Wednesday, August 29, 2012

GOV. CHRIS CHRISTIE (R), NEW JERSEY:  Thank you!
   (APPLAUSE)
   Thank you!  Thank you all very much.  Thank you.
   Well, this stage and this moment are very improbable for
me, a New Jersey Republican.
   (LAUGHTER)
   Delivering the keynote address to our national convention.
   (APPLAUSE)
   From a state with 700,000 more Democrats than Republicans.
A New Jersey Republican stands before you tonight proud of my
party, proud of my state, and proud of my country.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Now I am the son of an Irish father and a Sicilian mother.
My dad, who I'm blessed to have here with me tonight, is
gregarious, outgoing, and lovable.  My mom, who I lost eight
years ago, was the enforcer.
   (LAUGHTER)
   Now she made sure we all knew who set the rules.  I'll tell
it to you this way, in the automobile of life, dad was just a
passenger. Mom was the driver.
   (LAUGHTER)
   Now they both lived hard lives.  Dad grew up in poverty.
And after returning from Army service, he worked at the Breyers
Ice Cream plant in the 1950s.  Now with that job and the G.I.
bill, he put himself through Rutgers University at night to
become the first in his family to earn a college degree.
   (APPLAUSE)
   And our first family picture, our first family picture was
on his graduation day with my mom beaming next to him, six
months pregnant with me.  Now mom also came from nothing.  She
was raised by a single mother who took three different buses
every day to get to work.
   And mom spent the time that she was supposed to be a kid
actually raising children, her younger brother and younger
sister.  She was tough as nails and did not suffer fools at all.
   And the truth was she could not afford to.  She spoke the
truth, bluntly, directly, and without much varnish.  I am her
son.
   (APPLAUSE)
   I was her son as I listened to ``Darkness on the Edge of
Town'' with my high school friends on the Jersey Shore.  I was
her son when I moved into that studio apartment with Mary Pat to
start a marriage that's now 26 years old.
   (APPLAUSE)
   I was her son as I coached our sons, Andrew and Patrick, on
the fields of Mendham, and as I watched with pride as our
daughter Sarah and Bridget, marched with their soccer teams in
the Labor Day parade.
   And I am still her son today as governor, following the
rules she taught me, to speak from the heart, and to fight for
your principles. You see, mom never thought you would get extra
credit just for speaking the truth.
   And the greatest lesson that mom ever taught me though was
this one.  She told me there would be times in your life when
you have to choose between being loved and being respected.
   Now she said to always pick being respected.  She told me
that love without respect was always fleeting, but that respect
could grow into real and lasting love.  Now, of course, she was
talking about women.
   (LAUGHTER)
   But I have learned over time that it applies just as much
to leadership.  In fact, I think that advice applies to America
more than ever today.
   (APPLAUSE)
   You see, I believe we have become paralyzed, paralyzed by
our desire to be loved.  Now our founding fathers had the wisdom
to know that social acceptance and popularity were fleeing, and
that this country's principles needed to be rooted in strengths
greater than the passions and the emotions of the times.
   But our leaders of today have decided it's more important
to be popular, to say and do what's easy, and say yes rather
than to say no, when no is what is required.
   (APPLAUSE)
   In recent years -- in recent years we as a country have too
often chosen the same path.  It's easy for our leaders to say,
``Not us, not now'', in taking on the really tough issues.  And
unfortunately we have stood silently by and let them get away
with it.  But tonight, I say enough.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Tonight, I say together, let's make a much different
choice. Tonight, we are speaking up for ourselves and stepping
up.  Tonight, we're beginning to do what is right and necessary
to make America great again.
   (APPLAUSE)
   We are demanding that our leaders stop tearing each other
down and work together to take action on the big things facing
America. Tonight, we will do what my mother taught me.  Tonight,
we are going to choose respect over love.
   (APPLAUSE)
   See we are not afraid.  We are taking our country back
because we are the great-grandchildren of the men and women who
broke their backs in the name of American ingenuity, the
grandchildre of the greatest generation, the sons and daughters
of immigrants, the brothers and sisters of everyday heroes, the
neighbors of entrepreneurs and firefighters, teachers and
farmers, veterans and factory workers and everyone in between
who shows up, not just on the big days, or the good days, but on
the bad days, and the hard days.  Each and every day.  All 365
of them.
   You see, we are the United States of America.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Now -- now -- now it is up to us.  We must lead the way our
citizens live, to lead as my mother insisted I live, not by
avoiding truths, especially the hard ones, but by facing up to
them and being better for it.
   We can't afford to do anything less.  I know this because
this was the challenge in New Jersey.  When I came into office,
I could continue on the same path that the wealth and jobs and
people leaving our state.  Or I could do the job the people
elected me to do, to do the big things.
   Now, there were those who said it could not be done, that
the problems were too big, too politically charged and too
broken to fix. But we were on a path we could no longer afford
to follow.  Now, they said that it was impossible -- this is
what they told me -- to cut taxes in a state where taxes were
raised 115 times in the eight years before I became governor.
   That it was impossible to balance the budget at the same
time with an $11 billion in deficit.  But three years later, we
have three balanced budgets in a row with lower taxes.  We did
it.
   (APPLAUSE)
   They said it was impossible to touch the third rail of
politics, to take on the public-sector unions and to reform a
pension and health benefits system that was headed to
bankruptcy.  But with bipartisan leadership, we saved taxpayers
$132 billion dollars over 30 years and saved retirees their
pensions.  We did it.
   (APPLAUSE)
   They said that it was impossible to speak the truth to the
teachers' union .
   (LAUGHTER)
   They were just too powerful.  Real teacher tenure reform
that demands accountability and and ends the guarantee of a job
for life regardless of performance, they said it would never
happen.  But for the first time in 100 years, with bipartisan
support, you know the answer.  We did it.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Now the disciples of yesterday's politics, they always
underestimate the will of the people.
   CHRISTIE:  They assumed our people were selfish.  The
difficult problems, the tough choices and the complicated
solutions, but they would simply turn their backs.  That they
would decide it was every man for himself.  They were wrong.
   (APPLAUSE)
   The people of New Jersey stepped up.  They shared in the
sacrifice.  You know what else they did?  They rewarded
politicians who lead instead of politicians who pandered .
   (APPLAUSE)
   But you know, we shouldn't be surprised.  We shouldn't be
surprised, we've never been a country to shy away from the
truth.  Our history shows that we stand up when it counts.  And
it's this quality that has defined America's character and our
significance in the world.
   Now, I know this simple truth and I am not afraid to say
it.  Our ideas are right for America and their ideas have failed
America.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Let me be clear with the American people tonight.  Here is
what we believe as Republicans and what they believe as
Democrats.
   We believe in telling hardworking families the truth about
our country's fiscal realities, telling them what they already
know, the math of federal spending does not add up.
   With $5 trillion in debt added over the last four years, we
have no other option but to make the hard choices, cut federal
spending and fundamentally reduce the size of this government.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Want to know what they believe?  They believe that the
American people want to hear the truth about the extent of our
fiscal difficulties.  They believe the American people need to
be coddled by big government.  They believe the American people
are content to live the lie with them.  They are wrong.
   We believe in telling our seniors the truth about our
overburdened entitlements.  We know seniors not only want these
programs to survive, but they just as badly want them secured
for their grandchildren.
   Our seniors are not children.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Here's what they believe.  They believe seniors will always
put themselves ahead of their grandchildren.  And here's what
they do. They prey on their vulnerabilities and scare them with
misinformation for the single cynical purpose of winning the
next election.  Here is their plan.  Whistling happy tune while
driving us off a fiscal cliff as long as they are behind the
wheel of power when we fall.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Now, we believe that the majority of teachers in America
know our system must be reformed, to put students first so that
America can compete, that teachers don't teach to become rich or
famous.  They teach because they love children.
   (APPLAUSE)
   We believe -- we believe we should honor and reward the
good ones, while doing what's best for our nation's future,
demanding accountability, demanding higher standards, and
demanding the best teacher in every classroom in America.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Get ready.  Here is what they believe.
   They believe the educational savages will only put
themselves ahead of children, that self- interest will always
trump common sense, they believe in pitting unions against
teachers, educators against parents, lobbyists against children.
   They believe in teachers' unions .  We believe in teachers.
   (APPLAUSE)
   We believe -- we believe that, if we tell the people the
truth, that they will act bigger than the pettiness we see in
Washington, D.C.  We believe it is possible to forge bipartisan
compromise, and stand up for our conservative principles.
   (APPLAUSE)
   You see, because it has always been the power of our ideas,
not our rhetoric, that attracts people to our party.  We win
when we make it about what needs to be done.  We lose when we
play along with their game of scaring and dividing.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Make no mistake about it, everybody.  The problems are too
big to let the American people lose.  The slowest economic
recovery in decades, a spiraling out of control deficit, and an
education system that is failing to compete in the world.  It
doesn't matter how we got here.  There's enough blame to go
around.  What matters is what we do now.
   (APPLAUSE)
   See, I know.  I know we can fix our problems.  When there
are people in the room who care more about doing the job they
were elected to do than  they worry about winning reelection, it
is possible to work together, achieve principal compromise, and
get results for the people who give us these jobs in the first
place.
   (APPLAUSE)
   The people have no patience for any other way anymore.  It
is simple.  We need politicians to care more about doing
something and less about being something.
   (APPLAUSE)
   And believe me, believe me, if we could do this in a blue
state like New Jersey with a conservative Republican governor,
Washington is out of excuses.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Leadership delivers.  Leadership counts.  Leadership
matters. And here's the great news I came here tonight to bring
you.  We have this leader for America.  We have a nominee who
will tell us the truth and will lead with conviction.  And now
he has a running mate who will do the same.  We have Governor
Mitt Romney and Congressman Paul Ryan to we need to make them
the next president and vice-president of the United States!
   (APPLAUSE)
   See, I know Mitt Romney, and Mitt Romney will tell us the
hard truths we need to hear, to put this back on a path to
growth and create good paying private sector jobs again in
America.
   Mitt Romney will tell us the hard truths we need to year to
end the torrent of debt that is compromising our future and
burying our economy.
   Mitt Romney will tell us the hard truths we need to hear to
end the debacle of putting the world's greatest care system in
the hands of federal bureaucrats and putting those bureaucrats
between an American citizen and her doctor.
   (APPLAUSE)
   Now we ended an era of absentee leadership without purpose
or principal in New Jersey.  I am here to tell you tonight, it
is time to end this era of absentee leadership in the oval
office and send real leaders to the White House.  America needs
Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan and we need them right now.
   (APPLAUSE)
   We have to tell each other the truth, right?  Listen, there
is doubt and fear for our future in every corner of our country.
I have traveled all over the country, and I have seen this
myself.  These feelings are real.  This moment is real,and it is
a moment like this where some skeptics wonder if America's
greatness is over.  They wonder how those who have come before
the before us had in the spirit and tenacity to lead America to
a new era of greatness in the face of challenge, not to look
around and say ``Not me'', but to look around and say ``Yes, me.''
Now, I have an answer tonight for the skeptics and the
naysayers, the dividers and the defenders of the status quo.  I
have faith in us.  I know.
   (APPLAUSE)
   I know we can be the men and women our country calls on us
to be tonight.  I believe in America and her history, and
there's only one thing missing now.  Leadership.  It takes
leadership that you don't get from reading a poll.  You see, Mr.
President, real leaders do not follow polls.  Real leaders
change polls.
   (APPLAUSE)

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/08/28/transcript-chris-christie-speech-at-republican-national-convention/?cmpid=app_pulse&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=pulsenews#ixzz24wMTqK1F
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The Geography of Iranian Power -
An excerpt from The Revenge of Geography

The most important facts about Iran go unstated because they are so obvious. Any glance at a map would tell us what they are. And these facts explain how regime change or evolution in Tehran -- when, not if, it comes -- will dramatically alter geopolitics from the Mediterranean to the Indian subcontinent and beyond.

Virtually all of the Greater Middle East's oil and natural gas lies either in the Persian Gulf or the Caspian Sea regions. Just as shipping lanes radiate from the Persian Gulf, pipelines will increasingly radiate from the Caspian region to the Mediterranean, the Black Sea, China and the Indian Ocean. The only country that straddles both energy-producing areas is Iran, stretching as it does from the Caspian to the Persian Gulf. In a raw materials' sense, Iran is the Greater Middle East's universal joint. Read More »

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Around the World with Ken Ham


Posted: 28 Aug 2012 06:51 AM PDT
Thanks to AiG researcher Steve Golden for his valuable research for this blog item.
I received a letter from a supporter recently, who wanted to bring yet another example of the sad state of the church to my attention. Last month, a story was released about a Baptist pastor who preached a sermon on the inerrancy of Scripture—but really, it was a sermon against biblical inerrancy. (You can read the story online.)
Dr. Richard Kremer, pastor of Garden Lakes Baptist Church in Rome, Georgia, recently preached a sermon called “Is the Bible Inerrant?” which has since been removed from the church’s website (atranscript is still available).
Even though the sermon will appall you, I encourage you to read it and experience for yourself an example of what is being taught in part of the church! No wonder the church in this nation is in trouble!
In the sermon, the pastor challenges the accepted definition of inerrancy, claiming that the Bible has no original autographs.
There is no such thing as an original autograph of the Scripture, and to claim such a manuscript is the basis for the inerrancy is intellectually dishonest.
While it is true that we do not possess the original manuscripts today, Kremer is arguing that they never existed. He even goes so far as to claim that “the Bible is not a history book,” “the Bible is not a philosophy book,” and “the Bible is not a science book.” With all those caveats, what exactly can we trust in the Bible? More importantly, how can we trust all that it has to say about Jesus Christ? Well, that’s an exception, says Pastor Kremer.
When you come to talking about the character of God, the Bible is indeed inerrant. When you’re talking about the revelation of God in Christ, we can trust that information with perfect confidence.
My question to Dr. Kremer is this—“Who decided you can trust this section but not the rest? On what basis did you determine this? Or is it just your fallible human opinion?”
Well, as it turns out, Pastor Kremer’s issue with inerrancy largely hinges on the Genesis account of creation. And this should be a warning and lesson for all of us. Of course, his statement that “the Bible is not a science book” gave that all away—Pastor Kremer does not believe in a literal six-day creation. He says that the ancient biblical writers didn’t even know what geology was, so certainly the Genesis account of creation cannot be trusted.
I don’t want a scientist having to put his/her brain on ice because his/her discoveries contradict what the Bible allegedly teaches about one scientific discipline or another.
The goal of secular historians is often to discredit the miracles of the Bible, such as the Resurrection. Over the years, however, I’ve seen more and more pastors who are doing the exact same thing as this pastor. They are unwilling to defend a miraculous creation in six literal days because they have accepted the secular beliefs of the day in regard to millions of years (and even evolution). Thus they have unlocked a door that undermines the authority of Scripture at the beginning. They use man’s ideas outside of Scripture to reinterpret what the Bible clearly states concerning the account of Creation, the Fall, and the Flood. This then brings them one step closer to denying the miraculous Resurrection of Christ. After all, if we take secularist Richard Dawkins’s views of evolution and millions of years to the Bible, why not take his views that reject the Resurrection and Virgin Birth and reinterpret the Bible too? And we see this as Dr. Kremer goes on to point out supposed mistakes in sections of the Resurrection account (e.g.,when the women came to the tomb, etc.).
Often, when people argue against the inerrancy of Scripture, they will say things like, “Man is fallible, so we can’t trust the Bible because it was written by men.” This is a fallacy, since it does not follow that man has to make mistakes in everything he does. Of course, we know that man is indeed fallible, but that does not mean that men cannot write an infallible book, especially when they are inspired by the infinite Creator God to do so. But Pastor Kremer goes a step further and says that there are intentional contradictions in Scripture.
In the creation account of Genesis, chapter one, God creates everything in the world, then creates humanity last. In Genesis, chapter two, God creates humanity first, then creates the remainder of the natural order. The brilliant editor who brought those two accounts into one sacred text was fully aware of the discrepancies in the accounts—but he did not care!
One of the ways that some people try to discredit what Genesis teaches us about history is through the Documentary Hypothesis, which claims that there were at least four different authors who wrote the Pentateuch over many centuries and multiple editors (or “redactors”) who combined the writings into their present form. (For a detailed explanation of the Documentary Hypothesis, see Dr. Terry Mortenson’s article, “Did Moses Write Genesis?”)
Now, Pastor Kremer’s explanation of Genesis sounds awfully close to the discredited Documentary Hypothesis. There’s no doubt that Pastor Kremer mistrusts the Bible’s history. He even uses supposed contradictions regarding the circumstances surrounding the Resurrection to make his case. But our staff members have already responded to many of these alleged contradictions in our book series Demolishing Supposed Bible Contradictions. And Dr. Elizabeth Mitchell, AiG–U.S., wrote a detailed article dealing with the circumstances of the Resurrection.
When I hear these kinds of teachings where the trustworthiness of the Bible is being questioned, I often ask myself: What are the youth in the church learning from this? How are these teachings affecting their thinking? But we know the answer—they’re learning that God’s Word can’t be trusted, and thus they’re experiencing doubts about it! Sure, Pastor Kremer can try to say that passages about Jesus Christ are an exception and can be trusted, but that is not consistent with his views about Scriptural authority, and the teens in our churches know it. And statistics in America show clearly that at least two thirds of young people are leaving the church by college age. If this continues, the church will be only a relic in the future—as it is already in England today!
When Answers in Genesis contracted with America’s Research Group to perform the research for the book Already Gone (which we published in in 2009), we found that the vast majority of youths begin having their first doubts about the Bible in middle and high school. If you have never readAlready Gone, I strongly urge you to do so. In this time when the church in America is in big trouble because of the compromise of pastors on the authority of Scripture beginning in Genesis, we have to strengthen ourselves and our children in the knowledge that we can fully trust God’s Word.
One day Dr. Kremer will have to give an account to the God of creation of what he taught adults, teens, and children in his church. I would not want to be in his shoes! Scripture reminds us that teachers will bear a stricter judgment.
My brethren, let not many of you become teachers, knowing that we shall receive a stricter judgment. (James 3:1)
I’m also reminded of other Scriptures as I studied what Dr. Kremer is teaching his flock.
“Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in Me to sin, it would be better for him if a millstone were hung around his neck, and he were drowned in the depth of the sea.” (Matthew 18:6)
“Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves.” (Matthew 7:15)
Yes, it may sound harsh to say that shepherds in churches can be “wolves” because of their destructive teaching. (I am not saying, though, that these shepherds are not Christians—I believe the destructive term can fit Christians as well as non-Christians.)
Thanks for stopping by and thanks for praying,
Ken

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