which He hates they have done to their gods . . . Whatever I command you, be careful to observe it; you shall not add to it nor take away from it" (Deuteronomy 12:28-32, emphasis added).



In fact, God told the Israelites to eradicate all elements of pagan worship among them (see verses 1-4).



God is keenly interested in our welfare. He created us and gave us His manual, the Bible, to follow so we can get the most out of this life and that He might give us eternal life forever.



Valentine's Day is rooted not in God's Word, but in ancient paganism. It is not from the true God but from this world and its false god, Satan (2 Corinthians 4:4). God says: "Do not love the world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world—the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life—is not of the Father but is of the world. And the world is passing away, and the lust of it; but he who does the will of God abides forever" (1 John 2:15-17).



So to return to the issue raised up front: Should you ask someone to be your Valentine? Not if you care more about true love and about what God thinks. GN









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



Related Resources



Does God Allow Us to Choose Our Own Religious Holidays?

Many think that under the New Covenant they have freedom to worship God however they want, including deciding on their own days of worship. But what does the Bible say?



St. Valentine, Cupid and Jesus Christ

Its customs appear harmless, but is Valentine's Day really a Christian holiday? What are its origins? Could this seemingly innocent celebration promote unbiblical teachings?



Before You Ask Someone to Be Your Valentine...

Millions send Valentine’s Day cards to express their affection for someone special. But how did this holiday originate? And does Valentine’s Day represent what true love is all about?



Is Valentine's Christian?

Should true Christians observe Valentine's Day?



Bible FAQ: Where did Valentine's Day come from? Is it wrong for a Christian to celebrate it?

Like many of the world's major holidays, St. Valentine's Day is an annual observance with its roots entrenched firmly in pagan beliefs and customs. What would God think about Valentine's Day?



What Kind of Love Does Valentine's Day Promote?

If a Valentine's Day kind of love could be defined, what would it be?



Holidays or Holy Days: Does It Matter Which Days We Observe?

Many people are shocked to discover the origins of our most popular religious holidays. They are also surprised to find that the days God commands us to observe in the Bible—the same days Jesus Christ and the apostles kept—are almost universally ignored. Why? Also, why are today's supposedly Christian holidays observed with so many rituals and customs that are not sanctioned anywhere in the Bible? In this booklet you'll discover detailed answers to these questions.

Friday, February 11, 2011

St. Valentine, Cupid and Jesus Christ

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.

St. Valentine, Cupid and Jesus Christ


Its customs appear harmless, but is Valentine's Day really a Christian holiday? What are its origins? Could this seemingly innocent celebration promote unbiblical teachings?

by Gary Petty

Every year in mid-February millions of people express romantic desire for each other by exchanging heart-shaped boxes of chocolate, flowers and "valentines." Children express hidden infatuations by sending cards as "secret admirers." Retailers stock shelves with merchandise covered in stylized hearts and Cupids preparing for the popular observance of St. Valentine's Day, Feb. 14.



Where and how did these curious customs originate?



Valentine's Day acquired its name from a Catholic saint, although exactly who he was is a matter of debate. The two most famous Valentines were a Roman priest and a bishop, both of whom suffered martyrdom in the last half of the third century.



Celebrations: The Complete Book of American Holidays records the story this way: "Everyone knows that St. Valentine's Day is that day of the year when friends and lovers express affection for one another, through cards, candy and flowers, whatever means the imagination can find. But no one is quite certain who this St. Valentine was—or, more appropriately, who these Valentines were. The early lists of church martyrs reveal at least three Valentines, and one source boosted this number to an unwieldy eight, each of whom had his feast day on February 14.



"The various Valentines eventually evolved into one. Lover's quarrels come under his jurisdiction and, naturally, he is the patron saint of engaged couples and of anyone wishing to marry" (Robert J. Myers and the editors of Hallmark Cards, 1972, pp. 48-49).



During the Middle Ages, Valentine's Day grew increasingly popular in Europe. Feb. 14 was significant not only for its religious meaning but because it was widely believed that birds begin to mate on this date. Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1340-1400) mentions the mating of birds on Valentine's Day in his poem "Parliament of Foules."



"English literature, following Chaucer, contains frequent references to February 14 as sacred to lovers. Shakespeare, Drayton, and Gay are among those who mention it in this connection, and the diarist Samuel Pepys several times discusses the day and its related customs. The Paston Letters, covering the period from 1422 to 1509, contain a letter by Dame Elizabeth Brews to John Paston, with whom she hoped to arrange a match for her daughter, which runs this way:



" 'And cousin mine, upon Monday is St. Valentine's day and every bird chooseth himself a mate ...' " (Jane M. Hatch, The American Book of Days, 1978, p. 178).



For centuries St. Valentine's Day flourished as 24 hours of romantic superstition. A common belief was that a girl would marry the first bachelor she saw or conjure her future mate's image by visiting a graveyard on St. Valentine's Eve.



The custom of sending valentine cards grew popular in the 1700s. In the early 1800s commercial valentines appeared, and soon there was no end to how entrepreneurs could make money from the holiday. Valentine's Day became so popular in the United States that a 1863 periodical claimed it was second in celebration only to Christmas.



Valentine's Day is as popular as ever with children and couples. It is one of the biggest moneymaking days for florists, candy makers and gift shops.



Pre-Christian origins

But do the roots of Valentine's Day run deeper and further back into history?



The origins of Valentine's Day predate Christianity. "The most plausible theory for St. Valentine's Day traces its customs back to the Roman Lupercalia, a feast celebrated in February in honor of the pastoral god Lupercus, a Roman version of the Greek god Pan. The festival was an important one for the Romans, occurring when it did, naturally had some aspects of a rebirth rite to it" (Myers, pp. 50-51).



The original festival, celebrated on Feb. 15, was founded in the ancient legend of the infants Romulus and Remus. The two brothers were said to have been abandoned but discovered and nursed by a wolf, or lupus in Latin. The two boys are credited as the founders of Rome.



Lupercalia was celebrated in honor of pastoral deities, and ceremonies included the sacrifice of goats and a dog. Young men dressed in the sacrificial animal skins would run from a cave, said to be where Romulus and Remus were cared for by the wolf, brandishing strips of goat skins. Any women struck by these thongs were assured fertility. "These thongs were called Februa, the festival Februatio, and the day Dies Februetus, hence arose the name of the month February, the last of the old Roman year" (Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. XV, ninth edition, 1907, "Lupercalia").



Over the years many customs were added to the celebration. One was for the names of girls to be placed in a box to be drawn by boys. Each resulting match was then considered a pair for the coming year.



Lupercalia and Christianity

As Christianity spread throughout the Roman Empire, it was common for pagan converts to retain their earlier religious customs and practices. Edward Gibbons, in his classic work The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, states: "After the conversion of the Imperial city, the Christians still continued, in the month of February, the annual celebration of the Lupercalia; to which they ascribed a secret and mysterious influence of the genial powers of the animal and vegetable world" (Vol. II, The Modern Library, p. 327).



Pope Gelasius is said to have eradicated Lupercalia from Christian observance in the last decade of the fifth century. But, in reality, the mingling of paganism and Christianity had become inseparable in much of the Western world. Saturnalia and Mithraism were incorporated into the church through claiming a December birth date for Jesus Christ. Various spring fertility rites merged to form the basis of Easter celebrations. Lupercalia evolved into the observance of St. Valentine's Day.



Celebrations: The Complete Book of American Holidays comments: "Everywhere that Christians came into power they immediately adapted the holidays and customs of the people to their own creed. Now it was a simple matter to call the day that this drawing took place St. Valentine's Day ... To Christianize the heathen practice of picking lots for sweethearts, all that was needed was to replace the names of the girls with names of saints and to have the young people emulate the particular virtues of whatever saint they drew. Incidentally, this custom is not dead today and is still observed in some religious orders.



"It was always more fun, of course, to pick a girl's rather than a saint's name. Consequently, by at least the fourteenth century the custom had reverted to its original form" (pp. 50-51).



Roman gods and Christian saints

Why would people observe a day that honors pagan gods by associating it with Christian saints?



The ancient Romans worshiped gods and goddesses involved with every aspect of life. Jupiter, the chief of the gods, was the deity of rain and storms, while his wife, Juno, was the goddess of womanhood. Minerva was the goddess of handicrafts and wisdom; Venus, of sexual love and birth; Vesta, of the hearth and sacred fires; Ceres, of farming and harvests.



The Greeks considered Mercury to be the messenger of the gods, but the Romans worshiped him as the god of trade, and businessmen celebrated his feast day to increase profits. Others included Mars, god of war; Castor and Pollux, gods of sea travelers; Cronos, the guardian of time; and Cupid, god of love, whose magic arrows encouraged humans and immortals to fall in love. The list goes on and on.



Romans would generically call on "the gods," but each deity had its own cult, and worshipers would pray and conduct religious ceremonies to a specific god or goddess to ask for help. Christianity, with its emphasis on one God, was viewed by many Romans as a strange superstition or even a kind of atheism that denied the existence of the gods.



Members of the early Christian Church considered themselves "saints," meaning holy or separated to God. Paul greets the church at Philippi as "all the saints in Christ Jesus" (Philippians 1:1). However, it wasn't long before "saints," in the Roman tradition, began to take on the meaning of a special class of martyrs or performers of heroic virtue.



In the second and third centuries it became common for congregations to honor the death of a martyr by celebrating the anniversary of his or her demise. The local cult would offer prayers to the dead for intercession with God. A "saint" could eventually receive universal recognition by declaration of the bishop of Rome.



The Catholic Encyclopedia explains: "As was taught by St. Augustine ... Catholics, while giving to God alone adoration strictly so-called, honor the saints because of the Divine supernatural gifts which have earned them eternal life, and through which they reign with God in the heavenly fatherland as His chosen friends and faithful servants.



"In other words, Catholics honor God in His saints as the loving distributor of supernatural gifts. The worship of latria ... or strict adoration is given to God alone; the worship, or dulia ... or honor and humble reverence, is paid the saints; the worship of hyperdulia ... on account of her greater excellence, [is directed] to the Blessed Virgin Mary" (Vol. II, "Saints," 1907, Online Edition, 1999, Kevin Knight).



The evolution from the early Church's recognition of all members being saints to the veneration and worship of the dead is rooted in the early mixture of paganism with Christianity. The populace throughout the Roman Empire was accustomed not only to the worship of the Greek and Roman pantheon, but to cultic worship of local deities. It was an easy step for Christian congregations rooted in paganism to replace the customs of local cults with the worship of dead martyrs.



Over the centuries the Catholic Church canonized saints for many events, problems, illnesses and occupations, each celebrated with his or her own feast day. St. Stephen is the patron saint of stonemasons; doctors can pray to St. Luke, fishermen to St. Andrew, and carpenters to St. Joseph. Patron saints are there for farmers, hunters, shoemakers and even comedians. The primary saint in Catholic theology is Mary, the mother of Jesus.



The danger in a harmless holiday

What harm can there be in the celebration of lovers in the name of St. Valentine? Besides, what does it matter that some of the day's customs hark back to pagan rites?



For one thing, nowhere does the Bible approve of praying to dead (or living) saints. In fact, Jesus declared that no one except Himself has ascended into heaven (John 3:13). The saints wait in their graves for the resurrection to occur at Jesus' return. Venerating dead saints propagates an ancient heathen custom that has no basis in reality.



The apostle Paul wrote to the Thessalonians about the resurrection: "But I do not want you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning those who have fallen asleep, lest you sorrow as others who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who sleep in Jesus. For this we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive and remain until the coming of the Lord will by no means precede those who are asleep. For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of an archangel, and with the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first" (1 Thessalonians 4:13-16).



One of the roles Jesus Christ fulfills as our resurrected High Priest is Intercessor: one who pleads on behalf of another. The Bible declares: "Therefore He [Jesus] is also able to save to the uttermost those who come to God through Him, since He always lives to make intercession for them" (Hebrews 7:25).



The Bible encourages Christians to pray for each other, but heavenly intercession is reserved for Jesus Christ. At Jesus' death the veil in the temple, a heavy curtain that separated the "holy of holies," representing God's throne, from the rest of the temple, was supernaturally torn from top to bottom. This action demonstrated that a new access to God was made available by the sacrifice of Jesus the Messiah. A Christian's relationship to God is with a personal and intimate Father. The supposed need for another heavenly intercessor denigrates this role of Christ.



Does it matter to God?

God warned ancient Israel, the people He chose to represent true religion, not to mix pagan customs with worshiping Him as the true God. "When the Lord your God cuts off from before you the nations which you go to dispossess, and you displace them and dwell in their land, take heed to yourself that you are not ensnared to follow them, after they are destroyed from before you, and that you do not inquire after their gods, saying, 'How did these nations serve their gods? I also will do likewise.' You shall not worship the Lord your God in that way; for every abomination to the Lord which He hates they have done to their gods ... Whatever I command you, be careful to observe it; you shall not add to it nor take away from it" (Deuteronomy 12:29-32).



Paul compares mixing paganism with Christianity to worshiping demons: "What am I saying then? That an idol is anything, or what is offered to idols is anything? Rather, that the things which the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to demons and not to God, and I do not want you to have fellowship with demons. You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons; you cannot partake of the Lord's table and of the table of demons" (1 Corinthians 10:19-21).



Holidays such as St. Valentine's Day metamorphose into icons of Western culture, parodying religion. Most people don't care that its origins lie in the Roman Lupercalia and are rooted in tenets that have nothing to do with the Bible. It's this apathy about how to worship God, and the corresponding moral decay, that is the result of mixing Christianity with paganism.



Jesus said His followers would "worship the Father in spirit and truth" (John 4:23). Observance of this holiday is just one of many traditions that must be questioned if Christianity is to return to its foundation laid by Jesus Christ. GN









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



Related Resources



Does God Allow Us to Choose Our Own Religious Holidays?

Many think that under the New Covenant they have freedom to worship God however they want, including deciding on their own days of worship. But what does the Bible say?



St. Valentine, Cupid and Jesus Christ

Its customs appear harmless, but is Valentine's Day really a Christian holiday? What are its origins? Could this seemingly innocent celebration promote unbiblical teachings?



Before You Ask Someone to Be Your Valentine...

Millions send Valentine’s Day cards to express their affection for someone special. But how did this holiday originate? And does Valentine’s Day represent what true love is all about?



Bible FAQ: Where did Valentine's Day come from? Is it wrong for a Christian to celebrate it?

Like many of the world's major holidays, St. Valentine's Day is an annual observance with its roots entrenched firmly in pagan beliefs and customs. What would God think about Valentine's Day?



Is Valentine's Christian?

Should true Christians observe Valentine's Day?



What Kind of Love Does Valentine's Day Promote?

If a Valentine's Day kind of love could be defined, what would it be?



Holidays or Holy Days: Does It Matter Which Days We Observe?

Many people are shocked to discover the origins of our most popular religious holidays. They are also surprised to find that the days God commands us to observe in the Bible—the same days Jesus Christ and the apostles kept—are almost universally ignored. Why? Also, why are today's supposedly Christian holidays observed with so many rituals and customs that are not sanctioned anywhere in the Bible? In this booklet you'll discover detailed answers to these questions.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

What Kind of Love Does Valentine's Day Promote?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.

What Kind of Love Does Valentine's Day Promote?


We often talk about true love. Yet what many people call love is actually only infatuation, defined as a foolish, unreasoning or extravagant passion or attraction (The American Heritage Dictionary, 1994).



Infatuation is a "falling-in-love" experience brought on by drastic changes in brain chemistry. Scientists now believe that the euphoria of infatuation is induced by the action of phenylethylamine (PEA). Naturally occurring in the chemistry of the brain, it is an amphetamine-like neurotransmitter.



PEA acts with dopamine and norepinephrine—a chemical derived from dopamine—to form what family and marriage therapist Patricia Love calls the "love molecule" or the "love cocktail" (The Truth About Love, 2001, pp. 28-29).



This "love cocktail" creates a euphoria or altered state of consciousness (ibid.). But is this love?



The Greek language in which the New Testament was written uses three different words to describe three kinds of love. One is phileo, used of fondness or brotherly love. Another is eros, which refers to erotic or sexual love. The third is agapao, a broader term used in the New Testament for a selfless, outgoing concern for others (compare John 3:16; 1 Corinthians 13).



So this brings up an interesting point: If a Valentine's Day kind of love could be defined, what would it be? Based on its origins, it actually more closely resembles infatuation, or eros, and not an outgoing concern—the kind of true love between a husband and wife. GN

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Child Porn Goes Mainstream: The Millstone of MTV

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.

Child Porn Goes Mainstream: The Millstone of MTV


A commentary by Marc Cebrian

Member of the Oakland, California, congregation of the United Church of God and a professional video editor in San Francisco

Posted February 3, 2011

Just when you think that the depravity of our modern culture cannot sink any lower, something else pushes the envelope. Enter: Skins, a television series that was first broadcast in the United Kingdom and that has now been adapted for the United States. The quick synopsis of this MTV show is: "Follow the adventures of a group of high school kids trying to discover who they are and what life is about by experimenting with drugs, alcohol and sex."



Sex, drugs and lots of underage skin

There have been many programs and movies over the years that used this "coming of age" story steeped in ancient sins, but a particularly disturbing part of this show is that the actors portraying the high school kids are kids themselves. The underage actors range from 15 to 17. Legally, they are minors. Yet these minors are put into sexual situations on camera—touching each other's bodies and, in some cases, showing lots of skin.



The sexualizing of our young people—children—is an abomination.



If I were to describe the content of the promotional materials that are being used to advertise the show, that in itself might be considered pornography. The fact that the actors are children intensifies the controversy because, by definition, MTV is selling child pornography.



MTV has gone from playing music videos 24/7 to pushing the "easy money" of reality television and controversial dramatic programming with overt sexual themes targeted at young viewers.



Where are the parents?

Where are the parents of these actors? Have they no protective instinct to shield their own kids from being exposed to such filth? What about all the adults involved in the production? Have they no conscience? Are their minds so seared by sin that they gladly accept the paycheck and put human standards aside?



Jesus Christ warned, "It would be better for him if a millstone were hung around his neck, and he were thrown into the sea, than that he should offend one of these little ones" (Luke 17:2).



I happened to speak with two coworkers this week about the show. The 45-year-old mother of an 11-year-old girl said, "If you go after them, you'll have to go after Abercrombie and Fitch." A father in his early 30s commented, "Well, my daughter's only 4, so I don't have to worry about it. Besides, the show that aired in the U.K. was much worse."



To sum up both responses: There's a lot of bad stuff out there, so just accept it. Evil builds upon evil.



Where evil comes from

According to surveys, most Americans don't believe a literal Satan exists. He does.



Satan knows all he needs to do is corrupt one generation and when the corrupted people have their own children, their evil ways will be assured. Satan knows the wisdom of Scripture and uses it to suit his own devices: "Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it" (Proverbs 22:6).



MTV is paving the way for more depraved programming. The only thing that might turn them back, besides an effective lawsuit for interstate traffic in pornography, would be very large numbers of Americans standing up and saying, "Enough!" What can you do to stand up against this disturbing program? You could write to the advertisers of the show. You could write to MTV. You could call them. You could tell them they are promoting the corruption of our young people by glorifying the worst moral values that exist in our society.



But would you make any difference?



It's not yet clear whether the Justice Department will investigate to see if federal laws were broken, but the damage is already done. The moral standard in our society has been lowered—and once that is cemented into the mainstream consciousness, it will open a door for the next step down. Satan may be laughing, but God is not.



The apostle Paul warned in his letter to Timothy, "But mark this: There will be terrible times in the last days. People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, treacherous, rash, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God" (2 Timothy 3:1-4, New International Version).



Any society that does not fulfill its obligation to protect its children is a society that does not deserve to exist. But rather than praying for God's judgment upon those who have contributed to this path of destruction, let us all pray that the children be protected from temptation when the parents fail to do so.



To learn more about what the Bible tells parents about protecting and raising moral children, see our free booklet Marriage and Family: The Missing Dimension

Monday, February 7, 2011

What Will Happen to Egypt?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.


A commentary by Mike Bennett

UCG editorial content manager

Posted February 3, 2011

After Tunisia's Jasmine Revolution toppled autocratic leader Ben Ali's government Jan. 15, protests have erupted in other Arab nations from Algeria to Yemen. But it is Egypt in particular that has the world's attention.



Tens of thousands of protesters in the streets of Cairo have voiced frustrations about the economy (about a quarter of young people are unemployed throughout the Arab world) and corruption. But protesters don't all share a common view of the solution—beyond removing President Hosni Mubarak, who has ruled Egypt for 29 years. If the government falls, will anarchy, democracy, military rule or an Islamic regime emerge?



The United States and the rest of the Western world has come to depend on Egypt's stability for the 30 percent of the world's oil that is transported through the Suez Canal, as well as its assurance of peace with Israel. That peace has come at a high price of about $2 billion a year in American aid—mostly military aid—to Egypt. Who will control Egypt's vast array of the latest armaments?



Egypt in Bible prophecy

Throughout the Bible, Egypt was in contact and often conflict with the people of Israel. No wonder Egypt is mentioned 611 times in the Bible! Although none of the New Testament mentions of the nation of Egypt refer to end-time prophecies, there are plenty of them in the Old Testament. Here are just a few:



In the Bible's most detailed prophecy, Daniel 11, Daniel saw many specific events that then occurred over the next 400 years. The conflicts centered on the king of the North (the Seleucids, whose empire was swallowed up by the Roman Empire in 65 B.C.) and the king of the South (the Ptolemies, who ruled from Alexandria in Egypt).



Then the prophecy skips to end-time events. Daniel 11:36-38 appears to describe the actions of the Roman emperors and their successors, leading all the way up to a final king of the North of the end time.



"And at the time of the end shall the king of the south push [Hebrew nagach, to push or to attack] at him: and the king of the north shall come against him like a whirlwind, with chariots, and with horsemen, and with many ships; and he shall enter into the countries, and shall overflow and pass over. He shall enter also into the glorious land…and the land of Egypt shall not escape" (Daniel 11:40-42, King James Version).



Good news for Egypt and everyone

Soon after this, Jesus Christ will return to save humanity from self-destruction and will be proclaimed king of all nations, including Egypt (Matthew 24:22; Revelation 11:15).



Through those end-time events of the Great Tribulation and the Day of the Lord, Egypt will be punished for rebellion against God, as all nations will. But God promises to heal Egypt: "They will return to the Lord, and He will be entreated by them and heal them" (Isaiah 19:22).



Then Isaiah records one of the greatest ironic twists of history. Egypt and Assyria, historically Israel's greatest foes, become blessed allies!



"In that day Israel will be one of three with Egypt and Assyria—a blessing in the midst of the land, whom the Lord of hosts shall bless, saying, 'Blessed is Egypt My people, and Assyria the work of My hands, and Israel My inheritance'" (Isaiah 19:24-25). That is truly the good news of the peaceful Kingdom of God!



To understand the volatile Middle East today, and the real hope God promises for the future, read the carefully researched and detailed booklet The Middle East in Bible Prophecy.




Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Disastrous Weather—Acts of God?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/  or call 1-888-886-8632.
Disastrous Weather—Acts of God?


Permitting God into the weather picture isn't fashionable. Nor do weather forecasters admit a divine hand might be at work behind the scenes.

by Graemme Marshall

Insurance companies happily take our money for reasonable risks. But when it comes to the unpredictable or extreme, they're uninsurable "acts of God." Few people actually think that God's hand is literally involved. You'll be told there's been worse in the past, one can't claim every event is from God, it's El Niño's fault, cyclical climate change, global warming, depletion of the ozone layer or worldwide pollution. Scientists say this, so it must be true!



In part it is true. There have been worse calamities and we shouldn't attribute every tragedy to God. Yet there have also been profound changes in the weather, and the trend is continuing.



Increasingly "worst ever on record" describes weather



The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy has estimated weather disasters cost the United States approximately $1 billion per week. And a look at the last four years of Atlantic Ocean hurricane activity reveals a period more severe than any on record, with scientists predicting more in the near future (Encarta Reference Library, "Weather"). Weather chaos isn't a new phenomenon; better record keeping and reporting make us more aware of it. But weather problems are getting worse.



While freezing rain is not an uncommon Canadian experience, the 1998 ice storm that hit eastern Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick was exceptional. In fact, it was the worst to hit Canada in recent memory. It brutalized one of the largest populated urbanized areas of North America, leaving more than four million people freezing in the dark for days.



Without doubt the storm directly affected more people than any previous weather event in Canadian history! One million households were without power; and prolonged freezing brought down millions of trees, 120,000 kilometers (75,000 miles) of power lines and telephone cables, 130 transmission towers (each worth $100,000) and 30,000 wooden utility poles (costing $3,000 each). What took human beings a half century to construct took nature a matter of hours to knock down. Many Quebec maple syrup producers, who account for 70 percent of the world's supply, were ruined and their trees permanently destroyed.



Was El Niño to blame for the ice storm? Will there be more? Environment Canada's science advisor says freezing temperatures are likely to occur even more frequently in southern Canada in the future-a disturbing thought to consider. Yet too much ice and snow is contrasted in other areas by drought and no rain.



Is it unthinkable that disastrous weather can be of God?



There are a few opening lines from Banjo Paterson's "Song of the Artesian Water" that give something to consider about upset weather. They hint, too, at the stubborn denial of God's hand at work in our lives. Banjo Paterson was an Australian poet of the late 1880s known for his ballads "Waltzing Matilda" and "The Man From Snowy River." "Song of the Artesian Water" begins: "Now the stock have started dying, for the Lord has sent a drought; but we're sick of prayers and Providence, we're going to do without; if the Lord won't send us water, oh, we'll get it from the devil: yes, we'll get it from the devil deeper down."



We drill bores and dig wells to get water from artesian sources. Only what happens when the water table drops and wells go dry? Writing from the 1880s, Banjo proposed an interesting alternative for our lack of water-that God hasn't sent it! Now that's a different perspective. You don't hear that possibility presented by weather forecasters. Do you suppose there could actually be reasons other than upset climate or El Niño why we have ice storms, hurricanes, brushfires, drought or floods?



Scripture shows the Creator of weather sometimes uses weather to get our attention.



In a specific example, the prophet Haggai records that God did, in fact, send blight, mildew and hail so the people might turn from wrong living and repent spiritually (2:17). It shows that if a nation or individual pleases God, He'll bless with good weather. Now this isn't to wrongly imply that every weather condition is some fearful warning from God. But unseasonable or destructive weather has been an instrument used to get people's attention.



Of course, if we see only global warming, climate change or El Niño, we won't get any message, will we? Yet if we'd only acknowledge our Creator, how simple it might be. The prophet Zechariah says it all with: "Ask the Lord for rain in the time of the latter rain. The Lord will make flashing clouds; He will give them showers of rain, grass in the field for everyone" (10:1). That asking could be part of the solution is food for thought.



Divine weather forecasts



During Old Testament times people were more conscious of God's hand in the weather. "He [God] called for a famine in the land; He destroyed all the provision of bread" (Psalm 105:16). This prediction came true for Pharaoh of ancient Egypt. Joseph relates, "God has shown Pharaoh what He is about to do. Indeed seven years of great plenty will come throughout all the land of Egypt; but after them seven years of famine will arise, and all the plenty will be forgotten in the land of Egypt; and the famine will deplete the land...And the dream was repeated to Pharaoh twice because the thing is established by God, and God will shortly bring it to pass" (Genesis 41:28-32). A later verse shows this famine was in all countries, with only Egypt adequately prepared to survive it.



Consider some further examples. Through the prophet Elijah, God sent a three-year drought (1 Kings 17:1; 18:1). Earlier in the reign of King David was another famine, the result of a sin of former King Saul (2 Samuel 21:1). It was up to David to set the matter right before God.



During the reign of Roman Emperor Claudius (A.D. 41-54), a prophet named Agabus predicted "a great famine throughout all the world" (Acts 11:27-28).



How can we escape catastrophes such as these? Should we not reflect if we are guilty of God's displeasure, whether nationally or personally? After a 2001 destructive tornado, a man interviewed on TV said, "Maybe someone up there isn't happy with us."



In specific Bible references, the divine withholding of good weather is revealed. When God is displeased with peoples' sinful ways, He gains their attention by holding back rain. "Take heed to yourselves, lest your heart be deceived, and you turn aside and serve other gods and worship them, lest the Lord's anger be aroused against you, and He shut up the heavens so that there be no rain, and the land yield no produce, and you perish quickly from the good land which the Lord is giving you" (Deuteronomy 11:16-17).



The prophet Amos recorded God's weather prophecy: "'I also withheld rain from you, when there were still three months to harvest. I made it rain on one city, I withheld rain from another city...I blasted you with blight and mildew. When your gardens increased, your vineyards, your fig trees, and your olive trees, the locust devoured them; yet you have not returned to Me,' says the Lord" (4:7-9). It all sounds so much like today. These scriptures reveal God as the real source of good things, including our weather. If we are not pleasing Him, why shouldn't He powerfully get our attention?



King Solomon clearly linked disastrous life events with disobedience to God. You can read this connection in his prayer at the dedication of the temple (1 Kings 8:35-39).



Can future weather trends be known?



Future weather trends can be known. Consider this. A single nuclear submarine is said to have more destructive firepower than all the combined explosives unleashed by all sides during World War II, including the atomic bombs dropped on Japan. What would be the horrendous impact upon our weather by simultaneous detonations of several nuclear devices? The effect upon air currents, vegetation and temperature levels would be enormous.



In the years ahead, there will be climatic upheavals as a result of unfolding prophesied biblical events. Some startling verses indicate even the delicate balance of our oceans will be seriously disrupted. This ruination of the sea's marine life could be punishment upon humans who are prepared to unleash such horrific weaponry upon earth's fragile environment (Revelation 8:8-9). Our booklet, You Can Understand Bible Prophecy, is enlightening reading. This is the short-term bad news. It's also reason for us to pause and ask: Should we assume all weather catastrophes are just random, isolated events?



Good news about weather



God said to ancient Israel, "And it shall be that if you earnestly obey My commandments which I command you today, to love the Lord your God and serve Him with all your heart and with all your soul, then I will give you the rain for your land in its season, the early rain and the latter rain, that you may gather in your grain, your new wine and your oil. And I will send grass in your fields for your livestock, that you may eat and be filled" (Deuteronomy 11:13-15). Rain in season. Every time, predictable. Can you imagine this as normal year after year?



The prophet Ezekiel records God saying of the future: "I will call for the grain and multiply it, and bring no famine upon you" (36:29). This comes after a "new heart and a new spirit" moves people to keep God's ways (verse 26).



The long-range forecast is good: We are heading for centuries of predictable seasonal climate. It will be a time when God's law and government are restored to earth. Weather forecasters will have an easy job. Good weather will be on time. Rain will come when due. And sunshine aplenty for harvest will be the norm. Year in year out, decade by decade, predictable, sure, guaranteed. That is, as long as humans remain obedient to God's way of give instead of today's way of get.



Notice, however, that nations who fail to respond to Christ's leadership "shall have no rain; they shall receive the plague with which the Lord strikes the nations who do not come up to keep the Feast of Tabernacles" (Zechariah 14:17). God will use adverse weather to encourage a voluntary surrender to His sovereignty.



For the present, prepare your life to feel the impact of further unseasonable, catastrophic weather, caused both by man and by the hand of God.



But also reassure yourself with the knowledge that each day is one day closer to when favorable seasonal weather will be a normal event for all people on earth. WNP