Map o’ Visitors
ClustrMaps Visitor Count Started: 02/08/2009
Creative Commons License  This work by Discerning The World is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.5 South Africa License
No portion of this site is to be copied or used UNLESS kept in its original format - the way it appears. You are requested to put a LIVE link on the article you use back to our website and the original page the article comes from. Please note that articles on Discerning the World can be updated.
Anything that falls outside of the above mentioned Fair Use Copyright, please contact us for permission. Thank you.
|

Thank you to Jewel Grewe and Discernment Research Group for allowing me to publish their articles! :)
Introduction
Encountering the Dead
Unbelievable as it sounds, one of the latest New (old) Age temptations to confront both the world and the church is to encourage spiritual and religious seekers to talk with the dead. In this maneuver we can see the adversary’s ploy is to further open the door to a seducing spirit world (1Timothy 4:1). Demonic spirits that impersonate deceased loved ones will attempt to convey “new understandings” and “new revelations” that will contribute to a “new worldview.” This will ultimately lead to a deceptively contrived world peace. This deceptive “peace” plan was warned about in the Bible (Daniel 8:25, Matthew 24:3-5, 1 Thessalonians 5:3, 1 Tim 4:1, 1 John 4:1, Revelation 13, etc.).
 'Sanctum' stars Alice Parkinson, left, and Ioan Gruffudd as cave explorers who get caught in a flood. / Universal Pictures
Thanks to Hollywood, mercy killing is going mainstream
By Grace Vuoto
Hollywood is attempting to lower our standards once again. In the blockbuster movie Sanctum, killing in order to prevent further pain of those who are badly wounded is portrayed as courageous and heroic. Welcome to our brave new world where men can act as gods.
In Western culture, killing of any kind, including alleviating the pain of those who are grievously ill, has generally been viewed as an abomination. While Hollywood movies regularly depict violent acts, they rarely venture into the topic of euthanasia. Hence, killing is not often presented as an “act of kindness.” When it is, the gravity and controversy of the deed is clearly conveyed. For example, in Million Dollar Baby (2004), — produced, directed and starring Clint Eastwood — a gritty woman seeks to become a successful boxer. Her trainer, played by Mr. Eastwood, guides her toward fulfilling her dream. She is then gravely injured by a blow to the head and is a quadriplegic. In a final hospital scene, following the girl’s request to end her life, the trainer kills her as an “act of love.”
→ PLEASE CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING: Euthanasia – Mercy Killing goes Mainstream in Hollywood THEN PLACE A COMMENT ←
|
|