2009 was bad but 2010 will be worse

I hope everyone had a great holiday season with their family and friends and hope you all will have a joyful new year in Christ.

We have arrived to a new year and a new decade and I know 2009 was bad for many but 2010 will be worse.

Here are seven things to consider in 2010. They are likely to impact us in one way or another.

1. We probably should start in the house of God. How long will God put up with those on TV speaking in his name?  Christians have been putting up with the rats in our Christian TV for quite a long time. It is high time to clean out these vermin nests before God does. For decades I have been calling Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) The Blasphemy Network because I think that name is much more fitting. I have not watched TBN for some years but from what I hear it just gets worse and worse.  Dr. John MacArthur decided to give TBN a look-over when he was recovering from knee surgery. MacArthur is not one to mince words and he did not in this article he named the Unholy Trinity. The article has been re-posted all over the Internet so you may have already read it. If not, I suggest that you and all Christians read it and take heed and stop supporting these “Christian” TV heretics. They are giving a false gospel to millions and hindering the work of the Church in these last day.  Here are a couple of clips from MacArthur’s article.

I’m outraged at the brazen way so many false teachers twist the message of Scripture in Jesus’ name. And I’m frustrated because I’m certain that if these charlatans were not receiving a large proportion of their financial support from sincere believers (and silent acquiescence from Christian leaders who surely know better), they would have no platform for their shenanigans. They would soon lose their core constituency and fade from the scene. Instead, religious quacks are actually multiplying at a frightening pace. One thing I discovered to my immense displeasure is that TBN is by no means the only religious network broadcasting poisonous false doctrine around the clock. The channel lineup I receive includes at least seven other channels whose schedules are filled with false teachers and charlatans. There’s The Church Channel, Daystar, GodTV, World Harvest Television (LeSEA), Total Christian Television, and several others. Some of them feature blocs of family television programing and a few fairly sound teachers who provide moments of escape from the prosperity preachers. But all of them give prominence to enormous amounts of heresy and religious claptrap—enough to make them positively dangerous. And TBN is singularly responsible for kicking that door open so wide.

TBN is by far the leading perpetrator of that lie worldwide. Virtually all the network’s main celebrities tell listeners that God will give them healing, wealth, and other material blessings in return for their money. On program after program people are urged to “plant a seed” by sending “the largest bill you have or the biggest check you can write” with the promise that God will miraculously make them rich in return. That same message dominates all of TBN’s major fundraising drives. It’s known as the “seed faith” plan, so-called by Oral Roberts, who set the pattern for most of the charismatic televangelists who have followed the trail he blazed. Paul Crouch, founder, chairman, and commander-in-chief of TBN, is one of the doctrine’s staunchest defenders.

The only people who actually get rich by this scheme, of course, are the televangelists. Their people who send money get little in return but phony promises—and as a result, many of them turn away from the truth completely.

If the scheme seems reminiscent of Tetzel, that’s because it is precisely the same doctrine. (Tetzel was a medieval monk whose high-pressure selling of indulgences—phony promises of forgiveness—outraged Martin Luther and touched off the Protestant Reformation.)

Like Tetzel, TBN preys on the poor and plies them with false promises. Yet what is happening daily on TBN is many times worse than the abuses that Luther decried because it is more widespread and more flagrant. The medium is more high-tech and the amounts bilked out of viewers’ pockets are astronomically higher. (By most estimates, TBN is worth more than a billion dollars and rakes in $200 million annually. Those are direct contributions to the network, not counting millions more in donations sent directly to TBN broadcasters.) Like Tetzel on steroids, the Crouches and virtually all the key broadcasters on TBN live in garish opulence, while constantly begging their needy viewers for more money. Elderly, poor, and working-class viewers constitute TBN’s primary demographic. And TBN’s fundraisers all know that. The most desperate people—”unemployed,” “even though I’m in between jobs,” “trying to make it; trying to survive,” “broke”—are baited with false promises to give what they do not even have. Jan Crouch addresses viewers as “you little people,” and suggests that they send their grocery money to TBN “to assure God’s blessing.”

That’s not all. Almost no false prophecy, erroneous doctrine, rank superstition, or silly claim is too outlandish to receive airtime on TBN. Jan Crouch tearfully gives a fanciful account of how her pet chicken was miraculously raised from the dead. Benny Hinn trumps that claim with a bizarre prophecy that if TBN viewers will put their dead loved ones’ caskets in front of television set and touch the dead person’s hand to the screen, people will “be raised from the dead . . . by the thousands.”
Ironically, one doesn’t even need to be an orthodox Trinitarian in order to broadcast on the Trinity network. Bishop T. D. Jakes, well known for his rejection of the Nicene creed in favor of oneness Pentecostalism, is a staple on TBN. Benny Hinn has repeatedly attempted to revise the doctrine of the Trinity in novel ways, notoriously teaching at one point that there are nine persons in the godhead.

And yet evangelical church leaders typically show a kind of benign tolerance toward the whole enterprise. Most would never endorse it, of course. They may joke about the gaudiness of the big hair and tawdry set decorations on TBN. Ask them, and they will most likely acknowledge that the prosperity gospel is no gospel at all. Press the issue, and you will probably get them to admit that it is a dangerous form of false doctrine, totally unbiblical, and essentially anti-Christian.

Why, then, is there no large-scale effort among Bible-believing evangelicals to expose, denounce, refute, and silence these false teachers? After all, that is what Scripture commands church leaders to do when we encounter purveyors of soul-destroying substitutes for the true gospel:

Full article

2. I think 2010 will be worse because it will be the year when people realize that there is not going to be a easy fix for the economy. In spite of the hype coming from government and Wall Street there really is no was to avoid a full fledged depression or hyperinflation. I think this article called 2010 will be worse explains it very well. Here are a few clips.

The year 2010 is likely to be the pivotal year where pundits stop referring to the recession and begin openly talking about a depression.

Our economic problem is rather simple to describe: There is too much debt relative to income and/or wealth. Below is a single graph that depicts the condition of our economy. It shows total debt of the U.S. as a percentage of GDP from 1870 forward
The government has decided that the cure for too much debt is more debt. This solution cannot work, especially when credit is already so overextended. Income and wealth cannot support present debt levels. Credit will adjust back to the mean, regardless of what the government attempts. Whether this is via orderly payment or via default, the reduction in debt is inevitable.
There are only three possibilities with respect to meeting 2010 funding needs:
  • The Fed continues its QE beyond their planned cessation in March 2010.
  • The Fed raises interest rates to levels that would attract the capital necessary to fund government operations via conventional credit markets.
  • No Fed action is taken. That would cause the government to default on some of its obligations.
None of these alternatives is attractive. The unpalatable choices arise from prior Fed and governmental policies. To avoid recessions over the past fifty years, the government abused and then finally exhausted all reasonable options. After years of mismanagement, the government is in a quandary of its own making from which there is no escape.

Full article

Other events that may make 2010 worse than 2009.

3. The Middle East is in real danger of a major war this year. There are many things that could spark this war with Iran and Hezbollah being the chief concerns. If a regional war should happen this year I expect it to rapidly turn into a world war against all radical Islam. The wild card is if Iran has a revolution or Hezbollah uses its power to fight against the Lebanese government instead of Israel. These developments could slow Iran’s nuclear ambitions and weaken the Israeli opposition and delay the world war a few years.

4. People are dying all over the world because of  unusual cold and  governments are still planning to tax us to pay for imagined carbon caused global warming. I think this may be the year that people of the world will finally wake up. We may see a backlash against this tax and power grab by globalists. The tar and feathers might appear in the not too distant future.

5. I do believe several successful terrorists events will be carried out in the United States in 2010 and Obama will take the heat.

6. I think there will be unrest and riots in many nations in 2010 and possibly even in the United States

7. It might not be all bad  in 2010. The Far Left controlled house and Senate might get a rude awaking this year when people rebel against the unconstitutional Health Care Bill the unconstitutional reckless bail-outs and many other unconstitutional actions of Federal government? Watch the progress of the tea parties and state rights legislation.

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2 thoughts on “2009 was bad but 2010 will be worse

  1. Don, thanks for the good news for the new year:P

    Actually, I am so glad I found your site. You have regularly challenged my beliefs that have come from many of the sources you describe here and in other commentaries. I believe I was blessed by the fact I guess that one of the first Christian series I read as a believer was the Left Behind Series. It helped set the stage for a world I saw ten years later that really got me thinking, “wow, are we living in end times?”. And that question late one night led me to your blog. Once I argued that I found Christ through secular 12 step meetings. I now realize that is where He found me. Empty of myself and disillusioned about life. Totally fed up with how things were going and doing things my way…unfortunately for me, it is only there that He seems to speak to me, or more accurately where I allow Him to, and my life continues to reflect this. So, I cannot give you too much credit, lol.

    I am afraid for many who do not seek to be taught anything beyond God’s love for them. I pray for the misled and misguided (and that I can be saved from being among them) but I also know from experience that this type of belief system is only possible through laziness. Many people like the watered-down gospel. I believe it appeals to their self. Who wants to hear anything about dying to self? Why pick up my bible and study to be approved before God when I can listen and look at someone who tickles my entertainment bone? Why do I have to spend time in prayer and bible reading when I can be spoon-fed? Ugh! I admit, I am lazy at times. And maybe (assuming I am not alone in this) these people who once sought to serve God have been elevated beyond what is humanly possible? That maybe (some of their) success and fame are linked directly and indirectly to a cult of personality that rises from lazy “sheeple”. I hear it today in my bible groups and church where many quote Rick Warren and Joyce Meyers more than they quote the God’s Word. Many of these people also complain about their inability to set aside a regular bible reading time. I have been inspired by some of the things I have read by TD Jakes, Joyce Meyers and John Baker. And my natural tendency, I am sad to say, has been to elevate them in my own eyes. But I continue in my disciplines, though I admit not as consistantly as I’d like. I admit I suffer regularly from ADD (Attention Diversion Disorder) where I dilligently seek something out that may be more fun than what I am doing or should be doing. I have yet to find a group for that one (maybe I’ll start one) there I go again!

    But just when I get to the point where I am sickened of myself: there He is. And through my afflictions He has used me greatly in this little town of mine. I once had dreams of changing the world. Now I seek to change my heart that constantly grasps for anything before turning once again to God fed up, spent out: sick of self and this flesh. Who wants to be there? So much better to hear what I want to hear, do what I want to do, anything but die to self. Maybe that’s why the only people we will hear saying those things will not be smiling for the camera on primetime TBN. They will be living in the Ozarks on their PC battling biting gnats and scaling piles of books to get to their laptop (if they can find it under their pile of notes). Or trying to desperately to seek God’s will in their miserable existance that really is a blessing in disguise lest they think this world has anything lasting to offer…

    Yeah, I think you hit the nail on the head 2010 will be worse than 2009. And that may very well be because there are still lots of people (like me) God has his eye on. They can only get it, really get it, when the ground is shaking and crumbling beneath them: when all they hold dear in this life is falling apart around them.

    I am, however, grateful that today I can and do look forward to the ultimate outcome of it all: To be in His presence forever. And the greatest blessing He has given me besides my Salvation has been the solid foundation of faith that has survived the trials of fire.

    Whom I love having not yet seen…because He first loved me.

    But, If I may ask Please not yet, Lord: I am heart-sick that once again I allowed my attention to shift away from You.

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