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Another view of life under Hitler

2/24/2018

4 Comments

 
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As the product of a family that immigrated to the U.S. from Pomerania in the 1920s, I’ve always been fascinated by Germany and everything related to World War II. I minored in the history of this period in college and personally toured concentration camps in Germany and Austria. What’s more, I consider two memoirs of this era – Corrie ten Boom’s The Hiding Place and Trapped in Hitler’s Hell by Anita Dittman and Jan Markell – absolute masterpieces, easily making my personal Top 25 Favorite Books list.
 
Dorothea Wollin Null’s Surviving ‘Uncle Hitler’ (First Steps Publishing, 2016) doesn’t present these classics with any serious competition. Nevertheless, for a reader with an interest in the era, there’s a lot to like about this slim volume, which focuses on the author’s life as a German child growing up under the murderous tyrant she and her siblings were taught to call “Uncle.” For instance, the book:

  • Opens with an excellent summary of Hitler’s rise to power, penned by the author’s brother
  • Makes the case that average Germans had been blinded and brainwashed by the Nazi’s complete media censorship and superb propaganda machine 
  • Describes some of the hardships German citizens faced over the course of the war, reminding the reader that they, too, were victims of Hitler’s evil
  • Provides insights into the human impact of military decisions – for instance, the 1942 British decision to begin “de-housing” the German people rather than focusing strictly on military and industrial targets
  • Expresses gratitude for America’s post-war assistance via the Marshall Plan and touches on our country’s once-strict immigration policies
  • Includes wonderful family photos and evocative descriptions of, for instance, the sight of stork nests and the scent of newly mown hay in the countryside as her family moved from place to place as refugees
 
Null frequently makes reference to the Lord’s protection, provision and guidance throughout her ordeals, which I appreciated greatly. But I wish she'd gone into more detail about His intervention. It would have been very interesting, too, to learn about how she finally came to Christ as a young woman; she says that’s a story for another time, but a preview would have been welcome. And I do wish she had spelled out the gospel, to make this book potentially useful as a giant gospel tract. 
 
Still, I found much to admire in Surviving ‘Uncle Hitler.’ Kudos to Null for producing an interesting memoir.
 
Disclosure of Material: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher through the BookCrash.com book review program, which requires an honest, though not necessarily positive, review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s CFR Title 16, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”
4 Comments

The law's like an MRI for the soul

2/21/2018

2 Comments

 
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These days, a lot of people seem to think that getting into heaven requires being a good person – being nice to others, avoiding theft, murder, adultery, and greed, and maybe putting a lid on bad language. To this list, religious folk might add tasks like going to church, participating in certain sacraments, confessing their sins, and following any instructions their gurus might have for erasing those sins.
 
In other words, to these people, the price of admission to heaven is following certain laws. Not perfectly, of course; they figure that as long as you do so as well as the next person, you’ll be fine. And what did Jesus mean, in Matthew 5:49, when He said we must be perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect? Ah, he was probably just joking. Either that, or He was misquoted.  
 
The trouble is, this line of thinking gets us nowhere, because its opening premise is wrong. God didn’t give us the law so that we’d obey it. He knew we wouldn’t be able to.
 
So then why did He give us the law?
 
Pastor Ken Keltner explained it well in a February, 2018 sermon delivered to Brookside Baptist Church in Brookfield, Wis. The law is like an MRI, Pastor Ken said, a diagnostic imaging tool that’s capable of exposing diseases like cancer before symptoms even appear. But instead of revealing physical disease, God’s law exposes our sin–the spiritual disease that, left untreated, is inevitably and eternally fatal.
 
This is just what the apostle Paul was implying when he wrote, in Romans 7:7, “I would not have known sin except through the law.”
 
Fortunately, no costly and time-consuming tests are required for this diagnosis. We just need to examine our lives in the light of God's law, summed up perfectly in the Ten Commandments.
 
The first Commandment alone should be enough to make the problem clear: Have you ever worshipped gods other than the God of the Bible? Family or work, for example?Politics or material possessions? Personal popularity or intellectual prowess? Have you in fact spent every waking moment of your life thinking about and loving no one but God?   
 
Feel free to examine your life in light of the other nine Commandments (see Exodus 20). But it’s probably not necessary; this first one’s enough for an accurate diagnosis. Which is that you’re a sinner, just like the rest of us. And if you don’t treat it, you’re headed for eternal death.
 
Sadly, unbelievers are prone to denying the results of this test. They insist that they are not sinners, that the test is inaccurate or the disease nonexistent, that their gods don’t use such archaic standards.  Which is tragic, because unless they allow the law to reveal the disease of sin in their souls, they will never escape their death sentence.
 
But there’s good news for those who are willing to accept the diagnosis: There is a cure for sin, a cure that’s 100% safe, effective, and permanent:  it’s the blood of Jesus Christ, who atoned for the sin of the world upon the cross almost 2000 years ago. 
 
How do we get this cure?
 
Not by denying the disease. Not by trying to cure it ourselves through good works and sacraments. And certainly not by trying to keep the law that was given to us only to make the diagnosis clear.  
 
We get this cure instead by repenting of our sin and trusting in Jesus to have paid its penalty, in full, on the cross. When we do this, He cleanses us completely and clothes us in His righteousness.
 
And that's how we achieve the perfection that Jesus talked about in Matthew 5--the perfection that takes us through the narrow gate to eternal life.  
 
If you haven’t yet done so, consider examining your life in light of God’s law, and then taking the cure. It’s free!
 
If you have already done so, give this diagnostic-imaging analogy some thought. It just might come in handy the next time you’re witnessing to someone who’s trusting in his or her goodness to achieve a heavenly forever after.  
2 Comments

Have a friend who's open to truth?

2/13/2018

1 Comment

 
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​From an excellent piece by veteran Christian-book reviewer Sherry Early, who writes at Semicolonblog.com:

"Heaven Without Her would be a great gift for an unbelieving friend, provided that friend was somewhat open to the gospel. Kitty Foth-Regner herself says that her efforts to share the wonderful news of her new-found faith with friends and associates met mostly with polite, but definite, disinterest, sometimes outright hostility ...
​

"So, use your own judgment and the guidance of the Holy Spirit as to whether or not to give the book away to friends and neighbors, but I would say that having a copy to read yourself and another to give away if so led would be an excellent investment." 

​Here's the entire review. Or, for details, visit this page.  
​

1 Comment

Heading for a new home

2/7/2018

2 Comments

 
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I am amazed to think back on all the time and money I have spent over the years on this earthly home ... and how it continues to crumble around me in spite of continued maintenance. 

In fact, I just started a new (and horrifyingly costly) list of Things That Will Eventually Need To Be Repaired. Even if I live to see these items checked off, new and unfixable problems will certainly arise. 

That's why I was especially delighted to stumble across this little essay from Mrs. Chas. A. Cowman's classic Streams in the Desert. I saved it some time ago -- whether it's been months or years, I haven't a clue, since my memory is one of the things that's crumbling -- but what a great message for anyone striving for 20/20 vision in his or her eternal eyes. 

Ready to move

"For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God, an house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens" (2 Cor.5:1).

"The owner of the tenement which I have occupied for many years has given notice that he will furnish but little or nothing more for repairs. I am advised to be ready to move.

"At first this was not a very welcome notice. The surroundings here are in many respects very pleasant, and were it not for the evidence of decay, I should consider the house good enough. But even a light wind causes it to tremble and totter, and all the braces are not sufficient to make it secure. So I am getting ready to move.

"It is strange how quickly one's interest is transferred to the prospective home. I have been consulting maps of the new country and reading descriptions of its inhabitants. One who visited it has returned, and from him I learn that it is beautiful beyond description; language breaks down in attempting to tell of what he heard while there. He says that, in order to make an investment there, he has suffered the loss of all things that he owned here, and even rejoices in what others would call making a sacrifice. Another, whose love to me has been proven by the greatest possible test, is now there. He has sent me several clusters of the most delicious fruits. After tasting them, all food here seems insipid. 

"Two or three times I have been down by the border of the river that forms the boundary, and have wished myself among the company of those who were singing praises to the King on the other side. Many of my friends have moved there. Before leaving they spoke of my coming later. I have seen the smile upon their faces as they passed out of sight. Often I am asked to make some new investments here, but my answer in every case is, 'I am getting ready to move.'" --Selected 
2 Comments

Put yourself in Satan's shoes

2/2/2018

2 Comments

 
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If you were Satan, and your goal was to hurt the Lord God by keeping His creatures – specifically, those He made in His image – away from Him for all eternity, what would your game plan be?

Even if you don’t believe in a literal devil, think about it just for fun: How would you stick it to the One who chucked you, the most beautiful angel of all, out of heaven just because you’d become a little prideful?

There are some obvious tactics, I think. 

If I were Satan, I’d begin by solidifying my base -- those who have no interest in a God of any sort, or at least the holier-than-thou God of Christianity. 

I’d whisper in the ears of their opinion leaders – primarily the intellectual elite – telling them that science mustn’t allow for the supernatural, that absolute truth (if it exists at all) can’t extend beyond science, and that anyone who disagrees with such truths is a lunatic along the lines of the William Jennings Bryan character in the film Inherit the Wind. 

I’d urge them to get busy and promote these ideas far and wide, in order to stamp out the backwaters of biblical literalism, with all its ignorance and intolerance -- clearly holding back human progress. “Fundamentalist religion is responsible for most of the ills of mankind,” I would assure them. “Just look at the Crusades and the Inquisition.” 

Next, I’d skim off those potential converts who were most prone to temptation by enticing them into overtly rebellious activities that the Bible clearly condemns – encouraging adultery or drunkenness, self-centeredness or greed, to mention just a few examples of the rich minefields of human sin. To prevent them from becoming so sick of themselves that they might repent and turn to God, I’d keep whispering in their ears about what horrible, hopeless perverts they are. “Might as well grab all the gusto you can,” I would hiss, “’cause there’s no way you’ll ever make it to heaven.” (Note the nifty double deception here, in reinforcing the misconception that it’s one's personal goodness that’s the ticket to paradise.)

Then I might go after those who are so wrapped up in this world that they don’t give spiritual things any thought. I’d nudge as many of them as possible into the “nobody can possibly know the truth” camp of hard-line agnosticism, an increasingly popular place to hang one’s intellectual hat these days. I’d encourage them at every turn to squeeze every last moment out of this life, turning away from anything that threatens their pleasure and relentlessly battling anything that might cut their lives short.

Having taken care of all this low-hanging fruit, I would let the rest go to church, as their consciences dictate. But I’d do whatever it takes to get those churches teaching false gospels – watering down the real gospel by saying  nothing about repentance or substitutionary atonement or evangelism, for instance, or better yet explicitly denying these things altogether. I'd get them to de-genderize their hymnals and call God "she" -- or "she or he," should a Big Contributor balk at the use of exclusively female pronouns. And then I’d shower those who preach such lies with material wealth and the adulation of thousands to keep them on message for the long haul.

So far, so good: I’ve wrested a huge chunk of the human population away from my Enemy! 

These tactics alone would probably take me 90% of the way towards accomplishing my objective. It would be enough to make the average demon take a little vacation.

But Satan, of course, is no ordinary demon. He is the Prince of This World, and there are always more targets to attack.  

So maybe you really don't believe in Satan. But you have to admit that it's kind of interesting, the way what we see in our world today just happens to match what an enterprising devil would do. But don't worry, it's probably all just coincidence ...
2 Comments

    Kitty
    Foth-Regner

    I'm a follower of Jesus Christ, a freelance copywriter, a nursing-home volunteer, and the author of books both in-process and published -- including Heaven Without Her. 

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