WHERE WAS GOD WHEN…?
By Dr. Hoyt W. Allen, Jr.
The following article came to me recently and I contended that I should pass it on. It has been slightly edited and a conclusion added.
The following was
written by Ben Stein
and recited by him
on CBS Sunday
Morning Commentary,
Sunday, 12/18/05.
Herewith at this
happy time of year,
a few confessions
from my beating
heart: I have no
freaking clue who
Nick and Jessica
are. I see them on
the cover of People
and Us constantly
when I am buying my
dog biscuits and
kitty litter. I
often ask the
checkers at the
grocery stores. They
never know who Nick
and Jessica are
either. Who are
they? Will it change
my life if I know
who they are and why
they have broken up?
Why are they so
important?
I don't know who
Lindsay Lohan is
either, and I do not
care at all about
Tom Cruise's wife.
Am I going to be
called before a
Senate committee and
asked if I am a
subversive? Maybe,
but I just have no
clue who Nick and
Jessica are.
If this is what it
means to be no
longer young. It's
not so bad.
Next confession:
I am a Jew, and
every single one of
my ancestors was
Jewish. And it does
not bother me even a
little bit when
people call those
beautiful lit up,
bejeweled trees
Christmas trees. I
don't
feel threatened. I
don't feel
discriminated
against. That's what
they are: Christmas
trees.
It doesn't bother me
a bit when people
say, "Merry
Christmas" to me. I
don't think they are
slighting me or
getting ready to put
me in a ghetto.
In fact, I kind of
like it. It shows
that we are all
brothers and sisters
celebrating this
happy time of year.
It doesn't bother me
at all that there is
a manger scene on
display at a key
intersection near my
beach house in
Malibu. If people
want a creche, it's
just as fine with me
as is the Menorah a
few hundred yards
away.
I don't like getting
pushed around for
being a Jew, and I
don't think
Christians like
getting pushed
around for being
Christians. I think
people who believe
in God are sick and
tired of getting
pushed around,
period. I have no
idea where the
concept came
from that America is
an explicitly
atheist country. I
can't find it in
the Constitution,
and I don't like it
being shoved down my
throat.
Or maybe I can put
it another way:
where did the idea
come from that we
should worship Nick
and Jessica and we
aren't allowed to
worship God as we
understand Him?
I guess that's a
sign that I'm
getting old, too.
But there are a
lot of us who are
wondering where Nick
and Jessica came
from and where the
America we knew went
to.
In light of the many
jokes we send to one
another for a laugh,
this is a little
different: This is
not intended to be a
joke, it's not
funny, and it’s
intended to get
you thinking.
Billy Graham's
daughter was
interviewed on the
Early Show and Jane
Clayson asked
her "How God could
let something like
this Happen?"
(Regarding Katrina)
Anne Graham gave an
extremely profound
and insightful
response. She said,
"I believe God is
deeply saddened by
this, just as we
are, but for years
we've been telling
God to get out of
our schools, to get
out of our
government and to
get out of our
lives.
And being the
gentleman He is, I
believe He has
calmly backed out.
How can we expect
God to give us His
blessing and His
protection if we
demand He leave
us alone?"
In light of recent
events...terrorists
attack, school
shootings, etc. I
think it started
when Madeleine
Murray O'Hare (she
was murdered, her
body found recently)
complained she
didn't want prayer
in our schools, and
we said OK.
Then someone said
you better not read
the Bible in
school. The Bible
says thou shalt not
kill; thou shalt not
steal, and love your
neighbor as
yourself. And we
said OK.
Then Dr. Benjamin
Spock said we
shouldn't spank our
children when they
misbehave because
their little
personalities would
be warped and we
might damage their
self-esteem (Dr.
Spock's son
committed suicide).
We said an expert
should know what
he's talking about.
And we said OK.
Now we're asking
ourselves why our
children have no
conscience, why they
don't know right
from wrong, and why
it doesn't bother
them to kill
strangers,
their classmates,
and themselves.
Probably, if we
think about it long
and hard enough, we
can figure it out. I
think it has a great
deal to do with "WE
REAP WHAT WE SOW."
Funny how simple it
is for people to
trash God and then
wonder why the
world's going to
hell.
Funny how we believe
what the newspapers
say, but question
what the Bible says.
Funny how you can
send 'jokes' through
e-mail and they
spread like wildfire
but when you start
sending messages
regarding the Lord,
people think twice
about sharing.
Funny how lewd,
crude, vulgar and
obscene articles
pass freely through
cyberspace, but
public discussion of
God is suppressed in
the school and
workplace.
Are you laughing?
Funny how when you
forward this
message, you will
not send it to many
on your address list
because you're not
sure what they
believe, or what
they will think of
you for sending it.
Funny how we can be
more worried about
what other people
think of us than
what God thinks of
us.
Pass it on if you
think it has merit.
If not then just
discard it... no one
will know you did.
But, if you discard
this thought
process, don't sit
back and complain
about what bad shape
the world is in.
.
Plainly, don’t get short changed. Let’s be ready to meet our Maker. The Bible (in Acts) teaches that to avoid hell and gain heaven - one must:
1) Believe In Jesus As Savior (16:31) 2) Repent Of Sins (17:30)
3) Confess Christ Audibly (8:37) 4) Be Baptized In Water (2:38)
5) Live A Christian Life (14:22) 6) Be Active In the Church (2:47)
KYOWVA Evangelistic Association * 1541 S. 7th Street * Ironton, OH 45638
Web Page: www.kyowva.com * Free Bible Course Upon Request