Kindle version can be borrow for free with Amazon Prime |
Here is one of the revealing confessions from Secrets of an Unlikely Convert by Rosaria Champagne Butterfield, a former feminist who regrets spending her best childbearing years in bondage to the lies of self-serving feminism:
I had to confront my age. I was 39 years old when I married Kent. I was too old to have children (without fertility treatments). This was startling to me. I had spent my childbearing years fighting windmills and now I was, yet again waking up to my life, There is a biblical principle that lies behind my confusion: People whose lives are riddled with unrestrained sin act like rebellious children. Sin, when unrestrained infantilizes a person. Here I had thought that I was so mature, so capable, so "important" in the world, and the truth remains that I didn't even know how to act my age! After conversion, I was surprised to discover how old I really was."
When a girl, by delaying children in pursuit of her own goals outside of marriage and family for too long, is overdue becoming a women in its true meaning, she might find herself left with regret. This culture's norm is to exchange God-given design and blessing of children for birth-control, abortion, or lesbianism, but rarely abstinence. Recreation and fun is still demanded without the impending responsibility. This is the heart of childishness.
For more definitive explanation of the type of feminism under the fire of this blog post click here.
"For this reason God gave them over to degrading passions; for their women exchanged the natural function for that which is unnatural" (Romans 1:26)
When I say it's the norm, I really mean it. Check out these recent sociological statistics that reveal the latest style of feminism pushing its limits. Huffington Post
No comments:
Post a Comment