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UK Government put us on Lockdown... whilst they partied
The Government have been exposed for holding a number of Christmas parties during Lockdown last year.
Allegra Stratton, a former aide to Boris Johnson has resigned after footage of her laughing about a Government Christmas party, whilst the rest of us were ordered to stay at home.
Another video of Jacob Rees-Mogg has been exposed at an illegal Christmas do, in which he laughs about not being investigated by police.
Rishi Sunak's Treasury Department also held a 'staff Christmas gathering' on 25th November last year, whilst we were banned from seeing friends and loved ones.
Dominic Cummings, former chief adviser to Boris Johnson has confirmed a 'Lockdown Party' was held on 13th November in the Prime Minister's No.10 flat.
Lorraine Kelly & guests caught lying about unvaccinated hospitalisations
Dr Hilary Jones and Lorraine Kelly were caught lying about unvaccinated hospitalisation figures according to official fact checker, FullFact Org.
Lorraine Kelly's ITV show was hit with 1312 Ofcom complaints after they both falsely claimed that 90% of people currently in hospital with Covid have not been vaccinated.
The actor and musician Martin Kemp then told the same lie on the show the following day.
In fact, the latest data for England suggests that it’s more like 36%, meaning the vast majority of people currently in hospital are vaccinated.
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THIS WEEK IN HISTORY: Encyclopædia Britannica first published
On 10th December 1768, the first part of the first edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica was published and advertised for sale in Edinburgh.
A key part of the Scottish Enlightenment, the Britannica was founded by Edinburgh bookseller and printer, Colin Macfarquhar, & engraver Andrew Bell. It was Edited by 28-year old William Smellie.
An estimated 3,000 copies of the first edition were sold.
Encyclopædia Britannica is the oldest continuously published and revised work in the English language.
Enjoy the rest of your weekend.
Yours sincerely,
British Freedom Party HQ
The Media the tool of the NWO They are psychopaths!
They are psychopaths!
This week we saw a number of prominent media reporters call for the most evil treatment of innocent people...
NICK FERRARI - LBC
Nick Ferrari called for everyone over 40 years old to be fined if they are unvaccinated.
- £100 fine in December,
- £100 fine in January,
- £200 fine in February,
- £300 fine in March...
to continue all year until they agree to get vaccinated.
------------------------------
TOM HARWOOD - GB NEWS
Tom Harwood has called for unvaccinated people to be charged for their medical bills.
British taxpayers are already charged Tax and National Insurance which pays for their medical treatment under the NHS.
------------------------------
ANDREW NEIL - DAILY MAIL
Andrew Neil wants to see the 5 million people who have chosen not to take the vaccine 'Punished'.
He has called for mandatory Vaccine Passports to enter restaurants, pubs, bars, planes and non-essential shops to 'keep the unvaccinated away from the vaccinated'.
------------------------------
The Media are part of the Elite...
They want a Covid Dictatorship so they can PUNISH US
Time to FIGHT BACK !
We want to get thousands of flyers and leaflets printed to expose the truth about the Covid Agenda.
But we need your help to get more Flyers printed...
Help us get Critical Info to the Masses!
We simply cannot do this on our own , we rely on our members and supporters to help us fund our campaigns!
The British people are being brainwashed by the mainstream media pumping Covid Fear onto them nonstop.
That's why we need your help! Please help us get these essential flyers & leaflets printed.
Yours sincerely,
Jayda Fransen
Neil Oliver: This Christmas my family and I are not afraid of Covid, just like the Government at their parties last year
'Think about those Christmas parties of 2020,
when fear among the general population had been
pushed to its greatest height by reports of big numbers.
There’s something left unsaid about this virus that has done so much to
disrupt our lives and change our world – change for the worse.
Unsaid or not it was hiding in plain sight during all the fuss last week about
Christmas parties in Downing Street, and other government buildings in 2020.
Much has been made – obviously – about the fact those parties were organised
and took place at a time when Christmas had been cancelled for plebs like us.
Loved ones left alone when they might have been with family. Businesses closed.
All manner of get togethers – long planned and looked forward to – set aside
for the apparent good of the nation.
While others made do with quiet homes, they – by which I mean our leaders
and their aides – danced and drank and partied like it was … well, 2020.
But never mind all that stuff about ‘one rule for them, another for us’ and ‘
do as I say and not as I do’. Rather notice something else as obvious
as Rudolph’s red nose.
The people behind those parties, and with whose knowledge they took place,
were not afraid … not afraid to be together in indoor spaces with people not their families.
They were not afraid to be maskless in confined spaces with more than six people, or
nine people, or whatever the final number was for the proles.
Because apart from anything else that might have been driving the government’s
determination to keep the little people indoors and alone, separated from others t
hey might have talked to and with whom they might have come to different
conclusions about why it was all happening, our leaders and their aides were evidently
not afraid of catching.
People who are afraid of a disease –
and I know with absolute certainty
that millions of people here in Britain
and around the world have been made
and remain
terrified of Covid – don’t have to be told to do whatever they have to do to limit their chances of catching it.
People naturally afraid will go home and stay there without the need of government diktat,
far less round the clock propaganda shaped
by nudge units to ramp up the terror.
They will, all by themselves, decide to keep away from places where people might
gather – like pubs, shops, restaurants, schools, cinemas, theatres, sports grounds.
If they do have to venture out, for life’s necessities, they will cover their faces and wash
their hands. They will do all of these things and more, instinctively, because fear of
catching a lethal disease makes thinking people take all possible steps to keep themselves
and their loved ones safe.
In the case of the sort of disease that is naturally terrifying for people, they don’t have to be t
ested, morning, noon, and night, while feeling perfectly well, in order to find out whether or
not they have a symptomless version of the lurgie.
If you’re not scared, you won’t do any of these things – not unless you’re ordered to by the authorities of course. As well as wanting no trouble from the police and the like, people
obey rules and toe the line for fear of attracting unwanted attention from the wider
community. Peer pressure.
Almost as much as disease of the body, people fear criticism, bullying by the mob, and the shame that falls upon any person who is seen to do The Wrong Thing. People who are not scared of a disease, however – people who have learned from those around them that there is nothing
to fear – will, if they get the chance, especially at Christmas, get together with friends and colleagues and drink and dance the night away.
I say again – the people who gathered for those parties and then laughed the morning after
about what they’d got away with were in positions to know more than anyone else about
what the government was saying behind closed doors. For whatever reason, they were evidently not afraid – not afraid of each other, not afraid of condemnation for their rule breaking, and not afraid of Covid.
And let’s remember too, that all of this fearlessness was there in the world of
Christmas 2020, that world before the
vaccines, whatever your opinion of them,
were even available.
I am not, here, belittling in way the fear felt by many people – the fear that is still felt and still driving behaviour and choices. The
government has, after all, spent hundreds of millions of pounds using all channels of communication, including the media, to
instil and stoke and pedal that fear.
There have been thousands of deaths since the virus arrived among us – although, on accoun
t of the way in which the counting was conducted and massaged for greatest effect, we will
never know how many actually died of Covid, and not of something else, like cancer, or heart failure, or crashing a motorbike or whatever, while also testing positive for Covid. Any death
, for any reason, is to be mourned – of course it is.
But hundreds of thousands of us die every year. Tens of thousands of the dearly loved – especially among our elderly and those already ill, or frail, or physically weakened and compromised in other ways – die every winter on account of flu and respiratory disease.
In 2020, for the first time, we were taught to fear death as never before. But not all death.
Since 2020, not all deaths are equal. The death to fear above all others was death by
Covid, or indeed with Covid, as I have already said. Ironically all the other ways of
dying – by cancer, heart disease, stroke and all manner of ills – were pushed into a column headed, Don’t Worry About That For Now.
Damage to livelihoods, caused by all the fear and all the rules, was nothing to fear either, apparently. No cause for alarm either were the consequences of the damage done
to a generation of youngsters on account of missing out on everything from education,
to play, to mixing with extended family, to enjoying childhood itself.
Fear is a powerful thing. Like fire it is a good servant and a bad master. Fear in response
to seeing for ourselves – without having to be told, or persuaded, or nudged or otherwise manipulated – that something is dangerous, makes us fight or flee, depending on our personal wiring. Fear can be a good thing, but only for moments at a time. Constant fear, never
-ending fear for month after month is a bad thing.
Fear that is kindled and stoked by propaganda, and for years on end, is no good to anyone.
We cannot, any of us, live in fear. So, I say again. Think about those Christmas parties of 2020, when fear among the general population had been pushed to its greatest height by reports of big numbers. The NHS apparently at breaking point.
Folk on their doorsteps on Thursday nights, waving anxiously at the neighbours –
“How are you doing? Are you alright,” while beating pots and pans with spoons and
clapping for carers – some of whom have
either been sacked already or shortly will be on account of saying no to vaccines. Kids off school for months on end, missing out on everything.
Think about all that, driven by fear stoked by
the media and the government
– and remember how they partied, and drank, and danced cheek to cheek, and laughed.
I read reports last week about a party in the offices of the Sun newspaper – one among many in that trade,
I venture to guess – and so deduced that they were without fear too.
And while I’m on the subject of the press
and the media – how about we get to know, as soon as possible, which political journalists representing which media, were at those parties – living it up the one minute, and then the following day sitting down to right more fear-laden about how we were all about to kill granny.
And then look at us now. Getting on for two years into it all now. Another Christmas
to be crippled and crumpled by more of the same fear-mongering from on high. Straight faced, despite their own partying, they’ve whipped up tighter restrictions.
In Scotland – FM Nicola Sturgeon’s pre-Christmas gift to the ailing hospitality industry is her advice to one and all to cancel any plans they might have had for Christmas parties. Advent this year has been not about the coming of Jesus Christ, but the coming of Omicron instead.
So far Omicron has infected many, many people – as yet there’s no data on hospitalisations
in the UK. So far, not one single death has been attributed to it.
Hospitalisations and deaths are currently in decline. Omicron might, if we’re allowed to
look on the bright side for just a moment, be the soft form of the virus that will lightly touch everyone, the vaccinated and the unvaccinated, and so deliver unto them the priceless
gift that is natural immunity, that might keep a person proof against Covid for a lifetime.
But we’re not supposed to talk about that, are we? Not frightening, you see – quite the
opposite.But no. Let’s keep the fires of fear burning instead. Let’s push for a third dose of
vaccine – in time, and we have no reason to doubt it – for a fourth in the Spring, a
fifth in the Summer.
Speaking only for myself, I contracted a mild dose of fear in Spring 2020. I was bit worried
for a while, waiting to see what would happen to us all. Within a few weeks I’d got over it,
got over the fear. I’ve been immune to the state-sponsored fear ever since.
This year I caught Covid and got over that as well. Now I’m naturally immune, which is what I might have asked Santa for, if I’d thought of it.
Anyone planning parties and get togethers with family and friends this year – even members of Her Majesty’s government and Opposition, that’s fine by me and I hope you and they enjoy every moment.
Because it’s Christmas, a time for forgiving as they say.
My family and I will do as we please. And just like the government types at their parties
last year, we are not afraid.
Christian Masculinity
Christian Masculinity
Today's excellent post on Christian Masculinity was written by Michael Witcoff
With every passing generation, men become weaker and more confused. This is not only because of dropping testosterone levels across the board, but also because men have few – if any – strong role models in modern America. More and more young boys are raised by single mothers or in female-dominant homes, and then they go off to public school… where their instruction and discipline is performed almost entirely by women. What’s a young boy to do?
Eventually, in the modern age, he finds his way to the Internet. Faced with an unprecedented plethora of choices, he must wisely navigate the endless sea of public figures who claim to teach “true masculinity.” Nowadays the PUA sphere has been largely supplanted by the more general “male self-improvement,” which always teaches how to indulge in one’s material temptations more successfully; not only more premarital sex – as was the niche’s focus in my own adolescence – but more money, more cars, more of everything he wants…all while compromising as little as possible.
This, so they tell you, is what it means to be a man: getting more of what you want while suffering as little as possible. To those of you more philosophically-inclined, this is simply the reiteration of ancient Epicureanism: a materialist outlook seeking to maximize pleasure and minimize pain. Is this truly the peak of what a man can achieve?
I won’t throw out the baby with the bathwater or suggest that there’s nothing of value to be learned from such sources. Rather, I assert that what good can be found in them can be found in better, fuller, and holier form from Christian sources – and without all the soul-killing baggage. For a deeper examination of this idea, I encourage you to read St. Basil the Great’s Address to Young Men on the Right Use of Greek Literature. It’s an ancient, in-depth homily on how young men ought to engage with pagan or secular material.
Having said that, there is no shortage of instruction for how men ought to look, behave, and conduct themselves in the writings of Holy Scripture and the Church Fathers. Therefore, I’d like to present you with three aspects of manhood that God considered important enough to illuminate through these vehicles.
Appearance
You may have read this bullet point and thought to yourself that men ought to have no concern for their appearance. In a certain sense, you’re right; a man should not spend inordinate amounts of time admiring himself in the mirror, seeking out and purchasing the latest trendy and fashionable clothes, or taking hours of each day making sure that he presents himself in such a way to attain validation from others.
On the other hand, the notion of how a Christian man should look was important enough to be mentioned in both the Old and New Testaments – not to mention by several Fathers of the Orthodox Church. Starting at the beginning, we read in Deuteronomy 22:5 that “The woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a man, neither shall a man put on a woman’s garment: for all that do so are abomination unto the Lord thy God.”
The New Testament, as you might expect, is perfectly aligned with the Old Testament and its sentiments. God is the God described in both texts, Who interacts with humanity in each of them and through Whose inspiration both texts were written. Christians are not Marcionites; we do not believe there is any tension or disagreement between the Old and New Testaments.
Therefore, we should not be surprised to discover that St. Paul reiterates what you read above, writing in 1 Corinthians 6:9-10 that “Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, not idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, not drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God.”
God, inspiring the pen of St. Paul, teaches that an effeminate man is as much an abomination as a fornicator, an idolater, or an adulterer. In practical terms, this means not dressing in such a way as to feminize your appearance or behaving like a woman. No earrings, no eyeliner, no painted nails, no “unisex” clothing, and certainly no “transgenderism.” For a full Christian breakdown of sexual dimorphism – and a survey of its denial’s consequences – I encourage you to listen to Father Josiah Trenham’s lecture series “Reflections On Transgenderism.”
Since the same Holy Spirit speaks through both the Bible and the Church, we should expect to find – and do find – this same sentiment passed down through the centuries. Specifically, we find Church Father after Church Father exhorting men to grow beards and not to shave their faces.
In The Instructor, Clement of Alexandria wrote that “For one who is a man to comb himself and shave himself with a razor, for the sake of fine effect, to arrange his hair at the looking-glass, to shave his cheeks, pluck hairs out of them, and smooth them, how womanly!…This is a meretricious and impious form of snare. For God wished women to be smooth, and rejoice in their locks alone growing spontaneously, as a horse in his mane; but had adorned man, like the lions, with a beard, and endowed him, as an attribute of manhood, with a shaggy chest – a sign of strength and rule.”
In his Exposition on Psalm 133, St. Augustine of Hippo wrote that “The beard signifies the courageous; the beard distinguishes the grown men, the earnest, the active, the vigorous. So that when we describe such, we say, he is a bearded man.”
In the Apostolic Constitutions we find the following passage as well: “Nor may men destroy the hair of their beards, and unnaturally change the form of a man. For the law says: You shall not mar your beards. For God the Creator has made this decent for women, but has determined that it is unsuitable for men. But if you do these things to please men, in contradiction to the law, you will be abominable with God, Who created you after His own image. If, therefore, you will be acceptable to God, abstain from all those things which He hates, and do none of those things that are unpleasing to Him.”
As a survey of history clearly demonstrates, from the time of Moses up until the present day, the community of God has explicitly declared that a man should look like a man. A beard and body hair distinguish you from women and children; should you shave yourself and look like a naked mole rat, you will have marred the appearance that God designed you to have.
Yet there is far more to being a man than just how you look. If you look the part – but act weak or womanly – you are failing just as much as if you shaved your face and body. On that note, let’s continue to the next point of Christian masculinity.
Conduct
The way you behave is even more important than the way you look. For a good example of what I mean, consider any mainstream “rap” video; half the time, the men in these videos are wearing a cross. And yet what do they “rap” about? Always the same topics: money, sex, power, drugs, killing, and Luciferian exaltation of the self. Every song is about me, me, me. This is the false image of masculinity propagated to the populace by wicked, deceptive agents of Satan who want to separate man from God.
Read any self-help book on the shelves today, and you will discover there a version, whether watered-down or full-fledged, of the Nietzschean will-to-power. The male self-help niche is absolutely saturated with the worship of individuality, the assertion of dominance, and the encouragement to conquer.
The irony of pretending these images are of “powerful men” is that there is nobody weaker, nobody more enslaved, than a man who throws himself into every sinful temptation he feels. St. Augustine of Hippo aptly noted that “a man has as many masters as he has vices.” You can have all the money, power, and women you want…the absolute zenith of “male self-help”…yet if you succumb to temptation left-and-right, you remain a slave to your own impulses and will never be truly free.
Now the concepts of individuality and dominance can, and do, have a Christian counterpart. On the topic of individuality, for example, the secular world may tell you that there is nothing more important than you. Your desires, your ambitions, your possessions, your influence. But in the Christian context, individuality is only truly realized in obedience to, and likeness of, Christ Himself. We are not Buddhists seeking to dissolve our personhood into a great nothingness. We do not seek the destruction of the self the way some esoteric, non-Christian belief systems do. Rather than destruction, we seek fullness and transfiguration; becoming a man means aligning our person with the ultimate Person, our manhood with that of the ultimate Man. In that context, our individuality is not erased; it is established, it blossoms, and it flourishes. This is achieved specifically by denying ourselves, overcoming our greed and our passions.
Likewise, there is nothing wrong with the idea of dominance – but depending again on the meaning. In the secular sphere, dominance often means never backing down, asserting yourself against and above everyone around you. It is about making yourself bigger by making others smaller, diminishing them to inflate your own sense of superiority. In the Christian sphere, dominance has two specific contexts: rulership of your family and, whether you have a family or not, rulership over your passions. A man who is moved by his emotions is weak; a man who cannot resist temptation is useless. Look at the world around you, at the politicians and media moguls. They are, largely, sin-sick men who succumb to their every desire and, being easily corrupted, are likewise easily owned. The Christian life is a battle with the passions, and in this warfare you must dominate. You must rule. You must conquer.
In short, the essence of masculine behavior is self-control. If you do not have the ability to say “no” – whether to others who offer you something you shouldn’t take, or even more importantly, to yourself – then you must get to work developing this ability immediately. You must be able to withstand a sinful impulse and adapt your behavior to that laid out by the Christian path. After all, we read in Revelation 21:8 that “the cowardly, the faithless, the detestable, as for murderers, the sexually immoral, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars, their portion will be in the lake that burns with fire and sulfur, which is the second death.” I hope you will heed God’s warning, and do everything in your power to avoid finding yourself in these categories.
And yet, one of the many grand paradoxes of Christianity is that your own power and will are utterly incapable of attaining this goal; rather, it is submitting your will to God’s that will bring you the results you’re after. The only power your will has, in these circumstances, is the will to cooperate with God. But if you try to brute-force your way into virtue, you will end up the spiritual equivalent of a “dry drunk;” your bad behavior may have improved, but the wounds that led to it will remain unhealed. This is especially difficult for men to accept since our pride wants us to be the victors, wants us to be powerful, wants us to be strong.
In fact, Satan will appeal to your fallen sense of masculinity in order to keep you in his grip: “You got this,” he whispers into the undiscerning ear. “You’re strong enough to handle this yourself.” And yet the truth is precisely the opposite; as quoted in one of my all-time favorite spiritual books, Victory In The Unseen Warfare: “If you rely on yourself in the spiritual warfare, you will not be able to resist even the smallest attack of the enemy.”
Such words wound our ego, our pride, our fallen manhood. We cringe at the notion of not being self-reliant; after all, men conquer! Men are strong! Men handle their problems! And we do conquer; we are strong; we do handle our problems – but we do so by submitting ourselves to God to let Him take care of such things with ease, rather than getting lost in the world’s vision of self-esteem.
And yet we are not utterly powerless, as I mentioned above. We have the power to cooperate with God by making wise choices about our behavior. We have the power to feel a temptation and – rather than immediately leap into it – fall to our knees and pray. We can choose to grab our prayer ropes, do our prostrations, say our Jesus Prayers. And these behaviors, so opposite to what the world tells us makes us “strong,” in fact brings us the greatest strength of all: God’s grace and power, against which temptation is nothing.
We can also choose to make intelligent choices that will minimize the odds of falling into sin. By way of personal example, I’ll share with you what I did when I was courting the woman to whom I’m now married. The first time she came to my apartment – which was in broad daylight, so as to be less tempting than a nighttime hangout – I asked my housemate to be present as a chaperone. I, a young adult in his early thirties, asked another man to help supervise me; this sort of thing is crushing to the pride that leads us astray, and helped set the right tone for our relationship.
Even before then, in our very first conversation about dating, I told her explicitly that I was not going to sleep with her unless and until we ended up husband and wife. I took the initiative, as a man should do, to set the frame and boundaries of the relationship. Believe it or not, she and I did not even hold hands until three months later – when we “officially” became boyfriend and girlfriend. I cannot tell you how grateful I am for having made these kinds of choices, nor for my gratitude that she followed my lead. I am convinced that if we’d slept together before our wedding night, it would have destroyed our relationship and the foundation of what we built.
If you currently have a girlfriend, or a woman you’re dating, I cannot recommend enough that you structure your hangouts or dates in such a way that the possibility of fornication is cut off from as many angles as possible. This is the kind of leader Christ wants you to be, and it’s the kind of leader to whom a Christian woman will want to submit.
Once you demonstrate, with behavior like this, that submitting to your leadership leads to mutual edification – and not to your selfishly using her as a secular man would attempt to do – she can relax into her obedient role and know that her body and soul are in competent, trustworthy hands. None of this can happen if you, yourself, are still subject to being overthrown by lust…and if you are, exercising this kind of caution and self-restraint will greatly help to free you from those shackles. Every time you overcome a sinful impulse, God will reward you with grace and dispassion.
So what is the key to proper Christian conduct? Obedience to God, to the best of your ability, coupled with sincere repentance if and when you fall short. But there’s more to obedience than what the average Westerner might imagine.
Obedience
To be a man is to believe in order, both within and without. Order in our internal worlds, submitting what is low to what is high within us. Order in our external worlds, submitting ourselves to the authority of God above. Orthodox Christians submit on many levels: to God, to the Church, to our Priest, and to each other. By ordering our external behavior in such a way, it cultivates humility – the ultimate weapon of spiritual warfare – and brings our fractured souls into alignment.
Without Christ and His Church, our souls are fragmented. We become compartmentalized, fractured beings with our inner powers in a state of disharmony. This is, as mentioned above, exacerbated at every opportunity by those who seek power and control over us. But by cultivating the virtue of obedience, we bring our dissonant selves into harmony and become whole, complete human beings. But in our world nothing is more difficult – and nothing is more anathema to the secular conception of masculinity – than the notion and practice of obedience.
Most Christian men understand the idea of obedience to God. Depending on what group you belong to, that can manifest itself in different ways; many Protestant men will take the idea to mean reading the Scriptures and doing their best to follow its commands and exhortations. That is certainly a step in the right direction, and will bring much more grace than simply trying to “go your own way” as many modern men do. Roman Catholic men do their best to obey not just the Scriptures, but also their Pope (at least, when they agree with him).
Orthodox Christians do our best to obey the Scriptures, our spiritual fathers or mothers, our Confessors, our bishops, and – most importantly – the Holy Spirit as He has spoken through the Church’s Ecumenical Councils throughout time. Ideally, there is no dissonance between any of these sources; a good spiritual elder will do his or her best to only teach what is found in the Scriptures and the Church.
As someone who began his life as an atheist – and then moved through Protestantism on his way to the Holy Orthodox Church – I can tell you that one of the most difficult parts of the journey was to swallow my pride enough to obey my priests and the dogmatic declarations of the Church. Infected by the spirit of American democracy, I brought my Western baggage into the beginning of my Christian walk: my voice counted as much as anyone else’s, my interpretation of Scripture was just as valid as a Saint’s, my life would be run my way and where convenient, I would allow Christ to take the lead. But a wise man once said that “There is a wall between us and God, and that wall is called ‘I.’” And the more I have learned to humble myself and obey, the more correct I realize he was.
Our deepest disease is pride. It is the mother of all sins, as humility is the mother of all virtues. And nothing breaks down the prideful self-willing, so expected and encouraged in the Western world today, as obedience. It is difficult, it will irritate you, and in the end it will prove to be one of the greatest mirrors for your own remaining sin as you attempt to grow in obedience and find such an ocean of resistance within. And plus – if you wish to be obeyed as a Christian leader, you must first learn to follow Christ. No man can lead until he first learns to follow.
Christianity is a paradox in many ways, at least as concerns our behavior in this world. But the founder of our Faith, Jesus Christ Himself, already told us this over 2,000 years ago: “The last shall be first, and the first last” (Matthew 20:16). When we puff ourselves up to an unwarranted position of superiority, we end up harming our souls in the long run. Thus I encourage you to study what it meant to be a Christian for the first 15 centuries of the faith; read the Apostolic Fathers (the direct disciples of the Apostles) and then their students, and their students, and their students after them.
If what you find disagrees with your own conception of Christianity, have the wisdom and humility to recognize the likelihood that those men who knew the Apostles personally understood Christianity better than what you learned from Pastor Jim’s Bible Church. If you submit to the Christian life handed down throughout the millennia, and obey the canons and dictates written down by the world’s most inspired and illuminated men, you will find healing in your soul that you never imagined possible.
When we humble ourselves enough to follow the teachings of Christ over time, adapting our appearance and conduct to the path He laid out rather than adapting Christianity to our own preferences, that is when we enter the Kingdom of God: not just in the afterlife, but in the here-and-now as well.
May God bless, guide, and save you.
In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Michael Witcoff is a Jewish convert to Orthodox Christianity. He is the best-selling author of On The Masons And Their Lies and runs the “Brother Augustine” ministry on YouTube and Telegram. You can click here to follow him on Gab.