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Simple lessons every world leader must learn!

TeeKee

Alfrescian
Loyal
Amos 6:7-8

(7) Therefore they shall now go captive as the first of the captives,
And those who recline at banquets shall be removed.
(8) The Lord GOD has sworn by Himself,
The LORD God of hosts says:
" I abhor the pride of Jacob,
And hate his palaces;
Therefore I will deliver up the city
And all that is in it."
Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.




Here God exposes the root cause of Israel's problems: Pride brought forth their self-pleasing religion, their overconfidence in their strength and their self-indulgent lifestyles. Where were their trust and faith in God? Pride causes people to resist and reject Him.

God saw this unwarranted pride most acutely in Israel's leadership. As we have seen, most of this chapter is aimed directly at the leaders, upon whose conduct the nation's destiny is largely dependent. God shows in the Bible that the leader of any institution—nation, church, business, family—can make or break it. If a leader because of righteousness comes under the blessing of God, then the people are also blessed. But if the leader is cursed by God because of his wickedness, his people likewise come under the curse.

When Judah had a good and righteous king like Josiah (I Chronicles 34-35), the nation prospered, but under evil Manasseh (I Chronicles 33), the nation declined. In this century, England experienced a year of turmoil in 1936 over the determination of Edward VIII to marry the American divorcée Wallis Simpson. Yet, his brother, George VI, refusing to leave London during World War II, rallied the nation during its darkest hour. This principle of leadership holds true in any enterprise from large to small.

We can also see this in the second commandment: "You shall not bow down to them nor serve them. For I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children" (Exodus 20:5). The fathers—the leaders—and the children both suffer. When the fathers are blessed or cursed by God, so are the children. The difference is only in the measure of responsibility that each bears.

In life, everyone is a leader as well as a follower, depending on the circumstance. Amos shows that a leader should never be complacent and content with the way things are because pride follows—and shortly after it, a fall (Proverbs 16:18). Leaders of nations bear a great responsibility because, if they allow morals to collapse, all their military prowess and vaunted technology will not save them. Above all else, the first consideration of a leader is to be moral.

But the Israelite leaders of Amos' day were people who first considered their own reputation and condition. They compared themselves with others instead of God (II Corinthians 10:12). In ignoring their spiritual health, they could neither lead and guide the nation, nor help and counsel others. Since they had failed so horribly in their duty, God says the leadership would be among the first to be led away as captives.




John W. Ritenbaugh
 
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TeeKee

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singapore reports 6th A/H1N1 related death



SINGAPORE, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- Singapore reported on Sunday the country's sixth case of Influenza A/H1N1 related death.

According to Singapore's Ministry of Health, the fatality is a 29-year-old Indian female with no other known underlying medical conditions other than being overweight.

She was admitted to local hospital on July 25 with a four-day history of flu-like symptoms and having fainted that morning. She was transferred to the intensive care unit on July 26 because of low oxygen saturation.

She passed away Sunday morning and the cause of death is pneumonia with renal failure, with Influenza A/H1N1 infection as a contributing factor.

Singapore reported its first confirmed case of Influenza A/H1N1on May 27. The country's first A/H1N1 related death case was reported on July 18.
 
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