Then and Now
Have you ever wished you could win a lottery? Or inherit a great fortune? We have already won an inheritance that is beyond our comprehension! An inheritance that transcends any quantitative measurement. In fact, it was set aside for us before the world began!
Ephesians is regarded by many as the loftiest pinnacle of the New Testament, and yet is also a practical manual for personal combat.
NEW BRIEFING PACK by Chuck Missler
Inheritance and Rewards
Inheritance and Rewards is the next briefing pack in Chuck's The Kingdom, Power and Glory series.
Inheritance came to the firstborn son by virtue of his birth. Whether he actually secured it depended upon his obedience and the father's choice. Inheritance was subject to condition and obedience. The Abrahamic Inheritance was based on Divine Oath, conditioned on obedience. Inheritances could be forfeited. The Exodus Generation was promised an inheritance, but failed to obtain it at Kadesh-Barnea. Israel was God's "firstborn son", yet only 2 of over 2 million took possession of their inheritance. Even Moses was excluded due to his disobedience. Esau, sold his inheritance for a bowl of pottage.
We have been promised an inheritance in the Kingdom to come. But is there more that is required of us than just our acceptance? Does behavior in this life really influence our future?
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SOUTER RETIRING; SUPREME COURT CHOICE TIME FOR OBAMA - (Print)
Supreme Court Justice David Hackett Souter announced late last week that he was
retiring. Less than four months into his term, and President Obama already has
the serious job of nominating a justice on the US Supreme Court, one of the
most powerful positions in the US Government. Who will next sit in Souter's
seat? Many argue that Obama will choose a woman, and others believe she will
also be a minority. The real issue, however, is not the gender of the nominee
or color of the nominee's skin; the big issue will be how Obama's choice views
the US Constitution.
Speculation on just who will be Obama's top choice is premature right now.
Souter will retire when the Supreme Court session ends in June, and the
President has a few months to vet prospective nominees. We can, however,
speculate on what kind of constitutional philosophy his nominee might have and
what philosophy we wish that person would have.
Justice Souter was appointed by President George H.W. Bush, and in 1990 America
expected the new justice to be fairly conservative. Instead, Souter turned out
to vote as a moderate pragmatist. He has tended to make practical decisions
rather than decisions based on the letter of the Constitution. This judicial
philosophy has made him one of the more liberal judges on the Supreme Court
today. He may or may not abide by precedent. He may or may not uphold state
rights. He may or may not uphold Freedom of Speech. He doesn't worry about what
the framers of the Constitution originally intended.
While fellow Bush appointee Clarence Thomas has tended to line up with
conservative Antonin Scalia on controversial social issues, Souter has lined up
with Clinton appointees Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer. In Lawrence
v. Texas, Souter voted with the majority to overturn state laws against
sodomy. He voted with the majority to uphold the state right to legalize
assisted suicide in Oregon. In Lee v. Weisman, Souter voted with the
majority to outlaw prayers at public school ceremonies, rejecting Free Speech
and the "free exercise thereof" clause of the First Amendment in the
name of separation of Church and State.
This is the man that Obama will be replacing. If the President appoints another
moderate pragmatist, therefore, it won't change the balance of the court much.
Yet, Souter was not a determined liberal. He did not have any apparent agenda
when he was appointed other than to be careful how his decisions affected the
lives of real people. Obama could bring in somebody far more liberal than David
Hackett Souter – somebody who could sit on the Court for the next 30
years.
While it is easy to call justices "conservative" or
"liberal," those terms do not mean the same in a court as they do in
Congress. Supreme Court justices are not supposed to have any political agenda
when they arrive at the Court. They do, however, have varying constitutional
philosophies, and it is justices' philosophies about how to interpret the
Constitution that tend to place them in one camp or another.
There are those who believe the Constitution is a "living" document,
one that can be molded to fit the society of any particular decade. There is
nothing about abortion mentioned in the Constitution, and yet seven of nine
justices in 1973 decided that a "right to privacy" collected from a
variety of amendments in the Bill of Rights meant that states were no longer
free to outlaw abortion.
Current Justice Stephen Breyer, for instance, argues for a flexible and
adaptive interpretation of the Constitution and is known for promoting
"active liberty." He has been accused of making decisions as though
he and other justices are a law unto themselves. Rather than recognizing the
plain meaning of the Constitution as the Law, he loosely uses the Constitution
to support the decisions he thinks are best.
Conservative justices currently on the court - John Roberts, Scalia, Thomas,
and Alito - make decisions based on the position that the Constitution is a
legal document, and that they should interpret it either according to the
original purpose of the founders or according to the actual definitions of the
words themselves. Constitutional Originalists argue there is no room for
"finding" new rights in the Constitution that were not expressly
penned there. If the Constitution can be made to say anything you want it to
say, then it is no longer the Law, it's just a political or social tool. It's
the job of Congress, and not of Supreme Court justices, to "make" new
laws.
Justice Antonin Scalia has long criticized the living Constitution view. He has
said, "The horrible consequence of that, you understand, is that it places
the meaning of the Bill of Rights in the hands of the very entity against which
the Bill of Rights was meant to protect you against, that being the
majority."
"The Constitution is not an organism, it is a legal document," Scalia
has noted.
The little that Obama has said about his plans for the new justice make it
fairly clear that he does not plan to put a Constitutional Originalist on the
Supreme Court. According to The New York Times, the President plans to
replace Souter with somebody who recognizes "how our laws affect the daily
realities of people's lives." He also wants, "someone who understands
that justice isn't about some abstract legal theory or footnote in a
casebook."
In other words, he wants a pragmatist like Souter, and not necessarily a legal
expert. At the same time, Obama said his nominee would be someone "who is
dedicated to the rule of law, who honors our constitutional traditions, who
respects the integrity of the judicial process and the appropriate limits of
the judicial role."
It might be difficult to marry those two sets of ideals into one person, and
one who has the persuasive ability to bring other justices around to his or her
point of view. Whoever Obama nominates, that person has the potential to
be making vital decisions on American law for a very very long time to come.
• Obama Reacts To Retirement Of Justice Souter, - Medical News Today
• The Souter Situation Makes it Harder to Dodge Some Tough Ones - The Wall Street Journal
• Souter's Replacement - Female, Activist...And Certainly Liberal - OneNewsNow
• Frontrunner for Supreme Court Believes Constitution Grows 'With the Times' - CNS News
NATIONAL DAY OF PRAYER IS MAY 7 - (Print)
"God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble." -Psalm 46:1
This Thursday, May 7, marks the 58th annual National Day of Prayer. Cities and churches throughout the nation will hold prayer gatherings to recognize God's goodness and to thank Him for the many blessings He has poured on America. Millions will gather to seek His guidance and protection for our national and local leaders, our communities, and our families.
On February 19, 1795, President George Washington proclaimed a day of public thanksgiving, and since that time there have been many days of national prayer in America. In 1952 Congress established an official National Day of Prayer, and in 1988 set aside the 1st Thursday in May for that purpose.
"Prayer... America's Hope" is this year's theme, based on Psalm 33:22: "Let thy mercy, O LORD, be upon us, according as we hope in thee. "
"Since the days of our Founding Fathers, the government has protected and encouraged public prayer and other expressions of dependence upon God," said Shirley Dobson, Chairman of the National Day of Prayer Task Force. "However, there has been a concerted effort by a small but determined number of people who have tried to prohibit all public references to the Creator, whether it be in the Ten Commandments, the Pledge of Allegiance, or a simple act of corporate prayer. This is unconscionable for a free society."
Need Something To Pray For?
Pray for Government: From the President and Congress and Supreme Court down to our local mayors and town councils, our government officials need prayer for guidance and wisdom. Whether or not we agree with them politically, these men and women are in positions of authority, and they need our prayers, not just on Thursday, but constantly.
Please join others in your city or church, or start your own prayer gathering on Thursday. There are prayer events being held in communities from Seattle to Washington DC and from Los Angeles to Augusta to Ft. Lauderdale. Prayer warriors are meeting at city halls and parks, schools and military bases, prisons and homeless shelters and even gas stations! Gather wherever you can, and join hearts with other believers to seek God for our nation, our communities and our families.
The World trusts in riches and power and prestige, but these things are temporary and can be lost in a day - as we have seen repeatedly in recent years. Only God is always faithful. Only God is holy and incorruptible. Only God can provide real safety and strength. Only God gives us true hope.
"Teach me thy way, O LORD; I will walk in thy truth: unite my heart to fear thy name. I will praise thee, O Lord my God, with all my heart: and I will glorify thy name for evermore." - Psalms 86:11-12
• National Day of Prayer Website - NDPTF
• Find a Prayer Event In Your Area - NDPTF
ESTHER: A BOOK OF MYSTERIES - (Print)
Esther is an obscure book to many, even though it is a story of romance and
palace intrigue set in the glory days of the Persian Empire. A Jewish maiden,
elevated to the throne of Persia as its queen, is used by God to preserve His
people against a Hitler-like annihilation. Even the works of Shakespeare's
dramatic genius cannot compare with the drama and irony in this captivating
epic.
To this day, the Feast of Purim is held to commemorate these events. Instituted
by Mordecai to celebrate the deliverance of the Jews from extermination, Purim
(from Akkadian, puru, "lots") is so called after the lots
cast by Haman in order to determine the month in which the slaughter was to
take place. Held on the fourteenth day of the Jewish month of Adar, Purim is
one of the most joyous days of the year.
The book of Esther chronicles real historical events. It deals with the Jews
escape from genocidal annihilation after their return from Babylonian
captivity. Chronologically, Esther makes possible Nehemiah. It was Esther's
marriage to the king of Persia that ultimately leads to the rebuilding of
Jerusalem and enables the chain of events that led to the appearance of the
Messiah five centuries later.
Orphaned as a child and brought up by her cousin Mordecai, Esther was selected
by King Ahasuerus to replace the queen when Vashti was disgraced. Haman, the
prime minister, persuaded the king to issue an edict of extermination of all
the Jews in the Persian Empire. Esther, on Mordecai's advice, endangered her
own life by appearing before the king-without being invited - in order to
intercede for her people.
Seeing that the king was well disposed toward her, she invited him and Haman to
a private banquet, during which she did not reveal her desire but invited them
to yet another banquet, thus misleading Haman by making him think that he was
in the queen's good graces. Her real intention was to take revenge on him.
During a second banquet, Queen Esther revealed her Jewish origin to the king,
begged for her life and the life of her people, and named her enemy.
Angry with Haman, King Ahasuerus retreated into the palace garden. Haman, in
great fear, remained to plead for his life from the Queen. While imploring,
Haman fell on Esther's couch and was found in this ostensibly compromising
situation upon the king's return. He was immediately condemned to be hung on
the very gallows which he had previously prepared for Mordecai. The king
complied with Esther's request, and the edict of destruction was then changed
into permission for the Jews to avenge themselves on their enemies.
It is a fascinating story, but one full of Biblical mysteries. There is no
mention of the name of God in the book. There is no reference to worship or
faith. There is no mention or prediction of the Messiah; no mention of heaven
or hell; there is nothing "religious" about it. It is a gripping
tale, but why is it here in the Bible? Martin Luther believed it should not be
part of the Canon, however the name Esther gives us a clue: it means
"something hidden." In studying this book we have discovered that
there are numerous surprises hidden behind, and underneath, the text itself. To
learn more about the book of Esther, click on the link below.
• Ruth & Esther - MP3 Download - Koinonia House
• Ruth & Esther - CD-ROM - Koinonia House
Same-Sex Marriages Annulled in Greece - May 05, 2009
A backlash from government and religious leaders in Greece has resulted in the
legal annullment of Greece's first two same-sex marriages. Two couples found a
loophole in a 26-year-old law that did not mention which gender people had to
be in order to obtain a civil marriage. They were married last June by the
mayor of Tilos. After an uproar, though, a court at Rhodes has ruled that the
marriages were illegal and invalid. The Jerusalem Post
US Troops Out of Iraq By June - May 05, 2009
While many are concerned that Iraqi security forces are not yet able to keep
control of the country, Iraq has asked the US forces to leave Iraq by the end
of June.
Asking U.S. forces to stay in the cities, including volatile Mosul in the
north, would be embarrassing for Iraq's prime minister, who has staked his
political future on claims that the country has turned the corner in the war
against Sunni and Shiite extremists. AP
Obama Accused of Whitewashing the Threat of Islam - May 05, 2009
The head of a pro-Israel organization says he's worried that the Barack Obama
administration could be the most hostile ever to the state of Israel. "This
could turn out to be the most hostile administration to Israel we have ever
seen," Klein laments. "Remember, this isn't good for America. A weak Israel is
not able fight Islamic terrorism as a strong Israel can -- and Israel is
America's only reliable ally in the Middle East."
One News Now
Islamic Scholars Debate To Behead Or Not To Behead - April 30, 2009
What should Muslim leaders do - stick to ancient Islamic texts or give into the
norms of society? Islamic scholars from 60 countries gathered at the
University of Sharjah in the UAE to discuss how to handle people who renounce
Islam in the modern world. One portion of the scholars supported religious
freedom and argued that severe punishments for apostates - like beheading -
were outdated. Others argued that followers of Islam needed to follow Sharia
regardless of what the modern world said. "We will never allow others to
dictate our religion to us."
Arab News
For the son dishonoureth the father, the daughter riseth up against her mother,
the daughter in law against her mother in law; a man's enemies are the men of
his own house. Therefore I will look unto the LORD; I will wait for the God of
my salvation: my God will hear me.
Micah 7:6-7 KJV
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