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Friday, October 30, 2020

What Can Other Nations Teach Us About Combating Covid?

Common concerns about Covid should unite people everywhere, regardless of nationality.

According to a piece in the October 30, 2020, The Week magazine, China has largely halted the spread of its coronavirus epidemic "through a combination of strict lockdowns, face-mask mandates and mass testing and contact tracing." 

China is an authoritarian regime, of course, and is able to impose restrictions in a way that is not as easily accomplished in a society focused on exercising its individual freedoms, even if contrary to the common good. But China may be the only major economy that will achieve positive growth this year, according to the article.

Here are some numbers:

Population

China 1.4 billion            US 328 million

Covid Infections

China 86,000                 US 8.5 million

Covid Deaths

China 4,700                   US 226,000

New Cases In A Recent Day

China 13                         US 48,000

We can always dispute the accuracy of information coming from China, and I welcome your fact checking here. But I hope we can learn from experiences of other countries, including many of the more democratic ones that have been more successful in combating the virus and reviving their economies. 

Thursday, October 29, 2020

When Jesus Stands At Our Door And Knocks

Last week I posted a blog on a 90-year-old prisoner, John Wright, for whom some law students at Washington and Lee and our local chapter of Aging Persons in Prison are seeking parole release and a temporary home. I wasn't surprised that my post got only a couple dozen page visits and that no one responded with an offer of taking this man in for a month or so.

I know all too well why this feels difficult. It would certainly be hard for aging folks like the two of us during a pandemic. And it would require a major commitment of time and effort for anyone, even if a congregational team of people took him on as their ministry of mercy, and even if he could be moved from home to home until some place could be rented or some other arrangement could be made. 

So I understand and share everyone's sense of hesitancy and concern about taking this kind of step. This represents a level of hospitality that may not be for everyone.

Yet there's a side of me that believes that somewhere in a community of so many caring people there might be some homes and hearts that would be able and willing to do this. And that it might be a reasonable goal to have some households provide a place to live for some homeless person, or some released prisoner, for a month or so once a year as a first step toward helping someone in need.

In the only description Jesus gives us of our final judgment, Jesus makes things very simple and personal. In the end, he is saying, what matters is not just what kind of sinner's prayer we've prayed, what kind of salvation experience we've had, or even whether we've invited Jesus into our heart, but it's also about whether we've invited him into our house. He makes it all about how we respond when Jesus comes to our door hungry, thirsty, sick, or as a prisoner in need of our help. 

And this doesn't mean just outsourcing this to other agencies to do this kind of charitable work on our behalf. Rather, Jesus is saying to each of us, Invite me into your heart and into your home, and you can be sure I will freely welcome you into my Father's house.

These are his words, not mine. As someone who will face my own judgment very soon, this gives me pause. 

Wait. Did I just hear a knock on my door?

**************************************

Even if granted parole, Mr. Wright would still likely not be released before early next year. Here's more http://harvyoder.blogspot.com/2020/10/guest-post-request-for-congregational.html

Monday, October 26, 2020

Focus On The Family's James Dobson, In His Own Words--1998 And 2020

James R. Dobson
1998 

"As it turns out, character DOES matter. You can’t run a family, let alone a country, without it. How foolish to believe that a person who lacks honesty and moral integrity is qualified to lead a nation and the world! Nevertheless, our people continue to say that the President [Bill Clinton] is doing a good job even if they don’t respect him personally. Those two positions are fundamentally incompatible. In the Book of James the question is posed, “Can both fresh water and salt water flow from the same spring” (James 3:11 NIV). The answer is no." (On the Preservation of the Family, 1998)

2020

"How will Americans, and how will you, decide who to vote for as our Chief Executive Officer? I have heard from dozens of friends and acquaintances in recent weeks who tell me they will base their decision solely on a candidate's rhetoric, tone, style, or likability. Does that describe your thinking process?

Just now, as I was about to react to that idea, my wife, Shirley, brought in an email that she had received a few minutes before from a friend. It quoted an anonymous statement that gets to the heart of the issue, as follows:

'This is not a junior high or high school popularity/personality contest. I'm not voting for the person—I'm voting for the platform!'

I'm voting for the Second Amendment. I'm voting for the next Supreme Court justice. I'm voting for the electoral college. I'm voting for the Republic in which we live. I'm voting for the police and law and order. I'm voting for the military and the veterans who fought and died for this country. I'm voting for the flag that is often missing from public events. I'm voting for the right to speak my opinion and not be censored for it. I'm voting for secure borders. I'm voting for the right to praise God without fear. I'm voting for every unborn soul that is at risk of being aborted. I'm voting for freedom and the American dream. I'm voting for good and against evil. I'm not just voting for one person."   (October 2020 newsletter)


Sunday, October 25, 2020

November 2020 Newsletter

 House-to-House

 Family of Hope House Church                 November 2020

An Election Reflection        - Harvey Yoder

We’re hearing a lot about how all-important this US presidential race is, as though the very survival of civilization rested on the outcome.

     I agree that the choices offered  are important, and that how (or whether) to exercise the one vote each of us has deserves a lot of prayerful thought. The following is an attempt to put things in a larger perspective, to look at the bigger historical picture and not just that of our own small corner of the globe.

     First, the United States is only one of 230 nations in the world, and represents less than 5% of the world's people--even though it currently controls the majority of the world's wealth and military might. From a biblical perspective, all nations are of minor consequence in comparison to God’s worldwide, eternal kingdom. As world citizens, we need to think less of governments simply ruling us and more about urging all of them to rule in more just and in less violent ways.

     Second, we need to remind ourselves that a US president is the chief presider and leader of only one of three branches of a federal government, and that the judicial and legislative branches are equally important. This three-part federal system, in turn, shares power with 50 states and commonwealths, each made up of county and municipal governments, and each responsible to the people being governed.

     In other words, we are electing administrator of one branch of one part of a democracy made up of citizens, not choosing a monarch or dictator over a kingdom of mere subjects. Each president's four-year term is less than 2% of this nation's relatively brief history, one that represents only 5% of the total span of civilization as we know it.

     Finally, we (US Americans) are not a “chosen people” whose culture and way of life is superior to everyone else’s. Take our national language, for example. Our one official tongue is English, mostly the language of white Caucasians. While English is popular worldwide as a second language, it is still only one of nearly 7000 spoken around the world. There is no superior race, language or nationality.


Notes, Prayers and Praises


WE CONTINUE TO MEET ONLINE Sundays from 4-5:30. For a phone connection (audio only) dial 646-876-9923. For video click on  https://zoom.us/j/2849269967. Problems? Call 574-606-8917.


PRAY FOR KENT PALMER, who is to have some reparative surgery done at the UVA Medical Center November 18.


NOVEMBER BIRTHDAY BLESSINGS to Neal Nelson 11/2, Paul Swarr 11/10 and Guy Vlasits 11/21. Neal and Elly Nelson’s anniversary is November 26! Let’s send cards to Neal Nelson, 512 Houston St, Staunton, VA 24401 and Paul Swarr at VMRC, 1401 Virginia Avenue, Harrisonburg, VA 22802.


November Study “Building on Solid Rock”


1   Matthew 7:13-23

8   Matthew 7:24-29 

15 Matthew 5-7 summary

22 Leader’s choice

29 Leader’s choice


November Services, 4-5:30 pm 


1  Location: on line 

Worship and Sharing Lewis Overholt

Bible Study Harvey Yoder


8 Location: on line 

Worship and Sharing Harvey Yoder

Bible Study Roy Hange


15 Location: on line 

Worship and Sharing  Kent Palmer

Bible Study: Wrap up of Sermon on the Mount Study c/o Harvey Yoder


22 Location: on line 

Worship and Sharing  Lois Rivera-Wenger

Bible Study Elly Nelson


29 Location: on line 

Worship and Sharing  James Stauffer

Bible Study Dick Dumas

Saturday, October 24, 2020

Should We All Become Single-Issue Voters?

After an initial spike in recorded cases after Roe v. Wade,
total numbers have thankfully been in steady decline ever
since, regardless of which party has been in power.
Faced with an array of pressing concerns over how the nation treats its immigrant neighbors, how to make healthcare accessible and affordable during a pandemic, and the apocalyptic effects of global warming, many of the friends I love and deeply respect cast their ballots primarily on the basis of which party promises to do the most to restrict abortions. 

I welcome and support their concerns. I well remember when it was mostly Roman Catholics who vocally opposed abortions, based on church tradition going all the way back to the Didache, a first century document which states, "Do not murder; do not commit adultery; do not corrupt boys; do not fornicate; do not steal; do not practice magic; do not go in for sorcery; do not murder a child by abortion or kill a newborn infant."

Yet prior to the conservative political movement that followed the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973, most evangelical Protestants in the US either had little to say on the subject or actually defended the right of a woman to choose.

For example, in a November 8, 1968, edition of Christianity Today, Dallas Seminary professor Bruce Waltke made the case that scripture is largely silent on abortion, and that “the Bible does not equate the fetus with a living person," but adds that "it places value on it” (CT, Vol. XIII, No. 3).

And in 1971, the Southern Baptist Convention actually passed a pro-choice resolution, committing themselves “to work for legislation that will allow the possibility of abortion under such conditions as rape, incest, clear evidence of severe fetal deformity, and carefully ascertained evidence of the likelihood of damage to the emotional, mental, and physical health of the mother.”

Soon after the Roe v. Wade court decision, the highly respected fundamentalist pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas, W. A. Criswell, made this surprising statement: “I have always felt that it was only after a child was born and had a life separate from its mother that it became an individual person and it has always, therefore, seemed to me that what is best for the mother and for the future should be allowed.”

Meanwhile, most U.S. Anabaptists like myself have remained committed to a consistently pro-life or “whole-life” stance, including being opposed to war, the death penalty, torture and euthanasia. And in 2007 my denomination (Mennonite Church USA) adopted the following statement regarding abortion:

• Human life is a gift from God to be valued and protected. We oppose abortion because it runs counter to biblical principles.

• The fetus in its earliest stages (and even if imperfect by human standards) shares humanity with those who conceived it.

• There are times when deeply held values, such as saving the life of the mother and saving the life of the fetus, come in conflict with each other.

• The faith community should be a place for discernment about difficult issues like abortion.

• Abortion should not be used to interrupt unwanted pregnancies.

• Christians must provide viable alternatives to abortion that provide care and support for mothers and infants.

• The church should witness to society regarding the value of all human life.

Professionals whose ministry involves dealing with the moral dilemmas of abortion and reproductive technologies need our support.

Many of us have been heartened by evangelicals becoming more "pro-life" over recent decades. But it is also true that conservative movements in the ’70’s used the issue for political purposes, effectively persuading many Christians to oppose candidates like evangelical Jimmy Carter in favor of Ronald Reagan, for example. This was in spite of Reagan, a Hollywood star and a divorcee, having supported some of the most liberal abortion policies in the nation when he was governor of California.

Ever since, majority of evangelicals cite their desire to decrease the nation’s abortion numbers as the primary factor affecting their vote. Interestingly, there were enough such Mennonite voters alone (several thousand) in Sarasota County, Florida, in the year 2000 to help eke out a George W. Bush win in that state over Al Gore, where a razor thin margin of 537 votes in that state decided the outcome.

Neither candidate was a perfect choice, of course, but what might have been the far reaching consequences of that particular election on other important issues? For example, had more Sarasota Mennonites simply stayed at home on election day, would the nation have become mired down in the two longest wars in US history? Would the Kyota Climate Accord have been ratified by the United States, thus helping mitigate some of the devastating effects of climate change we see today? Would a change in the makeup of the Supreme Court have decided the Citizens United case differently, the one that gave corporations the same ability to influence elections as individual citizens? And could the national debt have been reduced rather than significantly increased due to the effect of the Bush tax cuts and the staggering cost of waging two unfunded wars?

We may never have definitive answers to such questions, but rather than automatically leaning toward becoming largely single-issue citizens, should followers of Jesus make sure we support “whole-life” policies across the board? These should certainly include honoring and protecting precious human life in the womb, but also keep in mind that there are more commands (36 in all) to welcome and protect the lives of aliens and strangers in our midst than about any other single issue in the Torah.

We also need to hear the words of Catholic Sister Joan Chittister, who writes, "I do not believe that just because you are opposed to abortion, that that makes you pro-life. In fact, I think in many cases, your morality is deeply lacking if all you want is a child born but not a child fed, not a child educated, not a child housed... And why would I think that you don't? Because you don't want any tax money to go there. That's not pro-life. That's pro-birth... We need a much broader conversation on what the morality of pro-life is.”

Thankfully, there has been a steady decline in the number of reported abortions in the US since the spike following Roe v. Wade. And this has been equally true under both Republican and Democratic administrations, and in both Red and Blue jurisdictions.

Together we must continue the work of prayer and persuasion in our efforts to see that trend continue, not necessarily through criminalizing abortions and driving them underground, but by joining together to decry abortion as a form of birth control, by making better education and healthcare available to all, by expanding options for people waiting to adopt children, and by making men fully and equally responsible for the care and support of the children they father.

Thursday, October 22, 2020

Competing With Porn

Human beings come in a wonderful variety
 of shapes and forms, each incomparably
beautiful.
“We can’t possibly make ourselves as appealing as all the voluptuous images our men have access to,” is a lament I often hear from women whose partners have become hooked on pornography. 

They have a point. Real women seldom resemble the surgically altered nymphomaniacs portrayed on screen, always young and alluring and always instantly available.

And speaking of available, when I was growing up there were some 1000 US theaters nationwide featuring X-rated movies. Most were in undesirable sections of town, and to go inside was to risk one's good reputation. 

Today there are literally millions of such “theaters” in the  form of personal computers and smart phones available everywhere, each with an instantly available array of X-rated fare. As a result, the number of men (and some women) addicted to it has multiplied, with large numbers of ever younger adolescents now hooked on this material. 

That’s the bad news--and it's far worse than bad. We may never fully know the devastating effects of this plague on the stability and durability of long term relationships and on the wellbeing of families.

Is there any good news in the picture?

Yes, starting with one simple truth everyone needs to hear loud and clear: All of this X-rated hype is fake. In real life, the characters portrayed aren’t any more interested in sex than the rest of us, just greedy for the big bucks they can make--or the attention they can get--pretending to be. 

In the end, pornography is all about using deception for the sake of obscene profits. In reality, it is to good, satisfying lovemaking somewhat like WWE wrestling is to an Olympic event. If we’re looking for fantasy, we can find plenty of it here to fix our eyes on and to fire up our imaginations. But in the end, the actors and actresses involved are as pathetic and needy as are the consumers of their shabby products.

Unfortunately, a lot of addicted men, infantile in their need for this kind of virtual fix, have lost their ability to appreciate the difference. According to feminist author Naomi Wolfe, a disturbing number of them have come to expect their wives or partners to look and perform like porn stars. “Real women,” she says, “who come in a wide variety of body styles, and who aren’t downloadable and then deletable at will, and who aren’t dying to have instant sex with whatever male body may be at hand, are seen as just not being exciting enough to satisfy today’s pornographized expectations.” Wolfe adds that today “sex, like the fast food industry, is about everything being super packaged and super sized, where the more appetites are stimulated by poor-quality material, the more junk it takes to satisfy.”

But if we prefer truly satisfying and lasting bonds, real men and women like you and me can outperform the competition hands down. With God’s help, we can affirm things like “I love you,” and “I’ll always be there for you,” and really mean it. We can actually keep sacred promises like “in sickness and in health,” and “until death do us part.” We can offer reassuring touch and warm hugs to the love of our life, and receive the same. We can form a lifelong relationship and help create a loving family that can bless the world.

That’s real, unlike anything the dark and fake world of porn can offer. And in the context of a committed and blessed wedded life, we can celebrate times of ecstasy and intimacy far superior to anything offered on screen--with pure delight and no regrets.

That’s priceless.

Monday, October 19, 2020

Local Jail Claims That Inmates Are "Residents" And Are Exempt From Wearing Face Coverings



The above is in response to a grievance filed by an inmate at our local jail asking for better protection from the coronavirus. But the Sheriff believes inmates aren't required to wear masks because the jail is their legal "residence," and that jail employees are exempt because they are a part of a "law enforcement agency." 

This raises some interesting legal (and liability?) questions.

Your comments are welcome.