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  • Eugene Adkins 7:15 am on May 14, 2013 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , morality, ,   

    How Fast the Slippery Slope Carries Us(a)! 

    For three weeks in a row an American state has “legalized” homosexual marriages (New Hampshire, Delaware and Minnesota). It’s sad, but amazing, how fast the smoke blinds the eyes of a nation to the truth (Revelation 9:2), but ere goes the truth of a slippery slope – the farther down you go, the faster you go!

    And the surprising thing to me about it all is the virtual silence that’s coming with it. Most people don’t even know that these states are approving of something which is un-approvable. This is the tactic that’s now in play…out of sight, out of mind. Come to think about it, we’re already out of our minds, so it might as well be out of sight!

    How any individual can say “God Bless America” and at the same time say “homosexuals deserve the God-given right of marriage” with a straight face is beyond me. What God do they want blessing America? The god of their fleshly appetite (Philippians 3:19) – that’s which god!

    I thank my God – who is the God - for the freedoms that He has provided through His hand of providence; a hand I pray that continues to be us through the leaders who may still have an ounce of both common sense and spiritual sense (1 Timothy 2:1-3).

    The truth will continue to spread, the cross will still be victorious and God will continue to reign from His throne in Heaven regardless of how fast the slippery slope carries us as a nation away from all three. The kingdom of God is eternal – the kingdoms of men are only dust in the scales of time (Isaiah 40:15).

    The nations have sunk down in the pit which they made; In the net which they hid, their own foot is caught. The Lord is known by the judgment He executes; The wicked is snared in the work of his own hands. Meditation. Selah. The wicked shall be turned into hell, And all the nations that forget God.” (Psalm 9:15-17)

     
  • Ron Thomas 7:00 am on February 25, 2013 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Hollywood, morality   

    Corruption 

         It is a mantra of Hollywood and others in the entertainment community to declare that their particular form of occupation (or entertainment) in no way can be linked to bad behavior. Violent video games,  secular and vulgar music, movies that portray godly values as a drag on a person or community, and such like cannot be scientifically be shown to affect society adversely, they assert.

    Someone forgot to tell the Lord about scientific studies. “Do not be deceived: “Bad company ruins good morals” (1 Cor. 15:33, ESV). The context of the remark in Corinthians pertains to those who deny the possibility of the resurrection; Paul deals with this denial as it relates to the Lord. He makes the application that with such influence being present, one is merely deceived to think it won’t pass from one to another. RT

     
    • Eugene Adkins 8:24 pm on February 25, 2013 Permalink | Reply

      Very well said, Ron! I’m going to use this in our bulletin eventually.

      • Ron Thomas 6:44 am on February 26, 2013 Permalink | Reply

        Thank you, Eugene. That is very kind of you to think I have something to offer the church where you preach.

  • Ed Boggess 7:35 am on December 19, 2012 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , morality,   

    There is a proverb of old that declares, “righteousness exalts a nation.” America was made great because it was founded with strong moral fiber and religious fervor and freedom. America is the champion of capitalism, but capitalism can only succeed when it is accompanied by a strong moral ethic. When morality erodes, capitalism generates a society of self-seeking, self-indulgent, self-centered greedy gusto-grabbers. “Sin is a reproach to any people”, so the proverb continues. But when a populace is self-absorbed, it fails to notice that foundation has collapsed and ruin is upon them. Israel reached such a condition that “even though Noah, Daniel and Job were in it, as I live, says the Lord, they would deliver neither son nor daughter; only themselves.” Worse yet, I see no Noahs, Daniels or Jobs among us. This is Just-A-Minute with Ed Boggess

     
  • Ron Thomas 7:00 am on November 12, 2012 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , morality,   

    The Battle is Over—Did You Vote for the Lord? 

    The election is over. Your candidate of choice either won or lost. Did you pray the Lord’s will be done as you went into the booth and did you vote in favor of the Lord’s will? It is a serious matter and if a Christian thinks it is not he is mistaken in his thinking. Note the words of the psalmist: “for behold, the wicked bend the bow; they have fitted their arrow to the string to shoot in the dark at the upright in heart; if the foundations are destroyed, what can the righteous do?” (Psalm 11:2-3, ESV). Just who are the upright in heart? The Lord’s servants, of course. Consequently, when arrows are (or were) shot from the candidate you chose, were those arrows shot toward (and against) the Lord’s servant, against the foundations of morality that are crucial to a civilized society? I may not be able to make much of a difference in the community in which I live, but I will always try to make a difference in this respect. RT (A bulletin article of the Highway Church of Christ. 11.11.2012)

     
  • Eugene Adkins 6:33 am on November 7, 2012 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Liquor, morality,   

    At Least the Liqour Lost the Election 

    In my home county (which voted for Romney 2 to 1) the residents of the “capital” city voted on whether or not to legalize liquor stores. The measure failed…thank God! It didn’t fail by much, which leads me to look at the ‘religious community’ around my area through even more jaded eyes. In a town riddled with ‘churches’ the referendum lost by only about 130 votes! Some who supposedly consider themselves to be a Christian tried to justify their actions of voting in favor of such a thing by doing so under the guise “its good for the local economy.” We again see that whatever/whomever controls the purse-strings of the soul controls the heart-strings of the soul as well. If a person doesn’t see the “in your face” evil’s of liquor then it’s because their soul has been blinded by something much darker.

    Wine is a mocker, Strong drink is a brawler, And whoever is led astray by it is not wise.” (Proverbs 20:1)

     
  • Ed Boggess 7:26 am on August 29, 2012 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , morality, ,   

    Never has the devil been so successful than he is in this modern age. Man is convinced that he has progressed beyond the Rock of Ages and has thrown the inspired principles of morality to the flames of political correctness. The Ten Commandments are not even recommendations today and things formerly holy are trampled underfoot as profane. Marriage is no longer the sacred union of a man and woman; but is redefined to accommodate the corrupt and perverse. But the Almighty once declared to Job that there are boundaries and limits. God said, “Thus far you shall come and no further.” The sun is setting on these times and judgment peers from around the corner. Let it be shouted to a unhearing throngs, the fierceness of God’s wrath is not weakened or abated, but stands ready to strike. This is Just-A-Minute with Ed Boggess

     
    • Bernard Barton 8:04 am on August 29, 2012 Permalink | Reply

      I agree 100% with you Ed-It is even being accepted in the church by my brethren
      People are saying as long as it is consentual it is alright-who are we to judge is what they say
      Christ said by their fruits you shall know them

    • Abel nghuushi 11:08 am on August 29, 2012 Permalink | Reply

      Please assist me that information: when did the devil and its messengers cast out from heaven?

  • Richard Mansel 4:41 pm on April 20, 2012 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , morality, opinions,   

    Societal Acceptance is not God’s Will 

    I am always dismayed when I hear of society falling back spiritually. Moral decline in the world today is no longer incremental. It is in pure free-fall.

    A school system in Alabama wants to change its policies so gender boundaries will be removed from what people wear. Like everything else in society, this is derived from a fear of being sued.

    A lawyer recently addressed a school board where he:

    “cited a case in Atlanta in which a male employee of the Georgia Assembly’s Office of Legislative Counsel was fired in 2007 after wearing women’s clothing to work.”

    SIGH

    When my children asked why ridiculous rules existed in schools or in society, my answer was always the same. Somewhere along the way, someone was afraid of getting sued. Our entire society is being ruled by paranoid political correctness.

    While the culture is traveling down the wormhole to hell and increasingly bizarre behavior is being rewarded, we must never think that God cares what they think. Before time and culture even existed, God had already decided what He believed and would accept (Psalm 119:89).

    God’s Word will never conform to culture. We can burrow deeper and deeper into the slime but God will never follow us. We must not even “think beyond what is written” (1 Corinthians 4:6). If God didn’t approve it in Scripture, then it will never be approved (Colossians 3:17).

    Today, we live under the law of the New Testament (Hebrews 9), not American law. God has NEVER taken a public opinion poll and He will never consult us for what we want (Exodus 20:3). We cannot change God or sway him to our side. God doesn’t need our opinions because He knows everything (1 John 3:20; Acts 17:25).

    Truth be told, even in heaven there isn’t any discussion of the issues. God the Father is always the final voice (John 14:10; 16:13). If Jesus and the Holy Spirit can’t alter’s God’s mind, why do we think we will?

    We must follow God, not men. End of story.

     
  • J. Randal Matheny 7:41 pm on March 15, 2012 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: dancing, , , morality   

    North Atlanta church allows dancing in building for weddings 

    So says one of their members.

    North Atlanta’s announcement was in its monthly church bulletin. The main reasons for their decision were concerns of “diversity.” Basically, they’ve tried to take seriously that faithful Christian expression can, and should, look different in different cultural contexts. …
    Let’s just say the new generation is going to be blessed with (and robbed of) growing up in contexts where rhythmic bodily expressions of joy (that are often set to music) will not be frowned upon as “of the devil.” With time comes change…

    Enhanced by Zemanta
     
  • Ron Thomas 6:00 am on April 14, 2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , morality   

    Atheism’s New Bible 

    Not long ago an atheist published his “secular Bible,” a “bible” that focuses attention on “the non-religious teachings of civilization’s greatest thinkers.” This sort of “bible” is called the “Humanist Bible” (http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2011/04/11/leading-atheist-publishes-secular-bible/?hpt=T2).

    The author of this new book said: “The Bible would have been ‘a very different book and may have produced a very different history for mankind,’ had it drawn on the work of philosophers and writers as opposed to prophets and apostles, says Grayling, a philosopher and professor at Birkbeck College, University of London, who is an atheist.”

    Yes, there is no doubt this would be correct. But, isn’t that what we need – a “bible” authored by philosophers and writers of a varied sort! In this book, there would be no uniformity of message that transcends man; no purpose to a life currently lived that is not associated with subjectivity; and neither would we have any ultimate hope in (or from) the life we live. Yes, we could use a book like that, couldn’t we?!

    One of atheism’s great difficulties arises in the area of morality; they can give no reason for an objective standard of morality’s existence. According to the ideology of atheism all morality stays in the area of subjectivity. This is by necessity, though it is not something that positive atheists are particularly pleased about. Recognizing this, the author says, “[Humanistic ethics] tended to start from a sympathetic understanding of human nature and accept that there’s a responsibility that each individual has to work out the values they live by and especially to recognize that the best of our good lives revolve around having good relationships with people.”

    While this sounds pleasant, it is full of destructive ideologies. For instance: what if a person wanted to “work out” their particular values and those “worked out” values did not correspond to the community’s values; would there be any necessary, objective reason to change them? Furthermore, who determines what is “responsible” that is to be placed in another’s possession? What if those so-called “community values” had their authority in Moscow (communism), Berlin (nationalist socialists), or in some other atrocious community (government) of the past? This is the pure course of atheism. Atheism gives us no good reason to accept its tenets.

    However, atheism is not alone in tragedy purported in its name. History has declared much in the way of unseemly characters that have attempted to move aggressively in God’s name. It is prudent that we reject those individuals and ideologies that pervert God’s righteousness.

    Still, there is a foundation in place from which to spring forward, and that foundation is in God’s righteous standard as recorded in Scripture, a message that is greater than any individual man. Now, the options before man are simple: either the foundation for life has its existence in God, or not. If not, then the foundation of atheism plants the feet of people where, and on what? They assert that they give “rational” reasons for their ideology, but an ideology that that promotes, ultimately, hopelessness and human subjectivity is an ideology that is meaningless and to be discarded. Not much of a rational reason found in this! The foundation of atheism encourages us to reach for nothing, but survival of the fittest. Atheism has no solid foundation upon which to stand, and it has no meaningful hope in life that will pull one through the greatest of afflictions. Atheism is empty!

     

     

     
  • Ron Thomas 7:30 am on November 9, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , morality   

    Abortion, Morality, Civilization 

    Recently, I wrote a letter to a local editor on the topic of abortion and law. One lady in the expanded area took strong exception to my letter and addressed my sentiments in the newspaper (Mattoon Journal-Gazette, November 8, 2010, p. A-5). I was glad to see this; in my view, there needs to be a public debate about such issues (as there has been) for in this public discussion, persuasion can materialize.

    Women have the right to make medical decision, we are told. This is true enough, but in many cases this is a ruse for women who have a desire (they call a right) to kill innocent children. More than that, however, women should be given the right to make life and death choices. Note the following, “As long as a fetus is not viable outside the womb the woman’s rights comes first.”  From the “moral” perspective of this one woman, life within the womb is not worth preserving if the woman carrying a child determines unviability. From her letter, we learn that the standard of morality that supports this is called “autonomy.” The word means, self-governing or self-ruling. If each person is autonomous, does the child in the womb have the right to self-government? Not according to those who believe in killing innocent children!

    Morality is either subjective (originates with man) or objective (originates in a source outside man). These are the only two possibilities. The former is associated with atheism and agnosticism, the latter with theism. Subjective morality is a standard that changes with time and people and, generally, liberals and progressives will align themselves here. It is this kind of morality that seeks to destroy innocent children, but this is under the guise of “reproductive choices” or “medical decisions.”

    What is the difference between a child two months in the womb and a child two months outside the womb? Clearly, both are living – so, what is the difference between the two? If a child is killed outside the womb it is murder, if inside the womb it is choice. That’s a moral standard worth discarding!

    Some people identify this with a civilized society when, in fact, it is more aligned with barbarity.

     
    • Mike Riley 7:43 am on November 9, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Amen to what you’ve stated here, Ron. A woman’s right to “choose” is a moral standard? worth discarding, and those who practice it are definitely “aligned with barbarity.”

    • Steve 7:48 am on November 9, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Keep the editorial writing (er, preaching) going! For there are likely others who are considering the very act each and every day within the paper’s circulation. Hopefully your use of God’s Word will cause them to choose continued life for the child! Is it not wonderful that the media in your area allows such a distant debate to take place? Likely the result of prayers to get the message out, regardless of the manner.

      • Stephen R. Bradd 7:52 am on November 9, 2010 Permalink | Reply

        Good thoughts, Ron.

        If I might add this:
        If the standard for whether or not we can kill a baby is “viableness,” then I might suggest that no full-term baby is safe either. A baby born at 6 months will not survive without a lot of attention and care, but neither will one that is born at 9 months!

      • Ron 7:53 am on November 9, 2010 Permalink | Reply

        Thank you, Steve. I actually thought, initially, they would not include my letters, but they have. I think I have had six printed since July. I encourage others to do the same. It is a good forum.

  • Mike Riley 6:38 pm on September 29, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: accelerator, brake, calm, , , intersection, laundry, , morality, nerves, , ,   

    When did my moment of mortality come? While driving a laundry truck many years ago, I stopped at an intersection waiting for the red light to change. When it changed to green, I started to put my foot down on the accelerator, but something in my mind told me to put on the brake instead. I’m thankful that I did, because an 18 wheeler came across that intersection going about 65-70 mph, running the red light. Had I been in the intersection, I would have been killed instantaneously. After carefully looking both to the left and to the right, then safely going through the intersection, I pulled over and stopped in order to calm my nerves down. I then thanked the Lord for saving my life. Guess He had some future plans for me.

     
  • Mike Riley 3:29 pm on September 24, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , indicators, morality   

    Some More Indicators Of Declining Morality In America 

    Here are some more indicators of declining morality in America.

    http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=204957

    Note the contrast between Jeremiah 10:23 and Proverbs 3:5-6.

     
  • Ron Thomas 10:52 am on September 1, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: morality, ,   

    Approving Things Not of God 

    In our secular society, there is a mighty struggle with the voting-block. That struggle consists of those who support godliness and those who oppose. This oversimplification of the categories suggests, nonetheless, where a problem lies. In the media we hear reports that some on the “radical right” want to take us back to a time when there were “morality police.” The people on the “godless left” want to take us into an arena of moral debauchery that Rome, of many years ago, had sown to its own destruction.

    It is interesting to note that in Scripture the Lord had condemned many things, and though many things were condemned, it is also worth noting that He condemned those who supported those many condemned things. “Although they fully know God’s righteous decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them but also approve of those who practice them” (Romans 1:32, NET). This is stated in a context where the Lord gave up on those who know and practice such evil things. Consequently, it is fair to say that the Lord gives up on both (be sure to read the context)!

    An interesting question that arises from such a remark is how is it that one supports such things? One can support such evil activities by engaging in them. This we know and no further comment is needed. However, unbeknownst to many people is the fact that one can support such evil activities by promoting those who support the practice. Some of the people who believe such things believe they are the enlightened ones living in an enlightened society, not encumbered by “traditional morality” of the past. They have come to accept a “new” morality, a morality that is judged by the person, not an all-powerful God that condemns (or saves) for all eternity. In fact, this “new” morality is supported by a god of one’s own making. This is our current political environment.

    Do you support Democrat or Republican? Do you support Christian or not Christian? Do you support Secular Progressivism (liberals), Don’t Know (moderates), or Traditionalists (conservatives)? On such thoughts as I have expressed, this is where I get into the most trouble; but be that as it may, let us state it plainly.

     
  • Richard Mansel 9:43 pm on May 29, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , morality,   

    Sermon Help 

    Do you want help with your sermons, lessons and articles? I am posting In the News items on my blog, so you can be better informed. I hope this will be a rich resource for your work. I do the work, so you don’t have too.

    Today’s issue: Overweight girls more likely to have sex early, link between music & marijuana, Polls: Abortion is immoral but homosexuality is not, Sugar drinks affect blood pressure and much, much more.

    Read  More

     
  • Ed Boggess 11:14 am on May 25, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , morality   

    Moral chaos! – JAM 

    The Asia News International reported in May that a man and woman, both 23, from China’s Hubei province, were planning to get married in 2011. But before they do, they have plans to switch genders. The woman says she’s always looked like a boy, and the man says his “calm demeanor” more resembles that of a woman. All over the world chaos reigns and confusion confounds. The natural is pushed aside by the perverse and the normal is so abnormal that the subnormal has become normal. Yet remember that “all that is of the world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes and the pride of life . . . is passing away but the will of God abides forever.” This is Just-A-Minute with Ed Boggess

     
  • Richard Mansel 9:21 pm on May 13, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , morality,   

    Newsworthy 

    I have posted a new blog post that I think will be of interest to you as a Christian interested in the culture.

     
  • Ron Thomas 10:21 am on May 7, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , morality   

    Is there any wonder….? 

    Is there any wonder why we are confused?

    Psychiatrists Consider More Changes to Sexual Definitions

    The American Psychiatric Association is planning to once again change its manual that doctors use to diagnose mental illness. And the public comment period for the changes to the group’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders is drawing to a close.

    Susan Wright, spokesperson with a sexual activist group called the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom, said her organization is eager to see changes made concerning sexual issues such as cross-dressing and fetishes. “We know it’s not a mental illness; it’s just a different way to have sex,” she said. “As long as it’s consensual and as long as you’re not harming someone, it should be perfectly fine.”

    Geremy Keeton, a licensed marriage and family therapist who helps clients dealing with issues of sexuality and sexual addictions, disagrees with changing the definitions. “These disorders are progressive, and early diagnosis and early treatment prevent more havoc in individuals’ lives,” he said. “We’re robbing individuals of early treatment by changing the thresholds for diagnosing these disorders. … This is obviously about normalizing non-normative sexual behaviors. We’re hearing that from the sexual-activist groups in their memos, in their e-mails and in their own talking points.”

    In contrast to its relaxed proposals regarding these sexual behaviors, there is a news link on the APA’s Web site to an article that labels bullying as a “mental health problem,” along with several other links on the topic. [CitizenLink.com, APA.org]

    This from the Pastor’s Weekly Briefing (PWB), May 7, 2010

     
    • Laura 10:25 am on May 7, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Sodom and Gomorrah. We’ll not be long in getting there.

      • Ron 10:29 am on May 7, 2010 Permalink | Reply

        Sometimes I wonder if we have not already arrived.

  • Richard Mansel 1:23 am on May 7, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , morality   

    What’s Going On? 

    I have posted my new, “In the News” post. California students were sent home from school for wearing shirts emblazoned with the American flag. 92% of Americans believe in God. Comedy Central is planning a comedy about Jesus. Read More

     
  • Richard Mansel 2:04 pm on April 30, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , morality   

    What if Jesus Were on Facebook? 

    Would we change the way we conduct ourselves if Jesus was one of our Facebook friends? Don Blackwell’s guest article on Forthright gives us something to think about.

     
  • Richard Mansel 3:36 pm on April 28, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , morality, ,   

    In the News 

    I have added a new In the News post to my blog to keep us better informed as to attacks on morality, ethics, etc. I hope you find them informative.

     
  • Richard Hill 5:36 am on January 24, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , morality   

    What needs to be restored? Morality 

    Hey Laura was late with her comment so I’ll follow her example! ; ) I’ve been away as well, but really wanted to comment on this subject.

    Read the New Testament and it’s obvious not all Christians made morality a priority. . .but most did. Another big difference between the early church and now is moral behavior was expected. Jesus in his teaching delivered a clarion call to a new level of moral integrity. He did not present it as optional! It was expected by the inspired writers, elders and fellow disciples. Those who chose not to conform were informed of the need to change in very clear language–not from a “holier than thou” prospective, but out of concern for their souls.

    Immoral dress, language and conduct seem to have made their way into the church today. We must encourage a greater discipline among Christians not to conform to this present world.

    I’m not just speaking of when we’re at church services, work, or school. I’m talking about wherever we present ourselves. That includes forwarded emails and Facebook! I’ve felt it necessary to block a couple of churchgoing people on Facebook because of the occasional foul language used in their statuses. Unbelievable! Brothers and sisters this ought not be!

    Any practical suggestions on raising the bar?

     
    • Laura 11:55 am on January 24, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      I couldn’t agree more, Richard. It starts with the parents. It seems that many parents are way more concerned about their children’s earthly happiness and popularity than they are their eternal souls. Christian parents bring their daughters to services only partially dressed these days and get defensive when it’s pointed out that their kids are using foul language or behaving in worldly ways. I cannot imagine that a Christian parent who loves his/her children would purposely raise their children to be worldly. Perhaps the problem is lack of acceptance of God’s word on the parents’ parts? Most of them seem to not accept clear Bible teaching on what things are and are not sin. So perhaps we need to go back to the basics and have some clear teaching on what sin is. A detailed study of the works of the flesh might be good. I bet most people don’t know what half those words mean!

    • Mike Riley 3:08 pm on January 24, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Richard, you asked, “Any practical suggestions on raising the bar?”

      The application of the ten “E” principles would be a start.

      http://mbriley.preachersfiles.com/2010/01/24/the-ten-e-principles/

    • jimnewy 3:38 pm on January 24, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      In my Preacherfiles and Word Press blogs I have been posting articles on the sins Paul listed prior to the fruits of the Spirit in Gal. 5. I posted to parts of a lesson on “The Sins of Moral Impurity”. I have had more comment hits on these two lesson than any of the others. Maybe at some time I’ll post pieces of the here or excerpts and let you read them.

    • Richard Hill 4:39 am on January 25, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Laura, Mike and Jim, thanks for your comments. One rule I have when teaching is not to blow through lists. When we come to those lists, we stop and thoroughly examine each one. I want to make sure we have a clear, in our everyday vernacular, understanding of each idea presented. The lists present such important concepts, yet somehow it doesn’t always translate into changed lives. It’s an uphill battle against this present culture. Mike, your “E” principles are right on target. Thanks for all your help!

  • Mike Riley 5:19 pm on January 21, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , morality,   

    Without civic morality communities perish; without personal morality their survival has no value.

    Bertrand Russell, British mathematician and philosopher (1872-1970)

     
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