About Me
- Name: Glenn Rivers
- Location: Sioux Falls, South Dakota, United States
My wife Sandi and I are full-time RVers, and Workampers, employed at Adventureland amusement park in Des Moines Iowa, where I have worked for the last 20 years, and am currently a manager in the rides department. I also am a facilitator for one of the weekly Bible studies held for the employees there. I also teach a Bible Study in our home at our winter location in Mesa, Arizona. In addition to writing this blog, I am the author of a book entitled "Going Forth in the Name, an RVer's Guide to Living the Christian Life." I am a retired Police Sergeant of 25 years experience. MY book called "Going Forth in the Name" It is about living the Christian life, and staying connected to the Body of Christ while traveling as a full-time RVer.
Sunday, December 08, 2013
This is indeed an interesting
question; and one with very profound and far-reaching implications. The idea
that a way of life, a culture, a society and a nation whose influence has
changed the course of history on many occasions for three hundred years may be
coming to an end is truly mind boggling! And add to this that it is our
culture, our nation, our society, and our way of life; a nation in which we
have all taken so much pride and in which we are so emotionally invested. It is
a thought that is almost too difficult for us to entertain!
We as Christians are, I think, a
fundamentally optimistic people. We believe in a world where the good guys win
in the end. We believe in a good God, who is carrying out a good plan to
triumph over evil. We believe that “God causes everything to work together for
the good of those who love God and are called according to his purpose for
them.” (Rom. 8:28 NLT). Even in the midst of Israel’s captivity we find God
telling His people “For I know the plans I have for you,” says the Lord. “They
are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope. (Jeremiah 29:11 NLT)
Yet, almost to a man the writers
that we have talked about say without reservation that the United States of
America, as we know it, is finished as a nation, and that the catastrophe that
is about to come upon us is irreversible. There is only one exception to this
opinion. We will talk about him later.
I am forced to admit that I find
the irreversibility of our demise to be a convincing argument. We are afraid to
talk about the 17 trillion dollar elephant in the room, but it is hard to
imagine that we can get out from under such a massive debt. The moral attitudes
that are dragging us down seem entrenched. They seem to be not just a change
but an outright reversal of the formerly held Judeo-Christian ethic. There is
now a whole generation who not only themselves, but their parents have not seen
the inside of a church.
And there are many who share my
reluctant pessimism. I read recently in a newsletter published by Messianic commentator,
Jan Markell the following quote:
“[A] secular
talk show host who is most often an optimist, said this week that he fears America
will not last until the next election. At least, will not last in the
form it has been in for a couple of centuries.” (Jan Markell, Olive Tree
Ministries, November/December newsletter, P.1)”
We could search for, and find quotes like these all day long. Things look very dark indeed.
As I look at our world, it seems to
me that nothing short of a miracle could reverse the collision course we seem
to be on. Yet I am continually reminded that our God is a God of miracles. To
Him nothing is impossible.
If indeed what we are
experiencing is the transitional period into the last days, and the world stage
is really being set for the endtime, rather than this simply being a “dress
rehearsal” (and I believe we have had many dress rehearsals in our history),
then there is nothing we can do to stop what is about to happen. If however we
are still able to claim God’s healing and redemption of our society and our
nation, we do indeed have hope.
Who is that lone dissenting voice
of hope for our nation that I mentioned earlier? It is none other than the much
criticized and much maligned novelist, Jonathan Cahn the author of The Harbinger. I got to see the
accompanying video of The Harbinger
on TV the other night. Mr. Cahn “decodes” the message in his novel in this
video by pointing out in plain fashion what he was trying to say in his novel.
As I tell you about this, please keep in mind what we said about prophets and
their prophecies in the earlier post What
Some Others Had to Say, and about Deuteronomy 18:21-22 and 1 Thessalonians
5:20-21.
Mr. Cahn believes that because of
sin and arrogance, America is being “shaken” with the first shaking being the
911 attack, which he points out, occurred on a date that has significance in
Judaism, the 29th of the Hebrew month of Elul (Elul straddles the
months of August and September on differing dates each year). Because the
nation did not respond with repentance toward God, a second shaking occurred
exactly seven years later in the form of the financial meltdown of 2008, which
Mr. Cahn says began on the 29th of Elul. If this prophetic pattern
holds, and we do not turn back to God as a nation, hang on to your hats when we
get to about 13 September, 2015 (this is
I somewhat cursory calculation on my
part, so please don’t hold me to a too precise standard of accuracy). Yet Cahn believes that if our nation repents, this shaking will be avoided, and that our favor with God will be restored.
I read something this afternoon
that I thought was quite interesting. Prayer Connect magazine was talking about
an organization calls Intercessors For
America which “. . . encourages strong intercessory prayer for God’s mercy
on a forgetful and sinful nation, and for the establishment of a righteous
government.” (Issue 13, P.7) and it occurs to me that if our nation is to
survive, those two items will provide us with a very good starting place.
So what about those four crises
we talked about earlier. What are they about, and what has God led me to do to
protect myself and those around me in these times? We’ll talk about that next
time.
Thanks for sharing this moment
with me today.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home