Read this article from ANGLICAN INK.
EU labels ISIS persecution of Christians as genocide
Woody Norman expresses his opinions on this blog. Many of the posts are written in verse.
Friday, February 5, 2016
Thursday, February 4, 2016
Politics in the United States of America 2016
Politics in the United States of America
After a while one gets sick, very sick of political
campaigning. Unfortunately, there is no way around this seemingly endless phenomenon
of political rancor – dirty tricks, calling opponents liars, bamboozling the
electorate. I gotta tell ya, I’m sick of it.
Yet we, the electorate, must be vigilant about what is
going on around us and to us. We have to endure this latest cycle of presidential
electoral politics. For the past seven years we have seen, actually felt, what
a negative presidency can do not only to the United States as a whole, but to
persons, individuals who have either lost their jobs or have been reduced to
seeking part-time employment.
It is difficult, if not impossible, for any one of us to
know what a presidential candidate actually believes until he or she is
elected. The current American president was a virtual unknown to the voting
public in 2007, but because he promised much and spoke a traditional line, most
Americans voted him into office. It did not take long after gaining office that
we saw how destructive a sitting president can be to his own nation and to its
citizens.
Electing a president is inherently risky. It matters whom
we elect. Unfortunately, we must await the unfolding of his or her presidential
policies – regardless of what was promised during the campaign season – before we
really know. We then will be either pleasantly surprised or sorely
disappointed. Eight, even four years, of negative policies can ruin peoples’
lives for years to come. Significant economic impacts on a person’s ability to
earn an income over four to eight years make it even more difficult in future
years to recover those losses assuming a new president promotes better economic
policies.
What could be worse? What is worse is a certain kind of structural change
and governmental change? The tendency of Progressive government is socialism.
The natural “progression” of socialism is totalitarianism. When a
candidate-become-president states that he will “fundamentally transform”
America, he is stating his belief that something is/was wrong with America and it
needs to be radically changed. That president has almost succeeded. The
current “overt” socialist presidential candidate has garnered a huge following
among the young. The risk here, if successfully played out, is even higher. What could possibly happen?
Over the years the nations collectively known as Europe
have ceded their religious and cultural heritage to secularism. Secularism
thrives in a socialistic, progressive environment. Living the good life means
that the government pays for your necessities, and perhaps pays for your
luxuries. Enjoying life in such a government-controlled environment also
meant, historically, having fewer children. Having fewer children meant a future workforce
smaller in numbers than their living seniors. With the willing jettisoning of its heritage and its willingness to produce fewer offspring, Europe has made itself open to “fundamental
transformation” through immigration, not overt or combative revolution.
Europe is now overrun and will never recover.Their historical contributions to the arts, sciences, and religion will be
erased from history by the immigrated conquering religion-government, and will never be heard of in another 25 to 50 years. European socialism has not succeeded and is in the process of being replaced by a totally different form of life, government, and religion (replacing secularism). The same could happen to the United States of America.
One should now see where I am going with this. Show me a nation
where socialism has been successful. Such a nation does not exist. Eventually
some kind of revolution, not necessarily a "gentle transformation," will occur. Socialism lulls. Europeans, by way of example, were not animated by its secularism, therefore, Europe is now being overrun from the outside.
Vigilance of the American Electorate
Pay attention to these current 2016 presidential candidates.
Although the process is itself sickening, the history, speeches, and actions of
the candidates need to be examined by each one of us. Do not take
word-for-word account of what media outlets tell us. Of course, we have to read those media accounts, but we must use our own senses and logic to figure out as best
we can who our next president should be. Reduce our national risk by
understanding who these people are. And do not be lulled by grandiose promises.
A wrong presidential choice in November, 2016 can ruin
our lives for the next four years making for 12 years of continuous employment,
economic, and governmental degradation. Examine, think, act, vote.
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
African American Studies catalogue from McFarland & Co., Inc. Publishers
Download the catalogue
My biography of James Solomon Russell in on page 24.
BLACK HISTORY month in Virginia and Alabama
In 2012 McFarland and Company, Inc. published my biography of James Solomon Russell. A former slave, Russell founded Saint Paul's College in Lawrenceville, Virginia. As an Episcopal priest in the newly-formed Diocese of Southern Virginia in the late 1890s and early 1900s, Russell planted 31 churches.
In 2014 Archdeacon Books published my book Alabama Timelines: African American Entrepreneurs. This book is helpful for finding historical black entrepreneurs in the State of Alabama before, during, and after the Civil War.
Both books can be purchased through Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Books-a-Million online bookstores.
Monday, February 1, 2016
103rd Archbishop of Canterbury in Birmingham, AL at Beeson Divinity School
George Carey, 103rd Archbishop of Canterbury
The Living Church Magazine article for February 1, 2016
The Living Church Magazine article for February 1, 2016
Saturday, January 30, 2016
Sarai by the Sea
Sarai by the Sea
She strolls the sands
A pace so slow
Noticing not how the
ocean expands
Its ebb and flow.
The ocean’s creative
energy bound in two:
Its massive diastolic
reach
Engulfs the old, makes
new
The systolic remnant folding
from the beach.
The surf’s repetition
Is what most see,
The grandeur of the
waves’ disposition,
Both a danger and beauty,
most will agree.
Is there a secret
Hidden in the sea?
Does it request
From everyday life to
flee?
Sarai stares into the
ocean blue
Searching for an anchor,
For any answer, in lieu
Of the source of her
internal rancor.
The ocean can settle
From its pacific smile,
Its stormy waves, her
mettle.
But now only confuse and
beguile.
Sarai’s life not as she
thought.
In search of her true
roots,
A flicker of hope she
bought,
Revealed but as rotten
fruit.
Day after day,
Year after year,
Sarai searched for
someone to say
That she is some
father’s little dear.
Not from the shoreline, the outer banks,
The majestic great lakes fronts.
It was at the southern sunshine beaches and ranks,
She ceased her daughter-hunts.
Always at water’s edge
She looked for the concrete.
It was as if Sarai could not dredge
From the sea’s bed a stable seat.
Seemingly an orphan of
the sea,
Disappointment and
rejection
Guided her to flee
From her closest
affections.
Simply looking to the
ocean
Is not a lasting
retreat,
But of symbol and notion
How life can be
complete.
New life and new birth
Also symbolic of the
sea,
Point to One of higher
worth,
The One Who hung on a
tree.
Sarai was never abandoned,
While lorning for her
truth.
Her Father, His hand on
Her heart from childhood
and youth.
Now time
To be drenched by the
sea.
A different clime,
Baptizing Sarah's new me.
© 2016 WENjr
Monday, January 25, 2016
Readers Respond to Book by Archdeacon Books's author J.N. Sullivan
·
Ruth Jean's voice is so true, so
evocative of that time in the South that it is mesmerizing. I'm over halfway
through, and I had to put it aside for a while because I didn't want it to be
over. That feeling has happened before with some other books,
but not often. Something very special.
·
It’s a wonderful story. I was born in Vass, NC, near Pinehurst, and
spent a great deal of time at my grandmother and great-grandmother’s
homes. I had not thought of “slop buckets” in forever, but the memory is
back. Also shelling beans on the back porch and so many other small
moments in small Southern towns in another time. The words of so many
hymns sung in the Methodist Church we regularly attended….the melodies came
back to me. And BVD’s. In some ways I was reminded of Laura Ingalls
Wilder, a good story line, the evocation of another time in very clear, simple
prose.
·
I bought and
read the book right after I learned about it. I loved it! I am going to
put it in the church library.
·
I read this
wonderful book over Christmas vacation. It was a sweet and inspiring story, and
beautifully written.
·
I've
been kicking around in my head how to express the deep impression it made on
me. Let me only say that I was absolutely transported into the world rendered;
"disbelief" was willingly--and as completely as I believe it's
possible to be--"suspended," and I was deeply moved by the tale from
many different angles. It has earned its place in the Southern
"canon"!
·
I
loved this novel. The style is simple and elegant and flows easily. The story
puts us right into the 1920’s in a small town in Virginia as it is seen by the
young narrator, Ruth Jean. Along with her, readers will enjoy the humor and
warmth of family and community life even as we confront the difficulties and
moral issues that arise along the way.
·
Great
reading! This novel excels at qualities I value most. It offers characters in a way that makes the
reader know and care about them. Its details let the reader learn about a world
of experience distant from his or her own. It is built from vivid episodes,
especially those filled with difficulty and danger. I imagined how interesting
it would be, as a teacher, to explore this book with a group of readers the
same age as its heroine, Ruth Jean. Would they understand her? Would they be
able to compare her growth to their lives? What values would they learn from her?
·
J.
N. Sullivan's book takes readers to another time. Depending on the age of the
reader, the details bring forth memories. Each chapter provides an insightful
story, and the chapters are skillfully linked to create a heartfelt remembrance
by the narrator. Readers will react to the array of characters and to
recognized situations of today which are made more difficult by the social restrictions
of the past.
·
I
loved this book. I just could not put it down –a lovely journey of a little
girl learning what it means to take personal responsibility for your life!
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