MEANING KEEP SOMEONE IN SUBSERVANCE AND HARDSHIP, ESPECIALLY BY THE UNJUST EXERCISE OF AUTHORITY.
MY CHANNEL TALKS ABOUT THE TRUE GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST DEATH RESURRECTION AND BURIAL. I DISCUSS THE BIBLE SUBJECTS AND HOW TO APPLY IT INTO YOUR DAILY LIFE. I DISCUSS topics SUCH AS THE MEANING OF PSALMS 23 AND REAL LIFE ISSUES SUCH AS SUICIDE AND CRIME AND VIOLENCE.
Sunday, January 7, 2024
OPPRESS SCRIPTURE FROM THE BOOK OF AMOS
AMOS 6:4 ALAS FOR THOSE WHO LIE ON BEDS OF IVORY, AND LOUNGE ON THEIR COUCHES , AND EAT LAMBS FROM THE FLOCK , AND CALVES FROM THE STALL ; YOU LIE ON BEDS ADORNED WITH IVORY AND STRETCH THEMSELVES OUT ON THEIR COUCHES, AND EAT LAMBS FROM THE FLOCK AND CALVES FROM THE MIDST OF THE STALL.
JUSTICE IS SERVED AMOS 5
But let justice roll on like a river,
righteousness like a never-failing stream!
25 “Did you bring me sacrifices and offerings
forty years in the wilderness, people of Israel?
26 You have lifted up the shrine of your king,
the pedestal of your idols,
the star of your god[b]—
which you made for yourselves.
27 Therefore I will send you into exile beyond Damascus,”
says the Lord, whose name is God Almighty
AMOS 5 DO NOT OPPRESS THE POOR GOD'S JUDGMENT ON INJUSTICE
The Day of the Lord
18 Woe to you who long
for the day of the Lord!
Why do you long for the day of the Lord?
That day will be darkness, not light.
19 It will be as though a man fled from a lion
only to meet a bear,
as though he entered his house
and rested his hand on the wall
only to have a snake bite him.
20 Will not the day of the Lord be darkness, not light—
pitch-dark, without a ray of brightness?
21 “I hate, I despise your religious festivals;
your assemblies are a stench to me.
22 Even though you bring me burnt offerings and grain offerings,
I will not accept them.
Though you bring choice fellowship offerings,
I will have no regard for them.
23 Away with the noise of your songs!
I will not listen to the music of your harps.
INDIGENOUS NATIVE LIFE PT 2
Indigenous foods are those that are native to each region, so they vary depending on your location.
Indigenous foods are whole foods. That doesn’t mean the Whole30 diet or the grocery store chain. It means foods that come directly from the ground or an animal.
Anything outside of that definition wasn’t around before colonization.
For instance, Food is Power shares:
- Plants like barley and wheat were brought over from other regions.
- Animals like cows and chickens were not native to the lands Europeans invaded.
- While milking animals wasn’t new, this wasn’t a common practice for Indigenous communities.
Any food products that are processed, or not in their natural state, as well as nonindigenous plants and animals are examples too.
INDIGENOUS NATIVE LIFE
Indigenous ways of life and traditions are highly connected to the environment and the foods it provides. Long before their contact with Europeans, Indigenous Peoples populated the Americas and were successful stewards and managers of the land.
Indigenous Andeans, for example, developed more than a thousand different species of potato, each of which thrived in its own distinct growing conditions. Along with potatoes, many other foods—including corn, beans, squash, pumpkins, peppers, tomatoes, yams, peanuts, wild rice, chocolate, pineapples, avocados, papayas, pecans, strawberries, cranberries, and blueberries, to name a few, are indigenous to the Americas. More than half of the crops grown worldwide today were first cultivated successfully and scientifically in the Americas by Indigenous People. Crops and other foods were exchanged along vast, distinct, and complex trade routes.
Many Native food systems were disrupted due to European settlement and the displacement of Native peoples from their lands. Then, for over a hundred years, the U.S. government issued foodstuffs to Native Americans. The food was unhealthy and substantially different from traditional diets.
THE INDIGENOUS PT 2
Because it is such an inhospitable landscape, the Arctic’s population was comparatively small and scattered. Some of its peoples, especially the Inuit in the northern part of the region, were nomads, following seals, polar bears and other game as they migrated across the tundra. In the southern part of the region, the Aleut were a bit more settled, living in small fishing villages along the shore. The Inuit and Aleut had a great deal in common. Many lived in dome-shaped houses made of sod or timber (or, in the North, ice blocks). They used seal and otter skins to make warm, weatherproof clothing, aerodynamic dogsleds and long, open fishing boats (kayaks in Inuit; baidarkas in Aleut).By the time the United States purchased Alaska in 1867, decades of oppression and exposure to European diseases had taken their toll: The native population had dropped to just 2,500; the descendants of these survivors still make their homes in the area today.
THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
Many thousands of years before Christopher Columbus’ ships landed in the Bahamas, a different group of people discovered America: the nomadic ancestors of modern Native Americans who hiked over a “land bridge” from Asia to what is now Alaska more than 12,000 years ago.
In fact, by the time European adventurers arrived in the 15th century, scholars estimate that more than 50 million people were already living in the Americas. Of these, some 10 million lived in the area that would become the United States. As time passed, these migrants and their descendants pushed south and east, adapting as they went.
In order to keep track of these diverse groups, anthropologists and geographers have divided them into “culture areas,” or rough groupings of contiguous peoples who shared similar habitats and characteristics. Most scholars break North America—excluding present-day Mexico—into 10 separate culture areas: the Arctic, the Subarctic, the Northeast, the Southeast, the Plains, the Southwest, the Great Basin, California, the Northwest Coast and the Plateau.
The Arctic culture area, a cold, flat, treeless region (actually a frozen desert) near the Arctic Circle in present-day Alaska, Canada and Greenland, was home to the Inuit and the Aleut. Both groups spoke, and continue to speak, dialects descended from what scholars call the Eskimo-Aleut language family.
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And these are the names of the men that shall stand with you: of the tribe of Reuben; Elizur the son of Shedeur. ...