Saturday, July 5, 2025

Reflection on Family

 I am wanting to begin to talk about a proverbial elephant in the room which has been there for some time, and there are many complexities and levels to it that make it somewhat challenging to talk about.  The issue of course is family, specifically my family.  The idea here is not to be accusative toward anyone or to even disparage any members of my own family, but I want to just address a few things that need to be clarified.  

To begin with, a few points need to be established.  First, criticism of family attitudes and family members by no means indicates hatred or rejection, but at times they may become serious enough to merit discussion.  Second, no one is perfect, and as we live in a fallen world, mistakes happen and you try to deal with them and move on.  Third, the present-day society we live in is so atomized that often close family ties we had in the past no longer exist, and with many older members dying off, it means that some younger family members don't know each other as well as they should.  That is tragic also.  Finally, the passing of older family members may be a mixed blessing.  On one hand, their demise means a connection to the legacy is gone now, and it also may indicate that some valuable family stories may be lost for eternity if they are not recorded in some fashion.  On the other hand though, some older generations tended to harbor some bad things that maybe their descendants don't reflect or share, and perhaps a lot of the tension and division in many families may be due to the actions of those older members.  Given that is the case, the smart thing is to to do the old "digest the meat and spit out the gristle" approach to their legacies.  I am going to try to navigate this with the delicacy of a surgeon's scalpel, but for some of my relatives who read this, it may not be pleasant, yet it needs to be said. 

I feel that the last point - the legacies of deceased older family members - needs to be addressed first.  Over the years in our own family (especially on my mother's side), there has been a drifting apart in our relationships.  At the present time for instance, where I live in Baltimore I perhaps may have a dozen to 20 blood relatives within 15 miles of where I am sitting at home right now, but I neither hear nor see anything of any of them.  Some of these are cousins I haven't even seen since I was a kid myself - almost 50 years! - yet they are within a few miles of me.  Then, with a few of them, when I do actually talk to them on social media or something, they make some nasty jokes and inappropriate chatter that I cannot really understand - some of these people haven't seen me in 50 years, yet they make comments like that?  I have come to the conclusion that limited communication with some of those people may be in my best interest, because they have made it clear that they don't really value me as a family member, and do not have a desire to do so.  Therefore, in those cases it is better to just get on with my own life and let them get on with theirs.  If they want to visit or talk, I conclude, they know where I am.  

One other thing my mother's family has been particularly problematic with is for some reason they like to lay blame for whatever beef they had with my mother on my shoulders.  In all honesty, I have little to do with it, and whatever issues they had with Mom or anyone else they should have addressed with her instead of projecting it on me.  One thing they always love to do as a matter of fact is quite egregious to me, and it's taking a lot to even talk about it here.  In her younger years, Mom liked to drink, and she used to do so quite frequently.  Unfortunately, that gave her a reputation with some in the family.  However, that was 40 years ago, and they failed to understand what Mom was like in her later years.  Mom was by no means perfect, but I knew her better than a lot of her critics among family.  Beginning about 40 years ago, Mom began to get focus in her life as she took on a role as a live-in caregiver for elderly folks, and not only did she find it rewarding but she also gained a great degree of personal growth from it.  And, in all honesty, the families of the people she cared for ended up being more like family to me personally than my blood relatives did - I am still on good terms with many of them today, and I have a lot of fond memories of them.  In the years that followed, Mom ended up working very successfully as a CNA once she moved to Florida, and even after she retired in her early 60s, she continued to keep a more disciplined life than she used to.  Even as her health declined, I was there 3 years ago before she passed and witnessed her coming to terms with things in her life and making peace for herself, and in all honesty I was quite proud of her for doing so.  The last 10 years or so of her life, as a matter of fact, were spent staying with me, and I took care of her when no one else would.  During that ten years, Mom and I talked a lot about many things, and I have fond memories of sitting over coffee and just talking with her - there are days now I miss those moments.  When Mom finally succumbed to heart disease in March 2022, she was I believe in a good place, and the closure I got from that was that I was there when no one else was for her.  I got a lot of flak from other judgmental relatives for that over the years, but you know something, I don't regret a thing.  Everyone needs someone with them, and Mom had me and I was happy to be there for her.  She was able to leave this life with a good home, and I made sure she was put to rest in the way she would have wanted.  And, any imperfections she had, in my opinion, died with her.  I had some rather mean-spirited relatives of hers saying stupid things when she passed, including those stupid family rumors that she drank herself to death, etc.  Many of these people did not know her, and they had no right to really say anything.  But, their reckoning is coming too one day, and God help them when it does. 

Unfortunately, I cannot say the same for other relatives.  I had another relative pass away earlier last year, and a distant cousin who I never met in person acted very judgmental about it.  This particular relative is into family history, and they contacted me years ago based on that.  However, over the years they have also become sort of critical and condescending when I interact with them on social media, and despite never even meeting me in person, this individual all of a sudden has an opinion about me.  Having practiced as a paralegal as well as having a Ph.D. now, both of those have taught me a couple of things about how information is communicated.  For one, research and due diligence needs to be exercised before coming to any conclusion.  A good paralegal for instance who knows how to research the facts of a case can make or break an attorney's presentation of the case.  Also, from my doctoral education I learned that primary sources are key to establishing sound theses, and without the primary source material one cannot exercise good scholarship. Some family members would do well to exercise similar techniques when they open their mouths to repeat gossip and hearsay. I love how some relatives - these being 4th and 5th cousins - like making snap judgments about me and others without knowing a damn thing about anything.  The relative in question was noted in life for being a pathological liar, and they had this distant cousin fooled for many years with their interpretation of things, and the distant cousin was frankly too lazy to do due diligence and get the whole story.  To this day, that same cousin seems to be in judgment of me, and as far as I am concerned, let them - the truth will always prevail anyway, and in time the cousin will see how stupid they really were when it hits them full-on like an oncoming freight train.  It may not even happen in my lifetime or theirs, but at some point provided the Second Coming doesn't happen soon someone will uncover the truth about things.  That is a consolation that helps me to navigate these complex cloverleafs of family gossip and hearsay. 

That pretty much summarizes the issue as far as that is concerned, and again, much of this rests more with my mother's side of the family than my dad's side.  Although over the years Dad and I didn't have the greatest relationship, his family has nonetheless been quite loving and good to me, and they do not have as much of the crazy family drama and atomization that my mom's folks do. This doesn't mean they are perfect or anything, but overall my experiences with them have been good.  In recent years I have gotten very close to a number of family on Dad's side, and it has been really a blessing to finally get to know them.  Ironically, due to the fact that Mom had custody of me when I was a kid, I never got to know then many of my relatives on Dad's side like I wanted to as I never was around them as much.  Yet, throughout much of my childhood I was around many of my cousins, aunts, and uncles on my mother's side, and now they are the ones who are atomized more.  As I grow older myself though, I am starting to realize something, and that is what I wanted to talk about now.

My family dynamic has changed in recent years in some unusual ways.  For instance, despite Barbara and I being divorced, she is more like family to me still than many of my own blood relatives.  Also, in due time I may have the chance to sort of refine my own legacy and write a new chapter, as there is something that I will share at some point that may make that possible.  There have been instances in life where a family legacy is preserved not by continuing old chapters, but by starting new ones.  It may mean the family dynamic changes, and that is OK.  Not everything can be as it was, and in some cases it is better to let some things die and be buried.  A new chapter, I feel, is now being written in my own life personally, and it is just in the opening paragraphs at this point.  Letting God direct it as it unfolds is integral, and in time I will share a few things which are part of that new chapter as right now is not the time to do so.

Thank you for allowing me to share today, and I will be talking more soon. 

Thursday, July 3, 2025

The Land Speaks

 In recent weeks, I have been watching these videos on YouTube about these nasty creatures called HOA Karens.  The word "Karen" is used to describe a nasty, opinionated, entitled upper-class White woman who insults and belittles others.  She is that person who yells for the manager over a penny's difference in a pack of gum, the woman who also sends things back at a restaurant, and when you put a person like this in leadership, they tend to become totalitarian tyrants.  The HOA culture is like a fetid sewer which richly cultivates this type of person, much like the garbage on a Baltimore street encourages large rats.  These stories on YouTube, which may or may not be based on real events, personify the entitled, evil "Karens" who threaten old ladies for the wrong color irises, veterans for flying American flags, and violate the personhood of disabled people as "inferior."  Some of these stories, in all honestly, make me want to string these evil demons in female skin up and flog them until all the blood drains from their pathetic bodies, and they are honestly addictive to watch.  However, one of these stories got my attention and I wanted to reflect on it because something about that particular story resonated.  Let me first give a summary of the story, and then I will share my thoughts on it.

In the story, a man has a farm with a fertile corn field, and a nearby HOA "Karen" was trying to assert authority she legally didn't have over the man's farm, which had been part of his family for several generations. The farmer was resolute in standing his ground, and then one of Karen's goons used a stolen hoe and killed the man's dog, which got a reaction - the farmer broke the man's nose.  After burying the dog in the cornfield, the "Karen" came back trying to impose her will she didn't technically have, and the guy got his justice.  She entered the cornfield, and he set fire to it and it did its damage.  Then, when she came out and tried to still assert herself, she fell on some strategically-placed stakes soaked in honey, and in addition to maiming her legs, she found herself in the middle of a volatile fire ant nest, and the ants were all over her.  When she tried to pitifully beg for mercy, he stepped on her hand, and that did it.  He left her there wallowing, and somehow she made it to a hospital.  By that time she had also lost her marbles, as the impact of the experience caused her to have a mental collapse she never recovered from.  Her goon, the one who killed the dog, came back another night and was going to settle the score, but he ended up disappearing into the field as well.  In time, Karen was seen wandering around without shoes and in a hospital gown, and she would come to the cornfield and have conversations with invisible entities who were not even there - the farmer let her do that and never interfered until eventually she faded away completely.  At the time of the corn harvest, the man's field ended up producing abundantly, and despite the fact certain people attempted to destroy the field, it ended up being a bountiful harvest, and the message the farmer had was simple - the land doesn't forget. There is a lot packed into this, so let's talk about it.

One of the first things to understand is that this should not be read as a form of pantheism or anything - no one is worshipping the earth or anything.  Pantheism is a demonic belief that all is God and God is all, and God is viewed as the same as creation.  That idea is a part of both animistic paganism as well as Eastern religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism.  It was also one basis for the occultic worldview of the Nazis, and that view was traced with them to the volkisch occultism of people like Guido von List and Lanz von Liebenfels.  In that context, it also became a basis of racism.  The aforementioned story has nothing to do with any of that, but it does acknowledge however that there is a connection between someone and their roots, and we Appalachians call that "sense of place."  So, is there a Christian foundation to any of this?  Let's discuss that for a moment.

One important thing about the Thomistic theological/philosophical tradition is that it emphasizes two things.  First, the role of supernatural grace and what it does.  Secondly, there is a theology of God's creation of the earth and mankind which is a foundational basis for my own Biblical Creationist theological position as well as my scientific acceptance of Intelligent Design.  Essentially, this would be called the "Two Books" idea of God's creation - God authored two "books," one being a written Revelation contained in Scripture (or rhema) and the second being Nature itself.  The way these two things relate to each other is integral to a Christocentric understanding of faith - Revelation perfects Nature, and Nature confirms and authenticates the truth of Revelation.  It is also part of the whole idea of the Laws of Sufficient Causality and of Noncontradiction - to summarize those, the first states that everything has an ultimate source, while the second says that something cannot be and not be at the same time.  Based on that, we conclude rightly that everything is created by God, so it is a gift and blessing to us and even he called it good.  This is why oftentimes among Fundamentalist and Charismatic Protestants it is disturbing because they adopt a quasi-gnostic understanding of creation whether they intend to or not.  Phrases such as "in the natural" are spit almost with contempt by their preachers regarding even human emotions, and in all honesty when I was a Pentecostal that never made sense.  Again, the Law of Noncontradiction - nothing cannot both be and not be at the same time.  Therefore, calling God's creation "evil" or anything else derogatory is then basically calling God evil, and perhaps people who get off on those quasi-gnostic tangents need to really think about the implications of what they say.  God and his creation are distinct from each other, but God also did create the heavens and the earth, and everything in them, so we should consider them a blessing to us and treat them accordingly.  In this story of the farmer and the evil "Karen," I got the sense of that, as his assertion that "the land speaks" also goes along with Biblical passages such as Isaiah 55:12 ("The trees of the field shall clap their hands") and Luke 19:40 ("And I tell you that, if these should hold their peace, the rocks will cry out"), and in a more somber tone, there is the account of Cain's murder of Abel in Genesis, where God flatly told Cain that the ground was crying out in judgment because Abel's blood was spilled on it.  In that case, the Genesis account goes along with this story of the farmer on YouTube - the blood cries out for justice for a soul whose life was stolen by an evil one.  All creation therefore, as Aquinas and Bonaventure both correctly noted in their "two books" example, bears witness to God both in celebration but also in judgment.  That is why this story grabbed my attention.

It is not occultic, or pantheistic therefore to respect nature and its sanctity - it was created by God, and the earth itself bears witness of many things.  So, the story of this farmer illustrates that although we often brush things aside or ignore them, nature sees it, and in time what is concealed in the darkness will be brought to light if we do evil to someone by violating their God-given liberty or disrespecting them.  Think of nature as a silent witness to the work of humankind - people can easily deceive each other, but nature is not capable of deceit because it is what it is - it is there, and in many cases it holds a legacy for us.  A family home for instance is more than just a house cobbled together with brick, wood, and glass - it is home and there is a fundamental connection a person has to where they come from.  In Appalachian culture, we call that "sense of place," and it is what binds generations together as well as providing roots, identity, and other things to the person who was born there.  While this can easily be taken out of context, it is fundamental to the human experience and is how God made us.   There are two ways though that it can be misused, and I will get into those now.

The land stores negative experiences as well as positive, and I am thinking back to the movie Forrest Gump now because there is a very poignant example of this.   Forrest's love, Jenny, comes back to stay with him for a short time, and while Forrest is on the proverbial cloud nine, one day when he and Jenny were walking they come upon the old house her family lived in.  As a child, Jenny had been abused by her dad (or stepdad - I don't recall which he was in the film) and it caused her to have serious emotional scars.  When she saw that house - by now it was long abandoned and was in a bad state - it triggered things in her and she responded by releasing pent-up rage at that house by throwing rocks at it.  Not everyone has a positive experience regarding "sense of place," and that is part of the picture as well - sometimes we even have to face that in order to heal and grow.  Those who inflicted the misery corrupted the hearts of their victims in that regard, often doing irreparable damage.  What had the potential of a pleasant memory becomes a nightmare, and Jenny's old house in that movie illustrated that well. In this case it wasn't Jenny who caused the bad memory, but her abusive father.  Abusive and selfish people can corrupt things so easily, and they even misuse a home to create a negative memory for an innocent victim like a child.  The second example though is even worse, and it was once turned into a political system.

A part of the Nazi platform in Germany during the years leading up to the Third Reich was something called Blut und Boden, or "blood and soil." When I was doing work on this for my dissertation, I found out this was part of the whole volkisch mentality fostered by the precursors of National Socialism, and it was brought into National Socialism from Walther Darre (1895-1953), who was Hitler's Minister of Agriculture during the Third Reich.  Darre based this on his reading of the racist author Hans Gunther, who in turn digested it from his readings of Malthus, Galton, and Gobineau, who in turn co-opted it from the occultism with its pantheistic view of the land and German blood being one and the same.  I devoted a lot of space in my dissertation to this idea, because it was pivotal in understanding some of the more evil aspects of Nazism as it related to "purification" of both the land and the genetic identity of the fictional "Aryan" race many of them dreamed up in their delusional minds.  In this context, the land becomes a god in itself, and because the genetics of a certain race are believed by people who hold this view to come from "the soil," then both the blood inside a person and the soil they stand on are seen as one and the same.  This doesn't affirm God's gift of creation, but rather corrupts it by confusing the Creator with the creation, and the end product of that is never good - it results in the genocide of millions. This corrupted view must be rejected, especially by Christians.  Although our home and where we come from are something we hold as a precious thing, it should never be exalted to the point that the land becomes deity, nor should any type of ethnocentrism result from it.  That is why a proper understanding of "sense of place" is integral to having a healthy mind and spirit. 

The ultimate idea of this, however, is actually quite simple.  God created everything we see, and because of that, it should be respected and taken care of.  God gave man a special place of dominion over the earth, but with that comes the awesome responsibility of being a wise steward without exploiting the earth or making it into a deity in itself.  Rather, we take care of what God entrusts us with by maybe cleaning up the litter and pollution we create (the city of Baltimore where I live now would do well learning this) and by protecting and preserving what we have been given against those who would seek to do harm.  The farmer in the story did just that, and he treated the land like an old friend which could show its own expression.  While the land is not a living organism in itself, our care of it determines how we are rewarded.  If we really take care of it, we reap the benefits of it.  If we don't, then it causes more damage that can impact generations.  And, that starts with our own homes.  However, lest you think this is some sort of "global warming" screed, let me clarify that fast now.

The whole "climate change" and "global warming" spiels that have become a pervasive part of public discourse are quite honestly disturbing - they are not disturbing because they are true, but rather the opposite.  These agendas are driven by individuals who want to control, to dominate, and to micromanage everyone based on a utopian delusion that exists only in their own minds.  While many of the proponents of this lie - Gates, Soros, Schwab, and their buddies - are wealthy beyond the imaginations of most normal people, they are also devoid of any sense of decency and do not have the common good in mind.  They see this "global warming" hysteria as a way to make lots of extra money and exert control over things, and in doing so they are dangerous.  None of them believe in "global warming" either because they know it is a false narrative, but they use and manipulate it to exert their own control over others, and that is what is scary.  There is very little difference, for instance, in the ultimate agendas of people like Klaus Schwab and George Soros and the early Nazis, as when one reads what they are proposing it sounds eerily similar.  Both Schwab and Soros were known Nazi collaborators when they were younger, and both of them have nefarious ideas which would make even Lanz von Liebenfels flinch.  Like the abusive parent who scars their child's memory of home, these oligarchs misinterpret and manipulate a true respect for nature with an agenda, and their agenda is NOT God's way or will.  That is why it should be rejected as well. 

If God has blessed you with a home of your own, cherish it and treat it with respect.  If you do, it will reap many benefits that even your descendants will be blessed.  But, never make the extremes of conflating land with God, or never let anyone damage or destroy land either - protect it and be the steward over it God called you to be.  In doing so, we have true "sense of place," and that says more than volumes could communicate. 

Thank you for letting me share again this week, and hope to see you again soon. 

Monday, June 30, 2025

Summer Month Observations

 I am entering my third week of summer break from my teaching position this week, and in all honesty it is a bit jumbled.  I feel both exhausted and unsettled, as we have faced some challenges (extreme unseasonable heat for a few days, porch pirates, and a landlord who, although a nice guy, has a micromanaging fetish).  If you have ever had that incomplete feeling, it is something that is a bit hard to process.  Nothing is necessarily bad, but you still feel a bit out of place.  I recall when we still lived in Hagerstown I never had that feeling because there was more purpose then to my life than there seems to be now.  I know I am in a time of rebuilding, but that can be sometimes a bit to digest as you essentially have to recalibrate almost everything in your own life as you try to regain your footing.  Then, being in inner-city Baltimore is almost like being in a foreign country.  I want to linger on this for a bit, because it is at the core of some of the other things I am feeling right now.

I have always liked Maryland as a state - sure, it is more expensive than perhaps my home state of West Virginia, but it also has its charms too.  Although Baltimore is the biggest city in Maryland though, there is something different about it that does not really reflect the rest of the state - as I repeat, it is like a foreign country.  I don't really feel like I fit here in all honesty, and ironically, I lived here when I was a little kid and never felt that then.  Perhaps it is because I live in a different part of the city - I am more acclimated to the west side of town where many of my own family lived for years, and only now am I just getting acclimated to the east side of the city.  It's not that the city is completely bad, not at all - some parts of this area such as Charles Village and Fells Point are quite nice.  But, I don't live in those areas, but in Harwood - Harwood is in the north-central part of town, off Greenmount Avenue, and it is almost completely demographically Black in population.  If you go two blocks south of our house, all you see is urban blight - garbage all over the streets, boarded-up rowhouses and businesses, and frequent displays of insanity from the local drug addicts as well as being accosted for "handouts" if you walk in those areas.  It is not a safe area either, as the potential to be robbed, murdered, or assaulted is eerily hanging over the area like a dark demonic cloud.  While this particular street we live on has been somewhat renovated, there are still problems - porch pirates are like a pandemic, and dealing with rude entitled Black people who think you owe them something just because your skin is lighter than theirs can be stressful.  Fortunately, I have the income and soon will have the credit to kiss this part of town goodbye, and at this point I am working on doing just that now.  The ultimate goal is to buy a house, but in all honesty I can even rent a more upgraded place in a better neighborhood until I am able to do that. Barbara is on-board with this too, as she is sort of feeling the same way - thankfully we still have each other as a divorced couple but also still close friends.  I want to talk about that a minute too because some misconceptions about divorce need to be cleared up.

Divorce is obviously a tragic thing, and I don't believe it is anything that anyone aspires to.  Even a generally mild and amicable parting in a divorce settlement can trigger a tailspin in life, and that has been the case for both Barbara and myself.  The mythos of divorce in the US is that it is considered to be liberating and a right to life, and the expectation is that a divorced couple has to hate each other.  Especially if a couple is Christian and may endure a divorce, it doesn't mean that they cancel each other out, as it is still possible to be friends with your ex.  There are instances, as a matter of fact, where exes often end up closer as friends than they ever were as a married couple, and if the parties involved are Christians, then it serves as a witness and not some freaky abnormality.  In Barbara's and my case, we ended up being still very close, and to be honest, she is like a sister to me and I love her as if she was blood relation.  Barbara and I have been there for each other, we have helped each other out, and even at times when we have been attacked for it, we know better thankfully and will always have each other's backs.  I believe that Barbara and I will always be close until one of us eventually passes on, and to be honest that is not bad at all.  This now leads to a couple of things I want to say about that.

Marriage is a sacred covenant, and a sacramental act.  Ideally it should be eternal, and the love of the couple should grow as the years advance.  But, we also live in a fallen world too, and things happen.  Barbara and I divorced not because we hate each other, but because some very serious underlying issues tainted our marriage for years - we had issues with fully trusting one another and some other things, and often external forces manipulated that and intensified it to the point we began to understand a marriage couldn't work that way.  In all honesty, we don't blame each other for that, and we now speak openly of the fact that what happened to us was neither of our faults, as we in a sense were both victims of the same thing.  A lot of things - from meddling in-laws to manipulative cult-like churches - messed us up almost from day one, and we both suffered as a result.  Because the trust was essentially destroyed, so was our intimacy.  A strong factor in a good marriage is that an intimacy should be there which bonds both partners in such a strong way that they almost breathe and think as one.  That intimacy is foundated on a pure love, a love in which each person gives their whole hearts to the other without question, and in giving one's heart, you also give your complete and total trust.  This is what it speaks of when the Bible says the two shall become "one flesh."  The ultimate fruit of that is children - a child is the true fruit of deep love, and the child embodies the "one flesh" of their parents because they embody the best of both. This is why the Bible is also somewhat strict on sex as well - sex is not something that should be a recreational sport, but it is instead a beautiful sharing of each other in a physical way that creates a spiritual bond.  That is why a lot of times this within marriage is not just called sex, but instead it is called making love - you are celebrating a beautiful love that brings you and your spouse to a new level, a oneness and bond that will be so strong that the couple cannot even think of life without each other.  While Barbara and I had a level of love in our relationship - we were always there for each other, and still are now - that is what we missed, that beautiful, united love that creates a soul bond.  It is something I know we both desired but could never let ourselves totally commit to.  But, I know what that love feels like, and it is perhaps the most beautiful thing a human being can experience.  And, that is why often it is exploited just for the feeling it creates - sure, sexual indulgence feels good, is enjoyable, and it does give some emotional crutch, but without the proper context for it, it becomes either an afterthought or a bad addiction - that is where pornography comes in.  Pornography is Satan's mockery of true intimacy, and so is its related vice of prostitution.  Those things tend to reduce sex to just a fleshly indulgence, and in the process it loses its special place in human relationships.   Likewise, the wrong types of relationships - this includes homosexuality - further reduce the sanctity of the marriage bed because it throws out the natural order of things and turns a slogan like "love is love" into an epicurean political statement that is based on unnatural intimacy.  That is one reason too I believe the LGBT+ movement has embraced the sin "pride" as its slogan - it is about personal indulgence and has nothing to do with true love.  No matter how committed a homosexual relationship looks - and they do try to push that in the public sector - it still is lacking elements that make it a true expression of love.  Now, it is not up to me to dictate behavior - people are always going to do things we either know are blatantly wrong or fundamentally disagree with based on principle, so nothing is new there - but it is a responsibility to share the truth even when it may appear controversial.  There are signs on some liberal churches in town here that say "all are welcome" with rainbow flags framing that phrase, but there are two things about this I want to say.  Of course, anyone is always welcome in God's house - even the most vile of sinner has a place there.   Secondly, unlike the sharia Muslim crowd or the extreme Fundamentalists among our own Christian faith, no decent Christian is going to advocate mass execution of gays or anyone else who engages in problematic behavior.  The best policy for dealing with people like that is to treat them like human beings, subject to the dignity any human being is entitled by divine law to have, but at the same time disagree with their choices.  If bad choices were cause to execute someone, the population of the earth would be drastically reduced because we all would be guilty in some way for something.  Rather, by showing a gay person or someone else who is engaging in a lifestyle choice that is not right a basic kindness, you may impact them.  Many a drunk, drug addict, criminal, and gay person has found new life in Christ because a follower of Christ showed love and grace to them, and often those people are so transformed that they are even unrecognizable afterward.  Grace converts inwardly, and transforms outwardly - that is how it works.  But, treating someone with basic human dignity does not mean we affirm what they do - we should not compromise our faith for anything, despite how popular it might be in wider society.  What it does mean however is that we approach them in the right spirit and attitude - Scripture says as wise as a serpent and as harmless as a dove - and just be the witness to them.  That doesn't entail preaching at them, beating them over the head with the Bible, or constantly condemning them - no; it means we are honest with them about what we believe, but we also let them know that we value them as a fellow human being.  Until we learn this lesson as a Church, we will miss Christ's mandate by infinity. 

This balanced approach - being firm in our convictions while at the same time showing Christ's love to others - will ultimately be what converts the sinner.  There is no manual on how to do it either, and I cannot even say my approach will be something that works with you.  Some Christians can do the "in-your-face" type of testimony, and it will reach some people depending on the person.  Others can campaign for traditional values, yet also be there for everyone if a crisis happens - starvation and emergencies don't worry about if a person is gay or not, but rather if their survival is maintained despite the circumstance.  So, yes, give the gay person you see out there sweltering in heat a bottle of cold water to refresh them, and also never be afraid to do something even less grand such as giving directions to a gas station if they need it.  That is just basic human decency, and it respects all mankind as being created in God's image without affirming whatever bad habits or behavior they may engage in. I think it was the book of Ezekiel that says the rain falls on both the wicked and the righteous, and in Acts 10 the lesson is that God is not a respecter of persons.  To God we are all humans created in his image, and although his heart breaks at some things members of our race do, he still loves us regardless.  And, that is not universalism either - hell is real, and God doesn't send us there - we choose that fate.  Which is the last thing I want to talk about now.

There are some very narrow-minded types who like to, in the name of God, condemn anyone and everyone who disagrees with them.  One of those is a lady I mentioned some time back who was related to a former pastor of mine.  Will a person like that - who obviously displays a sin of pride - end up in heaven?  Let me suggest something very radical with that.  The Bible describes hell as an eternal lake of fire, and many saints and visionaries over the centuries have had visions of this place.  One thing that occurs to me is this - hell may or may not be a literal lake of fire, but it is a real place, and I have a radical idea of what hell will be like for some who cling to a prideful self-righteousness.  The prideful self-righteous Fundamentalist (or even traditionalist Catholic, as those exist too!) thinks they are on their way to heavenly bliss because they attack anything and anyone that even disagrees with them on what would be otherwise an inconsequential point. By becoming self-appointed "arbiters of salvation," such individuals isolate themselves.  Due to the lack of true conversion and grace in many people like this, they may be in for a delusion.  I believe hell for such a person will be something of their own creation that God allows once they get there - it may look heavenly, but it will be a lonely place for them.  Such an individual will think they are in heaven, but they will soon learn this is not the heaven God envisioned - it is a prison they constructed themselves, and God has given them what they want, complete isolation, even from him.  The fire will be internal and eternal for such people - they will be lonely, and their regrets, their cruelty, and their prideful self-righteousness will torment them through eternity even while they sit in what looks like a beautiful place.  That is an ultimate hell for the self-righteous who cloak hatred in legalism and religious jargon, and they attack others for maybe holding a belief slightly different from theirs - nothing fundamental to faith or anything, but just a slight detail such as maybe the earth was 10,000 years old rather than a literal 6,000.  Do those numbers radically alter faith?  Not at all, as those who would say one or the other would nonetheless agree in the fundamental truth - God created the heavens and earth.  But, to a self-righteous legalistic fundamentalist, it becomes a pivotal issue, so much so that they cut themselves off from other Christians and they become prideful in that they think they are the only truth on something that is frankly inconsequential in the greater scheme of things - Christ Himself describes such people as those who "strain gnats and swallow camels."  Therefore, the "heaven" they create in their minds will become their personal hell.  There is more I should say about this, but we will save it for later.

Thank you for allowing me to share this week, and I look forward to visiting with you again soon. 

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Where's the Sign?

 I wasn't planning on writing again today, but a few things have been on my mind.  So much as a matter of fact that I am having one of those moments trying to figure out how to sort everything out.  I am in my second week of summer break from teaching, and I am also starting a certification program in Instruction and Leadership to enhance my professional skills, but to be honest that overwhelms me a bit too.  One of the courses I am taking has to do with the application of technology to the classroom, and to be honest I am a bit weak in that area because I am not what you would call a tech-savvy person.  I can navigate my way around a computer, and have rudimentary knowledge of a few things to function in that regard, but that is about it.  My housemate, James, is more versed in those areas as that is what he is doing his undergraduate degree in.  However, he would be of little help with the course I have because that requires posting a discussion, and then responding to two classmates about it.  I am in the process now of trying to figure out how to do that. Which prefaces today's discussion.

A few years back, a well-known comedian I enjoy watching and hearing by the name of Bill Engvall came up with a shtick called "Here's Your Sign," and part of it was pointing out a stupid question to something and then giving a clever answer - although Engvall is often called a "redneck comedian," to be honest the conventional wisdom he communicates in his routine is something that will make you pause and think.  I am trying to think of one of his more witty examples but for some reason they are eluding me right now - that is my "sign" that I am getting older, and I have been noticing it more in the past few years.  Signs serve an important purpose in life - they identify things, point you to a destination you are traveling to, and also serve as directional aids.  Without signs of some nature, we would all be in trouble in all honesty.  The theological definition of a sign is something that points beyond itself to a greater reality, and in a sense it is sort of directional as well.  So, when the sign is either absent or for some reason you don't see it, you end up confused. Now, let's get back to where I am at today.

Since last October, I have felt like I am traveling a back road without a road map, and there seems to have also been a conspicuous absence of directional signs too.  Oh, once in a while I get some idea of what I am doing, but for the most part I have felt like I have been suspended in Jello for the past several months.  There are several factors I want to look at which are contributing to this bit of mental limbo I am in, as in desperately seeking the sign I need, I wonder if somehow I am missing it.  

To begin, my teaching position has been keeping me really busy.  I am thankful for the summer break because in all honesty I was feeling somewhat worn out from my first full year teaching school, and in keeping busy I haven't been able to pay attention as much to things I probably should be.   Imagine driving on a busy city street like say, Russell Street in downtown Baltimore.  All the traffic, road work, and everything else means that a driver needs to stay extra vigilant on the street.  However, if you are driving on a busy street like that, you become too focused on the task and may miss a vital directional sign to get you on the path to the destination you are traveling to.  Work has been like that with me over the past several months, and frankly I feel like I am still trying to catch up to myself now.  When I read Josef Pieper's book about the vital role of leisure in our lives and the sin of acedia, and this has caused in turn a sort of atomization of society, John Horvat notes it the following way in his book Return to Order:


"In our crowded cities, many are lonely.  In our interconnected world, there are those who feel entirely isolated, tormented by apathy, boredom, and restlessness. Is it any wonder we cannot unite to find solutions? Is it any wonder that so many feel abandoned and full of anxiety?" (John Horvat, Return to Order. York, PA: York Press, 2013. 88)


What Horvat has addressed is the very definition of acedia - the idolization of busy work and distraction that causes one to lose focus.  And, the demands placed on us by society - our landlords, our jobs, our education, etc. - contribute to this lack of culture.  We are driving in a busy downtown venue but are missing the directional signs to know where we are going, so we are becoming lost in the milieu.  I once felt like that in Corporate America too for the many years I did office work, but who would have thought it would happen teaching at a Catholic school.  But, there is more, so let's go there.

One of the biggest casualties of a life of busyness is that if you are a person of faith, your religious life suffers.  Between being worn out from work and dealing with porch pirates stealing deliveries at your home, etc., your prayer life suffers.  God is the one who gives us many of the directional signs we seek and need, but we miss them because everything else has our focus and not him.  Since COVID and the orchestrated pandemic associated with it, I have probably missed more church in the past 5 years than I have in the previous 20.  We missed this Sunday - the Feast of Corpus Christi - as a matter of fact because of these damned porch pirates stealing things off our own doorstep - dishonest and evil parasites like porch pirates don't just steal your packages, but they also steal your peace of mind and quality of life.  Our focus has been on the porch pirates instead of on our eternal souls, and that is costing us dearly.  Satan does that to us as well - he creates distractions so we get thrown off balance, and then he can effectively neutralize us.  That was the lesson in Matthew 14 of Jesus walking on water that he was trying to teach St. Peter.  Peter wanted to go to Jesus on the stormy sea, and Jesus told him to come to him.  While Peter was focused on Jesus, he was successful, but as soon as a distraction like the howling wind came, he lost focus and began to sink in the turbulent water.  We see it also in stories such as The Lord of the Rings, where Frodo and Sam were being led by the creature Gollum through a bog, and in that bog were dead bodies from many battles.  As long as Frodo and Sam stayed on the path and didn't let the sight of the bog distract them, they had a clear passage.  However, when they started to stray off the path, they risked joining the corpses in that bog.  Now, in life maybe our stakes are not that high, but they still have consequences.  If you are so focused on the traffic and other distractions, you will miss the sign telling you where you need to go.  Then, Lord only knows where you will end up.  Signs therefore are integral to our life pilgrimage as well, and we have to pay attention to those signs and not the distractions of life in order to stay on the right track.  However, if you are like me, you learn that many times the hard way, as you wander off the path and end up someplace you don't want to be.  While it is not hard to get back on the path you should be on, it could take time to get back there.  So, we need to look for those signs and follow them. 

That is essentially what I wanted to share today, and I will more than likely be writing more over the summer as I have both the time and inspiration to do so.  Thanks again for reading, and will see you next visit. 

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Averting a National Crisis

 Another special post today, this one dealing with the Israel/Iran episode, the 12-day war.  I am about to present an opinion on this that is a little uncharacteristic for me, but it does need to be said because more people feel the same way.  And, that includes our President, who made clear on no uncertain terms that these hostilities need to stop or else.  

There are two core issues in this.  First, support of Israel.  Second, regime change in Iran. I want to take these one at a time, and hopefully give a new perspective on the whole situation.

I have been a strong supporter of the state of Israel since as long as I can remember, and I still support its right to exist.  Israel IS the Jewish homeland, and the historical record backs that up.  That being said though, it does not mean Israel is perfect, and in this instance they made a boneheaded mistake.  After our own bombers successfully bombed the main Iranian nuclear facility a few days ago at the Fordow location, in all honesty it cancelled Iran's position as a major threat.  And, the Iranians sued for peace with us in a strange way - they launched six badly-aimed missiles at a US base on Qatar, but we successfully intercepted those too and no harm was done, and on top of it, the Iranians told us they were doing it!  That experience enabled Trump to broker a ceasefire between the two countries - Israel and Iran - and  everything looked like it was in order.  Then, just after the announcement, Israel launched MORE planes at Iran, claiming Iran fired a missile at them, which the Iranians flatly denied.  At that point, Trump had lost his patience with both countries, and in a very candid news interview, he said that Iran and Israel were both essentially acting like petulant children, and that they had been fighting so long that "neither knew what the **** they were fighting for anymore."  Trump's understandable frustration necessitated that little drop of his own bomb, in this case a proverbial "f bomb."  After chewing out Bibi Netanyahu earlier today over the whole mess, a REAL ceasefire was finally announced.  Now, if they don't get crazy and do something else stupid, maybe this war will be over. 

Our support of Israel's existence needs to be more nuanced in all honesty.  Just because they are a "Chosen People" does not make them perfect, and in recent years Israeli leadership has been doing some boneheaded things.  I dealt with one in particular, namely that Israel has been arming Azerbaijan to commit genocide against Armenians in Artsakh.  And now, they are trying to foment hostilities to start World War III with a hostile and psychotic ayatollah that rules Iran.  I will get to Iran in a minute as well, but want to say that we don't have to agree with everything Israel does - we can still support their right to exist, and even on Biblical grounds we can believe they exist for a reason.  But, they too are sinners just like the rest of us, and not every time an Israeli passes gas is it going to smell like lilacs.  Support Israel where support is warranted, but also don't be afraid to criticize them when necessary either. 

Now, onto Iran.  Iran is ruled by some rather maniacal and very radical individuals, and that nation has been in the grip of a bunch of religious fanatics since 1979, and our own left-wing politicians have enabled that.  That being the case, I fully would rejoice at a regime change there, but here's the thing - it is not up to us to make that happen.  We need to let the Persian nation liberate itself from the oppressive grip of the radical ayatollahs, and if history has taught us anything, we tend to make things worse when we try to initiate regime changes in that region.  In studying the history of the region, we may be culpable in giving Ayatollah Khomeini power because for some reason some of our career bureaucrats at the time wanted to get rid of the Shah, who was honestly a much more stable leader.  Well, we accomplished that, and the ones that took over were far worse and took our own citizens hostage.  I remember as a 10-year-old kid seeing that play out on the news on my grandmother Elsie's television.  Thankfully, the Shah has an heir, and his son has been talking recently.  While a regime change there would be great - especially if the Shah's throne is restored - it is best that we let the country handle it and keep our bumbling noses out of it.  Trust me, it will be much better that way if we can control ourselves from giving into the urge to get involved.  We did our part - Iran's nuclear capability has been crippled, and there is a growing unrest among younger Persians against the repressive puritanical rule of the Ayatollahs, and that gives hope.  Let the situation play out, and then offer support once they liberate themselves.  If we do that, the transition will be less volatile. 

These two nations - Israel and Iran - are the descendants of two great and ancient peoples.  We would do well to respect the legacies of both without blowing up half the planet in the process.  Israel needs to be called out when she is wrong, and Iran needs to remedy its own political system.  Doing those two things will carry much weight in the long run.  Thanks again for allowing me to share.

Heat Wave and Other Weekly Updates

 As I am writing this, our heat index in downtown Baltimore is unusual for this time of year - it was a sizzling 101 degrees yesterday!  While temps like this are not out of the question, it is unusual for it to be so soon in the summer - we usually don't have these types of temps here until at least early August.  Just a couple of things to say about this, and then we will move on. 

I can see it now - a number of leftists are going to start hollering "global warming," and Greta Thumberg will temporarily get her nose out of Palestinian terrorists' backsides to give us another of her dramatic "how dare you!" moments.  I don't see this as any evidence of global warming at all - it is just a fluke of the weather and more than likely will cool off soon enough.  Also, weather patterns like this mean the possibility of thunderstorms, and a good rain will be the key to cooling things off a bit.  The "climate change" doomsayers therefore can shut up and go back to eating their avocado vegan toast in their mama's basement. 

I also wanted to address an issue we have been dealing with the past couple of weeks or so - porch piracy.  For those outside of the big cities, you may not be aware of what this is, but essentially it is when some parasite with nothing better going on in their lives steals deliveries off of porches and doorsteps.  Many of them are so brazen that they do so in broad daylight, and in the past 2-3 weeks I have had two packages stolen, and a housemate also had some deliveries stolen as well.  Baltimore for some reason seems to be experiencing an epidemic of this behavior, and even the cops are ignoring police reports about it now.  While on one hand companies such as Amazon will recoup the costs of the stolen merchandise, it is still a bit disruptive to the normal flow of life.  So, being that cops here don't seem to take porch piracy seriously, I decided to take matters into my own hands and did so in two ways.

For those who know me, you know I love cats, and I have three of them.  One part of cat care is the infernal litterbox, and it can be one of the most challenging jobs to clean one of those.  Cat urine, unlike human urine, is extremely akalyne, and it reacts quickly with bleach or any other household cleaner.  I found that out several years back when I lived in Florida.  At the time, I was cleaning the litterboxes out on the back porch, and I made a bad mistake of pouring a combination of bleach and ammonia in the box as I was cleaning it.  What resulted was a chemical reaction which produced a small acrid cloud, and come to find out that could be extremely toxic.  When I did research later on how to effectively clean litterboxes, I found out that the best way to neutralize the odor is with something acidic, like white vinegar.  Now, for people who know me well, the smell of vinegar makes me very nauseous, and I hate the stuff.  It is an effective cleaner for sure, but for me I cannot endure the odor of it.  But, that day I made an exception to neutralize the litterbox toxicity I had created, and thankfully the vinegar did alleviate the toxic reaction.  Oddly too, the bleach and ammonia also neutralized the vinegar too, so what was left was essentially water after that - odorless and colorless water.  I tell that story to tell this one, and then I will get back to the main topic.

Cat litter can be tricky, and in order to make the job less unpleasant, it is important to choose the right kind.  The ones that look like small pebbles are the best as generally they will just dump out with no issues.  However, there is the other kind, a finer litter that is more like coarse sand.  That stuff is useless, in that it creates a stinky cement that takes forever to clean out of a litterbox.  I try to avoid that stuff at all costs, but when you have a grocery delivery service like Instacart shopping for you, often they replace what you order with what you don't want, and not wanting to waste money, you have to use it.  I think pet supply manufacturers should take that sandy crap off the market and instead stick with the more gravelly litter as it is easier to maintain.   That backstory now leads us back to our original thesis.

The noxious odors of a litterbox can be overwhelming at times, but in some cases that can be an effective weapon too.  When we were struck twice by porch pirate parasites, and the police report I filed was never followed up on, I decided to take matters into my own hands by creating a trap for the pirates.  In a small box that I had received a delivery in sometime back and still had lying around, I placed a small trash bag, and as I cleaned the litterboxes I filled that bag up with the most pungent litter (and a few cat turds for extra effect) and then securely tied it shut to contain the odor.  Then, I sealed the box with tape, making it look like a parcel being delivered, and I set it outside my door.  The heaviness of the litter would fool the scumbag attempting to steal it into thinking if it is that heavy  it must be valuable.  Then, I stuck it outside on the door step overnight to see what would happen.  And, wouldn't you know it, someone jacked it!  I would love to see what happens when they open that, thinking it is valuable merchandise they can sell to get their next crack or fentanyl fix, and they get that nasty surprise!  It is my hope that it may deter them from messing with our house again.  As an extra measure, we decided to invest in a secure package recepticle to stick outside as well, so that no one could steal packages.  Also, after my housemate reported theirs missing, Amazon is doing its own investigation as well to see if they can effectively reach a solution which would keep our deliveries safe and free of theft.  I only hope they are successful in doing so. 

Bottom line, porch piracy is one of the worst and most prevalent crimes, especially in cities.  People have important deliveries they are expecting, and the human vermin that steal those fail to understand they could be tampering with something important, such as life-saving prescriptions.  Of course, they don't care, because they are evil, selfish, and only serve to feed their own addictions which lead them to do stuff like that.  It is not because they are poor, homeless, or hungry either, I guarantee that - there are plenty of poor, hungry, and homeless people out there who do not resort to such tactics, and in all honesty they would probably be the first to stop such crimes if they witnessed them happening.  The typical porch pirate is not homeless or hungry at all - they are stealing merchandise to make a quick buck, and often they also may have addiction issues too.  In other words, they are criminals, plain and simple.  I have actually suggested that we should do to porch pirates what some countries like Saudi Arabia do to their thieves - you steal there, you get your hand chopped off.  A few extreme deterrents like that may cause this crime to dissipate in major cities, and that would be a good thing. 

So, we talked about cat litter and porch pirates, and the other aspect of my thoughts this week has to do with my search for a new house soon.  Thankfully, God's provision in recent months has made it possible to get some small credit problems straightened out, and being I also have been blessed with a good salary teaching, I am able to start considering buying a home for the first time in my life.  I know buying a house will be a process, but where I am at now was not meant to be a forever home - I live now in a small cramped room that essentially serves as a bedroom, office, and even coffee station for me.  While I live fairly comfortably, it is not what I am used to.  Given this is a time of recovery from a lot of things for me though, it also gives me a chance to plot the course of life I am going to be on for the next several years.  And, one immediate goal is getting the hell out of inner-city Baltimore and moving to a more compatible environment where you don't have to worry about getting deliveries stolen, etc. I will continue to document progress on that. 

On that note, I am due for a demo lesson that I get to observe and review for my school, which is happening in approximately 15 minutes.   So, I will go for today but plan on sharing more insights soon.  Thank you for visiting with me today. 

Monday, June 23, 2025

More Talk on Spiritual Abuse

 Some time ago, I examined the topic of spiritual abuse and it was perhaps one of my most beneficial articles I have written.  I wanted to draw from a rich reservoir of resources now to expand upon the topic, and perhaps write a book on it myself one day.  

I have already shared my story about being a victim of spiritual abuse myself.  The experience I had took place in a Pentecostal church that was part of a major denomination, and in regard to that it shed light on how some forms of Christianity tend to be more prone to abusive practices than others.  Recently, a Pentecostal minister named Dr. Steven Lambert authored two good books on this very topic, and I have his second book now called Charismatic Control: Witchcraft in Neo-Pentecostal Churches (Jupiter, FL: Real Truth Publications, 1997).   Lambert astutely ties abuse in Pentecostal and Charismatic churches to another phenomenon I have talked about - charismatic witchcraft.  Now, my definition of this is pretty basic, as it essentially means using a spiritual gift in such a way that manipulates and controls, and while that is simplistic, Dr. Lambert adds more to this.  In his earlier book that I will be getting later entitled Charismatic Captivation, he talks about this phenomenon as being a result of widely taught and highly authoritarian practices which originated with a sub-group of Charismatic churches called the Discipleship/Shepherding Movement (Lambert, Charismatic Control, 6).  This is partially true, but in some cases it has deeper roots that go back into the earliest days of the Pentecostal movement, and was partially a holdover from some of its more extreme Fundamentalist and Holiness roots.  I want to give a brief historical overview of the Discipleship/Shepherding Movement to kind of give some context. 

When the Charismatic Renewal movement happened in the late 1960s and early 1970s, people impacted by it tended to go one of three directions.  Some decided to affiliate with older Pentecostal groups, and denominations such as the Assemblies of God and Foursquare Gospel received them enthusiastically.  Others remained in their denominational traditions as Charismatics, and they participated in the various aspects of their church traditions in an enthusiastic way that did breathe some life into Catholic and historical Protestant churches.  Others, however, formed nondenominational churches that embraced charismatic spirituality, and that would lead to loose fellowships like the Word of Faith movement and other Charismatic schools of thought that emphasized a particular idea (prophetic ministry, healing, etc.).  This latter group is what brought the whole Discipleship/Shepherding controversy to light.  Many nondenominational congregations had a spiritual enthusiasm but lacked accountability and oversight, so some leaders in this movement felt the need to "shepherd" these enthusiastic new Charismatics, and they included a group of six noteworthy individuals - Bob Mumford, Charles Simpson, Derek Prince, Don Basham, Ern Baxter, and John Poole.  Forming a group in 1969 called Holy Spirit Teaching Mission, they wanted to establish a system of accountability in these new nondenominational fellowships, and in doing so they opened doors for abuse, so much so that in 1975 Pat Robertson and other Charismatic and Pentecostal leaders began to disavow and distance themselves from this group.  Robertson in particular was the first to identify their extreme practices as "witchcraft," and in doing so he is perhaps credited with identifying what is called "charismatic witchcraft," and despite some other unrelated controversies of his own, Robertson perhaps did the greater Christian community a service by identifying these movements as potential abuse opportunities (Harold D. Hunter, "Shepherding Movement," in Burgess, McGee, and Alexander, Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements {Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1988}: 784).  What was tragic is that this was not limited to nondenominational Charismatic churches either - the Foursquare church in Alabama where I experienced some of this was heavily influenced by this movement, and another version of it arose among non-Pentecostal Fundamentalists as well, the most notorious example being Bill Gothard's Institute in Basic Life Principles.  This began to garner attention in the early 1990s as more awareness of spiritual abuse (as it was now called) became public.  That is the next part of the story.

In 1992, a landmark book was published by Christian sociologist Ronald Enroth entitled Churches that Abuse (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1992).  At the time this book was published, I had come to the conclusion that the Foursquare church I was attending at the time was not right - the pastor was growing increasingly more authoritarian, and condemning as "demon-possessed" anyone who disagreed with him.  So, when I found out about Enroth's book, I purchased it at a bookstore in Chipley, FL, and it has been one of my most valuable resources in my library since.  It was Enroth's book, as a matter of fact, that helped to put an identifying term on what I was experiencing, and for me that was revolutionary.  Enroth's work served to open doors for others to look into this topic, and since then literally dozens of books have been published.  As far as the term "charismatic witchcraft" though, the first mention of that came from a non-denominational Charismatic minister named Bill Hamon.  Hamon was part of a movement that emphasized the phenomenon of modern-day prophets and apostles, and at the time he had a church in nearby Panama City, FL, called Christian International.  He published a three-volume set of books called Prophets and Personal Prophecy, and although he himself participated in some other questionable things of the Charismatic movement, I believe he had a valid insight on this one.  He identified the misuse of a prophetic gift to control others by the term "charismatic witchcraft," and in putting that together with Enroth's research, it more or less painted a more comprehensive picture of what I had experienced in an abusive Foursquare church with a very controlling and totalitarian pastor. That was liberating for me as well, because I truly realized that I was not alone and that what the pastor was doing was not right.  In time other books began to appear on this topic, and I wanted to mention a couple of important ones now.  

Prior to Enroth's groundbreaking work, another important work was published a year earlier by David Johnson and Jeff van Vonderen entitled The Subtle Power of Spiritual Abuse (Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1991).  While not getting the widespread attention that Enroth's work did a year later, these authors -one being a pastor and the other a Christian counselor - did some groundbreaking work of their own. Their book dealt more with the evolution of an abusive church situation rather than case studies like Enroth's did, and their thesis stated that an abusive church did not happen overnight but rather rested upon a foundation of beliefs and practices which would nurture such an environment.  Chapter 4 in particular deals with this.  The authors identify several factors from which an abusive church situation could evolve, and among those are the following:

1. Learned powerlessness - this involves behavior on the part of the victims that results from not being equipped properly to aid in fostering confidence, as well as leadership setting restrictive boundaries that limit spiritual growth. 

2. Based in shame - reinforcing shame instead of guilt is a tactic of abusive leadership.  This means instilling in a following the idea that they are fundamentally defective and worthless, and thus only "the leader" has the key to telling them "their place." 

2. Performance - the acceptance of behaviors instead of upholding the dignity of personhood.  The follower is told that they are only accepted if they behave in a certain way the leader dictates. 

These three key elements are also supplemented by other things, such as different forms of manipulation, the impossible and hard-to-please "god," and an unhealthy preoccupation with fault or blame as well as filtered reality - the leader of such a group only feeds his followers what he wants them to know, and independent thought is highly discouraged.  If someone attempts to step "outside the box," they are labeled "rebellious," "demon-possessed," and ultimately "an enemy of the church."  This is a form of shunning in which members are also discouraged from talking to "outsiders," especially ex-members, due to the fact it may lead them to ask questions, and a dictator hates being questioned!  I experienced that first-hand as well in the abusive Foursquare church I was part of.   A lady in that church, who had served as music minister for many years, all of a sudden was found to be at odds with the pastor and his wife.  So, she ended up leaving.  Despite this, I was close to this lady and maintained a friendship with her for many years.  However, the pastor found out we visited her one day, and we got a sharp rebuke about talking to "enemies of the church," and it was at that point I began to understand that this pastor was doing something very wrong.  In time, I would suffer the same fate, as eventually I would be called an "enemy of the church" once I finally left.  In other words, basically the pastor viewed anyone who challenged his narrative an "enemy," and he could not risk members of his congregation talking to them because they might uncover things they should not know.  Eventually, that is exactly what happened to me.  But, despite some overcoming of psychological hurts I received, I count getting out of that cultic atmosphere as a true blessing - God heard my prayer and delivered me from that viper pit, in other words. 

Another book that came out some point later was focused on the recovery from spiritual abuse, and it was Barbara M. Orlowski, Spiritual Abuse Recovery (Eugene OR:  Wipf and Stock, 2010).  Orlowski is a Canadian counselor who has risen as an advocate for the abused and although I haven't given her book a detailed read as of yet, I feel it is a valuable resource for counseling those who are coming out of abusive spiritual situations.  She notes that the recovery process entails a number of important steps, including the following (Orlowski, 6):

1. Christians becoming reoriented after a negative experience.

2. Christians having a greater appreciation for the work of God's grace in their lives.

3. The power of forgiving abusive leadership.

4. Being able to articulate the experience clearly without resentment.

5. Being able to reflect positively on what one has learned through the experience.

I really appreciate the way Orlowski breaks this down, as to be honest that is what I am doing here.  The fourth - articulating clearly without resentment - is a therapeutic exercise, and a good means I have found in doing that over the years is through journaling.  I have mentioned before about how journaling helps, and that even blog articles like this are possible because of the practice one gets of writing down their honest thoughts - they are between you and God, and you are not obligated to show them to anyone unless you choose to do so.  I also identify with the second as well - a greater appreciation for the work of God's grace.  What is important here is understanding the role of supernatural grace, and as I have drilled into my 11th graders in their Sacraments and Morality class I teach, supernatural grace does three things:

1. It elevates

2. It heals

3. It perfects

In other words, none of us will receive the fulness of grace at once (only one mortal human being was given that gift, and that was Our Lady), and supernatural grace must be allowed to work within us to bring us to the place God intended us to be.  This is why legalistic and abusive church leaders don't like grace - they don't have the patience for it, and it also reins in their desire to control others.  If we are receptive to God's grace, we grow daily in it, and for Catholics it also means that the Sacraments play a role in nourishing us with that grace as well.  Because part of supernatural grace is healing, it takes time to do so - some wounds are very deep, and they leave ugly scars that stare us in the face every day.  Grace enables us to see past that and toward who God truly called us to be.  Grace is not denying the wounds, but using the wound as a witness to God's healing power through his grace.  As Ronald Enroth states in his second book, Recovering from Churches That Abuse (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1994), we don't have to let the past rule our future (Enroth, 83):  or to put it another way as Mark Chironna once said, "our present position does not dictate our future potential."  If we let the past - even painful experiences like spiritual abuse - define us, we will limit ourselves.  That is why Orlowski's third point - forgiving abusive leadership - is key as well.  In my own experience, it took a while for me to forgive the pastor who caused me so much trouble, but in time I actually did, and prior to his death I was even talking to him and his wife on social media again.  It doesn't excuse what they did, and in all honesty that is on them, but I don't have to carry that around anymore.  And, that is another thing grace does as well - forgiveness has to be received as well as given, and for the offended person, it is important to develop an attitude of forgiveness, even if one's offender doesn't think they did anything wrong.  In other words, when (and if) they are ready to receive it, we should give forgiveness freely.  At times, that is some of the most painful growth too, as letting go can be tough.  But, as Jesus said, we have someone who can bear those burdens for us, and we don't need to carry them anymore.  So, what grace does is reminds us to pray for the strength to let go, and as the healing process continues, it gets easier with every passing day.  How forgiveness is cultivated largely depends on the extent of the damage and the person who was hurt - some can heal quicker than others, and that's OK too because none of us are exactly the same because God created us as individuals.  The important thing is being yielded - I again quote the famous evangelist Kathryn Kuhlman who said "God doesn't want gold or silver vessels, he wants yielded vessels."  Leaving ourselves in God's hands and trusting in his grace with our faith is what will ultimately heal us. 

That being said, we need to have compassion for the hurting who have been abused also.  Some of them will never step inside a church again unless God really touches them, but we cannot force them either.  Others go the other extreme and may become notoriously evil - Aleister Crowley is a classic example of that.  We don't need to arbitrate who people are based on reactions to painful memories they have - we are just reminded they need our prayers for God's healing in their lives too because they are badly wounded and may not necessarily be evil people.  And, although our own faith may be strong, until theirs is we need to exercise patience and compassion with such people, as what they need is support whether they admit it or not.  In time, some of these individuals may receive that healing, and when they recover they will be a more powerful force to reckon with because God took those hurts and turned them into strengths.  If this describes you right now, there are two things I need to say to you.  First, on behalf of sincere believers in Christ, I offer you my heartfelt apologies for what you have gone through, and in that be assured you are not alone.  Second, please understand that your abuser was the exception and not the norm - not all people of faith act like that, and we are ashamed of the damage individuals like that do.  Know also that God loves you, and he is not your enemy - he as a matter of fact wants to embrace you and let you know he loves you regardless of what some dictator in a pulpit made you feel. I am hoping that if you have been a victim of spiritual abuse, you know you are not alone - many of us have been there too.  We pray for you, and once you let us know who you are we will stand with you.  God's blessings until next time.