Here is the comment:
"Mr. Pundt also ridicules the right to post
anonymously. Unlike Mr. Pundt, I am very active in my community with
organizations and church. Mr. Pundt is not. I am not so willing to put my name
out there. Many of us try to keep our little village and town going while
living under the threat of a wind farm. We do not all have the luxury of
speaking from afar as Mr. Pundt does."
But what really caught my eye was the reference to church. I fully support anyone’s right to pick whatever
spiritual venue they think will bring spiritual support and meaning to their
lives. I am happy for this person that
they have found that in their community church of their choice. My next comment is in no way an attack on
this person’s personal spiritual activities or people who attend any church.
I respect that.
But the
church reference does make me ponder one thing.
What did Jesus do when he was faced with challenges and hardship and
rights and wrongs? What if he was here in Cape Vincent seeing his community
ripped apart and destroyed by big moneyed interests and greed. He outright defied the powers and beliefs of
the day and we all know that in the end gave his life for what he believed in.
What did he do
to the money changers in the temple. Make
any parallels you want here that apply.
Matthew 21:12
Matthew 21:12
King James Bible (Cambridge Ed.)
“And Jesus went into the temple of God, and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves”,
“And Jesus went into the temple of God, and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves”,
Now I am not a religious historian, but I am going to take a wild stab here that when Jesus was overturning those seats and tables to cleanse the temple he didn’t do it anonymously.
I am also going to take a wild guess that during Jesus’s life, the actions he took were not taken anonymously either. I am guessing that everybody who encountered him knew exactly who he was and what he stood for especially when he saw the blatant wrong right before his eyes. So what are we missing in this lesson?????
Just some thoughts to ponder the next time all of us go to church and realize we have those same vile money changers now in our town and temple and the wrongs are so blantantly obvious.
What does it take and how bad must it get before we all stand up and stop compromising our essential and basic beliefs. Do we let the industrial wind developers take that away too?
You talk of keeping our little village and town going while living under the threat of a wind farm. Keep it going for what and going where?...to let fear compromise everything you believe in?
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