Where we go ONE we go ALL

This phrase reminds me of the “Band of Brothers” who are united in love of their cause and their love for each other. Similar phrases are like “One for all and all for one”.

We have a choice. Follow the ONE who sinned, or follow the ONE who paid the price of sin in this world. How? Show love in your own circle of influence. Don’t let hate depression and despair become your companion. Perform acts of kindness. Don’t do kindness out of a feeling of obligation, but from a true heart of Love knowing that God has loved you even when you were not so lovely yourself. Don’t act religious, pious, uppity or better in any way to others. Serve them!

Consider this passage from Romans 5

Death in Adam, Life in Christ
12 Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all sinned— 13 for sin indeed was in the world before the law was given, but sin is not counted where there is no law. 14 Yet death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over those whose sinning was not like the transgression of Adam, who was a type of the one who was to come.

15 But the free gift is not like the trespass. For if many died through one man’s trespass, much more have the grace of God and the free gift by the grace of that one man Jesus Christ abounded for many. 16 And the free gift is not like the result of that one man’s sin. For the judgment following one trespass brought condemnation, but the free gift following many trespasses brought justification. 17 For if, because of one man’s trespass, death reigned through that one man, much more will those who receive the abundance of grace and the free gift of righteousness reign in life through the one man Jesus Christ.

18 Therefore, as one trespass led to condemnation for all men, so one act of righteousness leads to justification and life for all men. 19 For as by the one man’s disobedience the many were made sinners, so by the one man’s obedience the many will be made righteous. 20 Now the law came in to increase the trespass, but where sin increased, grace abounded all the more, 21 so that, as sin reigned in death, grace also might reign through righteousness leading to eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Just a jab?

Want to know what is going on? Follow the money! Think about it who is really gaining from this so-called pandemic? Is it not the pharma companies and their jabs? The oppressive government leaders who are insisting on masking and jabbing us. The major media outlets who are complicit in their fear mongering and spreading of lies and fear to drive it all.

I was at my doctor’s office recently and she was espousing all the virtues of the jabs that she has gladly taken to ‘protect’ herself, but when she hears I have not participated in the experiment, she has to run out of the room and don an additional face guard. Makes me think. If she is fully up on all of her jabs as she states, why is she so fearful that she might get sick? Isn’t the purpose of the jabs to prevent the infection from the virus?

 

Open letter to my granddaughter on her first year as a voter

Dear Grandaughter,

I have been through many elections in my lifetime and I wanted to share with you my experience. I do not want to dictate who you may vote for, or how to choose the best candidate, but I want to share my experience with you to help you make the best decisions on your own. I believe that voting is a right that as a Christian we MUST exercise.

“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing” Edmund Burke and also quoted by President John F Kennedy in 1961. Just one look at the evil that is running rampant in Seattle and Portland shows that not enough good men are at least voting!

The first election that influenced me even though I was too young to vote was 1964. It was Johnson vs Goldwater and on the schoolground during recess, kids were asking me who my dad was voting for. When I answered “Goldwater” they picked me up as a group and took me behind the building and started bullying me where no teacher could see them. As you may know I was raised in Portland OR just a mile from the location of the current Portland Police Union headquarters which was recently attacked by far left rioters seeking to burn the building down. I am sure it was not the same group that harassed me in grade school.

I remember the 1968 election and Richard Nixon. He was always ridiculed by the TV comedians but he got a landslide re-election in 1972 only to have some of his people be caught spying on Democratic headquarters at the Watergate Hotel near Washington DC. My opinion at the time was that everybody was doing it, but Nixon got caught. Nixon recorded all of his phone calls, but on one of the tapes there was an 18 minute gap that left his testimony in doubt and he resigned rather than being impeached. Gerald Ford became an un-elected president at that time.

The first election that I was old enough to vote for was 1976 when it was Carter vs Ford. When I heard that Jimmy Carter was a Christian and a Sunday School teacher, I thought that he would likely make a good President. I voted for him on that basis only. I was really disappointed! My lesson learned was that just because a person might be a Christian, doesn’t qualify him for positions of leadership. In 1979 hostages were taken in Iran and Jimmy had no idea how to handle this incidence.

The next election was 1980. Reagan vs Carter. It was easy to vote for Reagan. I had read both the Democratic and Republican platforms and decided (for myself not to judge others) that as a Christian I could NOT vote for the Democratic platform. I didn’t use simply abortion as a ‘litmus test’ as other Christians did, but I looked at the platform as a whole and saw it for what it was. I have voted Republican since then. Ronnie (The Gipper) was a great President. He continually put the media in it’s place and worked for a smaller government and built a great economy for the United States. Iran released the hostages taken rather than face Reagan in a war! In 1984 Reagan easily won over Democratic challenger Walter Mondale in 1984.

1988 was interesting. George H.W. Bush had been Ronnie Reagans’s vice president so he became the easy pick. Walter Mondale was the Democratic challenger and lacked any luster (at least to me). What I have found out more recently about George H.W. Bush has explained to me why he failed later.

1992 it was George H.W. Bush vs Bill Clinton. Of coarse I voted for Bush. But George H.W. Bush had vowed not to raise taxes he even said “Read My Lips.. No New Taxes”. His tax increase may have cost him this race HOWEVER, there was another fly in the ointment. This was the year Ross Perot decided to run as an Independent. It is possible that the conservative votes siphoned off by Perot also cost Bush this election giving it to Clinton. The big issue that year was NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement). Perot can be quoted as saying “NAFTA will make a giant sucking sound taking jobs from Americans”. In total hindsight, Perot might have been the best choice that year, but NO third party candidate can get enough votes to win an election. The only thing that a 3rd party candidate can do is upset the election by siphoning off votes from one side or the other.

1996 Bob Dole challenged Bill Clinton and lost. I voted for Bob.

2000 was George W. Bush (son of George H.W. Bush) vs Al Gore. This was the first election that seemed to be building a certain amount of drama to it. Al Gore ended up challenging the Florida vote and in my opinion the elections started to have more of a sinister (evil spiritual) angle to them. I genuinely liked George Bush as a person but I questioned the secret society that he belonged to. The 9/11 attack happened in 2001, George sent troops to Iraq (His father sent troops to Iraq to liberate Kuwait, but did not attack Suddam Hussain) to take out Suddam Hussain. In 2004 George won over John Kerry.

2008 Barrack Obama was elected over John McCain, and again in 2012 over Mit Romney. I do believe that Obama was the most corrupt and scandalous president to sit in the White House. There is evidence that his ‘wife’ Michelle was not born a woman and never actually went through with a sex change (Just google “Michelle Obama penis” and make up your own mind). Obama weaponized the IRS, DOJ, FBI, CIA and many other organizations against traditional American values in favor of a One World Government. Remember NAFTA? That giant sucking sound of American jobs being taken from the US. Obama said those jobs were gone and it would take some kind of “Magic Wand” to get them back. It seemed like America was on it’s way to oblivion and NONE of the previous presidents had helped much.

In my lifetime of listening to presidential hopeful speeches, I noted that they ALL promised things that we American Voters wanted to hear. It also was true that these promises were RARELY fulfilled. They were years and years of empty promises that were always excused away for some reason or the other.

In 2016 Donald J Trump joined the republican candidates for President. I never thought that somebody like him would run because why would an already rich and famous person  want the “hot seat” of a US President and be put through all that incessant mocking from Saturday Night Live and others? I have seen it all my life. Promise to do several things and then get the office just to be obstructed by the opposing party and end up in the end doing nothing. I had my sights on other candidates. I didn’t take Trump seriously. I remember that when there were something like 10 republican candidates on a stage for a debate, the question was asked “If somebody else received the Republican nomination, would you drop your campaign and support them?” Donald Trump is the only person that didn’t say yes. (I think he knew something by then). Donald Trump ended up by the grace of God winning the Republican nomination. BUT I was skeptical because I have heard all those promises before and they were NEVER kept.

I think it was 60 days into the Trump administration that I began to see that THIS President intended to KEEP ALL of his promises. In the past 3.5 years I have watched and listened while President Donald J Trump has made extraordinary measures to keep ALL of the promises that he has made to the American people in 2016. This alone sets him head and shoulders above any previous president in my opinion. President Trump has demonstrated that his allegiance is only to the American people and the American way of life.

I could get into all of the ways that evil has infiltrated the American government over the years, but I will save that for another time. Just remember these things. If you want to know who to blame, follow the money (or power). Money and Power are the root of all evil. President Trump wants you to keep your money (He just enacted an Income Tax Holliday which means our paychecks will be bigger and this tax will NOT be owed after his re-election). You can also see him returning the POWER in this country to the people as written in the Constitution of the United States. You will see Law and Order will be the rule of this land. He will not overstep the laws written in the Constitution. (An example of this is how he allows the evil to exist in Seattle and Portland and does not send in Federal troops to restore law and order without the invitation from the local mayors and governors.

I want you to think for yourself. Decide what is the path that God wants for you. Research everything. Make informed decisions. Don’t just follow any friend, family, preacher or political activist (including myself) without doing your own research. Pray and ask God to lead you. Read the Bible! (Read the Koran if you can, but that’s yet another topic). Ask God to guide you through Jesus our Savior.

-Grampa Miller

America, who has bewitched you?

Oh foolish Americans! Who has bewitched you? It was before your eyes that the patriots of old publically vanquished unjust taxation and the burdens of greedy self centered kings and royalty who glady and for their own self satisfaction broke your backs with their laws and taxation. Let me ask you only this: Did you receive your freedom and liberty by oppression and taxation or by standing together against those who would impose their taxes, tariffs and global agendas shedding our own blood to achieve this freedom for generations to come.

Are you so foolish? Having won the freedom and liberty at such a great cost, are we achieving a greater freedom by shouldering even more taxation and burdensome government control of our own making?

Did our patriots of old suffer the cost of true freedom in vain?

All who rely on the works of a human governing body are enslaved and cursed. The spirit of personal freedom is lost. You are told who to love and how to love them. Meanwhile central banks get richer, career politicians grow more calloused and isolated from the people they are duly elected to serve. In their debauchery they turn to try to satisfy their inner lusts for more power, control and self satisfaction. The people they are called to serve instead become nothing more than chattel to be milked for more money or trafficked for to satisfy their sensual lusts.

How does the Gospel of Christ relate to today’s Social Justice causes?

If you follow the teachings of Jesus, you will love your neighbor as your self, and your ‘neighbor’ will include people who are identified by ALL ‘isms.

The gospel does not pigeonhole people. There are no ‘isms. All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. Christ is the only way to restore a severed relationship with God.  If a preacher does not preach Christ and Christ alone, his message is of no use.

Social Justice movement and The Gospel

The following is a re-post of a Facebook post by Stephen Bond, a friend of mine.

 

An open letter to a pastor in good standing in the PCA (not my pastor, mind you!), who recently wrote — I am not exaggerating in the slightest — that to reject the ‘social justice’ movement is to deny the Gospel:

How very wrong you are. You believe that we who reject your style of ‘social justice’ have separated the Gospel’s message from its power. No! Quite the contrary! What we hold, rather, is this:

 

First: That the *diagnosis* of injustice in our day is often unclear — or, to be more specific, that it is almost always doubtful that the Left’s diagnosis of injustice is even an approximate match for any sound Biblical diagnosis of injustice. The Left considers many things racist, sexist, classist, ableist, ageist, cisgenderist, <insert -ist>, or otherwise unjust, which may well not be; the Left habitually considers all inequalities to be unjust, when some are in fact natural and part of the created order, or the consequences of choices made. Their seared consciences cannot tell the difference, and they rabidly denounce even the merest inquiry. It must not be so with us. Thus our insistence that the Church’s proper task is not to go seeking monsters to destroy, but to preach that ‘escapist’ and ‘individualistic gospel’ of ‘personal salvation’, and trust that it will bear true fruit in due time.

 

Second: That the *remedy* for injustice in our day is often unclear — or, to be more specific, that it is almost always doubtful that the Left’s proposed remedies for genuine injustices will not, in fact, make things worse. Here, too, there is Biblical cause for doubt: the Christian is seldom called to *overthrow* complex and interlocked institutions, but is often called to bear with their injustices and slights, real or imagined, in hopes of transformations that are in no way guaranteed this side of eternity. Moreover, much of what the Left calls ‘reconciliation’ is, rather, the nursing of resentments, and the quest for the thrill of ‘being on top for once’ — to wit, evils that are in fact pure, distilled forms of the evils they claim to oppose. Their seared consciences cannot tell the difference, and they rabidly denounce even the merest inquiry. It must not be so with us. Thus again our insistence that the Church’s proper task is not to work out how to destroy this or that monster, but to preach that ‘escapist’ and ‘individualistic gospel’ of ‘personal salvation’, and trust that it will bear true fruit in due time.

 

And then…

 

The following doesn’t apply to many of the 19th-century skeptics of liberalism — e.g. R.L. Dabney — but it applies to most of us today: we are, even more fundamentally, *not postmillennialists*. We understand that we are under no orders whatsoever to ‘immanentize the eschaton’: we understand that we cannot, and that the Holy Spirit has made it abundantly clear, both in Scripture and in the unfolding of history, that He categorically *will* not — neither through the Church nor in any other way — before Christ returns. The Church is a company of companions in shipwreck, not an ‘intrusion’ of heaven into earth. Will we necessarily look different from the doomed world? Yes — but in the manner of men who are escaping a stricken ship, *not* in the manner of men who long ago were plucked from the sea and delivered safely to port, and have long since enjoyed their new lives in their new home. To the authors of the New Testament, Rome endures, and Onesimus is, for some reason, not encouraged to dwell on his past misfortunes, nor to organize to uproot what some Intersectionality Studies ‘professor’ considers to be the ‘dominant power structures’. For some reason, justice and peace seldom follow when some Onesimus does so anyway. I wonder why?

 

Whatever. I do not write with the expectation of changing your mind. I write with the sole intention of repudiating your slanderous accusation that we who reject this present ‘social justice’ hysteria have “settled for a false gospel” or “rejected the full scope of the good news”. We have done no such thing. We reply, rather, that it is you who have bought into a false gospel, by imagining that the good news of the true Gospel is essentially the same as the good news of the Frankfurt School — that hierarchy and distinction are prima facie evil, and that the sword of the State, the keys of the Church, and (last but not least) the jeering of the resentful are the power of God to equalize every difference this side of the New Jerusalem. We baptize children to new life — and it is that new life and only that new life that has ever, in Burke’s memorable words, “made power gentle and obedience liberal”. You, however, are merely baptizing resentments — and, looking around, you increasingly have the ashes of our fathers’ church and civilization to show for it.

 

It is, perhaps, worth adding that it’s utterly laughable to claim that “the only aspect of the gospel often taught is the escapism”, and that this, of all things, is what has made the Church’s witness powerless. One could deny the consequent by pointing to, say, ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress’: if *that* book, which is nothing if not about individual escape from hell, is ‘powerless’ or presents a ‘false gospel’, then the divide between us goes much deeper than I thought. But the antecedent is rubbish too. Has not the hellfire-and-brimstone preacher become an endangered species, a risible archaism, ’round these parts? Or did I fall asleep for a few years, and so miss the decline of ‘moralistic-therapeutic deism’, and the comeback of the old thunder? We’ve passed the peak of ‘Next Sunday: Toe-curling Sex God’s Way’, and I just failed to notice? Get real. Outliers aside, who the hell talks about hell in a church these days?

 

 

If we do not fight this — and where necessary, start defrocking pastors who preach this — our denomination will go the exact same way as every other denomination that started blathering about how ‘the real gospel’ is this or that social uplift.

 

Family Secrets – Pain and Disappointment

Principle 1: Realize I’m not God. I admit that I am powerless to control my tendency to do the wrong thing and that my life is unmanageable.

Step 1: We admitted we were powerless over our addictions and compulsive behaviors, that our lives had become unmanageable.

Being raised in a Christian family, when I first considered this question, I though there were not any. I do remember my mom saying the she always wondered who that Indian was in her family pictures. She was never told that she was a descendant of a native American, in fact I think in her generation it was considered shameful.

Careful consideration of the question causes me to go a different direction. In my family of origin, SIN wasn’t talked about. It’s more like the family secret is that we are still sinners saved by God’s grace. If I was bad as a kid, I was punished (usually by the belt) and that was the end of it. We were somehow supposed to just be good especially once we made a confession of our faith in Jesus. In doing so we were protecting our own reputation.

Just like covering our ‘sin’, we were also expected to deny our pain and disappointment. I ended up being skilled at pressing all of those feelings down into a trash compactor thinking that their rot and stench would never effect me. This created a sad and depressed me that could never admit sadness or depression. After all, I am saved from my sin and am supposed to be happy all the time. I feel like my parents passed away without me really getting to know them. My mom was just happy all the time no matter what. With the onset of alzheimer’s she just slid into oblivion of any pain. I have often wondered what pain she experienced growing up.

Pain and disappointment is something we all experience everyday. Like the disappointment of being able to drive as fast as you want on the freeway, or to be able to just get ahead of that slow driver who is holding you back. Not to mention your co-worker or boss or spouse who never fail to disappoint on some level. It seems like pain and disappointment is like dying of 1000 cuts daily. Is this what Christ asks us to do? Die to ourselves and take up our cross and follow Him?

Coping skills learned as a child.

As a kid I learned that the world is a dangerous place and the safest place was by myself. After all nobody else really cares for me anyway.

I was the youngest child in a family where I had 5 siblings. When I came along my oldest brother had already left home, and my oldest sister left home by the time I turned 3. I had another brother and sister who were more that 6 years older than I. My oldest sister took care of me from the time I was a baby and I remember the deep feelings of abandonment the first time I went to her bedroom and she was no longer there.

My dad favorite saying was that “Children should be seen and not heard”. In my loneliness I would cry as a kid. My dad would say “Stop your crying or I’ll give you something to cry about”. My mom would say “Just quit feeling sorry for yourself”. This was the most “comfort” I ever received as a kid.

Growing up, I was always too little to be included in anything that my brother or sister did and I can remember just wanting to feel included. I don’t remember any other kids around my age so I mostly just stayed by myself. I do remember my older brother teaching me to read before I started school. We had no kindergarten so I started school in first grade a few weeks before my sixth birthday. I attended school in Grants Pass, Oregon for a few months then my family moved to Portland, Oregon and I had to re-start first grade there in January.

I was one of the smartest kids in school and had a quick wit. I came into a class that had already had a chance to form friendships or cliques, and I felt like an outsider so I continued to be withdrawn. I was different than everybody else and so I never felt like I fit in, or was accepted. I was the only ‘Preacher’s Kid’. I used NO profanity of any kind. We didn’t watch any sports at home. In 1964 during the presidential campaign I happened to mention that my father was voting for Barry Goldwater and I was physically carried off the playground and bullied by the kids of the LBJ supporters. I was also the target of other bullies too.

These incidents caused me to withdraw even more. It was not safe to share my opinion or anything with others. At home I stayed by myself tin the basement. I had my own TV to watch and I taught myself electronics and built a few projects in the basement. There was only one kid in my neighborhood near my age and he was a year older than I and in the next grade ahead of me. His parents took him on vacations, cooked steaks on the grill in his backyard sometimes, and I only wished that I could do things like that. I never had a steak until after I had left home. We never took any family vacations. I don’t even remember my dad ever having more than a day off work!

By the time I became a teenager I had had enough. I didn’t really believe in God at the time. Atheism was what was taught in school. So one day I prayed a desperate prayer. I prayed “God if you are really alive, I NEED to know you. If you don’t exist, I have no place here. I can’t live if all I am is evolved green goo and there is no life except this.” I knew that apart from God there is no meaning to life at all. Within a year of praying that prayer, God answered me.

Even today, decades later, I struggle with feelings of being left out. Actually I am uncomfortable many times when I am included. I crave attention but don’t know what to do when it is given to me. Isolation is so much easier.

The Wall

What is a wall?

A wall is a boundary. It says this is where your domain ends and my domain starts. A wall protects those within from harm. John 10 describes a sheepfold. You can tell the good guys from the bad guys because the thieves and robbers climb over the wall.

It is highly irresponsible to not have good boundaries in your life. Even to have boundaries around your own behaviors so that you can act responsibly and show propriety in your life.

A life without a boundary invites corruption.
A life without a boundary accepts all evil as normal.
A life without a boundary disrespects yourself.
A life without a boundary is shapeless.
A life without a boundary is meaningless.
A life without a boundary is open to any shifting wind.
A life without a boundary is lawless.