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CGR MONDAY 062623 Part Two

Chosen Generation / Pastor Greg Young
The Truth Network Radio
June 26, 2023 8:59 am

CGR MONDAY 062623 Part Two

Chosen Generation / Pastor Greg Young

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My passion is the fight for freedom. My father fought for a World War II defending our country. Today, we are no longer fighting with guns. Instead, we are fighting an ideological battle for control of our country by contributing to causes that support your constitutional rights.

I am Patriot Mobile. That was a shooting gallery up there. I could hear the tremble in his voice. She suffered a very severe being. The video is pretty graphic.

Justice for us seems almost impossible. It's not fun to watch somebody die, and they knew she was in mortal peril. They have not asked the hard questions. Why was the Capitol intentionally unsecure that day? The FBI had information about security concerns before January 6th. They're out for blood, and they're getting it. They appear to be winning. Were the actions of the Capitol Police out of line? Were there violations in use of force?

Now I describe it as an inside job. I'm ready to do whatever God calls me. There's an old Chinese saying my ancestors learned before the Communist Party took over our country. The family is the essential unit of human society, and that you must have honor and defend your family. But it's not always easy to do.

When the regime gives the order, you have to kill. My heart was pounding. I felt my body bouncing and twisting on the floor. They put numbers on our shoulders, then separated us into rows of even and odd numbers.

I was number nine. My brother, he's still in prison, and my sister, she was sent to a labor camp without a trial. But there's one piece of evidence they haven't been able to destroy yet.

I left everything behind. If I can't expose what they did to us, then all of our suffering would be for nothing. Welcome to Chosen Generation with your host, Pastor Greg Young. But you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people that you should shoe forth the praises of him who has called you out of darkness into his marvelous light, which in time past were not a people, but are now the people of God, which had not obtained mercy, but now have obtained mercy.

And now, Chosen Generation, where no topic is off limits, and everything is filtered through biblical glasses. And now, here's your host, Pastor Greg. I mean, I'm a doctor on TV. And there we go. Yeah, we're all doctors on TV.

Why not? Hey, welcome aboard, folks. I'm your host, Pastor Greg. Thanks so much for being here. I know you have a choice of where you can listen each and every day.

And I thank you for keeping it tuned here to Chosen Generation Radio. Okay, so I'm figuring this tie thing out. I mean, I've been doing these ties for a very long time, 40 years. My God, 40 years. You know, David, when you get to, hang on, let me get the right tagline down here just a second.

There we go. But man, you know, I and, you know, not not to give away, you know, your wisdom or anything, but when you get to be, you know, in your 60s, right, and you start having memories, and you start thinking about stuff, you you go, Oh, yeah, that and then you think, and that was and then you're like, Oh, my God, that was 50 years ago. Yeah.

And, and, and you can literally like, I mean, 50 years ago, you know, when you're in your 60s, you actually did remember stuff, right? Unfortunately, yes, I, you know, I mean, I mean, as we straddle eras in American history that are, you know, when I grew up, like you in the 60s, yeah, no computers, there were no cell phones, you drove a car, you were completely, you know, from the moment you left your house to where you arrived, you were in communicado. You had to worry when you went on these great trips across America, and you hit one of these desolate roads. No, your car breaks down, you're, you pray somebody comes.

Yeah, yeah. And then he would have to go get somebody at the next town to come back is there was no calling in. America was very different.

But the image of America that you have now being projected in our schools and to our kids, it is ridiculous. I mean, I know, but now now but the other part was is that if you broke down and somebody came along, they would help you. They knew they would do so they would stop. They would pull over.

Yeah, they would, you know, they they would they would you could they you could count they would take you to get gas and bring you back to your car. And you didn't have to worry about, you know, getting into their vehicle. Yeah, um, you know, and and and and and on, you know, and on the world stage, you know, we clearly understood who the bad guys were and who the good guys were. Yeah, there were lots of values in society and community was one of them.

The sense of obligation to fellow citizen citizen was another there were probably a lot fewer charity or there was certainly a lot less government charity. And yet everybody had places to go and be supported because communities were very strong. So when we played as kids, we were under the eye of all our neighbors. And there was only so much that was going to go wrong. So parents would feel more comfortable letting their kids play in the playground where they wouldn't talk to them or see them for 30 for an hour, two hours, three hours because they knew their other parents watching as well.

And it's just a very different environment now. Oh, we would go out. I mean, I remember, you know, on our block going out and and literally playing all day long, you know, playing ball, whatever, but we were out playing all day long. I mean, I remember, you know, with with a couple of my neighbors, you know, we've even talked about, you know, I don't even know why we have fences, we had to just take them down, you know, I mean, you know, everybody on the block knew everybody on the block. And yes, that we had a we had a end of the block that was kind of a rougher end and then then then you know, then and then the other end or whatever, but even still, for the most part, you knew the people around the area. And it wasn't it was just more about, you know, these were going to be kids that were going to be, you know, looking for a fight or whatever that was that was really more than anything else. But yeah, it was, there was those kids who were looking for a fight were the same kids you were living with all the time.

So somehow you have to figure it out either, you know, so Yeah, well, yeah, they were and you played ball against them and then what have you and then sometimes you got in fights and sometimes you just played ball and you know, and if you beat them enough, then that was sort of like winning in a fight, you know, it's just, but I remember we were out all day too. And I kept coming home late for dinner. So my mom bought me a watch.

So I figured out a little tab out the watch stops. And I come home and I say, Well, you know, my watch, it's just, you know, so she taught me how to read the sun. That was that was a more dependable device. That's what it was like.

Yeah, yeah. Well, and and and so we, you know, when you think about, you know, those those kinds of just in inherent, they weren't really inherent, they were inherited, because they were passed on, but just a sense of those those kinds of values. And now, because of the fact that we have, you know, this new concept, and this started conversation, folks started with the idea of, you know, of history, right, and and rewriting and changing the way that that things are remembered, and how history is remembered. That's right. And, and that's playing a huge role when it comes to what's going on with our, you know, foreign policy as an example, I mean, you know, suddenly, America, within America, there's a great deal.

And we'll talk with about the source agenda with the author of that book coming up next hour. But that, you know, those kinds of things are, are what are internally decaying our country. Yeah, exactly. I mean, look, in the 60s, obviously, there was still a bit of racism out there and so forth. But growing up in the 60s, and I grew up in Baltimore, which was not, you know, the New England world, not the south, but it was it was it wasn't it was a blue collar town. And yeah, you'd still have some leftover racism. But what you did have was a larger sense also of progress and moving ahead on the issue of racism.

People were genuinely working at it, you felt it. So when I talked to my niece, recently, she would ask me how, you know, how you guys living in the 60s, it must have been so horrible. Everybody was bullied. There was racism everywhere, the you know, etc, etc. I mean, you create this image of a dystopian society that America was at that point. And I don't realize that there was a lot of upheaval. I mean, it was the Vietnam War, etc. There was a lot of upheaval. And a lot of it went in wrong directions, I think the left with their where they went after the Vietnam, but there was a lot of sense of optimism and American purpose. And extending the American dream, whether you were in foreign policy, trying to fight for freedom or domestically trying to bring civil rights, there was a real feeling of freedom. And now that whole era is written off as just a fake.

There was no real progress. Americans are inherently right. It's it's our very system of freedom that is racism. So the very idea of America instead of extending, it needs to be destroyed. That the so they look back on the 60s. And they think it's some sort of Dark Ages. Well, let's, you know, let's, let's look at this.

So in 1968, the population of America, it says was 195 million. Okay. Let me see here.

Because one of the big things that's going around again now. Okay, so so. So let's get a calculator out here.

I want folks, I just want to put put this and I'm glad I mean, David, you and I talked about a lot of different things, and you know, including the Israel thing, but we, we talk a lot about cultural issues from a academic perspective, but but let's, so there were 50,000 people at Woodstock represented by 195 million. Is that is that how I would do that? Right? Yeah, to get to get to get a percentage. So it's telling me 2.564. That doesn't even sound right. It would have to be 50,000 divided by 195 million.

Right? Let's see now knock off four zeros. That's five over 195.

19,500. So if I'm doing it right, so it's one in five overnight. Yeah, it's one and four. So maybe it is 2%. Maybe it is 2%. It's 2% or 0.002. Yeah, 0.02. Yeah, that would be about right, I think. Okay.

All right. So yeah, so so to 2%, roughly, of the population is identified as having attended Woodstock. According according to those to those calculations, let me let me let me run that number one more time. So 50,000. It's about five and 20,000. So so it's one and 4000. Yeah, divided by 195.

And actually, the actual number is 195 743 427. So yeah, 2.2 point 5 5% point 0255 is is is the number we're talking about. Now, if you if you watch what they're presenting, though, they're presenting it as though Woodstock was like, you know, the whole epicenter everybody now now Woodstock was historic Woodstock was 50,000 was that was that was huge.

There's no question it was a gigantic concert. But but bear in mind that it is just over two and a half percent of the total point actually point to it's it's less than a percent. It's a quarter of a percent.

Okay. Yeah, it's one in 4000. It's a quarter of a percent, which means what?

How many people want you to take a whole college before a state college at the time of 4000 people 5000 people, and one maybe two people went? Yeah, it's so so the the point of that is 195 743 times. Yeah, because Yeah, there's no way it's 2% because, because 10% would be 19 million.

Right, exactly. So basically, the way I did it just in my head, yeah, 50,000 and 195 million is 200 million, roughly. So, um, so 200, just knock off four zeros, and you get five over 4000.

Yeah, I'm not sure exactly why this is. I mean, five out of out of two 200,000. But I mean, five over 20,000, which is one out of 4000. Right.

But I mean, it doesn't matter what it is, is it's a big event, because America is a big country. But we're talking about still a very small percentage that cannot claim to be the consensus. Exactly. But that's what the left does.

They manufacture false consensus and create an image of unity in the country around their ideology when we're talking about minuscule percentages that you could actually count on being part of that. Well, and yeah, exactly. And, and, and, you know, yeah, so yeah, so it's it. I'm sorry, I'm not I'm, I'm trying to figure out why this calculator gave me such a, such a goofy number. Instead, it Well, instead of giving me all the zeros in front of it, that's all it should have. It should have given me all the zeros in front. And it didn't, it did have an E on the end. And maybe I'm just misreading what that means.

But at any rate, the percentage numbers are very small. But the but the the point of it is, is that as you said, they have turned that into as as if, you know, that's what everybody thought, or that's how everybody believed or or whatever, as far as, you know, that everybody was dropping acid and everybody was doing dope and everybody was, you know, getting into I forget the guy's name, but the the whole spiritual thing now, in the same way, there was a Jesus revolution, which was also very powerful. And and a lot of those young people that were involved in Woodstock, you know, found their way to Costa Mesa and and down, you know, to the cove and, and and we're looking for a spiritual answers, spiritual awakening, and there was an awakening in general. But but there but the tie into that was that at that time, America was still predominantly a Christian nation. Absolutely. And so what you had then was is you had churches that were then bringing in new converts and a new generation was finding that that foundation finding that ground.

Absolutely. I mean, I remember in my house, because I didn't not I didn't grow up in a Jewish neighborhood. I was I was in fact, the only Jew in my high school. There was a very big phenomenon in the early 70s of of born again, Christianity. And you had organizations, young Christian organizations, and so forth, that arose in that period, there was definitely a sense that of all this uprising and upheaval and drugs was looking for some meaning in life. And you had those guys who went off to India and got high and believed in Hare Krishna. But more than anything, you had Americans begin to realize, wait a second, we don't have to reinvent the wheel here.

We have faith. And you saw a lot return. So by the 70s, by the end of the 70s, the Christian movement was already very powerful. Yeah, and this literally, you know, but it parallels a number of things. Like, for example, we think the Vietnam War and how America had this trauma from Vietnam. It's true. But five years after the fall of the of Saigon, Ronald Reagan was elected. Americans didn't doubt themselves that much. Right.

Right. Well, and, and bear in mind, you know, and I've said this, too, for folks to understand, contextually, and historically, Vietnam was in fact, a battle against the advancement of communism, just as North Korea had been, okay. And the problem was, and, and, and this is where, you know, and even those on the right are, are sadly mistaken when they do this, is using the term McCarthy ism, as an end. And what they don't understand is, is that Joe McCarthy was right, we were being infiltrated.

And in fact, there's a video by Curtis Bowers that I would strongly recommend folks to get agenda and agenda two. And, and this was spurned because Curtis Bowers was sent a letter by one of his constituents, telling him about a meeting that was taking place of communists. And he went to that meeting and listen to them talk about an agenda, which which came directly out of the 45 goals of the communists. That was that was being instituted right after World War Two, that scars gun scars. The naked comm the author of the naked communist, I don't know anyway, but but that that he outlines, and that were read into the congressional record in the early 1960s. The reason I tie that in folks for folks to understand is, is so Vietnam was a battle about that there were two ways you got exemptions, I'm going to keep hammering this home until somebody picks it up runs with it.

Two ways religious or academic. That's how you got exempted from going to Vietnam. patriots went to Vietnam.

These young men, yes, there was a draft, but there were young men going over there that were saying, Hey, I am here to fight for freedom to fight for my country, because they were proud to be Americans. Most Americans supported the Vietnam War at the beginning. The turning against the Vietnam War was not and this is what I think the left gets wrong.

They also get it wrong. I think about Iraq in this in this way. They look at it, the left looks at it as a sign of American corruption and evil, that we were evil, the evil force, and it was a moral failure of America. Most Americans at the time looked at it eventually as a waste of American effort that we put in 10 years and 60 some thousand of our best and in terms of dead, and we weren't getting any return on the investment was just a morass. So Americans begin to think look, if you're not willing to win, go home.

So there was a sense that we're wasting our kids, our the lives of our kids. And and to that end, okay, Pachepo tells us, yes, what the car and this is why I bring the McCarthy and the communism in McCarthy identified in the 50s. What what was written in the naked communists, that was the basis for him going after all of these communists that had infiltrated all the different institutions in our country. And Pachepo says in in disinformation, and he was one of the chief disinformation officers of the Soviet Union at that time, that they knew that they had to turn the narrative on Vietnam because they wanted that part of Southeast Asia to be communist. And the only way they could do that was as if they divided the populace in the United States, because if the United States got behind that war, in the same way they'd gotten behind World War Two, and think about this in context, if Russia and Pachepo at that Pachepo being a part of them at that time, but if the Russian hierarchy viewed Vietnam as as important as World War Two, just stop and think about that statement for a minute.

That means they they knew that it was going to be significant that they have some kind of a hold in Vietnam, and they do today, because they were able to use their infiltrators and deceivers in our media in order to change the narrative. I think I think this is a critical point that you're making because the convergence of Vietnam and the disinformation war and the internal fissure in America and the issue of McCarthyism, Americans came out of the war still very largely under the idea that it wasn't a moral failure of the United States. It was a waste.

It was a practical failure. We didn't doubt ourselves. We doubted the war. I would argue that even with Iraq, that was to some extent still true, that we we were angry at the people who got us into the war.

And I do share some blame for that. But they were angry at the people who got us into the war, but they didn't doubt America as a country. We didn't say, oh, well, I guess we're just as evil as the Russians were under communism.

The left constantly makes that because at the end of the day, the left is an agent of what this disinformation campaign was trying to get. And they succeeded in Vietnam, not in convincing most Americans, but establishing a core that then haunted us ever since and now has come back to really, really on this in a big way. And I would argue that that was the takeover of academia and the seminaries, the religious institutions and the academic institutions which they were able to accomplish in Vietnam. So while like you said, yeah, we sort of lost the war.

It was really more of a draw, but it was it was narrated as a loss. We didn't feel that we morally lost. We still loved our country. But they but they had put in place the agents necessary to change that sentiment precisely. And that's exactly what they have been doing for the last 50 years. And and your kids, our kids, my kids, if you're not fine, if you didn't fight back against this, if you didn't adjust it, if you didn't confront it, if you didn't say something about it, your kids have been raised. And even if they're in their 30s and 40s, now, if they're in their 40s, right now, there is an element of their persona of their of their psyche of their thought process that says America's bad. Final thoughts.

And then we got to jump. Well, you see the whitewashing of communism in America. Karen Bass was in Cuba being trained as an agent, and she is now a major figure in California politics, etc. You go to the State Department, people have now reached that start some major figures in our government put up pictures of Alger Hiss in their office. Alger Hiss was a communist agent. How would they tolerate Nazis being put like that? Or people who were trained by Nazis being senators or mayors or congressmen? Communism is evil. It's got a foothold. It there is still a very strong need intellectually to purge our country of I'm not saying people should be rounded up. I'm saying intellectually, our kids need to be protected from this and from their destructive agenda that they're carrying to try to unravel our society.

Well, and there still is on the books, by the way, a law against propagating communism in the United States that was put into place in the 1950s, but has never actually been prosecuted upon. And, and, you know, we're, we're in a we're in a very dangerous spot. We really are. David, thanks so much for being here. We'll have more of these conversations and my friend, you'll be back with me next week.

And I look forward to that. Reverend Dean Nelson joins us on the other side. We'll talk how this lays into the culture war and it does and the battle for life Roe v. Wade, the one year anniversary just passed. And we'll talk about that coming up with Reverend Dean Nelson of the human coalition. David, thanks again for being with me today.

I greatly appreciate it. We're going to take our break back right after this brief break. So up next, we have clean slate. When you have different things like cancer and different diseases that are autoimmune related, it can really help with inflammation because you're helping clean the bot and clean slate is a formula that's made from a natural orthosylic acid that basically is put into a formulation that's naturally occurring that uses different processes from polarization to heating, to cooling, to different types of catalysts, which will go in the body and really help communicate to get rid of those things that don't need to be there. People don't understand why there's so many autoimmune disorders, but our environment's toxic. The land, air and water have changed. We've been exposed to nuclear war.

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Negro products do not treat, reduce, cure, or prevent disease. My passion is the fight for freedom. My father fought for a World War II defending our country. Today, we are no longer fighting with guns.

Instead, we are fighting an ideological battle for control of our country by contributing to causes that support your constitutional rights. I am Patriot Mobile. You can support Chosen Generation and make a tax-deductible donation by visiting www.chosengenerationradio.com. And now, back to Chosen Generation with Pastor Greg. And welcome back to Chosen Generation Radio, where no topic is off limits and everything filtered through biblical glasses. I'm your host, Pastor Greg. And my special guest is from the Human Coalition, Reverend Dean Nelson.

Reverend Nelson, welcome. Good to have you. Thanks for being with me today. Always great to be with you, Greg.

Thanks so much. Absolutely, absolutely. Well, we were talking about that this past Friday was the one-year anniversary of the overturning of the Roe v. Wade decision. And so, I guess there was a lot of activity in Washington, D.C. Tell us a little bit about some of the things that were going on there, both, I imagine, both on the pro and the not-so-pro sides of the equation. Yeah, well, first, it was a great occasion where we as pro-lifers were able to celebrate the end of Roe v. Wade. And I think that all of us should be affirmed and encouraged that this day should go down as a day that we should celebrate. In this modern era, when we have seen almost 50 years of abortion on demand with the Supreme Court's faulty decision, we should be celebrating.

And so, here in Washington, D.C., on the Mall in front of the Lincoln Memorial, there were thousands that were gathered celebrating and honoring that. You had great pro-life warriors like Kristin Hawkins, Lila Rose, Alveda King, Marjorie Dannenfelzer, my good friend Arnold Culbreath, and others that were there on the Mall, just encouraging the next generation to continue to stand for the sanctity of life. Additionally, you had a whole host of candidates that came in town for Faith and Freedom's Road to Majority Conference that was a great event packed out, and I think over 300 media outlets that were there gave it a great deal of coverage. And you had most of the candidates speaking at least, you know, a sentence or two on the sanctity of life. So you had many activities that were going on, and I'm grateful that even though Roe has been overturned, the fight continues. And we've got lots of people that are continuing to pray and to strategize as to how we should take that fight to the culture. And I think it's important for us to, you know, help folks understand, too, that in as much as you saw the left trying to paint it as though it was the end of all abortion and all abortions are going to stop now and, you know, and so on and so on, and of course they needed that because that was their battle cry. That's how they got their people out in the streets and what have you. But I think people on our side need to understand that it really isn't the end of the abortion battle. It simply pushes the battle back down to the state level, and we've already seen the other side working very hard to once again, you know, put things in place in an effort to try to keep it going.

Oh yeah. Make no mistake, and I say this as a student of history, when the Civil War ended and you had the end of slavery, that's when you saw the rise of the Ku Klux Klan. That's when you saw the rise of black codes and all kinds of things. The opposition is not going to take this lying down. And the same thing that we see now in a number of states where they have ballot initiatives, where the pro-abortion forces are marshaling millions of dollars to pour into states like Ohio, where they are trying to overturn or set the precedent in state constitutions to protect it. And they will lie.

They will deceive. They'll make people think that this is not about abortion, that this is about something else. And we have to alert all of our people to be on high alert to engage, because as you stated, this simply turns it over to the people in the states to decide how much they want to restrict abortion. And we've had great examples like Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas that, you know, don't allow abortion on demand anymore at any stage. And we believe that other states need to follow that model.

We want to have a nation that honors and protects life at every stage of development. And there have been, if I'm not mistaken, there was a couple of Supreme Court or at least one where the Supreme Court decided not to take a case. I think that was on the pill, right? They said, we're not going to decide this yet. Do you have any insight or thoughts with regards to, you know, is there significance to that? Should we be concerned about that?

What does that actually mean to us? Yeah, you know, as you know, there are many facets to this and that particular case now, we hope to hear from the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, which generally has a fairly conservative makeup of that court so that we can, in this particular case, really challenge, you know, the Food and Drug Administration for not following their own guidelines. They kind of skipped a number of processes and steps, basically to fast track the pill. The pill, the abortion pill, kills innocent life. And right now, it is being pushed all around the country. We estimate over 70% of abortions now will be through the abortion pill. And in reality, it turns every bathroom, every home into an abortuary.

And we really want to do everything that we can to put a stop to it because, again, our ethic is to protect every life at every stage. Isn't one of the other, you know, big challenges of the movement, the education about just the value of life in general, because everybody says, oh, well, you bring God into it, now you're trying to legislate morality. But isn't it true, though, that morality is being legislated? And that's kind of why we're in the predicament that we're in? You know, you can, I've heard people say that in reality, many laws that are passed, have some level of morality that is being injected into the law.

I mean, we should have good laws that protect people. So I think that, you know, the idea that, you know, well, for some, hey, we shouldn't really interject, you know, God into it. You know, this is a country that was founded on the Judeo-Christian principles, you know, 90% of Americans believe in God or a higher power.

So I don't think that that's a problem. But let's just jump to the science. I mean, 98% of biologists say that life begins at conception.

So it's not just a theological argument. There's a scientific argument that we have to also put forth, you know, in this conversation. And I think that all of us would do well to better prepare ourselves to understand this issue. And I believe that what we're doing at Human Coalition, not just to educate people, but the work that we do to serve women, you know, you've heard me state that 76% of women that we serve who are seeking to get an abortion say, hey, my, I would choose to parent if my circumstances were different. So we're trying to educate people, you know, on the legislative side, but at the same time, we are a service oriented organization that provides help and healing to, you know, tens of thousands of women, you know, every year, and we want to continue to do that to help women make a healthy decision for themselves and their preborn children. And, and go ahead and tell folks how they can how they can reach out to you for assistance, both if they're if they're facing a situation with a pregnancy, and they're not sure what their options really are, where, where you're going to send them resources for that. And also, I know you guys do, you know, post abortion ministry, for women who have made that decision, and then are, are, you know, saying, Oh, my gosh, I, you know, I, what do I do now? I don't agree with that.

I didn't want to do it. Or I, I'm having, you know, major challenges working through that. Yeah, well, we would encourage people to visit us at human coalition.org, where they can hear, get great information on our organization, they can also find some fantastic winsome videos that we've created to help engage, sometimes it can be difficult to engage and to talk about these issues. But Human Coalition has done some fantastic videos over the years that help people winsomely speak about this topic. And we always need, you know, more resources. You know, we we pride ourselves both in having public and private funding to reach these women, which is extremely important. And to your point, Pastor Greg, it is extremely important. And we work with a number of groups around the country, for women that do suffer from, you know, post abortion trauma.

There's some fantastic, you know, resources that are out there. One I know is forgiven and set free. surrendering the secret is another one where women have been helped, they've been healed and delivered, because they have at least begun to get some level of counseling and closure for doing something that is horrific.

I mean, literally taking the life of your own child. And, and again, this goes back to and I know we talked a little bit about, you know, the the the mechanics of, you know, whose morality and so on. But there, there's such an important understanding that's necessary about that value of life. And I, I don't know, I'm, I like Prager U and I like Dennis Prager and so on. But Dennis came out about the whole Pride Month thing. And, and made a quote about there's decent people and not decent people.

And then he lumped the homosexual people into the decent people group. My, my, I there's, for me, there's a there's a huge challenge when we do that. Because now we are deciding, man is deciding subjectively, what's right and what's wrong. And we are saying we're going to make those decisions. And God will take your position under advisement.

But but that's not going to be where we're really going to look for the answer. And when we do that, then our our whole concept of inalienable rights, endowed by a creator, and one of the very first one that jumps has to jump out at us, right is life for this life. And so now if you say that, well, when it comes to decency, we're going to decide that man gets to decide what's decent and what's not, not God, then doesn't that logically lead to man gets to decide what's life and what's not? Yeah, we always are on a slippery slope, when we bow to humanism, which essentially is man is the measure of all things, rather than God being the standard bearer and the measure.

And, you know, I certainly have, you know, watched and affirmed many PragerU videos, but I think that it is important for us to understand that, as you stated, there is a creator, and the creator knows best how the created should function. And he's given us a guidebook as to how we should live. And I believe that that guidebook is the Bible. And I believe the Bible is not just for Christians, I believe that the Bible is for all man kind as to how we should conduct ourselves, as to how we should conduct ourselves, whether they receive it or whether they don't receive it. And so, as a person who is passionate about biblical worldview, I think that we need to level set the standard, help to educate that the foundations of Scripture have made civilizations like the United States successful, and the degree to which we stray from those biblical standards to that degree, we become a nation that is on shaky ground, and we ultimately can't save ourselves.

So thank you for bringing that up. We know that even within the pro-life movement, we have seen Planned Parenthood and other pro-abortion groups align themselves with the Pride LGBTQ movement, particularly with regard to trans. So we understand that there is a united front, I would say, that is against the nature of God and God Himself. And we need to be able to stand on the efficacy of, to me, of Scripture, as well as the standard of science that affirms the sanctity of life, affirms that there is two genders, man and woman. And we will continue to fight for the life of preborn children and truth and standards within our context in our culture. We're going to take a quick break when we come back.

I want to talk about, because, you know, we just kind of connected those two elements together, and I think there is a significant connection between those elements. And about the messaging, again, going back to the school system, the school's messaging is, we've reduced man down. And we've said that young kids are like animals. They're like rabbits. They're like, they don't have any control over their impulses. We're stripping man of his conscious responsibility and his sentient responsibility to be able to make a decision and say yes or no, to decide yes or no. And we're saying that we're all just instinctive, and everything we do is predicated on instinct.

And that concept is the humanistic concept that gives man control over man, rather than turning to who God has said that we are. And I think that's an important conversation for us to just kind of dive into for a few minutes. We're going to take a quick break.

We'll be back to dive into that coming up right after this brief break. Hi, this is Pastor Greg, and you're listening to Chodin Generation Radio. Get more at chodingenerationradio.com.

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Pick up your Clean Slate today. You can support Chosen Generation and make a tax-deductible donation by visiting www.chosengenerationradio.com. And now back to Chosen Generation with Pastor Greg. And welcome back to Chosen Generation Radio where no topic is off limits and everything filtered through biblical massism. My very special guest, Reverend Dean Nelson, humancoalition.org.

Humancoalition.org. And I was presenting the question having to do with the idea that there's no self-control when it comes to sex. It goes to the Kinsey theory, right? That all children are sexual from birth, and therefore you need to just let them have sex as young as possible, I guess. Do you mention something in the break about the Planned Parenthood and folks coming out of that, who are talking about that very agenda that's being perpetrated on our school children by Planned Parenthood and their allies?

Yeah. A good friend, Dr. Laverne Tolbert, who used to be on the board of Planned Parenthood, I believe in the early 80s, she began to see what Planned Parenthood was doing by setting up these school-based clinics to influence children largely without parental notification or parental knowledge. When she saw that, particularly them setting these up in urban school districts, she began to question it and ultimately got off the board and now uses her platform around the country to expose how Planned Parenthood works through the school system to advance their agenda by separating children from their parents and their parents' morality, becoming the sex experts in those children's lives and hoping to influence those children to get abortions. So it is philosophical on the one hit level, but it is also part of their business model to be able to get as many abortions from young children or from young women, particularly as they can, and particularly doing it in the urban school systems where they say, well, these poor black kids and Latino kids, they can't control themselves.

All the best that we can hope for them is to provide them with abortion or with birth control. Well, I'm going to go two directions here. One, I remember the name of the young lady, Gianna Jessen.

Yes, sir, that's exactly right. And I did a series with Gianna, gosh, many, many years ago. I won't say how many because, yeah, but many years ago, we were doing a thing for youth and we did a whole series about that. And one of the things we concluded was is that we've got to change that narrative. You know, if we ended abortion tomorrow, as far as the ability to have an abortion, you couldn't, it's illegal, so on and so on. But now you're still going to have unwed moms, you're going to have unwed women, you're going to have women that are not married.

And we already know the percentage of those that are having children out of wedlock anyway. But you're going to have this number of, they're saying, I'm not ready, I can't handle this, I don't know what to do, whatever. As opposed to, you know, the lead up to that, which involves the morality side. The other thing I thought about was, as you said that, and I'm going to run this out of time, I apologize. But is the Gosnell case. And remember that part of Gosnell's defense was, but I'm doing a service for these women. He, I mean, he, that was part of his defense.

Go ahead, find a minute. Yeah, well, you know, there's this, the scripture that says, you know, you know, a man, you know, as a man thinks in his heart, so is he. I mean, there, people will allow their minds to go so far from God's standard because they are pursuing their own desires.

And that's what we saw with Gosnell. That's what we see with humanism. Ultimately, that man is the measure. We need to interject biblical standards and present them as well as we can through many different cultural standards, through many different venues. And I thank you for giving us the opportunity to highlight the work that we do at Human Coalition every day to winsomely engage with women and to provide them with help rather than forcing them into an abortion.

The vast majority of them say that if they had the choice, they would choose to parent. And we want to help women, empower women, not to push them towards something that they will later reject or regret. Hear, hear, hear, hear.

All right, Reverend Dean Nelson, HumanCoalition.org, HumanCoalition.org. We're going to take a break. We come back. Mark Mix joins me right to work. Coming up right after this brief break. I'm your host, Pastor Greg.
Whisper: medium.en / 2023-06-26 10:34:46 / 2023-06-26 10:55:09 / 20

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