February 18
Trust your source. That is an admonition today’s generation of learners would do well to heed. We live in an age of deliberate distortion of truth. Our history, for example, is being rewritten to negate the monumental contributions of our Christian founders and to embellish and extol the virtually non-existent input of other cultures into the mix of human achievement.
It’s a lie, but most who study the history books don’t have a clue that truth has been lost in political correctness. Most students are totally unaware that the textbooks they study have been funded by subversive groups and the institutions of learning they attend are the recipients of much-needed funding from those same groups—in exchange for promoting this fallacious ‘history’.
To regain an understanding of the founding of our nation and of the immersion of the fathers of the United States of America in the Judeo/Christian scriptures a student must rediscover the writings of an earlier generation by searching out the textbooks of a by-gone era. In the dusty archives of forgotten rooms in the library, a scholar who seeks to know the truth will find it.
He will discover the accurately chronicled truth of our founding as a nation. And in so doing, he will comply with the admonition found in II Timothy 3:14, “As for you, continue in the truth which was firmly believed, knowing the integrity of those from whom you learned.” In the natural realm and in the realm of the spirit, we must trust our source and try the spirit—then hold fast to truth.
No comments:
Post a Comment