Rick, I saw that movie and I liked it, I thought it was well made, but the main reasonRickD wrote: Anyone ever see the movie, The Beautiful Mind?
I liked it was because it had a happy ending. I love happy endings because they remind
me of the Bible's happy ending in the book of Revelation and it's happy ending for Christianity
for all of God's people.
Anyway The Beautiful Mind had a happy ending because John Nash
[Russell Crowe] learned to ignore his hallucinations and lead a normal life.
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I would personally enjoy reading your thoughts on America and hope you
will at least share a few of them. Often folks from far away places can
offer valuable insights about America, imo.
I will give you my quick take on America: I don't think of America as one unified entity except
in the political sense. We obviously are united politically into a nation state, of course
that doesn't mean we agree with each other on politics.
The key. The really crucial all-important DIVIDE in America is it's spiritual division.
Two separate camps. I always think of two separate America's:
(1) Christian America. A huge swath of America [tens of millions] that is based upon Faith in God and
Faith in the Lord Jesus as Savior and based upon Family Principles and the Christian moral code and
who strive for self-reliance in the economic area of life [that is, they work hard and pay their own
way and do not rely on the Nanny Welfare State to keep them up.]
and
(2) Secular-Humanist America that essentially has the false god named Mankind as its object of love and
worship. This large swath of America is AGAINST having faith in God, and in the Lord Jesus, and they are
AGAINST the principles that strengthen the traditional Christian Family unit [for example, a life time
commitment to marriage], and they sneer at the Christian moral code and hold it in contempt.
Basically the political-social-economic struggle in America is between those two visions for America.
[I use the word "basically" because it is NOT always as "cut and dried" as I just described it.
"Cut and dried" is equivalent to "black and white with no gray areas" ... my point is that there
ARE some gray areas, nonetheless the basic struggle is between (1) and (2) up there.
At least that's my take on it.
What do you think?
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