Showing posts with label #IggyAzalea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #IggyAzalea. Show all posts

Friday, March 4, 2016

Spring Break Sex vs. Divine Light

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/ about teens, college students, and spring break. This follows this post about some of the problems of Detroit. This follows this post about the Pope and immigration. For a free magazine subscription or to get the books recommended for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632.


In analyzing these questions, Time magazine writer Belinda Luscombe cites a litany of imprudent behavior by famous young ladies.
Girls behaving badly
Examples include recently published photos of a semi-clothed Miley Cyrus and the unwed pregnancies of Jamie Lynn Spears and Bristol Palin. Plus there are the “Gloucester Seventeen,” a group of high school girls in Massachusetts who agreed among themselves to get pregnant together.
Adding to real-life cases, the author cites fictitious young female personalities who behave just as badly—and often more explicitly. Characters from the television shows 90210 , Gossip Girl and The O.C. top the list, plus MTV hits like My Super Sweet 16 and Spring Break . Juno may be the most visible in a list of films that negatively influence teen girls.
There's not enough room in this commentary to fully address the ways in which this particular Time magazine article fails to properly handle the subject—but there is room to make two very important points.
Boy accountability
First, remember that Jamie Lynn Spears and Bristol Palin did not get pregnant by themselves, nor did the Gloucester Seventeen. Boys must be held accountable for immoral behavior just the same as girls.
Young men need to understand their proper role with young women—to respect their character and protect their purity. If a teenage guy wants to become a real man, he would never make sexual advances toward a girl or accept any advances that she might make toward him. Real men understand the value of saving themselves and their girlfriends for the incredible blessings of marriage.
Underestimating the media
Second, the Time writer fails to grasp the true danger of sexual content in modern media. She states that the link between how teen sexuality is portrayed in the media and the behavior of teen girls is “more complicated than Tracey see, Tracy do” (“The Truth About Teen Girls,” Sept. 22, 2008). That's a word play on “monkey see, monkey do” to describe how some imitate the actions of others without thinking.
While not every teen exposed to sexual content in news or entertainment apes the behavior he or she sees, that's no cause for the cold comfort implied by Ms. Luscombe. The problem with sexually suggestive or explicit material is that it fills the mind with images and sound bites that are incredibly difficult to un-see and un-hear.
Bright thinking vs. wrong sex
Jesus Christ said, “The lamp of the body is the eye. Therefore, when your eye is good, your whole body also is full of light. But when your eye is bad, your body also is full of darkness. Therefore take heed that the light which is in you is not darkness” (Luke 11:34-35).
Of greater concern than “Tracey see, Tracey do ” is the certainty that when Tracey sees, Tracey thinks . When you think about wrong behavior, you suffer a portion of the damaging consequences even if your thoughts never lead to actions. If wrong thoughts do lead to wrong actions, the damage suffered greatly increases.
Asking whether teen girls are becoming sexually active too early in life is the wrong question. Any young person, male or female, who engages in sexual activity before marriage is doing so too early!
The real question for a vertically thinking young person is, “What should I be thinking and how should I be acting so that I can save sex for my marriage?” Successfully answer this question and you'll never regret it! VT

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Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Seventeen Mag Said WHAT?! About Muslim “Refugees”

A timely post about from http://www.debbieschlussel.com about coverage of Syrian refugees. This follows this post about Roman Catholics and Islam. This follows this post about why Muslims didn't migrate to European  and other Western nations in the past. This follows this article about American energy independence and preventing money from going to hostile countries. For more, you can read two very interesting books HERE.You can follow me here.

Seventeen Mag Said WHAT?! About Muslim “Refugees”

By Debbie Schlussel
seventeentorikelly
seventeenteenrefugee copy
Time for another edition of “I Read the Chick Mags” so you don’t have to. I do the dirty work so you can find out the BS that your wives, girlfriends, daughters, and other female relatives and significant others are reading. Today, it’s all about Islamic “migrants” and what Seventeen Magazine is telling your tween and mid-teen daughters about them.
Seventeen is mostly read by American tweens. (Most teens are already reading Cosmo and learning “50 Ways to Perform Oral Sex on Your Boss.”) And the mag’s February 2016 is brainwashing them about Muslim “migrants” from Syria and Iraq. They’re not dangerous or extreme, the mag wants your daughters to think. Nope. They are hip and cool and fashion-conscious (aside from that silly, suffocating doo-rag of oppression and limited peripheral vision on their heads).
Along with important topics like, “Crazy Crush Confessions! (You’re Not Alone . . .)” and “”The Girls of Dance Moms Like You’ve Never Seen Them Before,” there is, “I’m a Teen Refugee,” about 17-year-old Fayza, an alleged “refugee fleeing Syria,” who lives in Baltimore. Instead of asking Fayza what she thinks about HAMAS, Hezbollah, Jews, and Christianity, writer Kristen Mascia declares to us that Fayza has “huge chestnut eyes [that] would make a Kardashian totally jealous” (I doubt it) and that her “selfie game is strong.” Yup, sounds like she’s “just like us,” right? ‘Cuz extremist Muslims never ever ever ever have large chestnut eyes or know how to take selfies, correct?
seventeenfayza

Forget Jihad. “Muslim Refugees . . . They’re Just Like Us!”
Oh, but not to worry, Ms. Mascia (falsely) informs the young chick readers of the article that Fayza’s family “cleared the United States’ rigorous refugee-vetting process.” Um, rigorous . . . how? Only if you call less than six minutes of reading a BS application chock-full of BS answers–which is the amount of time the State Department and Homeland Security’s Citizenship and Immigration Services spend in total on “vetting” these people, “rigorous.” That’s rigorous like Domino’s Meat Lovers Pizza with double-cheese and sauce is “calorie-free.” It just isn’t. It very obviously isn’t to anyone with an iota of a brain cell.
Seventeen goes on to tell us about the violence and danger–we’re told their story is “brave and heartbreaking”–Fayza’s family allegedly faced. Of course, Seventeen writer Mascia didn’t see them in Syria and Lebanon and doesn’t have a clue or a shred of evidence to prove their story is true. But she reports it to the young chick reader as fact, anyway.
We’re told that life for Fayza and her large family of future jihadists is tough.
It hasn’t been an easy transition. “People say things like, ‘You’re from ISIS! . . . I’m not. Sometimes it feels bad.”
Awwww. Let me get out my world’s smallest violin.
worldssmallestviolin
Again, did the author ask her what she thinks of Jews, Hezbollah, HAMAS, and shariah? Or whether jihad and suicide bombs and violence against non-Muslims is ever justified? Or, even, what she thinks about girls posing in miniskirts, tank tops, and strapless dresses on Seventeen’s pages? Nope. Because the answers to those might not be what Seventeen wants impressionable American chick tweens to read about Muslim girls invading our country. It doesn’t matter whether this chick is in ISIS. It matters what she thinks about Islam and shariah and acts of violence in the name of Islam against infidels who engage in Western culture that Muslims don’t like (or pretend not to like).
Seventeen doesn’t want your daughters to think about those “minor” things that will be the end of Western culture (and existence). Instead, they’re supposed to focus on Fayza’s purported dreams of becoming a pediatrician, the fact that she wears jeans (extremists never wear jeans!), and that she watches DVDs of “The Parent Trap” and “Cinderella.” Oh, and she shops at “Forever 21.” Extremist Muslim girls never shop at Forever 21, right? That’s a FACT, damn it! (Or at least they want you to think so.)
And all the way through, we’re told that some American people, especially boys at school, don’t like her. Glad to hear there are still some Americans with a level of discernment beyond deciding which Kardashian-Jenner they like most.
By the way, we’re also told that Fayza’s family had an apartment in Lebanon but couldn’t afford to pay rent, after her father couldn’t travel to Syria for work. Um, is that really the life of a “fleeing refugee”? Being a refugee means you don’t have a place to live, that you have to flee persecution, and your life is in danger. It does not mean, “I can’t pay my apartment rent in Lebanon, so I think I’ll invade America.” This chick’s family should never have been given refugee status.
But with that “rigorous” non-rigorous process in which we let in every Muslim Veruca Salt demanding a Golden Ticket, they are here and can stay and she and her multiple siblings can have multiple children of their own and so on, like they all do, so that ultimately America becomes a Muslim country. It’ll happen. I’ve been warning about this for decades.
And then there will be no more Seventeen Magazine because it’s unIslamic.
By then, America will be over. Until then, Seventeen Magazine wants you to know that Muslim “refugees” invading America are hip . . . because the female ones wear lip gloss.
Alhamdulilh [praise allah], these American infidelettes are gullible morons.
***
A moron teen chick in Canuckistan a/k/a Canada, Valerie Sanchez, already announced on Instagram that she bought this crap, hook, line, and halal sinker:

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Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Where did Valentine's Day come from? Is it wrong for a Christian to celebrate it?

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/ about Valentine's Day.  This follows this previous post about it. For a free magazine subscription or to get the books recommended for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632.
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Where did Valentine's Day come from? Is it wrong for a Christian to celebrate it?



Like many of the world's major holidays, St. Valentine's Day is an annual observance with its roots entrenched firmly in pagan beliefs and customs. What would God think about Valentine's Day?


Answer:
Should Christians Celebrate Valentine
Source: Photos.com
The ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia, an annual three-day ritual believed to ward off evil spirits and increase fertility, was held on February 13 to 15.
Lupercalia (also known as Februatio, which is where we get the name for our month of February) was popular among many of the new converts to the quick-rising Catholic Church, and as Celebrations: The Complete Book of American Holidays notes, "Everywhere that [mainstream] Christians came into power they immediately adapted the holidays and customs of the people to their own creed” (Robert J. Myers and the editors of Hallmark Cards, 1972, pp. 50-51).
Such was their course of action with this festival of Lupercalia. While Pope Gelasius officially condemned the pagan Roman festival and banned its observance at the end of the fifth century, many of its accompanying practices quickly appeared in a newly established holiday added by him to the official church list of feast days in A.D. 496—St. Valentine's Day.
Soon, people were no longer looking to obtain fertility by being beaten with strips of animal skin called februa. Instead, they turned their focus to St. Valentine, the patron saint of "engaged couples and anyone wishing to marry" (Celebrations, pp. 48-49), whose actual identity is even murkier than what connection he bore to romance.
What amounted to a renamed, refurbished Lupercalia then picked up steam, gradually adapting itself into the Valentine's Day we know today, which included the added elements of Valentine cards and Cupid, the Roman god of erotic love.
Friendship and sending cards are wonderful things, and God is not opposed to romance at the right time in the right way. But does the pagan religious history of Valentine's Day taint the modern practices? What does God have to say about observing pagan traditions, renamed or not?
"When the Lord your God cuts off from before you the nations which you go to dispossess…do not inquire after their gods, saying, 'How did these nations serve their gods? I also will do likewise.' You shall not worship the Lord your God in that way; for every abomination to the Lord which He hates they have done to their gods... Whatever I command you, be careful to observe it; you shall not add to it nor take away from it" (Deuteronomy:12:29-32).
Though the practices of Lupercalia have been repackaged and dressed up in the form of Valentine's Day, these verses indicate they remain just as detestable as they have always been in our Creator's eyes. Instead of pagan days and practices, our focus should be on the Holy Days God has given us in the Bible, which point us toward His amazing and incomparable plan for all of humanity.
For more information, please read the free Bible study guide  "Holidays or Holy Days: Does It Matter Which Days We Observe? "



 


Friday, February 6, 2015

Valentine's Day

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/ about Valentine's Day. This follows this post about marijuana. For a free magazine subscription or to get the books recommended for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632.
I am leaving TWITTER SOON. Please continue to follow me here.



Valentine's Day



In this Bible Study, we’ll discuss the origins of Valentine’s Day and examine what God says about it.

Introduction

Valentine Heart candy , necklace and rose Hearts and flowers, cupids and candy—today's symbols of Valentine's Day are well removed from the circumstances which instituted this yearly display of affection.
In this installment of Teen Bible Study Guide, we’ll discuss the origins of Valentine’s Day and examine what God says about it.

History

Established as a religious holiday, the Feast of St. Valentine honored the Roman priest who lost his life during the reign of Roman Emperor Claudius II. According to various historical accounts, Valentine, a priest in Rome, was persecuted for his beliefs and executed on Feb. 14. Approximately 270 A.D. Valentine became a symbol of love and compassion. Several hundreds of years later when the Roman Catholic Church gained a stronger foothold in Europe and set about substituting pagan rituals with more "Christian" sounding names, Valentine was officially recognized.

"Lupercalia"

In ancient Rome this pagan feast day was known as Lupercalia, the "feast of Lupercus." Mid February was traditionally the time of the festival, an ode to the God of fertility and a celebration of sensual pleasure, a time to meet and court a prospective mate.
Lupercus was the Roman god that protected them from wolves, which were a great danger in that area. So, each year in the middle of February the Romans honored the god Lupercus, giving him thanks for protecting them. The people feasted, danced and played games. When the young men wanted partners for the dancing and games, they drew names of girls from a bowl. Sometimes they became sweethearts, too. This went on for hundreds of years.

Modernization

As more and more people throughout the Western Roman Empire converted to an increasingly popular "Christianity," they brought many of their favorite customs with them, including this "feast of Lupercus". In AD 496, Pope Gelasius outlawed the pagan festival. But he wanted to replace it with a similar celebration. He needed a "lovers" saint to replace the pagan deity Lupercus. The martyred bishop Valentine was chosen as the patron saint of the new festival.
Thus, "the church endeavored to amalgamate (mix), as it were, the old and new religions, and sought, by transferring the heathen ceremonies to the solemnities (observances) of the Christian festivals, to make them subservient (subordinate) to the cause of religion and piety… The result has been the strange medley (mingling) of Christian and pagan rites…" (Chambers’ Book of Days, Vol. 2).
And that’s how the feast of Lupercalia was replaced with the feast of St. Valentine.
Still others claim that sending greetings to loved ones on Feb. 14 dates to the middle ages when it was believed that this day marked the beginning of the mating season for birds.
1. What was the motivation to rename Lupercalia? How successful (on a scale of 1 to 10) do you think the strategy was?
2. But, despite it’s obvious pagan roots, is it still all right to keep it?

What does God say?

DEUTERONOMY 12:29-32 " When the LORD your God cuts off from before you the nations which you go to dispossess, and you displace them and dwell in their land, take heed to yourself that you are not ensnared to follow them, after they are destroyed from before you, and that you do not inquire after their gods, saying, 'How did these nations serve their gods? I also will do likewise.' You shall not worship the LORD your God in that way; for every abomination to the LORD which He hates they have done to their gods; for they burn even their sons and daughters in the fire to their gods. Whatever I command you, be careful to observe it; you shall not add to it nor take away from it."
1. Why does God not want us to look at other nations and other ways of worship and adopt those for our worship of Him?
2. Why do you think we should be careful in our worship of God?
3. What did Christ say about it?
Mark:7:6-7 He answered and said to them, "Well did Isaiah prophesy of you hypocrites, as it is written: 'This people honors Me with their lips, But their heart is far from Me. And in vain they worship Me, Teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.' "
4. How do these words of Jesus apply to the celebration of Valentine's Day?
5. Did Christ uphold God’s commandments? Read John:15:10 and 14:15 and then answer.
COMMENT: Jesus is our example so we should follow His conduct (I Cor. 11:1).

Summary

1. With what is Valentine's Day associated today? Do any religious ideas come to mind? If so, which ones?
2. What are the origins of Valentines’ Day? Why is it important to know the origin of Valentine's Day?
3. What does God say about how we worship Him?
4. Why is it important to keep God’s commandments?
5. What other days are celebrated in today’s culture that don’t come from the Bible?

More Information

Ideas for Family Bible Studies for Teens

Many parents desire ideas for use in their in-home " Family Bible Studies for Teens ". With this in mind, here are some ideas put together by parents, ministers and their wives, and younger adults, many of whom grew up in God's Church

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In this Teen Bible Study Guide, we’ll discuss the origins of popular holidays and examine what God says about them.