WhatFinger

By capitulating to unconstitutionally enforced control that devastates lives economically, socially and spiritually, the Church should ask if it has abandoned the “good fight of faith.”

Trusting government forces a false famine



This worldwide economic collapse was not serendipitous, nor was the unloosing of a “pandemic” on fear-filled populations. Coincidences are not accidental – the nature of the word tells us as much. Co–incidence: two or more events occurring at the same time. Rarely do things happen together by chance. God sees to timelines and Man, well, Man is hell-bent on engineering social wreckage for personal gain. Self-preservation is embedded in Man’s nature, often at the expense of others or, to be truthful, purposefully at the expense of others.

False famine created by an inflated fear of a virus

Fallout from the coronavirus-blamed demolition of the American economy, which affects the rest of the world, is a hardship our country has avoided for generations – famine. But it’s a false famine created by an inflated fear of a virus that has proven to be a fraction as deadly as the seasonal flu. The threatened famine is both physical and spiritual. The tangible side of the famine is the expected breakdown of the food and commodity supply chain in a nation where food is moved from the farm to a processing or distribution center to the marketplace. Interrupt the transport of food from a locked-down grower to a closed food processing plant to a restricted distribution center to a limited access retailer and you have – famine. Shortage engineered by liberal-infested government agencies, media and the billionaire powerbrokers that own and fund them. Against this monolith that has been allowed to grow in what began as a free society there is fragmented defiance. The edifice of “leadership” has been corrupted by decades of apathy; a populace that has been bought-off and appeased by government programs devised to entrench power in the state and federal capitals.

A forced famine of sharing the Word

Acceptance of top-down edicts to “stay (cower) in place” out of a distorted fear of breathing in public has demoralized nations, not just the United States. The forced famine goes far deeper than the foreseeable lack of food on the supermarket shelves. It is a forced famine of sharing the Word. Consider the following before tossing aside the last statement with the obligatory “we have the internet to keep us connected” because the worldwide web is far less beneficial than we’ve been led to believe. Yes, it makes information available far and wide but it does not and can never take the place of personal interaction. Quarantining perfectly healthy individuals unavoidably separates people of faith from the daily, and most valuable of all interactions – that of face-to-face conversations with the faithless, lost or seeking. Listen to the data collected by Doctors Dan Erickson and Artin Massihi, immunologists, (MSN and Youtube removed the video press conference as uncomfortably true) that the lock-down orders have resulted in a dramatic spike of domestic violence, alcoholism, illegal drug usage, suicide and sadly, incest. These tragic incidents result from isolating the rudderless behind closed doors where those with a real message of hope can’t reach out to them except by, what? An internet connection that is most likely tuned into Hollywood generated entertainment that glorifies all the behaviors God abhors?

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Dr. Erickson COVID-19 Briefing



Online church service and Facetime, Skype or other communications will not accomplish what a personal conversation can, eye-to-eye in the same room, business or backyard, for those who most need the Word. Too many church leaders proudly touting their compliance with shelter-at-home orders have lulled believers into accepting the world’s definition of health and safety, which is propelled by fear, plain and simple.

We of faith have succumbed to the fear enveloping the rest of the nation

We of faith have succumbed to the fear enveloping the rest of the nation, setting aside the words of Psalm 91. Thinking our lives can be lost by speaking directly to family members, let alone strangers or those struggling with loss, we hide out. By allowing ourselves to be placed under house arrest, incommunicado and even incognito, faith is not visible to the world except by virtual access, which is inadequate at best. What the Church has done is lock away the Word from its most valuable method of sharing, one-on-one and face-to-face. The internet is as much a barrier as it is an avenue of outreach, for there is nothing that can replace human contact and powerbrokers of the world know that. Sustenance for the body is on the verge of becoming restricted. More importantly, food for the spirit has already been bridled by a false belief that the internet can suffice to reach the lost, and bond believers. Isolation is a forced famine of the Word that was given to nourish mankind, not starve him. By capitulating to unconstitutionally enforced control that devastates lives economically, socially and spiritually, the Church should ask if it has abandoned the “good fight of faith.” 1Timothy 6:12 “Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life, whereunto thou art also called, and hast professed a good profession before many witnesses.” At this juncture, we’re not saving lives, we’re destroying them.

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A. Dru Kristenev——

Former newspaper publisher, A. Dru Kristenev, grew up in the publishing industry working every angle of a paper, from ad composition and sales, to personnel management, copy writing, and overseeing all editorial content. During her tenure as a news professional, Kristenev traveled internationally as a representative of the paper and, on separate occasions, non-profit organizations. Since 2007, Kristenev has authored five fact-filled political suspense novels, the Baron Series, and two non-fiction books, all available on Amazon. Carrying an M.S. degree and having taught at premier northwest universities, she is the trustee of Scribes’ College of Journalism, which mission is to train a new generation of journalists in biblical standards of reporting. More information about the college and how to support it can be obtained by contacting Kristenev at cw.o@earthlink.net.


ChangingWind (changingwind.org) is a solutions-centered Christian ministry.

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