Protestant Imperialists avoid Hebrews 11:1

gal_chippewa_02_full.jpg     Indian wars

Protestant Imperialists avoid Hebrews 11:1 “Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” Why are they afraid to consider that passage seriously? A possible answer: They do not have “faith” because they are not obedient Christians.

What! Imperialistic Protestants do not have faith?

Consider “the evidence of things not seen”. What evidence is not seen?

Jesus was clear. He told us “Love God and your neighbor as yourself.” “the evidence of things not seen” proves Protestant Imperialists do not have true faith. For two and a half centuries, Imperialistic Protestants exterminated tens of millions of comparatively unarmed Indians and stole their land.

Could those so horribly disobedient to “love your neighbor” have been truly Christian?

“the evidence of things not seen” is all around us. We look out our windows and do not see any Indians. We travel tens of thousands of miles in automobiles and airplanes and do not see any of the hundreds of thousands of little Indian towns and villages that once dotted North America.

Clearly, “the evidence of things not seen” proves Protestant Imperialists were actually anti-Christian for two hundred and fifty years of exterminating Indians and stealing their land.

Is there additional “evidence of things not seen”? Yes! Amazingly, we do not see any professional Protestants disavowing two and a half centuries of theologians who ignored or justified killing Indians and stealing their lands.

Many avoid those painful truths by bearing false witness.

Now, science provides more “evidence of things not seen”: In nations settled by Catholics, as many as 95% of the people still have Indian DNA. In areas settled by Imperialistic Protestants, there is hardly any trace of Indian DNA.

We see dimly what God sees clearly. “the evidence of things not seen”, also includes the hundreds of millions of children killed by abortionists and artificial birth control chemicals and devices. Deaths of the unborn, like the Indians’, are “evidence of things unseen”. Most of the 43,000 denominations do as little to protect our most helpless neighbors as their theological ancestors did to keep Indians from being exterminated.

Many of us spend more time analyzing which car to drive for a few years than considering which denomination is most likely to get us into Heaven forever. That, too, is “evidence of things not seen”.

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