Did 20th Century Theologian GK Chesterton Foresee Rise of Trump in 2016?

Christian Post Report – Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at the debate sponsored by CNN for the 2016 Republican U.S. presidential candidates in Houston, Texas, February 25, 2016.

While few could have predicted the political rise of billionaire businessman-turned-Republican-presidential-candidate Donald Trump, one famed early 20th century theologian may have forecasted the American public’s mindset that made such an unlikely person the current GOP frontrunner. That man is the late British writer and theologian G.K. Chesterton.

In an op-ed for Relevant magazine this week, writer S. Craig Sanders, founder of the Louisville Chesterton Society, identifies uncanny parallels between events in Chesterton’s 1904 novel The Napoleon of Notting Hill and Donald Trump’s campaign for the White House.

In Chesterton’s futuristic fantasy, based in England in the year 1984, democracy is dead. British society has become so jaded with the democratic process that it has resorted to a randomized lottery to choose its leader, a “universal secretary.”

Sanders highlights one of Chesterton’s main characters, Auberon Quin, whom the author describes as someone who “never opens his mouth without saying something so indescribably half-witted …” and has “talked nonsense so much that he has half bewildered his own mind …,” descriptions that readers may find resembling a certain outspoken and bombastic Republican presidential hopeful.

To the surprise of those around him, Quin has been selected to be King of England. Sound somewhat familiar?

Before Quin’s selection as King, Sanders explains that Quin and his friends meet a former president of the country of Nicaragua, of which Sanders writes ” … is no longer a nation, but an idea.” Still, the ex-president displays a “patriotic pride” and he issues a serious warning. Sanders writes, “The president warns that Quin is a ‘dangerous man’ because he takes nothing seriously … ”

Sanders’ observation here is eerily similar to what’s currently unfolding in real life within the Republican party as influential conservatives like former Texas Governor Mitt Romney speak out against a possible Trump presidency, essentially saying the businessman would be dangerous for America.

Romney said on Thursday, “His [Trump’s] domestic policies would lead to recession. His foreign policies would make America and the world less safe. He has neither the temperament nor the judgment to be president. And his personal qualities would mean that America would cease to be a shining city on a hill.”

And for the first-time ever in its history, The Christian Post took a position on a political candidate, speaking out against Trump in a Feb. 29 editorial, writing that the publication felt “compelled by our moral responsibility to our readers to make clear that Donald Trump does not represent the interests of evangelicals and would be a dangeorus leader for our country.”

While Trump continues to win Republican primaries despite his abrasive and often offensive style, Sanders in his op-ed highlights his similarities to Chesterton’s Quin, who garners a “devoted following” due to what the book’s author calls “that instinct which makes all men follow (and worship) anyone who chooses to behave like a king.”

in the 1904 novel, Quin plays what he thinks is the ultmate joke by encouraging England’s boroughs to build walls and fly their own colors, essentially dividing the country into individual territories — eerily reminiscent of Trump’s vow to build a wall along the border with Mexico.

Sanders writes, “Chesterton firmly believed in a fallen human nature. Because of this, he thought society would eventually give up on the difficult task of democracy.” He goes on to write, “Trump constantly belittles his peers, discrediting candidates and critics by comparing them to the very people he promises to help. Trump, like Quin, it seems, only cares about himself.”

The Christian Post contacted Sanders regarding his op-ed but did not receive a response by press time.

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Source : Christian Post

‘God’s Not Dead 2’ Creators Urge Voters to Take a Stand for Christian Values in Presidential Elections

Christian Post Report – “God’s Not Dead 2” will be released in theaters on April 1, 2016.

Encouraging Americans to get out the vote this primary season, the creators of “God’s Not Dead 2” have released a video clip urging the public to take a stand for Christian values and cast their ballots wisely during the presidential elections.

In the Facebook clip titled, “Before you vote watch this video,” fans are given a glimpse into a scene from the film titled Pastor’s Brunch. The caption reads: “These are the kinds of issues that are facing our country! We need strong Christian leadership now more than ever!”

The scene starts off by showing the late Sen. Fred Thompson, who plays a senior pastor in “God’s Not Dead 2.” In the clip he reveals to a group of ministers huddled around a table that they are all being subpoenaed to submit copies of their sermons. The news sparks a back and forth among the leaders, some whom are concerned about the violation of religious freedom in the local government’s demands.

The character Rev. Dave, played by recurring character and co-founder of Pure Flix Entertainment David A.R. White, chimes in at the brunch table and encourages the pastors to push back.

“If we stand by and do nothing the pressure that we feel today is going to mean persecution tomorrow,” he excalims in the clip. “The message of the Gospel has us standing in the way of a lot of things that powerful people want and our resistance to change that message, because it’s not ours to change, has made us a lot of enemies.”

“Whether we admit it or not we’re at war,” White’s character declares, before addressing the spiritual war pastors are up against, which is described in Ephesian 6.

The clip bears a strikingly similarity to the national story about five Houston-area pastors who were subpoenaed by the city of Houston in 2014 to turn over all of their sermons that address homosexuality, gender identity, and the city’s first openly-lesbian Mayor Annise Parker.

The subpoenas were issued to five Houston pastors in response to a lawsuit filed related to the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance. Many Christian groups were opposed to a provision in the ordinance that would allow men who identify as women to use the restrooms of their choice.

Among the many who pushed back against the city’s actions was Texas Sen. Ted Cruz who rallied in defense of the Houston pastors calling the subpoenas a “grotesque abuse of power.”

Source : Christian Post

Manny Pacquiao Delaying Retirement to Box in Olympic Games?

Manny Pacquiao (Photo: USA Today Sports/Jayne Kamin-Oncea)

Christian Post Report – Manny Pacquiao during a press conference at the Beverly Hills Hotel on Beverly Hills, California, on January 19, 2016, to announce the upcoming boxing fight against Timothy Bradley Jr. on April 9 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Even though Manny Pacquiao said he would retire from boxing after his third bout against Timothy Bradley in April, he now says he’s thinking about joining the Philippines’ boxing team at the Olympics.

Wu Ching-Kuo, head of the International Boxing Association, announced that he was trying to get professional boxers to participate in the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games this summer.

After personally inviting Pacquiao, the 37-year-old Filipino pugilist and politician said he would oblige if given the opportunity.

“It would be my honour to represent the country in the Olympics,” he told AFP Wednesday.

Bob Arum, Pacquiao’s longtime promoter, said back in October that the boxer would fight for the last time on April 9 to focus on his senate campaign and the May elections..

“We talked very seriously, and he said, ‘Bob, hopefully, by the middle of May I will have been elected senator in the Philippines, and at that point I cannot engage in boxing because I need to focus on the senate and I have to be in attendance,'” Arum told ESPN last year. “Manny told me this fight on April 9 will be his last fight.”

Pacquiao, however, told AFP he would be willing to change his retirement plans for a chance to participate in the Olympics.

“If I would be asked to represent boxing, why not,” Pacquiao said. “I would do everything for my country.”

Still, it is not clear if Pacquiao will be able to get the opportunity to participate in the Olympic games. The International Boxing Association still has to vote in May for the sport to be added to the Olympic games.

Robert Smith, general secretary of the British Boxing Board of Control, does not believe the plan is fair to amateur boxers who have competed far less than the likes of Pacquiao due to the qualification process.

“I can’t see how it would work to be honest. Are you really going to put in Floyd Mayweather against some little boy who has qualified through the Olympic system in Rio,” Smith told AFP. “There is a gulf in class and ability. It’s farcical to think this could happen in time for Rio. How can you just click your fingers and just sort it out now?”

Wu, however, stands stood by his plan to bring boxing to the Olympics. “It is an IOC policy to have the best athletes in the Games and of the international federations, AIBA is probably the only one without professional athletes in the Olympics,” he said Wednesday.

Source : Christian Post

Andy Stanley Apologizes for Saying People Who Go to Small Churches ‘Are So Stinkin’ Selfish’

Christian Post Report – Andy Stanley, author and pastor, speaking at Catalyst West event at Mariners Church in Irvine, California on Friday, April 17, 2015.

Pastor Andy Stanley issued an apology on social media for a recent sermon in which he said that people who go to a small church “are so stinkin’ selfish.”

The senior pastor of North Point Community Church in Alpharetta, Georgia, one of the largest churches in the U.S., posted on Twitter on Thursday expressing remorse for his remarks last weekend.

“The negative reaction to the clip from last weekend’s message is entirely justified. Heck, even I was offended by what I said! I apologize,” tweeted Stanley.

On the last Sunday of February, Stanley delivered a message to his large congregation arguing that large churches were better for a child’s Christian development than smaller churches.

easter north point(Courtesy of North Point Ministries/Dave Adamson)Over 70,000 people attended an Easter service at one of North Point Ministries’ eight church locations in the Atlanta area on April 19-20, 2014.

“This is one reason why we build big churches. People say ‘why do you have to make them so big?’ Let me tell you why,” reasoned Stanley.

“We want churches to be large enough so that there are enough middle schoolers and high schoolers, that we don’t have one youth group with middle school and high school together. We want there to be so many adults that there will be so many middle school and high school kids that we can have two separate environments.”

Stanley then went on to criticize adults who prefer to go to a congregation that only has a couple hundred members, calling them “selfish.”

“When I hear adults say ‘well I don’t like a big church. I like about 200, I want to be able to know everybody’ I say you are so stinking selfish,” argued Stanley.

“You care nothing about the next generation. All you care about is you and your five friends. You don’t care about your kids, anybody else’s kids.”

Stanley’s comments garnered controversy, with sites like Pulpit & Pen criticizing Stanley’s calls for larger churches as missing other important considerations for joining a church.

“Nevermind if the church is doctrinally sound, nevermind if your kids hear the Gospel preached from the pulpit. They need to go to a large church so ‘they can make friends,’ and ‘go off to college and make friends’,” noted one Pulpit & Pen contributor.

“From his tirade against people who prefer smaller, more intimate congregations, it appears that he believes the primary function of the church is friend-making.”

Stanley’s apology on Twitter has received over 200 retweets and more than 600 likes as of Friday morning.

Ironically, weeks before Stanley argued that smaller churches were bad for Christian youth development, a study was released indicating that smaller churches tend to have more involved membership than large ones.

A study authored by Duke University researcher David Eagle found that the larger the congregation, the less active its membership.

“[There’s] a negative relationship between size and the probability of attendance for Conservative, Mainline, and black Protestants and for Catholics in parishes larger than 500 attenders,” read the abstract.

“The addition of control variables does not change these patterns. These results support the theory that group cohesion lies at the heart of the size-participation relationship in churches.”

Source : Christian Post