Smoky Mountains Sunrise

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Republican and Conservative Network to Educate Public on Nikki Haley


A network of Republicans and conservative independents has announced a press conference to be held in Columbia on Thursday, September 30, at 4 pm, to launch an educational campaign about Nikki Haley and her campaign for Governor of South Carolina.

The Press Conference will be held on the first floor of the statehouse in Columbia.

Cyndi Mosteller, former First Vice Chairman of the South Carolina Republican Party and Chairwoman of the Charleston County Republican Party, and Dr. Dave Woodard, Clemson professor of political science and long time Republican activist, will present at the press conference.


Wednesday, September 29, 2010

South Carolinian Wins Free Missions Trip Around the World


Erica Kaufman of Charleston, S.C. is going on the World Race, an 11 month missions trip to 11 countries, this October -- for free.

The World Race is a ministry of Adventures in Missions (AIM), a Georgia-based interdenominational organization. According to Seth Barnes, executive director of AIM, the program is an "initiation process" that takes participants on an "epic pilgrimage."

Barnes writes, "they minister to the poorest of the poor, befriending those who have no friends and in the midst of the sorrow and pain, experiencing God in a new way without the trappings of success."

AIM offered the free trip this spring. To enter the giveaway, applicants submitted their story in 2 minutes of video or 500 words. Among ten finalists, Kaufman was the winner.

"I spent the summer with 100 students from my college ministry and I was in my hotel room with two of my roommates when I got the call," Kaufman recalls. "I fell to my knees and my roommates started jumping up and down screaming ... I think I cried."

Kaufman, who graduated from the College of Charleston in May, entered a video. In it, she says why she's going: "To grow in my walk with Christ, and to be pushed in ways I couldn't be pushed anywhere else, and to share the gospel with people who have never heard before."

Her route, subject to change, will span Central America, Southeast Asia, Southern Africa and South Asia.

Winning a free World Race has given Kaufman peace and confirmation. She admits that had she not won, she'd be "much more nervous if this was God’s will... " Of the many options available, she continues, "I wouldn't have been sure if this was the one He called me to."

"My family members aren't Christians and as I am the first person in my family to ever win anything it gave them a chance to get excited," albeit partially, Kaufman says. Winning "helped soften their hearts ... Also, because I grew up Jewish ... support-raising would have been very difficult."

But Kaufman won't have to raise many funds for the trip; she's also received some free gear. "God has made it pretty clear that He wants me to go on this trip, and that He will provide everything I need -- I just need to trust Him," says Kaufman.

" ... God has just spoken to me over and over again ... that He loves me, that I am doing His will, and that He is going to be with me every second of the [R]ace."

For more information on the World Race visit www.theworldrace.org.


Feast of Saint Michael the Archangel

From America Needs Fatima

T
his is the true story of a Marine wounded in Korea in 1950.
Writing to his mother, he told her of a fascinating encounter he experienced in the war. Father Walter Muldy, a navy chaplain who spoke to the young Marine and his mother as well as to the outfit commander, always affirmed the veracity of this narrative. We heard it from someone who read the original letter and retell the story here in all its details and in the first person to better convey some of the impact it must have had when first told by the son to his mother.

Dear Mom,

I am writing to you from a hospital bed. Don’t worry, Mom, I am okay. I was wounded, but the doctor says that I will be up in no time.

But that’s not what I have to tell you, Mom. Something happened to me that I don’t dare tell anyone else for fear of their disbelief. But I have to tell you, the one person I can confide in, though even you may find it hard to believe.

You remember the prayer to Saint Michael that you taught me to pray when I was little: “Michael, Michael of the morning,…” Before I left home for Korea, you urged me to remember this prayer before any confrontation with the enemy. But you really didn’t have to remind me, Mom. I have always prayed it, and when I got to Korea, I sometimes said it a couple of times a day while marching or resting.

Well, one day, we were told to move forward to scout for Commies. It was a really cold day. As I was walking along, I perceived another fellow walking beside me, and I looked to see who it was.

He was a big fellow, a Marine about 6’4” and built proportionally. Funny, but I didn’t know him, and I thought I knew everyone in my unit. I was glad to have the company and broke the silence between us:

“Chilly today, isn’t it?” Then I chuckled because suddenly it seemed absurd to talk about the weather when we were advancing to meet the enemy.
He chuckled too, softly.

“I thought I knew everyone in my outfit,” I continued, “ but I have never seen you before.”

“No,” he agreed, “I have just joined. The name is Michael.”

“Really?! That’s mine, too.”

“I know,” the Marine said, “Michael, Michael of the morning….”

Mom, I was really surprised that he knew about my prayer, but I had taught it to many of the other guys, so I supposed that the newcomer must have picked it up from someone else. As a matter of fact, it had gotten around to the extent that some of the fellows were calling me “Saint Michael.”

Then, out of the blue, Michael said, “There’s going to be trouble ahead.”

I wondered how he could know that. I was breathing hard from the march, and my breath hit the cold air like dense clouds of fog. Michael seemed to be in top shape because I couldn’t see his breath at all. Just then, it started to snow heavily, and soon it was so dense I could no longer hear or see the rest of my outfit. I got a little scared and yelled, “Michael!” Then I felt his strong hand on my shoulder and heard his voice in my ear, “It’s going to clear up soon.”

It did clear up, suddenly. And then, just a short distance ahead of us, like so many dreadful realities, were seven Commies, looking rather comical in their funny hats. But there was nothing funny about them now; their guns were steady and pointed straight in our direction.

“Down, Michael!!” I yelled as I dove for cover. Even as I was hitting the ground, I looked up and saw Michael still standing, as if paralyzed by fear, or so I thought at the time. Bullets were spurting all over the place, and Mom, there was no way those Commies could have missed at that short distance. I jumped up to pull him down, and then I was hit. The pain was like a hot fire in my chest, and as I fell, my head swooned and I remember thinking, “I must be dying…” Someone was laying me down, strong arms were holding me and laying me gently on the snow. Through the daze, I opened my eyes, and the sun seemed to blaze in my eyes. Michael was standing still, and there was a terrible splendor in his face. Suddenly, he seemed to grow, like the sun, the splendor increasing intensely around him like the wings of an angel. As I slipped into unconsciousness, I saw that Michael held a sword in his hand, and it flashed like a million lights.

Later on, when I woke up, the rest of the guys came to see me with the sergeant.

“How did you do it, son?” he asked me.

“Where’s Michael?” I asked in reply.

“Michael who?” The sergeant seemed puzzled.

“Michael, the big Marine walking with me, right up to the last moment. I saw him there as I fell.”

“Son,” the sergeant said gravely, “you’re the only Michael in my unit. I hand-picked all you fellows, and there’s only one Michael. You. And son, you weren’t walking with anyone. I was watching you because you were too far off from us, and I was worried.

Now tell me, son,” he repeated, “how did you do it?”

It was the second time he had asked me that, and I found it irritating.

“How did I do what?”

“How did you kill those seven Commies? There wasn’t a single bullet fired from your rifle.”

“What?”

“Come on, son. They were strewn all around you, each one killed by a swordstroke.”

And that, Mom, is the end of my story. It may have been the pain, or the blazing sun, or the chilling cold. I don’t know, Mom, but there is one thing I am sure about. It happened.

Love your son,

Michael



Tuesday, September 28, 2010

U.S. Economy "Close to a Destructive Tipping Point," Glenn Hubbard Says




From Yahoo Finance
By Aaron Task

"America is very close to a destructive tipping point," co-authors Glenn Hubbard and Peter Navarro warn in their new book Seeds of Destruction. "We must change how we conduct our politics and economics...or we will inevitably go the way of all once-great nations and suffer an irreversible decline."

Hubbard, dean of Columbia Business School, joined Dan Gross and I to discuss the "major structural imbalances" facing America, chief among them being the government's profligate spending.

Read the rest of this entry >>


Sunlit Uplands Included on List of "100 Excellent Conservative Blogs You Should Be Reading"

Sunlit Uplands is honored and humbled to be included among such major blogs as Town Hall, Drudge, Michelle Malkin, Red State, and Newsmax in a new list of the 100 best conservative blogs.

The
"100 Excellent Conservative Blogs You Should Be Reading" list was compiled by Masters in Education.


Survey Documents American Ignorance of Religious Knowledge


When we're shocked and perplexed at how someone like Obama could become President, how Americans could even consider a mosque at Ground Zero, or how this nation could owe more money than all the money that exists in the world, we come upon statistics like these; the fruit of America's government schools.

A survey of 3,412 Americans conducted by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life has documented the extent of religious ignorance.

While 44% of Americans speak frequently with friends and family about religion,

  • only 71% could name the place of Jesus’ birth
  • 67% inaccurately believe that public school teachers are forbidden to “read from the Bible as an example of literature”
  • only 63% could name the first book of the Bible
  • only 54% could name the Muslim holy book
  • 52% of Americans think that Catholics believe that “the bread and wine are symbols of the body and blood of Jesus Christ,” while 45% think that Catholics believe that “the bread and wine actually become the body and blood of Jesus Christ”
  • only 46% could name Martin Luther as “the person whose writings and actions inspired the Protestant Reformation”
  • only 45% could name the four Gospels
  • more Americans (28%) believe that Billy Graham participated in the First Great Awakening than that Jonathan Edwards did (11%)
  • more Americans (36%) believe that Brown v. Board of Education case-- which ended segregation in public schools-- focused on evolution than believes that the Scopes trial (which actually focused on evolution) did (31%)
  • The survey also found that

  • 69% are “absolutely certain” that God or a universal spirit exists, while 17% are “fairly certain” and 6% are atheists
  • 48% read Scripture at least monthly
  • only 59% of Americans know that the vice president of the United States is Joe Biden
  • Source(s): these links will take you to other sites, in a new window.


    Monday, September 27, 2010

    Surprise! 1/3 of Blacks Back Tea-Party Movement

    'The wheels on the race-card bus are beginning to fall off'

    From WorldNetDaily
    By Drew Zahn

    A new poll released this week soundly contradicts critics' claims that the tea-party movement is "fringe," "white" and "racist."

    PJTV's Tea Party Tracking Poll has monitored nationwide sentiments toward the tea party on a weekly basis since Aug. 2. The poll's most recent reports reveal the following results:

    • The number of people who identify as "members" of the tea party has more than tripled over the last month alone, up to 21 percent of likely voters;

    • Fifty-five percent of those surveyed said they support the tea parties based on the movement's positions on the issues;

    • Among the likely voters who are black, 32 percent said they would vote for a candidate backed by the tea parties.

    Read the rest of this entry >>