Month: January 2010

  • The Haiti Disaster…. Hell on Earth


    The visual images of the Haiti disaster are all at once frightening,
    nauseating, angering…. and curious.  How on earth can there be so
    much human carnage, how can this kind of thing happen in our world
    today?  Why did it happen?  Could any thing have been done?  What can
    be done now?  There is such a mind-reeling helplessness that floods
    over a person as they watch the coverage of the rescue attempts.  (I
    felt a similar feeling when as a teenager I first viewed photos of the
    Holocaust.)  Sure, we can, and will give money, food and medical
    supplies… in fact we must respond to the call for aid in times of
    human suffering such as this.
      But one has to ask the question, and
    make no mistake, everyone is asking it, even if it is just in their
    mind…  How did this natural disaster produce such an epic “hell on
    earth” as some of the news headlines called it?  Some cited the fact
    that there were no building codes, or that the country had been living
    in poverty for too long and just could not sustain this kind of
    catastrophe.  Those are true facts but I am not sure if that actually
    answers the question.  Most assuredly, if they would have had a better
    infrastructure as a country the loss of life would have been
    far less.  In 1989 the United States experienced the exact same size
    earthquake in Loma Prieta California. (Remember the upper deck of the
    Bay bridge collapsing?)  There were only 63 lives lost.  Everyone
    however did not live in cinderblock hovels on the sides of mountains in
    California like they do in Haiti so the infrastructure protected many
    lives.  I would not expect a small island country to have the same
    resources as the United States but still there is just something
    interesting about Haiti.  They are on the same island of Hispanola as
    the Dominican Republic, but they have always lived in poverty whereas
    the Dominican Republic is an entirely different kind of country.  Haiti
    for some reason has not been able to create a sustainable government or
    employment. (80% of Hatians are unemployed.)  A country can not survive
    if literally almost everyone is unemployed!  Why is this… and most of
    all what can we learn from it?

    I think we have to look at the history of that country to try and
    decipher what went wrong and what happened to create an unsustainable
    country that would become so vulnerable that a natural disaster could
    have literally wiped it off the map and possibly (as it did in ancient
    history,) made a whole people group extinct had they not had the aid of
    the rest of the world!

    Taking it all the way to the root of human behavior…. simply said…
    we do what we believe.  Our society will reflect our actions which in
    turn is a reflection of what we as individuals think about life. 
    Government structure, although critical, is only a by-product of
    society.  It is the society that is foundational in the stability of a
    group of people and society is made up of individuals with specific
    beliefs.  It is from that “collective belief system” that a
    governmental philosophy is established and implemented.

    So what type of society established the governmental structure of Haiti?  Let’s take a look at the “foundations” of this nation…

    History of Haiti
    “Hayti” (or mountainous land, as it was known by the original
    inhabitants, the Arawak Indians), was discovered by Christopher
    Columbus and named “Hispaniola”(Little Spain) in 1492. The Spanish
    colonized the island and under their rule the Arawak Indians were
    virtually annihilated. In 1697 the western portion of the island was
    ceded to France and named Haiti. (The eastern portion under Spanish
    rule became Saint-Dominique, now Dominican Republic.)




    Haiti flourished under French rule and became invaluable as a resource
    for cocoa, cotton, sugar cane and coffee.
    By 1780, Haiti was one of the
    wealthiest regions in the world
    . The plantation system was however
    built upon the backs of vast numbers of slaves imported from West
    Africa.




    Several consequences of this era provide the foundations for the
    present situation. Firstly – the West African slaves brought with them
    the religious practices of voodoo. Secondly – the French colonial
    masters treated the slaves with such undue harshness they created
    hatred amid an already resentful environment. Thirdly – a class of
    “mulattos” (light skinned, sophisticated, Catholic, French-speaking
    Haitians) arose from the relations of the slave owners and the slaves.
    They were at odds with the dark-skinned, voodoo practicing,
    Creole-speaking masses.




    The “Bwa Kayiman” or Bois Caïman Ceremony

    On 14 August 1791, a black slave and witch doctor named Boukman led the slaves in a voodoo
    ritual. Supposedly the spirit Ezili Dantor possessed a priestess and
    received a black pig as an offering. They sacrificed the pig and drank
    its blood to form a pact with the devil, whereby
    they agreed to serve the spirits of the island for 200 years in exchange for freedom from the French. The slave rebellion commenced on 22 August 1791, and after 13 years of conflict, the slaves won their independence. On 1 January 1804 they declared Haiti the world’s first independent black republic. An iron statue of a pig stands in Port-au-Prince to commemorate the “Boukman Contract”. (This was 206 years ago.)


    Voodoo Official Religion

    “Past President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was a former Catholic priest
    who gained notoriety with the Catholic Church and popularity in Haiti
    in the late 1980s on account of his liberation theology.




    Aristide was elected president in 1990, ousted in a coup in 1991, and
    re-elected as president in Nov 2000 (results disputed). He survived
    coup attempts in July and December 2001. November 2002 was marked by
    unrest and anti-government protests.




    In light of the historic and political facts it is therefore very interesting that
    in April 2003, President Aristide made voodoo the official religion of Haiti declaring, “voodoo is an essential part of national identity.”



    Haiti is reckoned as being 95% Christian (predominantly Catholic),
    but according to Catholic missionary John Hoet, Haitians “are 100%
    voodoo”.


    It is also interesting to note that in the year prior to Haiti’s
    independence the French sold the “Louisiana Purchase” and the port of
    New Orleans to the United States in 1803.  During that time of unrest
    there were many Haitian’s that migrated to the area of
    New Orleans making it the largest center of Voodoo worship in the United States.


    As we can see the societal history of Haiti has been one of
    slavery, victimization, violence, poverty, confusion, spiritual
    darkness and it is no wonder…  these are the same characteristics of
    the “god” they serve!  If this is what Satan does to an individual, it
    would only make sense that this is what he would also do to a society! 
    In Haiti’s recent days they have even reinforced their country’s
    foundations in the worship of Satan by making Voodoo the national
    religion.  Voodoo, (sometimes called voudoo or vodoun) is technically
    the worship of the Devil.  Here are a few details…….
     
    Voodoo notes:
    They call the “spirits” of the island, the “loas“.  Danbhala-Wedo, or the Grand Serpent (also called Danballah or Damballah), is the “father” of the loas,
    which brought forth creation. Before the days of slavery, Africans
    worshipped a large python, called Danh-gbwe, as an embodiment of the
    gods.  Aida-Wedo, the Rainbow, which arouse out of the waters of the
    earth is the
    wife of Danbhalah. She, also, is a serpent: a short-coiled snake.



    A main part of  Voodoo worship is the
    summoning of the Loas or spirits.  True communion comes through divine possession. When summoned, the gods may enter a govi, or “mount a horse”–assume a person’s mind or body. The possessed loses all consciousness, totally becoming the possessing loa with his or her desires and eccentricities.

    Magic, used for both good and evil purposes, is an integral part of
    Voodoo.  They recognize no dichotomy between good and evil.  They see
    evil as the mirror image of good. Devotees feel that the “magic of the
    spirits” is there to be used, if that magic is evil, so be it.”


    This seems obvious to me that the practice of Voodoo is a worship of
    the devil with possession as the ultimate desired outcome!  Imagine an
    entire nation… a society that had it’s foundation in this kind of
    religion!  Granted there is a good mix of Catholicism in Haiti also…
    there are icons, there is a Virgin figure, a St. Peter figure etc….
    it is the typical syncretism one finds in these small mission
    countries.  But as we have been told by many, although there is a
    Catholic influence…. Haiti is still 100% Voodoo!

    So what can we learn from this?  First, for our own country, we must
    continue to be a nation founded on a belief in Almighty God and in the
    principles set forth in the Scriptures.  If we cease from doing this we
    open the door to becoming a nation of slaves and victims which will
    lead to poverty, violence, confusion… all those things that
    characterize Haiti today as “hell on earth.”  If disaster strikes us in
    that condition there will be no hope… because we have rejected the
    Hope of the Nations.  Let us then strive as individuals and
    subsequently as a nation to draw near to God and He will draw near to
    us.  We were at one time a “City on a Hill”.  I pray that we can once
    again become that light that will point other nations to our sustaining
    God of hope and freedom!

    Second we must never forget that without God… people perish… and it
    is ugly… it is heart wrenching.  We must reach out to give not only
    physical life sustaining food and water.  We must also give them the
    Bread of Life and the Living Water so they can become spiritually
    healed and capable of sustaining a healthy society and subsequently a
    thriving government and country.  Only when Haiti receives spiritual
    healing will they have a hope of being rebuilt on a more solid
    foundation.

  • Iraq to Build Massive Mosque
    Over the Tomb of the Prophet Ezekiel


    Hmmm…. very interesting!

    (http://www.newmediajournal.us/staff/p_williams/2010/01072010.htm)

    “The Iraqi government plans to convert the Tomb of the Prophet Ezekiel, one of the most sacred sites for Christians and Jews, into a massive new mosque.

     

    What’s more, the Iraqis intend to erase all Jewish markings from the tomb so that no indication of its historic significance will remain for future generations.

     

    The plan to transform the ancient burial site into a mosque was reported this week by Ur News, the Iraqi news agency, and Shelomo Alfassa, Director of Justice for Jews from Arab Countries.

     

    Mr. Alfassa says that Iraq’s Antiquities & Heritage Authority “has been pressured by Islamists to historically cleanse all evidence of a Jewish connection to Iraq – a land where Jews had lived for over a thousand years before the advent of Islam.”

     

    The desecration of the tomb, Mr. Alfassa adds, is taking place under “the pretext of restoring the site.”

     

    Similar confirmation comes from Professor Shmuel Moreh, Israel Prize Laureate in Arabic Literature and Professor Emeritus at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, who says that he is aware that the Hebrew inscriptions have been erased and that the plans for the new mosque are well underway.

     

    The ancient burial site of Ezekiel is located in Al-Kifl, a small town south of Baghdad.

     

    Ezekiel, whose prophecies included the Valley of the Dry Bones and the return of the Jews to Israel, lived in the sixth century B.C., having accompanied the exiled Judeans to Babylon.

     

    Throughout the centuries, thousands of pilgrims visited the site of his tomb annually before Iraqi Jewry came to an abrupt end in 1979 with the rise of the Islamic Revolution. Though well over 100,000 Jews lived in Iraq, this number has been decimated to no more than eight, Professor Moreh said. “There are others,” he added, “but they barely know that they are Jews; in many cases, their parents did not tell them.”

     

    Now the remaining Christians are killed or forced into exile. Over the holiday season, increased attacks by Islamists have taken place on churches and convents and a dozen Iraqi Christians have been put to death.

     

    The violence, according to Monsignor Louis Sako, Archbishop of Kirkuk, is part of a project of “ethnic cleansing” against the Iraqi Christians that is taking place with the covert blessing of the Iraqi government.

     

    According to local sources, nearly 2,000 Christians have been killed in Iraq since 2003, the year of the fall of Saddam Hussein; thousands more have been driven into exile.

     

    Iraq – the Biblical Mesopotamia – is almost as rich in Jewish history as the Land of Israel. It is the land where Abraham discovered monotheism, and where the prophets Ezra, Nehemiah, Nahum, Jonah and Daniel, along with Ezekiel, are also buried.

     

    The plans for the mosque over the bones of the prophet have met with scant media attention and little outcry from Jewish and Christian communities.”


    More background on this area of Iraq…
  • Supernova to Destroy the Earth

    Now THIS does sound like science fiction… but according to the latest astronomers… it is for real. 

    You know I am so glad that I know who holds this Universe together…. do you know Him?

    Bee

    Nearby T Pyxidis Supernova Could Destroy Life on Earth

    Too Close for Comfort
    T Pyxidis, a star on the verge of growing too massive and collapsing
    into a type Ia supernova, was discovered to be closer to Earth than
    previously thought – close enough to end life here when it finally
    explodes.

    NASA


    Article here:
    http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2010-01/star-verge-supernova-could-threaten-life-earth