Voting Can Be Murder

When is voting murder?

In America, there are over 100 million people who say they believe you have to be born again to know God through Jesus Christ.  And they say that the Bible is the best book to live by.  Of that 100 million, 1/2 of them are not registered to vote.  Of the half that are registered, only 1/2 of them will actually go vote in any given election.  Of the 1/2 who do go vote (25% of evangelicals), 1/2 of them have (in most recent elections) voted for candidates who stand exactly opposite from the Bible on issues like abortion, marriage, gambling, and liquor.

If God’s people would go to the polls and vote for Biblically moral candidates, we would control any election in America:   Thereby stopping abortion, homosexuality, gambling, and all other immoral issues!

And the blood of more than 55,000,000 innocent children cries to us from the ground saying,  “Who will rise up for me against the evildoers? or who will stand up for me against the workers of iniquity?”   (Psalms 94:16)

So…if you are not registered to vote; or you don’t go vote; or you vote for candidates opposed to God’s moral stand on issues—especially abortion—your vote (or the lack thereof) murders innocent, helpless children in the womb!!

It’s not a pleasant thought…But, think about it.  Because if you don’t, someone else will do your thinking for you—and for your children; and you won’t like what that brings to you!

Persistent Statesman of Liberty

John Adams was born during the first full year after the Great Awakening (the greatest revival America has ever seen) began.  When one studies what family life was like during those years of revival, it’s no wonder Adams was such a Godly statesman.

He became a lawyer and one of the greatest statesman for liberty during America’s Founding Era.  He would marry, at age twenty-nine, Abigail Smith, the daughter of a minister.  Their relationship was one of the greatest examples of Biblical marriage in our history.  Though separated many years because of his service to our country overseas, their letters preserve for us one of the most tender and affectionate examples of the marriage covenant between a husband and a wife, that is on record today.

John Adams was one of five men who served on the committee of the 2nd Continental Congress which wrote our Declaration of Independence.  The year before, he had written for that Congress the document to be sent to the King of England, entitled, Declaration and Necessity of Taking Up Arms.  This was in answer to the attack on us by the British at Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775.  In it he stated, Continue reading

The Misunderstood “Trumpet Voice” of Liberty

Samuel Adams, though ignored today, was know as the Father of the American Revolution because of his Biblical thinking about civil law, and how to re-establish it when a tyrant has taken that law from a people and established his own will as law.

He was born in Boston in 1722 and grew up there, where the merchants said of him that he was so punctual in attendance at school, they could set their clocks by him.

As an adult he failed in business because his entire focus was on law and particularly what the American colonies should do to correct the dictatorship being imposed on them by King George III.  His leadership moved Boston to begin the network known as The Committees of Correspondence.  Continue reading

Lives Of The Signers Of The Declaration Of Independence

Fifty-six chosen men met in Philadelphia, summer 1776, to write a Declaration of Independence to be sent to the King of England.  Young Thomas Jefferson, only thirty-three, would be chosen to write the Declaration.  Even though the committee chosen by the 2nd Continental Congress to write it was also made up of such leaders as John Adams, Ben Franklin, and Roger Sherman, those men chose Jefferson because of his gift for expression and his knowledge, though so young, of law (as rooted in the Bible).

It was a difficult time for Jefferson:  He and his wife had lost a child less than a year before; Continue reading

“It’s Been A Long Night…”

As my daughter and I met yesterday morning to pray in connection with our National Day of Prayer, a great burden came over me to pray, “Oh God, it’s been a long night.”  (I was thinking of His Word in Psalms 30:5,  “Weeping endures for a night, but joy comes in the morning.”)  I began to weep uncontrollably as in my mind I could see a dark cloud stretching over America all the way back to the early 1900’s.  As I wept, I sobbed out over and over the words,  “It’s been a long night, O Lord!”  Over and over this came pouring out.  It was as if I was weeping out a great burden I had carried for years concerning the disintegration of our nation.

But after a while, ever so slightly, I felt deep in my spirit the words,  “…but joy comes in the morning.”  And certainly Jesus will come to this earth and straighten out all the mess we, as mankind, have made of this world:  But the slight comfort I was feeling seemed to me an indication that He yet will work a work in America that turns us back to our Biblical foundations; at least to some degree; or maybe a certain segment of our population.  I just know I had a little comfort from Him concerning our land.

May you who are seeking Him for revival with your whole heart, likewise be comforted with these words.

Don   Is. 58:12

That Which Makes Jesus Different

Jesus is totally unique among all the leaders of world religions.  Not one of them came back from the dead!  The following tells the story of the evidence of His uniqueness (this is taken from the book: Why God Birthed America):


Chapter 5   —   Alive!

One of their group, Mary Magdalene, was just as uncertain as the rest.  However, the love in her grateful heart would not be denied:  Not by questionings or by fears.  Jesus had set her free from a wretched life of bondage to sexual sin and the torture of evil spirits.[I]  He had changed her!  She had never been the same since that day she met Him, and her gratitude of duty now compelled her to go to the tomb and do the anointing with spices to His body, which time had not allowed the day He died.

Though it was still mostly dark, she gathered her spices and started to make her way to the tomb.  Some of the other women fell into step with her, but Mary was oblivious to their presence.  She only vaguely heard the question about how would they ever be able to roll away the stone from the tomb entrance.  That stone over the entrance weighed several tons.  It was designed to keep out intruders.  And then there was the Roman guard.  Would they still be there?   Continue reading

Who Is Patrick of Ireland?

Patrick of Ireland (called by some St. Patrick) lived in Ireland in the first half of the 400’s.  He was once a teenage slave there, escaped, was converted to Christ, then went back to Ireland with a call from God to share Christ with the Irish.  Ireland was not a unified country then, but was ruled by local chieftains.  Patrick began to lead these chieftains to Christ.  They then wanted to know how to rule their clans according to the Bible.  It was in 432 that Patrick lifted out of the Books of Moses in the Bible the civil laws, forming what he would call, in Latin, Liber Ex Lege Moisi; or The Book of The Law of Moses.  The local chieftains who had been converted to Christ began to implement these laws in their clans.  The Biblical idea of decentralized government took root in Ireland and would later spread to Scotland through the work of a man named Columba.  This would become the basis of British Common Law. Continue reading

Eternal Investments

As I was reading in Ecclesiastes 11 this morning (as that was the place to which my progression through the Bible had brought me), I was impressed with the promise of the Lord to bring to us a return on our investments.  And whether that investment be truth put into our children, or labor or money into business, we can believe that:

“Cast thy bread upon the waters; for thou shalt find it after many days.” (Ecclesiastes 11: 1)

Continue reading