Thursday, October 02, 2008


“What was the purpose of my life, does it have any meaning?” “And is this really the end, or can I hope for something more?” What if “something more” is the reality? What if there is a Master Plan and a Final Solution to the pain, sorrow and death of this planet? What if Jesus is who He says He is? And what if His death and resurrection can accomplish what He claimed it could? What if birth is the end and death is the beginning? What if...


May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in Him so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. (Romans 15:13)

5 Comments:

At 11:17 AM, Blogger nanalissa said...

Wow, thanks Scott for sharing. God allows us each moment to be used for His glory; this is a great opportunity for me to take a step back and think about the value of life and how important Christ's life in us really is.

 
At 1:24 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

Scott, I admire you just for going there. I can't imagine I would myself go there.... I dont think I'd have a strenght to go there, walk around the camp , hear the stories....

 
At 11:18 AM, Blogger maria said...

I´ve been there... I know what are you talking about.. You hear about the genocide all the time, but you really realize what happened only when you see all of those faces, hair or shoes... the amount of shoes you see is huge, but it still is just a little part of the real amount. that is scary..

 
At 1:12 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

where are the bones? bones don't cremate. piles and piles of hair and eyeglasses and no bones. 6 million sets of bones areas of eastern europe should look like the killing fields of southeast asia. I'm not a neo nazi. I worked in a crematory for over a year and I got to thinking. I think too much? I had too much to think last night...

 
At 3:13 AM, Blogger Fuller said...

To Michael Huntington: I found the following quote online at Holocaust Studies,.

Germans crushed Jewish bones in two specific contexts only. One was in the Operation
Reinhard death camps (Belzec, Sobibor and Treblinka) in Poland. The other was in the former
Soviet territories (Latvia, Estonia, Ukraine, Belarus, and Lithuania), where SS and police
detachments known as Einsatzgruppen conducted mobile killing operations, shooting thousands of Jews and burying them in mass graves. Beginning in 1942, when the Germans were no longer sure they could win the war on the Eastern front, exhumation crews were sent into these territories to open the mass graves, burn the bodies, and crush the bones, in order to destroy all physical evidence. A special machine ground the bones into a powder of dust and very fine pieces, which were then reburied along with the ashes from the burned bodies.

 

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