‘I Feel the Presence of The Lord’  

"I Feel The Presence of The Lord" is a personal collection of devotions intended to encourage the reader to seek and see the Lord in every aspect of their life.
The enemy of our souls would have us subscribe to the mentality of being endlessly busy, and therefore it being excusable to relegate God to a Sunday morning church service, if that. Thus, many in our churches today are powerless Christians and/or Christians in whom faith and fellowship with God is sorely wanting.
I Feel The Presence of The Lord is not just a book to be read as part of our daily devotions. It is a collection of thoughts and instructions to inspire the reader to meditate upon the Lord and His Word.

Follow The Truth

May 19, 2015
[adsanity id=15905 align=alignleft /]As we talked, my friend made the simple but profound statement: “I go where the truth leads me.” That simplistic statement should be the pursuit of all mankind but sadly, as another friend said recently: “The problem is that so many foolish people find truth offensive.”

Which brings me to my point. I do not view things through a color-coded matrix and that upsets those who place a higher value on skin color than they do the worship of God. They can claim otherwise but the truth undermines their protestations.

I specifically reference blacks. Speaking empirically, the duplicitous moral opprobrium and intellectual dishonesty of the great number of blacks cannot be denied.
The problem is, there exists an Erebusic form of existentialism that perverts all reasonable rationale when it comes to blacks and skin color. Even more immoral, there exists a formal belief based upon the fear of ostracization that argues only a person of color can speak or even dare speak the truth to blacks pursuant to how self-limiting said mindset is.

The depth of inculcated and reinforced acrimony that flows through blacks is like an electrical umbilical cord connecting most of them to a register of instant anger and antipathy toward authority. And woe be the persons of color who do not view life from their cosmological view. The only thing that enrages said blacks more is a person of color who is willing to address the problems besetting blacks as not being whites and/or America but as being self-inflicted.

I recently had a black woman attack me on Twitter for daring to use the word “nigga” when referencing Michelle Obama. The woman tweeted: “He shouldn’t be using denigrating terms. [He] is embarrassing his ethnicity.” Since when did a black person using “nigga” become an affront? Haven’t we been told time and again that only persons of color can use the word?

[adsanity id=8405 align=alignleft /]But herein lies their aversion to intellectual honesty. Only those persons of color who subscribe to the lowest levels of boorish commonality can use the word and then only in certain references.

Blacks quickly become enraged to the point of cursing and threatening those who criticize Obama’s poor job performance. Disapproving of a president is one of the rights Americans enjoy. It is not about skin color is about the abysmal job Obama is doing. But blacks deny the truth that they specifically are worse off under the “color” in the White House than at any time in modern history.

They take any criticism of Obama as being an ad hominem attack strictly because of the color of his skin. Even more tragically, they refuse to see or acknowledge how this perpetuates their exploitation.

A black truck driver tried to convince me that Obama was doing the best he could and that the $18.5 trillion deficit wasn’t his fault. It wasn’t his fault because he was doing the best he could, but the white Republicans weren’t doing what he told them to do and that’s what was causing the problems.

Blacks blame former President George W. Bush and white Republicans but ignore the truth that Obama enjoyed full control of the Government his first term. They overlook the truth that John Boehner and Mitch McConnell have surrendered to Obama’s every demand.

It is time for blacks to be honest and truthful with themselves. It is time they started holding those causing trouble accountable. They can contentiously argue that there’s no such thing as black-on-black crime but that doesn’t change the truth that 8,000 blacks murder other blacks annually.

Rioting and destroying their areas of domicile doesn’t change the truth that gangs and drugs are destroying their families.

Blacks can point to women of other population groups having abortions but that is just defecting the truth that at current rates of abortion the black population will be single digits by 2050.

Calling those who refuse to be shackled to an ideological prison of inferiority, immiseration, and despair that suborns loyalty to reprobate race mongers is not a step forward.

There is no justification for the duplicitous double standards blacks demand. Even children understand what is wrong for one is wrong for all. Blacks cannot be excused for placing large swaths of cities, human life, and resources at risk because they are upset.

The truth is the truth and like it or not blacks are committing crimes that insure large numbers of them are incarcerated. Is the judicial system supposed to reward lawbreakers?

Pundits, talk show hosts, etc., all have reasons for the problems and travails blacks endure but their reasons are not predicated upon the truth. The truth is that blacks bring it upon themselves and until they individually take the requisite steps to end self-destructive behavior and embrace modernity, they will have no one to blame but themselves.[adsanity id=11817 align=alignleft /]

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Mychal Massie

About the Author

Mychal Massie

Mychal S. Massie is an ordained minister who spent 13 years in full-time Christian Ministry. Today he serves as founder and Chairman of the Racial Policy Center (RPC), a think tank he officially founded in September 2015. RPC advocates for a colorblind society. He was founder and president of the non-profit “In His Name Ministries.” He is the former National Chairman of a conservative Capitol Hill think tank; and a former member of the think tank National Center for Public Policy Research. Read entire bio here

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