Town
puts kibosh on prayer meeting's warning, Police shutter message in 'Follow Baal and go to hell!' speech
by Bob Unruh, 8/9/15.
Most of the viral videos these days come from
the incredible stunts some people do. Or maybe from someone who’s captured just
that one incredible action by a baby, or a pet. It is a fact that few prayer
meeting videos fall into that category. Except
one.
It’s the video of a prayer meeting in Washington
in late April that has collected millions of views – and been uploaded multiple
times.
It most recently stirred a controversy near
Dalton, Georgia, where city officials said yes, it would be taken down from a
city police department website, after it had been up for weeks.
The video is of Rabbi Jonathan Cahn, author of the New York Times bestseller “The Harbinger” and the
inspiration behind the “Isaiah 9:10 Judgment” movie. He appeared at the 2015 “Washington: A Man of
Prayer” service at the U.S.
Capitol in April, an event that was live-streamed online.
There, he smacked down both the U.S. Supreme
Court justices for the audacious assumption that they could set themselves up
in opposition to God and redefine marriage, as well as President Obama, whose
policies have been of that ilk.
See Jonathan’s Cahn’s
message at Washington: Man of Prayer event at the Capitol. Read more at
http://www.wnd.com/2015/08/gay-puts-kibosh-on-prayer-meetings-viral-warning/#0x2hxLlzZYR7dzl8.99
The
Dalton Daily Citizen reported that in nearby
Varnell, officials said someone had complained that the video appeared on the
police department's Facebook page.
Mayor Anthony Hulsey told the paper he's asked
Police Chief Lyle Grant to make sure that "anything that goes on that
Facebook page" is "city or police related."
Cahn's comments are blunt. He noted the Supreme
Court opens sessions with the words, "God save the United States and this
honorable court." It was before the justices redefined marriage across
American to include same-sex "marriage."
He said at the time: "If this court should
overrule the word of God and strike down the eternal rules of order and right
that heaven itself ordained, how then will God save it? Justices, can you judge
the ways of God? There is another court and there another judge, where all men
and all judges will give account.
"If a nation's high court should pass
judgment on the Almighty, should you then be surprised God will pass judgment
on the court and that nation? We are doing that which Israel did on the altars
of Baal," he said.
Cahn said America's biblical foundation was
affirmed throughout history and the nation came into existence "solely for
the glory and purposes of God."
"No historian can rewrite that. No
president can expunge that," he warned. "If a thousand angels swore
on a thousand Bibles that this was not the case, it would in no way alter the
fact. … America was brought into existence for the will and purposes of
God."
He explained ancient Israel turned away from
God. "They drove God out of the government. They worshiped idols and
served other gods. They celebrated immorality and they persecuted
righteousness. The blessings of God were removed and replaced with
judgments," he said.
Now, he said, "America has made the same
mistakes. "He cited the deaths of 55 million through abortion. "What
we were warned never to do we now have done," he thundered.
Moving to directly confront President Obama,
whose pro-abortion and pro-homosexual agenda has been unparalleled in American
history, he questioned what happens when a leader places his left hand on the
Bible to assume to highest office in the land but with his right hand
"enacts laws that violate the laws of God."
"Mr. President, when you address the House,
look up above the senators and the representatives, above the Supreme Court
justices, you'll see a face, the only full visage in that wall. It is the face
of Moses. ... It would say this, 'No man can overrule the laws of God. No
judgment of man can stand against the judgment of God'."
America, he warned, is faced with a critical
decision, "Choose you this day whom you will serve … if the Lord be God,
then follow Him. If Baal, then follow him and go to hell."
In Varnell, the Dalton newspaper said,
screenshots showed that the video was shared about the beginning of July. A
"gay citizen" said it was an inappropriate place for a video.
The department responded, "If it's good
enough for Congress to hear then we the people should hear it also, you are a
guest on our page, it is not run by, or endorsed by the state. There is a
delete button to select if you do not like a post."
Grant confirmed he posted the response, but said
that he was not trying to offend. "It was coming across the newsfeed and I
posted it," said Grant. "(Cahn) was talking in a federal building
about George Washington 200 years ago and about how the country was founded and
(he) said we need to get back to the grassroots of how the country was founded."
The YouTube video page that was linked on the
site already has counted nearly 11 million views of the video.
But it's not the only
place that it has been posted. It probably was up first on WND, which reported on the meeting the
evening it happened.
http://www.wnd.com/2015/08/gay-puts-kibosh-on-prayer-meetings-viral-warning/
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