| We are pleased to announce an exciting
addition to the Christian Civic League of Maine team. Fritz
Spencer, a native of Aroostook County, is writing for the RECORD.
He has actually been writing for us for over a year now, but we have
not been using his byline in the RECORD. Some readers have
suggested that they would like to know who is writing what they are
reading. So, from now on we will be indicating who is writing the
stories. You can welcome Fritz aboard by emailing
fritz@cclmaine.org
Thanks for reading! – Mike Heath, executive director
THE
FIRST MARRIAGE
“From Eden a river flowed out to water the
garden, then it divided into four rivers. The first one is the
Pishon River that flows through the land of Havilah, where pure
gold, rare perfumes, and precious stones are found. The second is
the Gihon River that winds through Ethiopia. The Tigris River that
flows east of Assyria is the third, and the fourth is the Euphrates
River.
The LORD God put the man in the Garden of
Eden to take care of it and to look after it. But the LORD told him,
‘You may eat fruit from any tree in the garden, except the one that
has the power to let you know the difference between right and
wrong. If you eat any fruit from that tree, you will die before the
day is over!’
The LORD God said, ‘It isn't good for the
man to live alone. I need to make a suitable partner for him.’ So
the LORD took some soil and made animals and birds. He brought them
to the man to see what names he would give each of them. Then the
man named the tame animals and the birds and the wild animals.
That's how they got their names. None of these was the right kind
of partner for the man.
So the LORD God made him fall into a deep
sleep, and he took out one of the man's ribs. Then after closing the
man's side, the LORD made a woman out of the rib. The LORD God
brought her to the man, and the man exclaimed, ‘Here is someone
like me! She is part of my body, my own flesh and bones. She came
from me, a man. So I will name her Woman!’
That's why a man will leave his own father
and mother. He marries a woman, and the two of them become like one
person. Although the man and his wife were both naked, they were
not ashamed.”
(Genesis 2:10-15)
THEODORE
ROOSEVELT ON THE IMPORTANCE OF FAMILY VALUES
“The first essential for a man’s being a
good citizen is his possession of the home virtues…based on
recognition of the great underlying laws of religion and
morality…which if broken mean the dissolution of civilization.”
“It is a contradiction in terms to speak of
a good government if the good government does not rest upon
cleanliness and decency in the home, respect of husband and wife for
one another, tenderness of the man for those dependent upon him,
performance of duty by woman and by man, and the proper education of
the children who are to make the next generation.”
“Sins against pure and healthy family life
are those which of all others are sure in the end to be visited most
heavily upon the nation in which they take place.”
COLUMNIST
CLAIMS FEMINISTS HAVE UNLEASHED ‘RAUNCH CULTURE’
A recent column by Rich Lowry claims that
feminism has been one of the principal forces which have “unleashed
raunch culture” on our society. Lowry says that feminists have
contributed to the vulgarization of our society by insisting that
women act like men, thus turning women into mere objects – which is
nearly the point the Christian Civic League has been trying to make
all along.
The current push for gay rights and
same-sex marriage would have been unthinkable in early times, when
the sanctity of the home was honored and respected. “Gay rights” and
“gay marriage” can only be understood in the context of an
ever-worsening climate of sexual permissiveness, which includes a
toleration of pornography which would have been unthinkable a
generation ago.
If homosexual practices are tolerated, or
worse yet, put on a par with marriage, radicals will seek the
approval of society for even worse forms of sexual deviance. Many on
the left are now advocating that marriage be replaced by legal
unions between three or more people, in arrangements called
“polyamory” or “polyfidelity.” At a recent speech by Mike Heath at
Bowdoin College, one student stood up and identified himself as a
“polyamourous socialist.”
If one unwritten, universal law – that is
the natural law which prohibits sodomy – can be replaced on the
basis of an appeal to “rights” and “equality” why not all other
natural laws pertaining to sexual morality? The only possible
outcome from the overthrow of all laws pertaining to sexual
morality, is the death of the institution of the family. by
Fritz Spencer
A BRILLIANT PREACHER FROM MAINE HEADS
FOR FLORIDA -- THANKS TO THE GAY RIGHTS MOVEMENT
The Bangor Daily News is reporting that
Kevin Holsapple of St. John’s Episcopal Church in Bangor will soon
be leaving Maine for Florida thanks to the sharp divisions the gay
rights movement has caused the Episcopalians. The Rev. Holsapple, a
native of Dexter who graduated from the University of Maine, has
received wide attention as a brilliant preacher, and a man of
penetrating insight. But apparently his thinking on the issue of
gay rights was a little too clear for the Episcopal diocese in
Maine. Holsapple took a public stand against the ordination of Rev.
Vicki Gene Robinson, the first openly homosexual Episcopal bishop, a
stand which put him at odds with the Episcopalian Bishop of Maine,
Chilton Knudsen.
Holsapple also takes a clear stand on the
problem of sin in general. In a brilliant sermon preached on Good
Friday of this year, Holsapple commented that preachers who talk
about sin – Evangelicals in particular – have been laughed out of
the Christian church, and all that remains is a watered-down version
of the doctrine of sin. He went on to describe those who are
“beaming with pride” when they should be “burning with shame,” all
because of a false humility which says “We are only human.”
Holsapple condemned this sort of humility as a “toxic mixture of
sloth and pride.”
Although Holsapple’s sermon was not
directed specifically towards homosexuality, its relevance to the
current debate over gay rights is unmistakable. Missing from the
debate over gay rights is any discussion of the concept of sin.
Those in the gay rights movement are different from heterosexuals in
that they seem positively proud of their sexual orientation, which
in fact might more properly be called sexual disorientation. In any
case, sexuality is nothing to wear on one’s sleeve as a source of
pride. by Fritz Spencer
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