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By
Don Wildmon | AFA Founder/Chairman
A friend in North Carolina sent me a letter recently. Included
in his envelope was a packet of material he was passing out at his
local church and to pastors, mens clubs, prayer groups and
mid-week Bible studies in his area. He is trying to get them involved
in the great cultural war that is raging in our country.
Perhaps the most telling sentence in all the material he sent me
was what he wrote about his pastor. I believe our pastor is
on your membership list, he wrote. Although he is a
good Bible preaching minister, he like so many doesnt
speak to the cultural issues from the pulpit.
Wow! What an indictment! To have a cure for the cancer eating away
at our society, and to refuse to offer that cure! I wonder if the
pastor had a cure for physical cancer, would he offer it? I bet
he would. He would shout it from the rooftops!
Journalist David Aikman, former Beijing Bureau chief for Time
magazine, said that just before Chinas former President
Jiang Jemin left office he made a statement that if he could he
would officially decree that China be a Christian nation.
Jemin isnt a Christian and wasnt trying to convert anyone.
He was saying that pragmatically, Christianity is good for China.
Aikman says studies have shown what Jemin and other Chinese leaders
have learned: that predominantly Christianized areas
in China have lower crime rates, less family breakup, fewer incidents
of juvenile delinquency, and higher productivity rates.
Isnt that what we need? To have a cure, and to hide that cure
under a basket is a sin.
In our nation, we are headed in the opposite direction. In Fountain
Valley, California, students were informed that they could not wear
clothing expressing religious messages such as Happy Birthday,
Jesus. During the past Christmas season, public school administrators
in Georgia instructed employees that they could not have any Christmas
activities such as making Christmas decorations or reading from
Christmas books.
In Michigan, public school officials removed all religious books
dealing with Christmas and Hanukkah and put them in a separate room,
out of sight of the students.
In New York, the city schools would not allow Christmas displays,
but gladly allowed Jewish menorahs and the Muslim star and crescent
during their holidays.
We are now involved in a battle to define the very basic unit in
our society marriage. I wonder how many pastors will address
the issue from the pulpit, applying Biblical concepts? And I wonder
how many members will demand leadership in the battle against the
assault on marriage?
We have a cure for what ails us, but it will never do anyone any
good as long as we keep it confined inside the four walls of our
church buildings.
In my high school typing class, we had one sentence we typed over
and over for practice. Now is the time for all good men to
come to the aid of their country.
Indeed it is.
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