Do you mean that you arent willing to fight for the US?
And to further qualify my answer, I quote a visiting pastor to my church about 30 years ago: “Where would the early church have been if it had put its faith in Rome”.
The US I knew is long gone and not coming back. The only positive change that can come at this point is to help something good rise from the ashes. It is because our problem is not our elected officials. The problem is the electorate, and we are woefully outnumbered.
In 2011 I moved to a farm I bought (two weeks before the 2008 election) in central Kentucky from my 45 year home of Seattle in the spirit of Revelation 18:4.
Time and events have made it clear it was one of the best decisions I ever made.
Good to hear, because I'm making a very similar move next week. :)
Awesome. Sounds like my plan. In a state very close by. I considered Kentucky especially Amish country. But I have to be near mountains or hills to feel at home.
The early church climbed into bed with Rome, and became half of the monster that has plagued mankind ever since, in various forms of government-church alliances.
This article is off kilter because the grieving process pertains to the grief after a person's death. The USA is being strangled by (1) evil people with evil intent, and (2) misguided and cowardly people who imagine themselves to be too good, or too helpless, to confront the evil people.
Turning the other cheek when evil needs to be confronted and defeated, is evil itself.