Cat Stevens Peace Train.

Forums Home | Global Fires | Other

Posts 1-7 of 7 | Latest Post
June 25, 2008 07:09 AM    View printable version     Link to this comment   
Member Since:
May 6, 2008

Cat Stevens. Peace Train.

Images from Iran that you don't see every day.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLX9ChtWBGo&feature=related
June 25, 2008 07:16 AM    View printable version     Link to this comment   
Member Since:
May 6, 2008
Comment updated June 25, 2008 07:19 AM

NBC’s Middle East correspondent Richard Engels 

 

What is IRAN like?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2k33G8CaYq8&feature=related
June 25, 2008 10:48 AM    View printable version     Link to this comment   
Member Since:
February 16, 2007
ZOMG! Could it be possible that the Iranian people think, act, and believe differently than their government?  Much like how people from other countries (and our own) love the American people but hate the American government?


Instructions on how to be a neocon.
I support the troops who still have moral values, but I don't worship them. I do not support the occupation of Iraq. I believe the opposite of anything George W. Bush says and support Chuck Baldwin for President. I am a Mormon, Libertarian, 9/11 Truther, Alex Jones listener, Ron Paul supporter, and proud of it!
June 25, 2008 02:59 PM    View printable version     Link to this comment   
Member Since:
May 6, 2008
Comment updated June 25, 2008 03:03 PM
Dyne said: ZOMG! Could it be possible that the Iranian people think, act, and believe differently than their government? Much like how people from other countries (and our own) love the American people but hate the American government?

 

 

BINGO! But have too many Americans been fooled into believing that the likes of Obama and McCain are on different teams when in reality the two are literal puppets owned by the same puppet master for whom they dangle to attain the same end goal?: Could it be the eradication of all soverign nation states in exchange for global government consisting of 3 superstaes with third world nations under the control of the UN?

June 25, 2008 03:39 PM    View printable version     Link to this comment   
Member Since:
February 12, 2007
MelClay  &
Dyne                 EXACTLY! Both CIA Puppets
June 25, 2008 06:26 PM    View printable version     Link to this comment   
Member Since:
May 6, 2008
Comment updated June 25, 2008 06:26 PM
DANE said: MelClay &
Dyne EXACTLY! Both CIA Puppets

  

Matthew 5:43-48 (Bible. New International Version)

43"You have heard that it was said, 'Love your neighbor[a] and hate your enemy.' 44But I tell you: Love your enemies[b] and pray for those who persecute you, 45that you may be sons of your Father in heaven.

He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. 46If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that?

47And if you greet only your brothers, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that? 48Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.

 

Love Your Enemies

Jesus demands not only that we not resist evil people assaulting our honor or possessions (vv. 38-42) but that we go so far as to actively love our enemies.

Jesus Demands Love Even for Enemies (5:43-44)

When Jesus explains his final quotation from the Bible, Love your neighbor, he adds to the quote an implication some of his contemporaries found there: hate your enemy. He is probably speaking of all kinds of enemies.

Personal enemies were common enough in the setting of Galilean villages (Horsley 1986; Freyne 1988:154), but Jesus' contemporaries may have also thought of corporate threats to Israel or the moral fabric of the community (see Borg 1987:139).

Whereas the biblical command to love neighbors (Lev 19:18) extends to foreigners in the land (Lev 19:33-34; compare Lk 10:27-37), other texts hold up a passionate devotion to God's cause that bred hatred of those who opposed it (Ps 139:21-22; see also 137:7-9).

Popular piety, exemplified in the Qumran community's oath to "hate the children of darkness," may have extended such biblical ideology in Jesus' day (see Sutcliffe 1960). Jesus may well mean both personal and corporate enemies (Moulder 1978).

Jesus builds a fence around the law of love (Mt 22:39), amplifying it to its ultimate conclusion (compare Ex 23:4-5). In so doing, he makes demands more stringent than the law. He also makes a demand that can require more than merely human resources for forgiveness.

Corrie ten Boom, who had lost most of her family in a Nazi concentration camp, often lectured on grace. But one day a man who came to shake her hand after such a talk turned out to be a former prison guard. Only by asking God to love through her did she find the grace to take his hand and offer him Christian forgiveness.

Since Jesus does not say exactly what to pray for our persecutors, some of us have been tempted to pray, "God, kill that person!" Needless to say, the context makes clear that Jesus means to pray good things for our enemies. Old Testament prayers for vindication (such as 2 Chron 24:22; Jer 15:15) still have their place (2 Tim 4:14; Rev 6:10), but our attitude toward individuals who hurt us personally or corporately must be love (Lk 23:34; Acts 7:60).

Again, Jesus' words are graphic pictures that force us to probe our hearts; they do not cancel the Old Testament belief in divine vindication (Mt 23:33, 38; Rev 6:10-11), but summon us to leave our vindication with God and seek others' best interests in love.

June 25, 2008 06:45 PM    View printable version     Link to this comment   
Member Since:
May 6, 2008
Comment updated June 25, 2008 11:32 PM

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Circle of Quiet

  

                                                 

 

                                     When the future's architectured

by a carnival of idiots on show
you'd better lie low.
Coldplay: Violet Hill
 
Get full article here: 


 


You must login to discuss this item.