Please watch this five minute video.

Thank you all so very much for coming to the Appeals court to encourage me.  I knew my court appointed attorney did not know Christ.  I found that out last Thursday morning when we met for the first time.  I knew he was a Democrat, a Quaker, pro-abortion, and going to vote for Barack Obama again this year.  I knew the cards were stacked against us in the court room..  I knew that two of the judges would be very ideologically and theologically opposed to the stand we take for Christ. 

I thought I would be pretty much alone.  Oh, I knew that God would never leave nor forsake me but, for whatever reason, I felt forsaken when I arrived at the Charlotte School of Law – alone.  I entered the building, turned down the hall to the left, found a seat at the end of the hall and just sat down – alone.  I was feeling pretty sorry for “Me.”  It was hard for me to pray.  I didn’t want to pray.  I felt forsaken by a country I love and am very thankful for.  I felt forsaken by God’s church.  I was having a pity party of unbelievable magnitude.  The whole world had shrunk to just me – poor, pitiful “Me.”  And I was all alone, though there were many people in the room with “Me.”  I was alone.

I was thinking only of “Me” – alone!

My son David put out a very moving appeal for folks to pray for his dad this April 2, 2012, and an invitation to come to the court hearing.  Tears welled-up in my eyes.  Then, many of you emailed me or left messages on my phone that were all pointing me to Jesus.  But I was busy with “Me.”  Though I appreciated all the encouraging words,  I simply felt forsaken.

Have you noticed how many times I have talked about “Me” and how “Me” was “feeling.”

God brought to my selfish, whiney little mind a picture I had seen earlier that morning.  It was a picture of Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani who was hung earlier this very same morning.  He was hung from a crane that was brought in just for that purpose by the Iranian regime.  He was hung because he was a Christian.  He died for his faith.  He died well.  He had run his lap of the race.  He finished the course.  (we did receive a notification that Pastor Youcef has been executed in Iran but no other news outlets have verified this that we are aware of, we hope and pray that his execution has not been carried out and that Pastor Youcef is still alive) It was “my turn now!” 

It was then that I saw Kathy Pavkovic and Lisa Metzger at the end of the hall.  They were coming to encourage “Me” to run the race marked out.  They did not come sympathize with poor pitiful “Me.”  They had come to encourage me to gut it up, shut-up, and continue storming the gates of hell.  By the way, I found that I was not alone.  I was not forsaken.  Then I saw my son David and all of our grandkids walk into the courtroom surrounded by our great friends from “Cities 4 Life.”  They were looking to “Me” as a man who follows hard after Christ.  I have a calling.  I have a Savior.  His Name is Jesus.

I do well understand John’s doubt when he was imprisoned (Matthew 11:1-6) and Jesus’ admonition to him “…blessed is the man who does not fall way on my account.”  I have come to understand my wretched “Me” a little bit better now. 

I want to thank you all for your prayers, presence and fellowship with “Me,” as sorry as I am, during these very small sufferings for Christ.  They are so little compared to all that He has done for “Me.”

I agree with the video.  “All I have is Christ,” and you to encourage me to “run to the roar.’

Thank you all!

In Christian love,

Flip

PS.  Please don’t forget to pray for Clifton Howell and Jo Scott who will be going through the very same thing I just went through as they appeal their case before a three judge panel at Denver School of law on Wednesday, April 4, 2012.    

Sue Idtensohn, President and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Greater Orlando is retiring at the age of 66.  Thank God!  May her tribe never increase.  This article will bring you face to face with a woman who has been turned over to her own depraved mind and any little tid-bit the devil can add to it.

It is sickening to hear her “heroic selfishness” abound in almost every statement.  It is absolutely impossible for her to think of anything outside of herself.  Look at her picture and you will see it in her face.  She is ugly.  It is an ugliness of the heart.  It is not because of any physical deformity.  It is because her heart is hard toward God and that hardness shows up in her face.

Pray for God to break through the hardness of her sin sick heart that she will become beautiful in the way Jesus intended.  Only He can make beauty out of the ashes of our own twisted and messed-up lives.  ~ Flip

NEWS (Interview posted on Orlando Weekly)

An exit interview with Sue Idtensohn of Planned Parenthood of Greater Orlando

Idtensohn talks contraception, empowerment and retirement amid the current political attacks on reproductive rights

Photo: Rob Bartlett, License: N/A

Rob Bartlett

By Billy Manes

Published: March 22, 2012

Sir, we’ve got a person here that lives in the neighborhood that cuts the heads off babies,” a religious protester says to a passing car. It’s July 19, 2011, and he’s picketing outside the Titusville home of Sue Idtensohn, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Greater Orlando. In between half-hearted, tuneless songs about the gospel of Jesus, the waving of poster-board images of dismembered fetuses and accusations ranging from profiteering to infanticide (how else could she afford such a nice home?), Idtensohn remains stoic. By now, she’s grown accustomed to preaching peanut galleries outside her home and her office, Planned Parenthood’s main Orlando clinic on Tampa Avenue. But she’s always taken it in stride, facing down the Bible-bearing critics with the same aplomb she faces down the legislators that encourage them.

“All of the noise around me, I’ve probably gotten a little hardened to it,” she says over a glass of wine at White Wolf Café. “I made the decision a long time ago that if someone was going to do harm to me, they were going to do harm to me.”

But neither Idtensohn nor Planned Parenthood’s two local offices have had much harm done to them, despite the fact that some of her clinicians include bulletproof vests in their work uniforms. Since 1998, Idtensohn has led PPGO from a fledgling organization of almost secretive advocacy to a thriving resource for women’s health serving 26,000 men and women with basic health care annually.

In January, on the 39th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision, Idtensohn, now 66, announced that she would be retiring from her post; her last day is March 29. The timing couldn’t be more surreal. The last year has seen attempts by Republicans to shut down the federal government over Planned Parenthood funding, a huge public-relations disaster when the Komen for the Cure Foundation threatened to pull its funding for breast cancer screenings from the organization and unprecedented – even obscene – political forays into wedge issues of contraception and vaginal intrusion. All of a sudden, women – who make up 51 percent of the electorate – are the punching bags of the moment. And this is when Idtensohn decides to walk away?

She says, with some authority, that this is the perfect time, the time for a new generation of activists, leaders and practitioners to step up and defend the rights of women. She’s done her job, and now other women – women like her replacement, 28-year-old Jenna Tosh – need to carry the torch.

“I love that I grabbed an organization like Planned Parenthood here in its infancy, and now it’s at its adolescence,” she laughs. “Here you go. Here are the keys to the car. I can’t think of a better scenario.”

Orlando Weekly : We’ve talked a lot over the years, and what never fails to surprise me is how you’ve been put in a position of both running a clinic and looking out for your life and the lives of your staff. Does that happen in any other medical field?

Sue Idtensohn: I challenge anyone [to] tell me what other organization faces the challenges that we face, and it’s clearly around women, clearly around women’s issues. I don’t know any other legislation that’s ever been talked about forcing a doctor to show a man what his prostate looks like on a sonogram machine. I don’t know any other doctor. There are not people protesting in front of HIV clinics, not people protesting in front of STD clinics. They’re protesting in front of Planned Parenthood. Everything we do is all about prevention. We’re trying to prevent unintended pregnancies, we’re trying to prevent abortions, we’re trying to make sure that everybody is healthy. I have always been appalled that someone can come and tell me what I can or cannot do, within reason. Particularly when they come and tell me what I can or cannot do when it comes to my body. They’re going to tell me what kind of life I can live, the decisions I’m going to make? I am absolutely determined to tell them that they’re not going to get away with it.

To what extent has that constant pressure influenced the last 14 years of your life?

I think you have to put it in the context of your family as well. It’s very stressful personally, but I have to make sure that I modulate that stress, so I don’t carry it over to my relationships, I don’t carry it over to my staff, because I have 35 people that work for me over at that clinic. And if I want to make sure that there’s a sane head running this organization, that I put this life into perspective, that you stand up for your principles, that you stand up for your beliefs. I’m one of those people who will stand up for those beliefs, but there are other people who feel as strongly as I do that won’t stand on a corner with a sign saying “Support Planned Parenthood.” I do. And I think that has to do with how you view your job and how you view your life. I’ve always said, ‘I hope that someone knew that I was here.’

The sense of being forthright when you’re right, that’s got to mean something.

It’s very emboldening to me, because I do know that we’re right. We’re standing on the side of the majority of Americans who feel very strongly about it. Planned Parenthood has an approval rating of 68 percent. Congress has an approval rating of what? I’m supposed to be worried about Congress? The problem we find with confrontational people, and also media people to an extent, is that they like to inflame the topic.

But that inflammation has worked, at least to some degree, in your favor. The Facebook response alone to the Komen decision earlier this year sparked a firestorm. Also, how else would we have heard about holding an aspirin in between your knees as the preferred old-man means of contraception? Women are angry.

They’re doing that in a sense anonymously through the social networks, because one out of every three women in this country have had an abortion, and we have asked them to speak up, but in the past most of that was confidential. Now that there’s an outlet for women to go ahead and speak up about it, I think it’s an incredible development. I think that as Americans we have always wanted to do that. But we’ve been tamped down by whatever confines we live in, whether it’s religious or political. I think it’s a terrific move. And I think it’s another reason that Planned Parenthood needs to have young people, needs to have young men and young women involved, because they’re really going to be setting whatever the charter is for reproductive health, for gay rights, for the environment, for all of the things they’re going to be living with for the rest of their years.

What’s your take on how a woman’s reproductive freedom grew into the political monster it is at the moment?

I think it happened in 2010 when we had this group of people come into elected office, and they came in with specific guidelines about what they wanted to do. Not necessarily what their constituents wanted them to do, but if you remember correctly, they were riding on this wave; the Tea Party came in, banks were being bailed out, the government’s spending too much money, unemployment is too high, ‘I’m losing my home.’ But coupled with that was kind of this undercurrent of social issues. They always bring up abortion. They always bring up gay rights. Also, the last couple of months, we’ve had this whole debate on contraception. It’s such a silly debate, because it’s women’s health care. It cuts across all religious barriers, it cuts across all ethnic barriers. They bring it forward, I think, because they can’t fix the economy; they can’t go ahead and rewrite the tax code so it makes sense; they can’t do anything right now about trying to get the housing market back on some kind of even keel. I certainly think they are very upset that there’s a Democrat in the White House and they are certainly upset that there’s a black man who is president. I think gay rights issues have done very well – there have been a number of states that have passed gay marriage – but when it comes to women’s issues, I think they feel like they can get away with it.

To me, I think the complacency we’ve seen in the younger generation about birth control has been directly challenged. It’s been replaced by a digital riot. People want to be involved now.

For example, we had an escort training last week and we had 40 people sign up. A couple weeks prior to that, we had 30 show up. What that means is they’re being trained to escort clients into Planned Parenthood. Young men, young women, old men, old women: It was awesome. They said, ‘I am so upset about the attacks. You guys have always been respectful of everyone else’s opinion. You have not been out bashing people over the head with signs. You have been quietly competent and intelligent about how you’re going about doing your business.’

Do you think that waning so-called radical feminism has allowed this latest round of scrutiny and attacks to sneak its way back in? I mean, if women just climb back into the reproductive closet, don’t you just end up with a board of five religious men telling Congress how they think women should be treated? Do you think, in essence, that there’s been a correction?

I do. I can see it a lot out at University of Central Florida. At our last event there, many of the people there were men. It’s very interesting to me. When you talk to any of those women who are involved in our movement, they’re really not into labels so much. They’re into the fact that they feel they have the right to determine what happens to them, the right to determine who they want to hang out with, what kind of movements they want to support. It’s very difficult to talk to a young woman and say, ‘Listen, abortion may be overturned,’ because Roe is 39 years old. None of those women have ever been without the option of having a choice. I think what we did when we grew up, we kind of labeled people, or the media labeled us. They labeled us the feminists or feminazis, and I think they did that because they didn’t know how to talk of us any differently. But now we are so part of the fabric of the country.

I think what’s happened in a good way is that women are much more of a part of the bylaws of this country. I love to go every year to Olympia High School and I talk about the ethics of abortion, and they bring in a priest as well. But when I look out at that group, I am just so thrilled that they’re all from everywhere. Some of them may be WASP conservatives, but if you ask the question if they would be upset if one of their black friends were discriminated against at a restaurant, they all raise their hands. That is progress. When I ask, ‘Would you be upset if your girlfriend got into a university and you didn’t; you got into a community college?’ They say no, they don’t think so. I mean, you couldn’t even ask those questions 15 years ago. What happens with real movements is they become part of the fabric.

But then you have what we’re experiencing now. Even I, in my wildest conspiracy theories, would never have imagined we’d be talking about birth control as a variable in 2012, and transvaginal ultrasounds. And it’s men, many of whom don’t know the organs about which they are talking.

It’s the same for women. We don’t live in your male bodies. We have to make sure that people know that women are the only group that is being intruded upon for medical decisions. You know, who else is? It’s a medical issue. The pill is over 50 years old. It’s been studied. But because it is wrapped around the culture of the ’60s and free love, and for the first time women were able to take a product that would not tie them to having families of eight or 10 kids. For the first time ever, women had an opportunity to do what they always wanted to do, their mothers wanted to do, their grandmothers wanted to do. Now we’re living in a time when we’re able to do that with this terrific product. And now we’re talking about that 50 years later. And it’s because we have legislators who are men and that are talking about this stuff, because they want women to get back in the kitchen. It’s an attack again on the way that we’re living our lives.

It sounds like an attack on evolution.

I don’t know why they’re so tone deaf to that. Again, I think women are not represented enough. They’ve been arguing about contraception, they’ve been arguing about tampons. Again, I think it’s because it’s about women, and they think we’re going to put up with this. As I said before about the young women, I think what we’ve done as older women is when we’ve come in contact with them, we’ve told them, ‘You have a voice. Don’t ever let anyone tell you that you don’t.’ And so that voice is being expressed. It also gets back to the fact that we have to do a better job electing people who represent our voices, because regardless of how you feel about an issue, they’re going to forever make legislative rules that are going to affect us for a very long time.

When you came into your position in Orlando in 1998 following an economic development stint with the Gov. Lawton Chiles administration (1992-1996), what did you see?

I found the job out of the newspaper. It was right after I stopped working for Chiles and Jeb Bush had come in. I had worked for Johnson & Johnson, it was my first job ever, and I was the first woman that they hired. I was the first woman who was selling birth control pills in this country. I was absolutely appalled – I’ve always been appalled, since I was born, about a lot of things; I’ve spent most of my adult life appalled – I thought wait a minute, why can’t they have access to the pill so that they can control their lives. So when I saw this job as the director of Planned Parenthood, that was almost a full circle for me. Because I worked in Asia, I ran an institute in Singapore, I’ve done a lot of things. I kind of think of myself as a renaissance woman, because I’ve always thought that you have a limited amount of time, and you need to go for it. So when I interviewed for the job with the board at the time, I said, ‘My resume is very unusual, I’ve done a lot things. But I really believe that women have not been represented appropriately in this area and I think Planned Parenthood needs to have a presence.’

Was there resistance?

I think there was resistance because they didn’t know what they were getting. I said to them, ‘If you want someone who is going to be a force in this community and talk about women’s health and make it an important discussion and grow this facility, then you need to hire me. If you don’t want to do that, please don’t hire me. If you want me to just stay on West Colonial Drive in a little 2,000-square-foot cinder-block house and hand out brochures, please don’t hire me. It’s an injustice to you and an injustice to me.’ They hired me. So I said OK, and I kind of dragged them and changed the board a couple of times. I said, ‘Hey, this is very important and we need to be proud of it.’ At the time, this Planned Parenthood was the youngest in the whole federation. Planned Parenthood’s 95 years old. There are affiliates around the country that have a long history. They have large endowments left to them. We just don’t have that here yet. We will have it, because we’ve really established our footprint in this community. I tell people all the time that I am not confrontational, but I am very determined. You want to hook up with me, we’re going to get stuff done. It is about representing women and families in the community; it’s not about me.

So is right now the lowest of lows or the highest of highs for you? Or is it somewhere in between?

It’s kind of somewhere in between. I am very proud of what we have done in this community, my staff, the board and me. It is very unusual that a nonprofit after 15 years is thriving and growing every year and being asked to contribute and be partners with other people and groups in the community. It’s a hard slog, because Orlando is not a philanthropic community, it doesn’t have a broad base of companies that are headquartered here. The two largest employers are headquartered out of California. Most of my donations come from 90 percent individuals that want to help us and make sure that we’re here. I think with Jenna Tosh coming on, it’s just a terrific transition. I couldn’t be happier.

What else has changed since you started?

Women are being personally attacked now. And they’re being told what they can and cannot do. That’s new within the past five years. People who stand outside my clinic and people who picket my home are absolutely on one track, and that track is to outlaw abortion. It’s also about controlling women. There’s a segment of this population that thinks we’ve gotten out of hand. Forty-five percent of women in Florida that are having babies are unmarried. That’s a huge comment: ‘I want to be a mom and I think I can handle a child appropriately. I don’t need a man. I need his sperm, but I really don’t need him.’ And everybody on the conservative side of this issue thinks that that’s a degradation of family values. I’ll tell you what family values are. Family values are not bringing your 8-year-old to Planned Parenthood and protesting with a shirt that says, “I hate gays and you’re a baby killer.” So I have absolutely no compunction about ignoring these people. And then we have men out there protesting.

Why does it seem like it’s always the men leading the protests?

They tell women that we don’t have the capacity to think. We can’t make tough decisions. Well, sure we can. The other thing that upsets me the most is that this is a plural religious society. I don’t necessarily have to believe in God or Jesus, and you’re telling me that I’m going to go to hell? Good, I’ll see all my friends there.

It’s also a plural gender society. For the first time men are figuring out that women don’t piss through their vaginas, apparently. For the first time, men are figuring out that a clitoris is not the same as a uterus.

There’s a lot biology learning going on out there. They’re not comfortable. We were hoping, maybe blindly, that the legislative men who are in their 50s would have daughters in their 20s, and the daughters would step in and say, ‘Hey, wait a minute dad, what’s going on?’ I think we’re beginning to see some of that, but I do think in Florida we’re beginning to have more legislators that are heavily funded by religious organizations, and they vote accordingly. We’ve got a couple Republicans who will take us behind closed doors and say, ‘We really believe in what you guys are doing. I’ve got daughters. I have a wife who’s on me all the time about this. But I cannot go onto the floor and talk about this, because my peers will not let me have a committee chair, they will not let me be on a bill that I believe in.’ It is archaic the way the political system is designed. It’s all driven by money.

Somebody asked me today, why are you guys always standing up and being so political? Because the other side has driven the debate. If we don’t talk about politics and how it’s going to impact women and families, who’s going to talk about it? NOW doesn’t talk about it, NARAL doesn’t talk about it. Planned Parenthood, we’re the only one in the state that has a lobbyist in Tallahassee. If we don’t talk, who will? If abortion is outlawed and birth control is outlawed and somehow you have to have a full body scan before you can have a termination there, if somebody doesn’t go, ‘Wait a minute, you guys can’t do that?’ We’re calling people on what they are doing. We’re saying, ‘Explain to me why this is the better interest of Florida. Explain it to me.’ We talk with women every day and say this is a very difficult choice that you’re about to make and it’s confidential. And then we can’t say, ‘Oh, and by the way, would you stand up and testify?’

Somehow they think if we really clamp down on abortion, that 45 percent of single mothers giving birth [statistic] is going to come down. Fifty-nine percent of pregnancies in Florida are unintended. The national average is 50 percent. It just blows my mind.

On a personal note, how does your husband feel about the past 14 years?

My husband is one of those unique individuals who fell in love with me 31 years ago and he’s never been out of love with me. He tells me every day that I’m the defining moment in his life. He’s thrilled. I need about three months to decompress and I don’t want to be on anybody’s list that I have to show up at places where I don’t want to be. We bought some land north of Chattanooga, Tenn. It’s in the woods. I’ve never built a modern home, and I’m very handy. I’m a builder. I like to build things. I have very good feelings about leaving. I have very good feelings about what’s going to happen next.

 

 

Ken and Jo Scott have been given a platform few of us will ever have.  Their case is a Civil Lawsuit brought against them by St. John’s Episcopal Church to force gentle Christians to stop proclaiming the Gospel of Christ on a public sidewalk outside of the Church.  150+ law students and their professors will attend.  The hearing will take place at the Denver University Law School.

Pray for Ken and Jo and pray that the Name of Jesus will be lifted high. ~ Flip

 Hello All,

A panel of three Appeal’s Court Judges at the D.U. Law School will hear Oral Arguments in favor of free speech on the public sidewalk in front of St. John’s Episcopal church on Wednesday April 4th at 3:30 PM. Attorney Rebecca Messal will argue for Clif and I.  She just won the FACE Case for us.  150 + afternoon Law students and their professors will also attend .  D. U. provides their law students an opportunity like this twice a year. Our case is their class project.  St. John’s is suing us under the Nuisance and Conspiracy to Commit Nuisance laws. They challenge the right to protest on a public sidewalk.  St. John’s ordained a woman priest that is on the Board of Planned Parenthood and they support abortion and homosexuality.  We were consistently able to get  visitors to leave and members to quit the church. There are several Judges that are members there. They were not happy with us, so the Episcopal Church initiated a Civil Lawsuit and got an Injunction against us that has kept us away for several years.

If you attend the Oral Arguments, there will be reserved seating for the guests of Ken Scott and Clifton Powell, please arrive before 3:30 p.m. for seating. Our lawyers ask that all attending dress in their Sunday best.  No tee shirts.  I’m doing what they are asking.  The Thomas More Society out of Chicago is footing the bill and their number one Attorney Thomas Brejcha will be attending, to Assist Rebecca Messall and Monica Flanigan of Hackstaff Law Group in Denver.

If you can’t attended, please pray for them to be anointed to speak to the Colorado Appeal Court Judges to see the truth.

Thanks again and God Bless!!! 

Ken and Jo, and Clifton Powell

Please pray for Flip tomorrow.  He is to appear before three judges at the Charlotte School of Law to appeal his “guilty” verdict for stalking.  The court hearing will be at 1:00 PM EST.

Thank you in advance.  All glory be to God!    

Press Release

 

2 April, 2012

 

For Immediate Release:

Homeland Security Unites with Abortion Industry to Silence Gospel

Charlotte, North Carolina:   In an effort to silence the First Amendment Rights of Christians carrying the message of life to three abortion mills in the city of Charlotte, the “Homeland Security” unit of the Charlotte Mecklenburg Police Department has united with the abortion industry to get the job done.

Rev. Flip Benham, the National Director of Operation Save America, will appear at the Charlotte School of Law in Charlotte to appeal a “guilty’ verdict for “stalking.”  The charge of “stalking” is simply the latest of many blatant attempts by the abortion industry and the city of Charlotte to remove from the streets gentle Christians who offer mom’s a real choice at abortion mills.  There have been lawsuits, injunctions, temporary restraining orders, and every other imaginable strategy, to silence the Gospel of Christ.

This new North Carolina “stalking” statute is so egregious because it can be used by virtually anyone to silence the First Amendment rights of another by simply saying that he or she “feels” threatened.  How dangerous are Christians living out their faith in the streets of their city anyway?  We are moms and dads, grandmas and grandpas, little boys and girls, standing in the gap on behalf of preborn children.  We are families living out the Gospel of Christ in the streets of our city.  Now, with the help of the Department of Homeland Security, we are considered “stalkers.”  God help us!

Why?  Perhaps it is because of the fact that, since October 28, 2009, there have been 1,340 baby boys and girls saved from abortion and alive today because of the faithful witness of Christians at abortion mills.  These children represent a lot of lost revenue to the abortion industry here.  So now we have the unholy alliance of the “Domestic Terrorism” Department of the CMPD and the abortion industry working hand in glove to chill First Amendment activities of Christians by labeling the Christian witness as “stalking.”

What:             Rev. Benham Appeals Court Hearing

Address:         Charlotte School of Law, 2145 Suttle Ave., Charlotte, North Carolina

Date:               Monday, April 2, 2012

Time:              1:00 PM

Contact:         Rev. Flip Benham (980) 722-4920 or Dr. Pat McEwen (321) 431 3962

Here is a report from our great brother in the Lord, Cal Zastrow.  While working hard in an attempt to get “Personhood” on the ballot in Montana, Cal always finds time to pound on the gates of hell in the magnificent Name of Jesus. ~ Flip

No Tranquility with Child-Killing

March 26, 2012

Cal Zastrow

 

BILLINGS, MONTANA –  Do the adults of Montana have a “right” to remain undisturbed while children are being murdered in their cities?   The babies sure don’t think so, and neither do I.

Eight pro-lifers showed up to peacefully pray and picket outside of the Northern Rockies Surgery Center  (http://www.northernrockiessurgery.com/AboutUs/) for a couple of hours this morning.   No, babies aren’t murdered at this facility, but one of their anesthesiologists, Dr. David Healow, does murder preborn chlidren at Planned Parenthood.  A handful of patients, and many people driving by, thanked us for being there to expose child-sacrifice.  We proclaimed Psalm 2 and the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Some of the clinic workers came out to complain about us hurting their business.   I assured them, “Get rid of the abortionist, and we’ll go away.” 

They called the police on us.  Two patrol cars came quickly.   After Officers West and Hageman went inside to hear their story, they came over to the sidewalk to talk to us.   They were not disrespectful, but they did tell us to not “yell” at patients enterning in before surgery.   While talking in a normal voice, we could be heard in the whole parking lot.  I told the officer that we weren’t, and wouldn’t, yell at anybody.
“Well, don’t have any conversations with any patients.”

The order (bluff) didn’t work, and he knew it when I kindly replied that we would continue talking to people.   One officer drove away while the other sat in his car in the parking lot for another half hour, talking on his cell phone.  

A few more patients entered.  I asked them, “Is Dr. David Healow your anesthesiologist today?”

All denied that he was, but I still informed them, “Please don’t let Dr. Healow touch you.  He is an abortionist who murders babies.  Please invite the surgery center to get rid of the abortionist.”

A few patients agreed that they would speak up.

We welcome others to join us in praying for abortionist Dr. David Healow to quit murdering preborn children.  We also invite others to join us in the next picket, until the abortionist is gone from there.

The phone number for the Northern Rockies Surgery Center is: 406-248-7186.

Bruce Garren, a longtime friend of ours and one who has been instrumental in heading up the “Personhood” movement in the state of Kansas, has written a short and concise article articulating the reason why “Personhood” is the only piece of legislation that has God’s imprimatur.  As Bruce unsheathes the Sword of the Spirit in response to those (Pro-lifers) who are attempting to regulate abortion rather than ending it, see if your heart does not pound within you.  ~ Flip

If not personhood, what is the plan to end abortion in Kansas?

by Bruce Garren

I have heard the Rev Flip Benham, Director of Operation Save America, proclaim on several occasions that, “Abortion will end in America when the church of Jesus Christ makes up her mind it will end – and not one second sooner.” This certainly falls under the heading of bold statements. There a many parts of this proclamation that a person could question, such as how could Rev. Benham possibly know this to be true? Why is it that only the church has the power to end abortion, and how can a claim be made without honestly considering the power of the United States government to influence the outcome? All are good questions I’m sure Rev. Benham would be willing, if not eager to respond to, but I want to focus on another aspect of his claim. I want us consider the reality that there could truly be an end to abortion in America.

Like many of you, I have been fighting against abortion for what seems like a long time. Also, like many of you, I have applied myself in a number of different strategies. I have voted pro-life, written editorials, contacted legislators, attended rallies, taught classes, held signs, prayed, and fasted. All of which I have found to be worthwhile efforts, but none have succeeded in themselves to end abortion. Until recently, none of these activities were actually part of a plan to end abortion once and for all. Certainly, everything we have done had as its primary goal the end of abortion in America, and the hope was always be to save as many innocent lives as possible, but none provided a plan to actually end child killing once and for all.

Although reducing the number of unborn children killed can appear to be a worthwhile interim goal for us, it can never ever be what our efforts lead to. We must not lose sight that reducing abortion is not and cannot be our goal! Even one child legally lost to surgical or chemical abortion would bring as much shame on America as the 1.2 million that were killed last year. I believe that’s what Ambassador Alan Keyes means when referring to the compromising the life of even one unborn child: “It’s the devil’s game – Satan would be happy to end all abortion if only he could get all of us to consent to killing one child.”

Our national shame is not from the number of unborn children legally murdered in our hospitals and abortion clinics each day, but it comes from our willingness to permit even one unborn child to be killed without our outrage.

Recently, I was part of a discussion about ending abortion in our state with several high-level government officials. After some time, and after the officials castigated the personhood strategy, I finally relented. I asked a particular gentleman a question that has gone unanswered. “Okay, I understand you don’t like personhood as a way to end abortion in Kansas. So, if not the Kansas Personhood Amendment, what is your plan to end abortion during the Governor’s term of office?” I couldn’t believe what I saw and heard next. He looked stunned and ill prepared for the question. “Well, we are several years away from that still,” he said.

After that discussion, I came to realize that our problem is not the disagreement on the personhood amendment strategy. The issue is that, among the personhood opponents, there is little hope at all of actually ending abortion in a short time frame. They are preparing to battle for the next several decades.

This same outlook is true of many of our leaders. It has been parroted, often from surprising sources. National Right to Life lead attorney, James Bopp, for instance, once charged that “wise leaders recognized from the beginning that one of their foremost tasks was to keep abortion alive as an issue.” And having compared the pro-life movement to the prohibition movement, he claimed that if we were to pass a ban on abortion, “No one would read [our] literature, attend [our] ‘rallies,’ or donate to the cause.”

In his response to Bopp, Robert Muise, Esq. of the Thomas More Law Center wrote: “The obvious problem with keeping abortion alive as an issue, is that keeping abortion alive means killing the unborn. Each day abortion remains an issue—and the law of the land—is a day in which innocent life is destroyed…If succeeding in reversing Roe v. Wade and ending the slaughter of millions of innocent lives each year means “no one would read [NRTL] literature, attend [its] ‘rallies,’ or donate to the cause,’ then that is the price of victory we should be willing to pay.”

If you are like the many Kansans we have talked to across the state who want to see child killing not just reduced, limited, or restricted but ended in Kansas once and for all and you want to be part of a plan, tell everyone you know that you want the decision in your hands. Tell them you want to be able to vote on the single most critical vote of your life. Tell your family, friends, community leaders, church members, and legislators that you want the Personhood Amendment on the statewide ballot.

Do not leave this vote in the hands of anyone else. Don’t trust anyone to represent your position on child killing. The Personhood Amendment provides you a way to end abortion in Kansas and a plan in which to do it.

Rev. Benham is right, and it is long past time for the church of Jesus Christ to speak out boldly about the slaughter of the children. We have a way to end the killing in Kansas and it’s called the Personhood Amendment, but it looks like you will have to insist that it be put on the ballot. If you want to be heard by the powers that be in Kansas, you will have to speak loudly, clearly and persistently! Tell them, “I want to vote on the Personhood Amendment because I want to end the killing, NOW!”

The Department of Justice has dropped all of its charges against Ken Scott.  That’s right!  Every civil charge brought against our great brother in the Lord Ken, has been dismissed.  \

Enjoy!

U.S. Department of Justice Drops ‘FACE’ Lawsuit Against Denver Pro-Lifer

DENVER, March 22, 2012 /Christian Newswire/ — Today, Thomas More Society attorneys secured agreement from the U.S. Attorney General’s office to dismiss all of the civil charges pending against Denver pro-life advocate Kenneth Scott, who had been accused of physically obstructing clients and employees of the Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains abortion facility. The Attorney General’s office filed suit last year in Denver’s federal district court, charging Scott with ten separate violations of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act, asking the court to assess a $10,000 civil fine and an injunction keeping him 25 feet away from the abortion facility.

The agreement to dismiss the charges followed in the wake of a ruling last January by United States District Judge Philip Brimmer, denying the federal government’s bid for a preliminary injunction against Scott. Judge Brimmer ruled that the Attorney General had failed to prove that the government was reasonably likely to prevail at trial.

“This is a monumental vindication of the free speech rights of those who offer assistance at the nation’s abortion clinics,” said Peter Breen, executive director & legal counsel of the Thomas More Society, which represented Scott. “The charges against Scott, like a flurry of other charges the Justice Department recently has brought against pro-lifers all over the country, were fundamentally flawed and repugnant to the United States Constitution. The Government here sought to criminalize leafleting on a public sidewalk, which is clearly protected by the First Amendment, even when that leafleting occurs outside an abortion clinic.”

The Thomas More Society retained Denver attorney Rebecca Messall to assist with the defense of Scott. The agreement resulted after a settlement conference held this afternoon at the Alfred A. Arraj United States Courthouse in Denver.

A copy of the signed settlement agreement may be viewed here.

More information about the case can be found here.

About the Thomas More Society
Founded in 1997, the Chicago-based Thomas More Society is a national public interest law firm that seeks to restore respect in law for life, marriage, and religious liberty. The Society is a nonprofit organization wholly supported by private donations. For more information or to support the work of Thomas More Society, please visit www.thomasmoresociety.org.

Christian Newswire

Pastor Ed Martin and the blessed saints in Jacksonville, Florida, are continuing the battle for the lives of their preborn brothers and sisters.  All over the country this battle is being won in the streets.  “for everyone born of God overcomes the world.  This is the victory that overcomes the world, even our faith.”  1 John 5:4.  Do you believe this?  Me too, and therefore I am greatly encouraged.

Enjoy!    ~ Flip

 

Dear Family for LIFE,

 Today we had our first Pastors Stand for LIFE today. 

 

 

 We had pastors share with 50 – 60 people the evils of abortion and how God expects us to combat it.

 

 

Pastor Tim Nelson, Hope Baptist Church, brought his youth group.

 

 

Anthony Johnson, Jacksonville Jaguars chaplain, told them how much Jesus loved them and what He expected of them.

 

 

Rob Barnaby, their youth pastor read from Matthew 7:13-14 telling them how the gate to destruction is wide, encouraging them to choose the narrow gate to LIFE and follow its straight path.

 

 

This youth group from Hope Baptist comes EVERY Saturday morning.  Some of them stand vigil even when they are on spring break!

 

 

They sacrifice their Saturday mornings getting up at 6:30 a.m. to be the arms and legs and voice of Jesus, because they “Hope in Christ”

 

 

Bianca, standing between her youth pastors, Rob and Ruthie, presented her senior photo essay on why “Abortion should be ILLEGAL” and received an A++!

 

 

Hope Baptist Youth Group is an integral part of our Family for LIFE and they invite other youths to join them as they try to save their peers from the tragedy of abortion.

 

 

By the way, our group this Saturday, representatives from about 10 churches, was so large that we had to straddle the driveway leading to A Woman’s Choice of Jacksonville, the grey building behind the vigilers (on the left of center in the photo below).

 

 

 

Next Saturday, March 31, please join us for two events, our last during the 40 Days for LIFE. 

 

At 8:00 a.m., we will have a Memorial Service for the Unborn on the sidewalk at 4131 University Blvd.

 

Also, at 8:00, there will be the 100+ Man March starting with Mass at Prince of Peace Church followed by a 3.8 mile march for men only (The men want to “carry their weight” in this organized effort to rid Jacksonville of abortion! Ladies, you are welcome to join us on the sidewalk or stay at Prince of Peace Church and pray as your men march for LIFE. )  Their route will encompass the 3 operating abortion facilities in Jacksonville. 

 

If you would like more information about either event, please email me.

 

God bless you! 

Trudy

Friends, Greetings in the Name of Yeshua/Jesus our only God and King!
 
I have included a PowerPoint slide with information to send to your church today. If your church does not use PowerPoint for announcements the invite can still be read from the pulpit.
 
Remember, Word in warfare is more than a “Bible Reading Marathon”, or a simple little group read-a-long. It is 77 hours of non-stop spiritual warfare, praying the Word of God from beginning to end, aloud, in public and inviting everyone and anyone to do so. Intercessors and others can read one chapter and listen while others do the same in one group whether for a few minutes or taking a 2 hour shift day or night; doing it powerfully in the Spirit in front of Mississippi’s one remaining killing center in Jackson.
 
I will be arriving in Jackson, MS Sunday morning, April 1st and would ask you to join me Sunday afternoon at 4 PM at the Wesley Biblical Seminary to to kick off the Operation Save America year long 5 state campaign called the States of Refuge…targeting the 5 states in America with only one abortion mill.
If you are coming to Jackson and have housing needs please notify me immediately as hospitality is still available on a first come first served basis. No single hotel has been contracted for this event though several reasonable hotels are available.
 
Here is the invitation to present to your church via a Powerpoint slide:
 
Chet
(702) 343-4725

Skip and Brenda Spurlock have been great friends of mine for about twenty years. What wonderful friends of this ministry they have been. They are even better friends of Jesus and His precious preborn children. Most of you probably don’t know that Skip and Brenda are the ones who keep up our mailing list in Dallas and keep the latest news flowing into your homes. We first met and got to know each other during our court case in Dallas, Texas, for exposing abortionists to the Gospel of Christ at their offices, churches, and their neighborhoods in 1993. The Rutherford Institute defended us. We were a very high profile court case for some months in Dallas.

We won that case thanks to Charles Bundrin and the wonderful attorneys at Rutherford. They were up against the formidable Wendell Turley, one of Dallas’ most feared and wealthy attorneys. Wendell hated us with a passion. Unfortunately for him he did not recognize that our real lawyer was none other than the Holy Spirit Himself. Skip, Brenda, and I have been friends ever since. We have also been in a lot more trouble since that time, but only because we are following hard after Christ.

I wanted you to see Skip and Brenda and their wonderful family at their 50th wedding anniversary. Thousands of children, more than they will ever know on this side of heaven, are alive today because of their ministry.

Flip