Reblog: Daniel Silva’s Pro-Israel Fiction | David Solway | PJ Media

Peanut Gallery: If you haven’t discovered Israel’s James Bond, “Gabriel Allon,” then you’re in for a real treat. Silva’s latest book, “The Black Widow,” is #16 in the series. The Black Widow will get you hooked; then go back and read them in order. Enjoy!
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Click here for original artcle: via Daniel Silva’s Pro-Israel Fiction

daniel-silvaDaniel Silva is among the finest and most compelling writers in the suspense/intrigue/espionage/thriller genre in modern fiction, which has its share of brilliant or engaging practitioners—Ian Fleming (of course), John LeCarré, David Baldacci, Jo Nesbo, James Rollins, Kathy Reichs, Steve Berry, Donna Leon, Tom Clancy, Jonathan Kellerman, Mons Kallentoft, Louise Penny, P.D. James, Michael Gruber, John Burdett, Trevor Ferguson (aka John Farrow) and, yes, Dan Brown, to name a few of the most prominent. Silva is a charter member of this elect fraternity, one of the genre’s best-selling authors, whose area of expertise is the Middle East, the Palestinian terror machine, Iran’s nuclear ambitions, the Russian involvement in the region, the ambitions of Islamic jihad around the globe, and, of course, the efforts of Israel’s intelligence agency, the Mossad, to counter these manifold threats.

Indeed, Silva’s knowledge of the Middle East imbroglio is second to none and his plots are invariably timely, impinging on the cultural, political, and military realities of the present day. His most recent offering, The Black Widow, may well be his most topical and profoundly analytical work. All the salient elements of the international arena, real and imagined, are there: ISIS and the caliphate; drone warfare; the dissolving border between Iraq and Syria; the disintegration of Lebanon; the collusion of Turkey; a succession of catastrophic attacks in Paris, Amsterdam, and Washington, the latter on the scale of 9/11; a feckless and narcissistic American president plainly inadequate to the burden of high office; the dysfunctional character of American and European national security; and the comparative effectiveness of the Mossad. The book and the world intersect at every point.

It is interesting to note that Silva’s novels are tailor-made for the Hollywood film industry, yet not one has appeared in the theaters. It is not difficult to see why. As in real life, his terrorists are Muslims, members of a socially protected species. When it comes to the entertainment industry, a toxic amalgam of abject pusillanimity and leftist sympathies, along with dark infusions of Arab cash, has had its predictable effect on filmic integrity and patriotic sentiment. One recalls that the movie version of Tom Clancy’s The Sum of All Fears transforms the novel’s villains, a sect of actual Palestinian terrorists known as the PFLP, into a collection of Austrian fascists—safe, acceptable bad guys. Given their inseparable interweavings with geopolitical reality, Silva’s plots are thankfully immune to such deceptive meddling. Timorous and morally compromised, Hollywood will not violate the shibboleths of the day or offend its twin masters: progressivist culture and Islamic money. As usual, the iron grip of political correctness is, well, iron.

The same wariness is true of our literary critics who are often careful to hedge their bets. Robert Fulford, for example, a belvedere eminence for the National Post, penned a laudatory review of The Black Widow, but could not help pressing the right virtue-signaling buttons. Silva’s fascinating hero, Israeli operative and future head of the Mossad Gabriel Allon, may be “the James Bond of Israel.” Nevertheless, though sympathetic with Allon’s fight “for his country’s future existence,” Fulford considers it necessary to comment in passing that we “see everything from the standpoint of the Israelis,” as if we didn’t see everything from the standpoint of the British in the Bond novels, or from the perspective of the Americans in Berry’s works, or of the Thai in Burdett’s Sonchai Jitpleecheep series, and so on. He plainly would not have felt obliged to qualify his approval had there been any other national polity in play.

Morning Prayer: Wed, 04 Jan – 1 John 3:7-10; Psalm 98:1, 7-9; John 1:35-42 ~ who’s your daddy?

Wednesday of the Second Week of Christmas

+ In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen!

Opening Sentence

O come, let us adore him!

His right hand has won a mighty victory; his holy arm has shown his saving power!
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Reading: 1 John 3:7-10 (NLT)

put-on-righteousness

Dear children, don’t let anyone deceive you about this: When people do what is right, it shows that they are righteous, even as Christ is righteous. But when people keep on sinning, it shows that they belong to the devil, who has been sinning since the beginning. But the Son of God came to destroy the works of the devil. Those who have been born into God’s family do not make a practice of sinning, because God’s life is in them. So they can’t keep on sinning, because they are children of God. So now we can tell who are children of God and who are children of the devil. Anyone who does not live righteously and does not love other believers does not belong to God.
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Reading: Psalm 98:1, 7-9 (NLT)

Sing a new song to the Lord, for he has done wonderful deeds. His right hand has won a mighty victory; his holy arm has shown his saving power!
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Let the sea and everything in it shout his praise! Let the earth and all living things join in. Let the rivers clap their hands in glee! Let the hills sing out their songs of joy before the Lord, for he is coming to judge the earth. He will judge the world with justice, and the nations with fairness.
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Reading: John 1:35-42 (NLT)

The following day John was again standing with two of his disciples. As Jesus walked by, John looked at him and declared, “Look! There is the Lamb of God!” When John’s two disciples heard this, they followed Jesus.

Jesus looked around and saw them following. “What do you want?” he asked them.

They replied, “Rabbi” (which means “Teacher”), “where are you staying?”

“Come and see,” he said. It was about four o’clock in the afternoon when they went with him to the place where he was staying, and they remained with him the rest of the day.

Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother, was one of these men who heard what John said and then followed Jesus. Andrew went to find his brother, Simon, and told him, “We have found the Messiah” (which means “Christ”.

Then Andrew brought Simon to meet Jesus. Looking intently at Simon, Jesus said, “Your name is Simon, son of John—but you will be called Cephas” (which means “Peter”).
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Prayer:

The Word of God was manifested in the flesh, seen by angels and preached among the nations. Let us praise him: Only Son of God, we adore you.

+ Redeemer of all men, you made us children of God; may we never know a day apart from you.
+ You manifested to us the faithfulness of God: may you always be the light of our lives.
+ You let us see the Father’s love for us: may we show others your loving care.
+ You came to live among us: make us worthy to be your friends.

Almighty God, the light of a new star in heaven heralded your saving love. Let the light of your salvation dawn in our hearts and keep them always open to your life-giving grace. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.
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” Lamb of God” – Vertical Church Band

You came from heaven’s throne | Acquainted with our sorrow | To trade the debt we owed | Your suffering for our freedom

The Lamb of God in my place | Your blood poured out, my sin erased | It was my death You died | I am raised to life | Hallelujah, the Lamb of God

My name upon Your heart | My shame upon Your shoulders | The power of sin undone | the cross for my salvation

My God, there is no greater love | There is no greater love | The Savior lifted up | There is no greater love
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Blessing

Put on the righteousness of Christ; demonstrate that you are a child of God.

+ In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen!

Reblog ~ Obama’s Middle East Policy: Turning Points Where It Went Wrong | National Review | by Victor Davis Hanson

Peanut Gallery: Victor Davis Hanson identifies America’s Middle East Policy failures over the last eight years. Sadly, it didn’t have to be this way…

via Obama’s Middle East Policy: Turning Points Where It Went Wrong | National Review

victor-davis-hansonPresident Obama had lots of choices in Middle East. Unfortunately he made all the wrong ones, guided by pop ideology rather than unwelcome facts on the ground. The result is chaos at best and millions dead or displaced at worst. It didn’t have to be this way. Here are 15 turning points since 2009. There is one common theme: bombastic self-serving declarations coupled with weak or nonexistent concrete follow-ups — all in a weird landscape of punishing friends and empowering enemies.
Had Obama only:
  1. Cut out all the trash-talking of Israel and Prime Minister Netanyahu, which ranged from off-the-record slights (“coward,” “chickens**t”) to public snubs to hot-mic ridicule, to constant ankle-biting of Israeli policy in pursuit of “daylight” between democratic Israel and the U.S.
  2. Quit the 2012 politicking and just left the 10,000 or so U.S. peacekeepers in a calm Iraq after 2011 to ensure what Vice President Joe Biden had strangely called the administration’s “greatest achievement,” and Obama had acclaimed as “a sovereign, stable, and self-reliant Iraq.”
  3. Taken ISIS seriously early on and not written it off as a “jayvee” terrorist group.
  4. Not bombed the reforming monster Qaddafi and his brood out of power without any plan of replacement.
  5. Beefed up embassy and consulate security in Libya and sent in reinforcement troops at the first sign of trouble.
  6. Never supported the efforts of the Muslim Brotherhood and the firebrand ex-CSU Northridge professor Mohamed Morsi to stage a one-vote, one-time Islamist takeover in Egypt.
  7. Avoided the empty and melodramatic braggadocio that “Assad must go!”
  8. Kept the sanctions on a lying, terrorist-subsidizing — and teetering — Iran, and dropped illusions of an “Iran deal.”
  9. Shown support for the Green Revolution and Iranian reformers in 2009.
  10. Passed on the idiotic “special relationship” with the Ottomanist Recep Erdogan of Turkey.
  11. Never have issued fake “redlines” in Syria or rhetorical serial “deadlines” for cessation of Iranian nuclear proliferation.
  12. Never have invited Russia into the Middle East after a hiatus of over 40 years.
  13. Skipped all the Middle East purple-passage myth-making, from the fatuous Cairo speech to the various apology tours about purported U.S. sins.
  14. Treated “radical Islamic terrorism” as a real existential threat and forgone the ridiculous euphemisms such as “man-caused disasters” and “workplace violence,” along with the embarrassing assertions of our top intelligence leaders that the Muslim Brotherhood was largely secular, that jihad was a non-violent personal growth journey and one of the new chief aims of NASA was Muslim outreach.
  15. Dropped the “lead from behind” cuteness, and loud talk of a pivot away from the Middle East.

Read original article here.

Morning Prayer: Tue, 03 Jan – 1 John 2:29–3:6; Psalm 98:1, 3-6; John 1:29-34 ~ the Lamb has adopted me

Tuesday of the Second Week of Christmas

+ In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen!

Opening Sentence

O come, let us adore him!

The Word was made flesh, and he lived among us, full of grace and truth. From his fullness we have all received grace upon grace, alleluia.
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Reading: 1 John 2:29–3:6 (NLT)

Since we know that Christ is righteous, we also know that all who do what is right are God’s children.

adopted-third-day

See how very much our Father loves us, for he calls us his children, and that is what we are! But the people who belong to this world don’t recognize that we are God’s children because they don’t know him. Dear friends, we are already God’s children, but he has not yet shown us what we will be like when Christ appears. But we do know that we will be like him, for we will see him as he really is. And all who have this eager expectation will keep themselves pure, just as he is pure.

Everyone who sins is breaking God’s law, for all sin is contrary to the law of God. And you know that Jesus came to take away our sins, and there is no sin in him. Anyone who continues to live in him will not sin. But anyone who keeps on sinning does not know him or understand who he is.
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Reading: Psalm 98:1, 3-6 (NLT)

Sing a new song to the Lord, for he has done wonderful deeds. His right hand has won a mighty victory; his holy arm has shown his saving power!
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The ends of the earth have seen the victory of our God.

Shout to the Lord, all the earth; break out in praise and sing for joy! Sing your praise to the Lord with the harp, with the harp and melodious song, with trumpets and the sound of the ram’s horn. Make a joyful symphony before the Lord, the King!
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Reading: John 1:29-34 (NLT)

The next day John saw Jesus coming toward him and said, “Look! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world! He is the one I was talking about when I said, ‘A man is coming after me who is far greater than I am, for he existed long before me.’ I did not recognize him as the Messiah, but I have been baptizing with water so that he might be revealed to Israel.”

Then John testified, “I saw the Holy Spirit descending like a dove from heaven and resting upon him. I didn’t know he was the one, but when God sent me to baptize with water, he told me, ‘The one on whom you see the Spirit descend and rest is the one who will baptize with the Holy Spirit.’ I saw this happen to Jesus, so I testify that he is the Chosen One of God.
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Prayer:

Lord Jesus Christ, Immanuel – our Redeemer, the Son of God, who became man to renew our human nature – be with us now.

+ Jesus, Splendor of the Father, Son of the Virgin Mary, brighten this day by your presence among us.
+ Jesus, Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, put us on the path to holiness, be our guide.
+ Jesus, all-powerful, obedient and humble, inspire all believers to pour out their lives in the service of others.
+ Jesus, father of the poor, our way and our life, grant to your Church the spirit of detachment from earthly things.

Almighty God, your Son’s manhood, born of the Virgin, was a new creation, untainted by our sinful condition. Renew us, then, in Christ and cleanse us from all trace of sin that we might live faithfully as your children. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.
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“Children Of God” – Third Day


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Blessing

Dear friends, we are already God’s children, but he has not yet shown us what we will be like when Christ appears. But we do know that we will be like him, for we will see him as he really is. And all who have this eager expectation will keep themselves pure, just as he is pure.

+ In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen!

What’s wrong with millennials?

I confess, millennials have confounded me for years – no more so than over the last year with their antics throughout the election cycle and, more recently, their total collapse after the Trump win.

Two recent articles helped me put it all in perspective:

The First was from PJMedia“An Inside Look at Adulting School (Yes, It’s a Real Thing)”

By Jeff Reynolds December 25, 2016  (See full article here, it’s well worth the read.)

millennials

Imagine a room full of 24- to 28-year-olds. Many still live with their parents. Most are probably still on their parents’ insurance (thanks, Obamacare!). Several are fresh off candlelight vigils being held in the wake of Trump’s election. All are seeking the spiritual crystals or magical incantations that will suddenly grant them the superpowers to pay their credit cards, show up to meetings on time, set their own dental appointments, and maybe even cook their own dinner once in a while.

Honestly, I can’t imagine it at all. At their age, I had graduated from college with an engineering degree that secured me a good-paying job, I had moved out of my parent’s home (never to return), and I was married (just celebrated our 50th anniversary.) In fairness, it took me a while to find the career that God had in store for me – but we worked hard, made do with what we had, and, mostly, paid our own way (no debt).

Reynolds  adds:

So, the Trump election had one positive tangible effect, at least—it jolted millennials into the real world where they have to pay attention and fend for themselves.

My jolt of reality came my first few weeks out of college. I sat alone in my tiny rented room in a strange city looking at my checkbook and realized that there wasn’t much left after paying my living expenses.  I couldn’t believe how much it cost just to breathe – not to do anything – just exist. But I digress.

The Second was a video posted on YouTube“The Millennial Question” an interview with Simon Sinek. He is insightful and funny; take the time (15 min) to watch it. You may find yourself, or someone you know described in it.

Sinek is also analytical; he identifies four root causes of the millennials’ unhappiness: 1. Parenting; 2. Technology; 3. Impatience; 4. Environment – but watch the video as he develops each point, it’s entertaining.

After watching this video, however, I realized that, underneath it all, millennials suffer from the same malady that affects us all – restless heart syndrome.

St. Augustine of Hippo, Confessions (AD 400), put it this way –

You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they find their rest in You.”

What’s wrong with millennials? Nothing that Jesus can’t fix –

Then Jesus said, “Come to me, all of you who are weary and carry heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you. Let me teach you, because I am humble and gentle at heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy to bear, and the burden I give you is light.” – Matthew 11:28-30 (NLT)