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Tagged: abortion, America, bloodshed, broken covenants, civil war, crisis, day of reckoning, heal, indigenous, Jezebel, judgment, massacres, Molech, nation, native Americans, Roe V Wade, slavery
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September 20, 2020 at 1:57 pm #19633Ron McGatlinKeymaster“A Day of Reckoning! Keys to Heal Our Nation”Cheryl Amabile, Colorado Springs, CO
“…Upon you may fall the guilt of all the righteous blood shed on Earth, from the blood of righteous Abel to the blood of Zechariah, the son of Berechiah, whom you murdered between the temple and the altar. Truly I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation.” (Matthew 23:35-36)
In the book of Joel, the prophet begins to address the people of Israel about the crisis in the land by asking, “Has anything like this ever happened in your days or in the days of your ancestors?” If we were to ask the same question in America today, many would associate our current circumstances of caustic division with the very tensions that were escalating between the states just prior to the Civil War. We would agree.
It is also our understanding, as it was Abraham Lincoln’s, that America’s Civil War was the day of reckoning for the bloodshed of slavery. In Lincoln’s second inaugural address he framed the context of their present reality with these words:
“Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue, until all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, ‘The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.'”
By 1861, when the first shots of the Civil War were fired, the atrocity of slavery had continued uninterrupted for over two centuries, being woven into the fabric of our nation’s everyday life. It is a chilling reminder of how God will often tarry generation after generation until He requires a reckoning for persistent bloodshed. Suddenly, in just four years’ time, over 650,000 men, from both the North and the South, died on the battlefields of the Civil War to atone for the land. (Photo via Pixabay)
Abortion in America Will End
We believe God is bringing us now into a day of reckoning once again for the bloodshed of over 60 million babies that have been slaughtered in the womb since abortion was legalized in 1973. Yet, for the past twenty years, hundreds of thousands have gathered in fields, stadiums and arenas to plead the Blood of Jesus before the court of Heaven, seeking an end to this modern-day holocaust. That Blood may yet save us. But one way or another, whether Roe V. Wade is annulled through our court system or through another civil war-type crisis, we believe abortion in America will be brought to an end.
Walking the Trail of Tears
Back in 2003, Lou Engle was flying from Canada to America reading a biography of William Wilberforce. There on the plane, the Lord spoke to him, “You will raise up a prayer movement for the ending of the slave trade of abortion in America.” Lou began to weep as he was gripped with this sense of commissioning.
Not long afterwards, Lou was led into a 40-day fast in California to break the spirit of Jezebel. Little did he know he was going to be challenging the death altars of Baal as they did in the days of Jezebel when babies were being offered up to Molech. Then, while ministering in Connecticut, a woman had a dream that he was walking the “trail of prayers,” which she knew had to do with the Trail of Tears. When Lou got home, a young man had a dream. This dream is possibly one of the most poignant sounds we must capture at this time.
In the dream, he saw warring drums in the heavens and they were Native American drums. Then he heard a voice say, “This is God’s war against abortion. Native Americans must lead it. African Americans must lead it. The whole nation must lead it!” Then the scene changed and the Native chiefs were with Lou and his wife and there was a special fruit they were looking at. The Natives said, “You cannot buy this fruit unless you walk in our sandals.”
We knew this dream meant that we could not deal with the precious fruit of the womb unless we first walked in the sandals of the Native Americans, identifying with their pain, confessing the bloodshed, the massacres, and the broken covenants that we made with them. We began to understand how the bloodshed and our broken covenants with the indigenous people were foundational to the next wave of bloodshed that came with the African slaves who were brought to the land.
So, we walked the Trail of Tears from North Carolina to Tahlequah, Oklahoma where thousands of Native Americans had previously walked, and died, when they were forcibly removed from their ancestral homelands. An African American leader named Will Ford joined us in this identificational walk of prayer and repentance. As the trail led through Montgomery, Alabama, where Martin Luther King had pastored at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, he and Lou Engle made a covenant together as intercessors that they would give their lives to the ending of abortion and to the healing of the races. (Photo via Wikimedia Commons)
The White Bag with Black Handles
That night, Will had a defining dream. In the dream he and Lou were driving together in a car to pick up Martin Luther King, Jr. When he came out to meet them, he was carrying a white bag with black handles. Before getting in the car, King violently emptied the contents of the bag and threw it to the ground. In the dream, Will remembered thinking that the bag would make a good souvenir, so he jumped out of the car to pick it up. Just then, Martin Luther King grabbed him by the shoulders and said, “Don’t you pick up that bag!” He then shared with him what it would take to heal the race issue in the nation and to bring reconciliation. Will couldn’t remember all that he was told, but he broke down weeping in the dream and woke up still weeping.
As he and Lou processed the dream together, Will sensed the Lord speaking to him about its meaning. He understood that the white bag with the black handles was about how the blacks have handled their white baggage. He knew the Lord was saying to him, “You’ve been carrying it way too long.” Then he sensed the Lord speak to his heart, saying, “Get rid of your bitterness, get rid of your resentment, get rid of your unforgiveness, so you can all get into this new vehicle that’s going to bring revival and justice for everyone!”
Will Ford, and others like him, have become signs and wonders in our day of how God is raising up men and women, in spite of their pain and suffering, who have embraced the Cross of Christ. We believe that in many ways, the Natives, the African Americans, and those who have been wounded the most, have the greatest authority to heal the nation – if they can forgive.
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Cheryl Amabile, Editor
The Briefing via TheCall
Email: thebriefing@thecall.com
Website: http://www.thecall.comCheryl Amabile and her husband Paul have served on the leadership team of TheCall and the Justice House of Prayer movement for over 14 years. Together they have led prayer initiatives across the country and are working to mobilize TheCall’s growing network of intercessors. Cheryl is the editor of The Briefing, a digital publication of The Call, that provides prophetic insight for strategic intercession. She’s pleased to enable thousands to track closely with the key dreams and assignments that TheCall is stewarding from the Lord. Cheryl and Paul have six children and their first grandchild and live in Colorado Springs.
Source: https://elijahlist.com
- This topic was modified 4 years, 2 months ago by Ron McGatlin.
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