Saturday, August 13, 2011

How do I say this clearly?

What is it that people want? They make choices and then when that choice fails they complain. The secret is to fail a winner. That’s right, fail a winner and never look back. Are we supposed to be perfect?   No!  We are supposed to learn from our mistakes.  People have a way of complaining about every failure they have made without moving on.  Who cares what people think of you after you have just made a stupid decision?  I don’t!  Never judge people on one action (Unless it is something cruel and we all know better than that) I judge people only after I have cleared my own plate and after realizing this person ignores what is right. And yes the Bible says I can.  Where you ask?

The issue of judging is a contentious one, despite the Bible giving us clear guidelines about making judgments. In Matt 7:1-5, Jesus said not to judge. A closer look at this passage will show that He is referring to personal, hypocritical judging, telling us to take the log out of our own eye (Matt 7:5).   Also, it's quite obvious that we should not judge a person's motives or thoughts as we simply don't know what they are (1 Cor 2:11). In John 7:24, with regard to a matter of the Law, Jesus said, "Stop judging by mere appearances, and make a right judgment."   In clear terms, we are instructed to make judgments in matters of doctrine and righteous living (see Matt 7:15 and Rom 16:17 also).   If we fail to follow these commands then the Bible will become just another book and we will be without a foundation.  We'll then be like the Israelites in the time of the Judges: "In those days Israel had no king; everyone did as he saw fit" (Judges 21:25).

If you were in error, wouldn't you want someone to go against the trend and warn you?  Of course you would - so, in love, do it for your neighbor. James 4:17 warns us, "Anyone, then, who knows the good he ought to do and doesn't do it, sins." Failing to judge righteously is unspeakably callous as it will leave a sinner on the broad road to destruction (or exposed to false teachers willing to lead him there) and will, bit by bit, turn the holiest of congregations into little more than a social club.

Look, God the almighty the Father of the son Jesus is the only God in the entire existence of this planet to have historically existed.  It is a proven fact by thousands and thousands of years of writings and witnesses.  These new Gods (Muslims, Atheists, Buda’s etc, etc) haven’t a chance.  Believe Muhammad was a God?  Read the Quran!  It says Muhammad prayed to God thousands of times.  A God don’t pray to a God.  A man prays to a God and in time dies like a man and is NOT risen like the true God.  Jesus.
Walter Gatlin

Sunday, August 7, 2011

What is it people want?

I hear of so many stories about this and that but I never get why things happen the way they do. One little boy may have a terminal illness and hardly anybody pays attention.  Yet another little boy has the same condition and it’s all over the world and millions of dollars poor in for him.

How is it that in life some people succeed greatly and yet most people with even better ideas struggle for the same opportunity?  It most certainly makes a person wonder. Is there a secret?  Is that just the way life goes?  Is there a certain thing that goes on in the midst of those that receive the blessings?  Some of the people that succeed greatly are as evil as evil gets so I am sure it has nothing to do with you being good or bad.  Some success stories have religious people in them and some without religious people in them so I am sure it has nothing to do with religion.


The old adage is probably the best solution for my question.  Why do some people succeed and why do most never succeed?  You must be at the right place and at the right time.

Is having a terminal illness lucky if you receive millions of dollars in return?  I don't know.  You will have to ask those who keep the money after the boy dies.

Walter Gatlin.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Am I going to write more?

Yes I am.  I will do my best to blog more so that people may better understand me.  For now I must get ready for work but I just wanted to write this to let you know.  God Bless.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Trump Downplays Romney as 'Small Business Guy,' Touts Personal Fortune

Potential presidential candidate Donald Trump says he's a better businessman than a leading GOP hopeful in 2012, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Trump tells CNN's "State of the Union" that he has a "much, much bigger net worth. I mean my net worth is many, many, many times Mitt Romney."

Trump describes Romney as a "small business guy." Trump says he's created thousands of jobs and built a "great company."

Romney is a former venture capitalist with a record of turning around failing companies. While heading Bain Capital, he helped launch the Staples office supply chain, as well as buy Domino's Pizza. Romney invested more than $40 million of his own money in the 2008 race.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/04/17/trump-downplays-romney-small-business-guy-touts-personal-fortune/#ixzz1JpTUT4Tx

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Marine Home From Iraq War, Wife Allegedly Assaulted Outside Florida Theater by Teen Mob

This is a fox news report worth repeating.


He made it home from the Iraq war just in time for Christmas. She was looking forward to a night out with her husband after so much time apart.  But a group of teenagers had other plans for Federico and Kalyn Freire, who were assaulted outside a Florida movie theater after asking the teens to be quiet during a movie on Christmas Day.  Federico Freire, a 28-year-old Marine, and Kalyn Freire were attacked after the couple attended a showing of "Little Fockers" on Saturday in Bradenton, Fla.  "The saddest part about it was that this was our first date night together in a long time," Freire's wife, Kalyn, said in an interview Wednesday with FoxNews.com. "We were just looking to spend some time together."  Freire, a Florida native stationed at Camp Pendelton in California, said he and his wife asked a group of "obnoxiously loud" teenagers talking on cell phones to "be quiet" during the 8:20 p.m. movie.  "This was my first time back in town from my tour in Iraq," he said.

Freire told FoxNews.com that news outlets reporting he was home on leave from Afghanistan were incorrect, and that he had served a combat tour in Iraq and currently was stationed at Camp Pendleton, Calif.

Freire said that when the disturbance escalated and the group began cursing, his wife called the manager, who asked several of the teenagers to leave the theater.  The couple said they thought the fracas was over until they walked out of the theater and were assaulted by a mob of menacing teenagers.

"On our way out of the movie theater, my wife gets surrounded with about 10 to 15 girls that were about to attack her," Freire told FoxNews.com. "As soon as I saw this I immediately ran and got her out of harm's way."  Freire said he was kicked and punched as he and his wife tried to run from the group.  "I leaned down to grab my purse and there were literally 100 teens around us," Kalyn Freire said, "While the manager was in the corner with his mouth open and not doing anything."

Freire said one bystander stepped forward and told the couple to follow him to his car, saying he could scare the crowd off with a gun. But before the two reached the man's vehicle, one of the teenagers said, "I'm going to knock your wife out," before punching Freire's wife to the ground, the couple said.  Deputies from the Manatee County Sheriff's Department responded to the scene and arrested two 15-year-old brothers and charged them with misdemeanor battery.

According to a police report, three others -- 16-year-old Ishmael Dunbar, 17-year-old Reginald Gardner and 20-year-old Destiny McNeil -- were arrested and charged with felony battery on a law enforcement officer and trespassing.
"All available units were requested to respond to disperse the crowd for officer safety and to restore order," the police report said. One teenager was stunned by a Taser.  Authorities said the fight attracted about 300 bystanders.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Judging is clearly being un-Christian? Wrong!

My weekly Blog will astound you as I bring you the facts of many subjects.  This one below written by:  Robert Meyer

Regardless of the level of theological sophistication, we can always be sure the critics "know" one thing: The Bible says that we should not judge one another. Anyone who would do so is clearly being un-Christian. Such obtuse reasoning is employed against Christians who offer a negative commentary on certain cultural trends, behaviors or lifestyles. Still, I wonder how many people have taken this concept to its logical conclusion?


We now hear that in our modern times, John 3:16 has been replaced by Matthew 7:1, as the most often quoted scriptural passage. This is clearly because we have taken the focus off of what the Creator has done for us, and placed it on the creatures do for themselves. We have taken the emphasis off of grace, and have instead made the approval of moral pluralism the quintessential virtue of the age.

The very idea that all judging is wrong, is an illegitimate synthesis between Christianity, moral relativism, and the contemporary perspective on "tolerance." These ideas have been wedded together to conjure up witch's brew of self-contradictory sophistry.

Christianity has traditionally viewed "tolerance" through a prism of scriptural precept that parallels the garden variety dictionary definition. The scriptures say things like, "Love endures all things," and "As much as it depends on you, live peacefully with all men." The traditional definition is that "tolerance" is graciously enduring those who you disagree with.

Today, "tolerance" has been reconstructed to mean something entirely different. Essentially it means that all ideas, lifestyles and truth claims, are deemed equally valid. Christian author and speaker Josh McDowell refers to this phenomenon as "negative tolerance"(permission) versus "positive tolerance" (approval). One can readily see how this new definition of tolerance circles back to the claim made about judging. If nobody has a superior moral position, then nobody has the standing to "judge" anything in terms of ethical hierarchy.

But does the use of Matthew 7:1, as a stand-alone quotation, bring contextual justice to the point Jesus is making? Of course not. Later in the passage, Christ refers to certain people unable or unwilling to assimilate spiritual things. He refers to them figuratively as "pigs" and "dogs." That sounds a bit like judging to me! In the book of John, Jesus talks of rendering a "righteous judgement," rather than none at all. The point was never that we should not make moral judgments, or employ an ethical hierarchy in being discreet about evaluating "right" and "wrong." The idea was that there should be no "double-standards." We should not judge others by a standard we would not want to be judged with ourselves. This is how we avoid "judgmentalism" and cronin fault-finding. We are exhorted to correct our own hypocrisies before reforming the world.

Now that is very different from telling someone that they shouldn't dare to call anything wrong. In fact, such reasoning will ultimately lead to calling evil good and good evil. This is because evil cannot be called evil, since such labeling is judgmental. Good is considered evil, because those who are endeavoring to do good by calling something else wrong, are guilty of judging. How could any court of justice operate if all judgment without exception were considered wrong? All criticisms of anything would have to be withheld on the basis that such critiques are judgmental in nature.

Christian apologist Greg Koukl offers us the perfect antidote to this apparent logical dilemma. He says that we must be egalitarian in terms persons, but elitist in reference to ideas. That principle is embodied in the old ecclesiastical adage that we are to hate the sin, yet love the sinner. This is a perfect expression of "righteous judgment," but it is a posture that would be condemned today as grossly judgmental. And yet in effect, is it any different from saying, "We support the troops, but oppose the war(We have concern for the person, but disapprove of the cause)?" The latter position is assumed to be accepted as valid without question, despite the fact that the former is seen as intolerant. Interesting paradox.

Last year an editorial writer to my local newspaper made a preposterous claim. He declared that the only hope for the peaceful co-existence of mankind, was that each of us must accept and respect the other guy's truth. We can't be dogmatic and say the other guy is wrong. But in articulating such a standard, the writer himself is engaged in judging, not to mention being dogmatic. Applying Koukl's axiom to this situation, we might say that all people deserve respect because of their unique position as reflecting the image of God. But in the process of evaluating the cogency of ideas, the writer clearly is confused, as he seeks to reconstruct the term "truth," by making it tantamount to opinion.

The idea that we can never judge about anything is patently absurd. To say that we can never judge is to wander aimlessly. The scriptures tell us that we should reprove each other, speaking the truth in love. What our society lacks is righteous judgment. What we have an abundance of is knit-picking and indifference. Neither of those two alternatives promotes justice and righteousness.