Posted on 08/11/2017 12:21:44 PM PDT by Kaslin
Hillary Clinton's pastor compared her defeat to President Trump in the 2016 election to Jesus Christs death.
You, our nation, our world, is experiencing a black Friday," Rev. Bill Shillady wrote to Clinton one day after her loss. "Our hope is that Sunday is coming. But it might well be hell for a while."
He also said life is filled with a lot of Fridays and Good Friday represented the day that everything fell apart.
Today, you are experience a Friday. Your Friday is what happened in the last few weeks and last night in the tragic loss. But Sunday is coming! he continued.
To Christians, Good Friday is the day Jesus's death is commemorated, while Easter Sunday marks His resurrection.
Friday is finished," Shillady wrote. "Sunday is coming. Death will be shattered. Hope will be restored. But first, we must live through the darkness and seeming hopelessness of Friday."
Here is the letter in full, via CNN:
Sunday is Coming)November 9, 2016
It is Friday, but Sunday is coming. This is not the devotional I had hoped to write. This is not the devotional you wish to receive this day. While Good Friday may be the starkest representation of a Friday that we have, life is filled with a lot of Fridays.
For the disciples and Christ's followers in the first century, Good Friday represented the day that everything fell apart. All was lost. The momentum and hope of a man claiming to be the Son of God, the Messiah who was supposed to change everything, had been executed.
Even though Jesus told his followers three days later the temple would be restored, they had no idea of what that Sunday would be. They betrayed, denied, mourned, fled and hid. They did just about everything BUT feel good about Friday and their circumstances.
or us, Friday is the phone call from the doctor that the cancer is back. It's the news that you have lost your job. It's the betrayal of a friend, the loss of someone dear. Friday is the day that it all falls apart and all hope is lost. We all have Fridays. But, as the saying goes, "Sunday's coming!"
Today, you are experiencing a Friday. Your Friday is what happened in the last few weeks and last night in the tragic loss. But Sunday is coming!
Jesus completed the excruciating task of giving up his life as a sacrifice for the sins of the world. It was his faith and belief in his heavenly Father, that gave him the grace and peace to submit to Friday. While death had seemingly won, Jesus knew better. When he said, "It is finished," it wasn't meant to be a statement of concession. It was a declaration that a new day was on the way.
Friday is finished. Sunday is coming. Death will be shattered. Hope will be restored. But first, we must live through the darkness and seeming hopelessness of Friday.
You know one of my favorite sayings is "God doesn't close one door without opening another, but it can be hell in the hallway." My sister Hillary. You, our nation, our world is experiencing a black Friday. Our hope is that Sunday is coming. But it might well be hell for a while. (CNN
The letter comes on the heels of a report that Clinton is interested in becoming a Methodist preacher.
Jesus rose on the Third Day.
By the third day, Hillary probably hadn't even sobered up.
“This is a common analogy for anyone going through dark times no matter what they are....”
And therein lies the troubling problem: Jesus’ dark times were unutterably dark and entirely unique in the entire span of human history. NOBODY should presume to blithely compare the troubles of ANYBODY to the ordeal of Jesus of Nazareth. Nobody. Not ever.
Jesus asked St. Peter, “Can you drink the cup I am about to drink?” Peter answered, “I can.” Jesus went on to affirm that Peter would, indeed suffer and be martyred for his faith. Yet we know from history that Peter so understood the unique magnitude of the suffering of Christ that he, himself, refused to be crucified as Jesus had been; choosing, rather, to be crucified upside down so that his own ordeal would not be comparable to that of Messiah.
Why did Peter refuse to allow his murderers to make his suffering appear remotely the same as Jesus’ suffering?
Why ought we not do likewise?
Why are we so ready to elevate our trials to the level of Jesus’ own?
What insufferable hubris!
Scripture affirms that Jesus suffered more than any man, but many had been beaten, flogged and crucified before and many more were after Jesus. Our issue is that we wrongly limit the suffering to the physical realm when, in fact, Jesus’ greatest suffering was spiritual: the Divine and Holy being MADE SIN.
No suffering of ANY human being in all human history before Christ, nor after him; has approached, or ever will remotely approach, the depths of darkness that Christ suffered on our behalf. To even verbalize a comparison borders on damnable blasphemy.
Just...do not.
If your pastor IS using this, as Hillary’s did, you REALLY need another pastor. Perhaps another church entirely.
You’ve heard of the Vicar of Christ, now meet the Vicar of Satan
Since Anton Levay died the Church of Satan has been in need a new leader.
Sick.
Muslime,no doubt.
You have to love a kid with that many dirty fingernails. He could come over to play with my grandchildren any time.
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