When the shooter at the Oregon Community College asked his victims who were Christians to raise their hands, he did not distinguish between Catholic, Orthodox or Reformed Christian. Just being Christian and raising your hand merited a bullet in the head in his twisted mind. Those who would not raise their hands or respond at all to the question were kneecapped and crippled for life.
Either fate seems gruesome but those who were shot in the head are probably now with their Savior and ours as martyrs for their respective faiths. If I had been there, I hope I would have had the courage to get the bullet in the head but I am as cowardly as the next guy and might not have mustered the courage.
We are entering dark times for Christians. I would like to recommend good Christian reading as preparation for those times.
First, of course, the Holy Scriptures in as conservative a translation as you can find: The Catholic Douay-Rheims Challoner edition of the late 16th century or the magnificent King James Bible of James I Stuart, the single greatest work in the English language (Protestant or not it rings with the Voice of God),
Imitation of Christ by Thomas a Kempis (15th century spiritual advice by a monk living in community written for his brother monks and just as wonderful advice to the rest of us to this day) which should be read about three pages a day and then be the subject of meditation and prayer,
Anything by Gilbert K. Chesterton,
Anything by Hillaire Belloc
Anything by J.R.R. Tolkien,
Anything by his Oxford colleague Charles King,
Anything by C. S. Lewis,
For the hard times ahead: Dark Night of the Soul by St. John of the Cross, reportedly a dangerous book for the unprepared soul, it is claimed that it almost frightened Mother Teresa out of Catholicism (and belief) during her own dark night of the soul,
The works of Reformed Christian Frank Schaeffer,
Feel free, each of you and anyone else reading this to recommend books that you have found valuable.
God bless each of you and yours!
See #82.
Reason and Revelation in the Middle AgesAnd Frederick Wilhelmsen:
The Unity of Philosophical Experience
Christianity and Political Philosophy
Hilaire Belloc: No Alienated Man
***When the shooter at the Oregon Community College asked his victims who were Christians to raise their hands, he did not distinguish between Catholic, Orthodox or Reformed Christian. Just being Christian and raising your hand merited a bullet in the head in his twisted mind.***
Amen and Amen! We all know who they are, no need to name any names, of people who hang out on the religious threads ,that are so full of hate for their fellow Christians, if we’re even considered Chrisitians at all. Our enemies don’t care where we worship, only that we’re Christians . Now is the time to come together.
To stand against a cause, or a government crack down against known Christians are reasons to die a martyr. Your faith is known by all. Your works are evident by many. There is no way out. Unless you recant.
Recanting your faith in the face of such duress makes martyrs. Why? Because such a witness, over time, has changed nations, ended brutal regimes and great conflicts, even restored or brought peace.
But this Oregon killer was neither a cause nor a government force. He was an insane, brutal murderer, to whom no one owed allegiance. To announce your faith, or to intelligently deny your faith to a weakling individual on a killing high is not much of a dilemma or a question for me.
Line me up in front of this @$$hat who is killing those who confess their faith, and electing to only knee cap the ones who go dumb, I choose to go dumb.
I pray for the Holy Spirit and my conscience to correct me if I am mistaken, but there is something about bowing to death before some, one, sick-o, I just can’t get there. It reminds me of abortion. All those aborted, who could be saints.
In this case, it is the same feeling in me. Those who denied the faith, in Oregon, are alive to love their Lord, to become saints, to do His will in a fallen world as they pilgrim on, carrying whatever is there Cross in life. They chose to live, *to respect life*.
(I realize possibly the odds that some of the deniers of the faith may not have been Christian, or even may have been only marginally Christian, but who knows, among them a great Christian can emerge, because they chose LIFE.)