The Republican Wing of the Republican Party

Dobson: Letter From 2012 in Obama’s America

Dr. James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, presents this dire but realistic picture of America in 2012, after just four years of an Obama Presidency.

Read the WorldNetDaily story about Dobson's letter here.

Read Dobson's letter here.

Read the introduction to Dobson's letter below:

Letter from 2012 in Obama’s America

What will the United States be like if Senator Obama is elected?  The most reliable way of predicting people’s future actions is by looking at their past actions. Jesus himself taught, “You will recognize them by their fruits” (Matthew 7:16). Anyone who has hired employees knows that – the best predictor of a person’s future job performance is not what he tells you he can do but what he has actually done in the past.

So here is a picture of the changes that are likely or at least very possible if Senator Obama is elected and the far-Left segments of the Democratic Party gain control of the White House, the Congress, and perhaps then the Supreme Court. The entire letter is written as a “What if?” exercise, but that does not make it empty speculation, because every future “event” described here is based on established legal and political trends that can be abundantly documented and that only need a “tipping point” such as the election of Senator Obama and a Democratic House and Senate to begin to put them into place. Every past event named in this letter (everything prior to October 22, 2008) is established fact.

This letter is not “predicting” that all of the imaginative future “events” named in this letter will happen. But it is saying that each one of these changes could happen and also that each change would be the natural outcome of (a) published legal opinions by liberal judges, (b) trends seen in states with liberal-dominated courts such as California and Massachusetts, (c) recent promises, practices and legislative initiatives of the current liberal leadership of the Democratic Party and (d) Senator Obama’s actions, voting record and public promises to the far-Left groups that won the nomination for him.

Many of these changes, if they occur, will have significant implications for Christians. This letter is addressed particularly to their concerns so they will be aware of what is at stake before the November 4 election.

Some will respond to this letter by saying, “Well, I hope hardship and even persecution come to the church. It will strengthen the church!”  But hoping for suffering is wrong. It is similar to saying, “I hope I get some serious illness because it will strengthen my faith.” Jesus taught us to pray the opposite: “And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil” (Matt. 6:13). Paul urged us to pray not for persecution but “for kings and all who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and quiet life, godly and dignified in every way” (1 Tim. 2:2). So Christians should hope and pray that such difficult times do not come. But if they do come, then it will be right to trust God to bring good out of them and also bring them to an end.

Of course, there are many evangelical Christians supporting Senator Obama as well as many supporting Senator McCain. Christians on both sides should continue to respect and cherish one another’s friendship as well as the freedom people have in the United States to differ on these issues and to freely speak their opinions about them to one another.

Everyone needs to read the letter that follows.  To read Dobson's letter, click here now.

Technorati Tags: Abortion, Card Check, Conservative Movement, Election 2008, Fairness Doctrine, Foreign Policy/National Security, Health Care, Homeschooling, Obama, Religious Liberty, Same-Sex Marriage, Second Amendment, Supreme Court, Taxes, Unions

Related Posts


Tagged as: Abortion, Card Check, Conservative Movement, Election 2008, Fairness Doctrine, Foreign Policy/National Security, Health Care, Homeschooling, Obama, Religious Liberty, Same-Sex Marriage, Second Amendment, Supreme Court, Taxes, Unions

Leave a Response

You must be logged in to post a comment.