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Re: Radio Murder Confession
I ceased being surprised at anything a few years ago after reading multiple accounts of a High Scool student who was killed by another one and whoe the police had been looking for the body.
High Scool kids knew where the body was in the woods and many of them had been taken there to see it as the poor boy's corpse rotted, decayed and turned into a skeleton. Not one cotton picken HS kid that saw it had the moral character to call the policeto give the boys family some closure and to be able to bury his body.
The kid that was killed was from a very poor family in the hills who had moved to a neighborhood where he had to go to an upscale school where he was very much an outsider.
Finally years after he was killed his body was found and the case solved. I could not believe the number of people who had known about the crime and were now grown several years later who STILL had not contacted the police about where his body was.
We are rasiing a generation of people without a conscience or moral barometer of any kind.
__________________
"I think some people love spiritual bondage just the way some people love physical bondage. It makes them feel secure. In the end though it is not healthy for the one who is lost over it or the one who is lives under the oppression even if by their own choice"
Titus2woman on AFF
"We did not wear uniforms. The lady workers dressed in the current fashions of the day, ...silks...satins...jewels or whatever they happened to possess. They were very smartly turned out, so that they made an impressive appearance on the streets where a large part of our work was conducted in the early years.
"It was not until long after, when former Holiness preachers had become part of us, that strict plainness of dress began to be taught.
"Although Entire Sanctification was preached at the beginning of the Movement, it was from a Wesleyan viewpoint, and had in it very little of the later Holiness Movement characteristics. Nothing was ever said about apparel, for everyone was so taken up with the Lord that mode of dress seemingly never occurred to any of us."
Quote from Ethel Goss (widow of 1st UPC Gen Supt. Howard Goss) book "The Winds of God"
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