Great Sermon! May The Lord continue to bless and strengthen your ministry, Pastor Weaver. Your teaching is like the words of Ezra. Pray that the Church will hearken to your words, as they are from The Lord.
Great Sermon! I lived in Arlington, VA when I was in 1st and 4th grade( my dad was in the military.) While living there,I developed a life long love for history.I visited all the usual tourist spots, including Robert E. Lee's mansion. After listening to this message, it puts a new perspective on what the Civil War was really all about. You have a passion for truth and wish every American could hear this account of history. Thank you for your labor of love and for sharing this amazing history!
Great Sermon! Hello Pastor John,
this sermon is a spiritual, nutrional main stay, truly a Blessing!
Psalm 80:19 King James Version (KJV)
19 Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts, cause thy face to shine; and we shall be saved.
I thank Christ Jesus for everything, God the Father for every good thing and God the Holy Ghost for his comfort, Amen
brother James
Great Sermon! Thank you for such an edifying message, Pastor Weaver. During these troubled times, we are so thankful for your preaching and teaching. I found a quote from a book we have about the Southern Confederacy, and I had to share it here, because this sermon reminded me of it. God bless you and much love to you and yours in Christ Jesus
"Look at the South until you are filled with the love of her, and when you are filled with her greatness, reflect that it was acquired by men of daring who knew their duty and feared dishonor in the hour of action. All alike gave their lives and received praise which grows not old. I speak not so much of that in which their remains are laid as of that in which their glory survives to be remembered forever, on every fitting occasion in word and deed. There are monuments and graves for famous men, but the memorials we speak of today are not so much engraved in stone as in the hearts of men." ~ Dana Sheppard
States' Rights: Slaughtered at Appomattox The ruination of states' rights was stated by Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase on a year after the surrender of Robert E. Lee at Appomattox. Salmon P. Chase said that, "State's rights died at Appomattox." What Salmon P. Chase was saying was that the surrender of the Confederacy at Appomattox on 09 April, 1865 was the nail in the coffin to local sovereignty through state's rights. The erasure of state's rights on 09 April, 1865 resulted in the centralization of power in Washington, D.C. The fact is that state's rights was meant to restrain any power grab by the federal government intended on expanding the scope of influence in Washington D.C.