Heaven Is Our Destination Where We Will Be ONE With The Lord Forever

Today, we are in The Season Of The Last Generation. The Birth Pains that Christ Jesus spoke about are currently under way, including natural and unnatural disasters. They will be ever increasing. Because of the increase of wickedness, the love of most will grow cold. Social, economic and political turmoil will be ever increasing, causing people's hearts to be weighed down with dissipation, drunkenness and the anxieties of life. An apostasy within the Church of God is currently under way. This will all reach a climax with Satan revealing his Antichrist and requiring that everyone worship him; That every one receive his "mark" in order to buy or sell; The new currency of the New World Order, the New Tower of Babel.

Today, it is critical that those who have a heart for God are aware of what God is doing and speaking today. God is opening up His Word like never before in preparation for The Time Of The END. I exhort you to open up your heart and your eyes to see what He is doing and your ears to hear what God is speaking at this time. My prayer is that we will be able to stand before the Son of Man at His appearing, without fault and with great joy. I encourage you to read David Wilkerson's book, America's Last Call at davidwilkersontoday.blogspot.com. Also, Google, Tommy Hicks Prophecy, 1961 for a view of the End Times.

Tom's books include: Called By Christ To Be ONE, The Time Of The END, The Season Of The Last Generation, Worship God In Spirit And In Truth, Daniel And The Time Of The END, and Overcoming The Evil One. They are available at amazon.com. They can also be read without cost by clicking on link: Toms Books.

To receive Christ Jesus as a child by faith is the highest human achievement.

Today, the Bride Of Christ is rising up in every nation in the world! Giving Glory to Her Savior and King, Christ Jesus!
Today, the world is Raging against God, Rushing toward Oblivion! Save yourself from this Corrupt Generation!
Today, America is being ground to powder because of it's SIN against God!

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Monday, May 27, 2019

WHAT IS WAR GOOD FOR?


'War, what is it good for? Absolutely nothing.' Really?
Reflections for Memorial Day
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By Rev. Mark H. Creech
May 24, 2019


On my commute home after a long day, the 1970s hit song "War" by Edwin Starr came over my Serius radio station. 
I can remember passionately singing its lyrics, "War, what is good for? 
Absolutely nothing," at age 11 when it was at the top of the Billboard charts. 
And there I was alone in my car fifty years later, once again, singing those same words, when suddenly I paused mid-lyrics, realizing I didn't believe that anymore.

Not all war is wrong. 
Granted, war always tends to produce greater evils than those which precipitated its cause. 
But to argue all war is wrong – to say that there is absolutely nothing good about it – just isn't true.

Neither the pacifist's position on war nor the militarist's view is actually right. 
The truth lies between the two extremes.

America's first great military general, George Washington, expressed the desire of every sober-minded person concerning war. Washington said:

"My first wish is to see the whole world in peace, and the inhabitants of it as one band of brothers, striving who should contribute most to the happiness of mankind. 
For the sake of humanity, it is devoutly to be wished that the manly employments of agriculture and the humanizing benefits of commerce should suspend the wastes of war and the rage of conquest and that the sword may be turned into the plow-share."

Nevertheless, as the late Presbyterian scholar, Lorraine Boettner argued in his classic publication, 
"The Christian Attitude Toward War," 
war is sometimes just, necessary, and sometimes good. Boettner writes:

"If the people of Europe had not resisted the Mohammedan invasions, Europe would have been conquered and, humanly speaking, Christianity would have been stamped out. 
If at the time of the Reformation the Protestants had not resisted the Roman Catholic persecutions, crimes such as were practiced so freely in the Spanish and Italian Inquisitions would have become common all over Europe, and Protestantism would have been destroyed. 
If the American colonists had not fought for their rights, this country would not have gained its independence...
We desire peace, but we realize there are some things worse than war. 
We desire peace, but not the kind found in the slave camp or the cemetery."

Over and again in the Old Testament, God directly commands the Israelites to go to war against their enemies. 
After they were delivered from Egypt, Moses and the people sang, "Jehovah is a man of war: Jehovah is his name. 
Pharaoh's chariots and his host hath he cast into the sea" (Exod. 15:3,4). 
After wandering in the wilderness for 40 years, the Israelites entered the Promised Land, and God told them to drive out its wicked inhabitants. 
Joshua received direct instructions from God as to how to fight the battle of Jericho. 
Many of the Psalms are prayers for guidance and victory during war-time. The nations that Israel often fought were so vile and sinful that God authorized war against them to wipe them out. 
And when the Israelites became like the pagan nations and were abominable in their own behaviors, God raised armies to make war against them. 
There is no question that the Scriptures teach that war, in the Providence of the Almighty, is sometimes sanctioned and divinely appointed.

It may sound remarkably striking, but the truth is war can serve wholesome objectives.

Of course, someone will quickly take exception to this assertion and claim the New Testament has a different message. 
The teachings of Christ always forbid war, they'll say. 
Such arguments can seem quite persuasive, when based on some poignant sentiment, or when Scripture is selectively employed, and the larger context of the Bible's teachings as a whole on the subject is avoided.

The New Testament doesn't provide any direct teaching on war. 
Jesus does command his followers to render to Caesar what is Caesar's. 
The apostle Paul teaches in the book of Romans that Christians must recognize the authority of civil government and perform their duties to their country. 
It is also true that Christians are living in a different dispensation than the people of God in Old Testament times. 
Still, as Boettner contends, 
"When rightly understood the two Testaments are supplementary, not contradictory. 
The silence of the New Testament on the subject of war apparently rests on the assumption that the subject had been adequately treated and did not call for any addition or modification."

I believe the wars America has fought through the years were just and right. 
I think Colin Powell, the U.S. Secretary of State who served under President George W. Bush, summed it up quite eloquently when he said:

"Over the years, the United States has sent many of its fine young men and women into great peril to fight for freedom beyond our borders.
The only amount of land we have ever asked for in return is enough to bury those who did not return."

This Memorial Day Weekend, we remember those who gave their lives to secure our freedom. 
As Abraham Lincoln said in his incomparable Gettysburg Address 
"that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to the cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion – 
that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain...
and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth."

"War, what is good for? Absolutely nothing." No, that just isn't true.

© Rev. Mark H. Creech

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