Friday, October 31, 2008

THE TRUTH ABOUT HALLOWEEN

DO YOU LOOK FOR THE WHOLE TRUTH ABOUT HALLOWEEN?

1.YouTube.Halloween drawing

2.Google in Greek.Halloween drawing.

Monday, October 27, 2008

GREAT ANNIVERSARY OF GRECO-ITALIAN WAR.THE HEROIC GREEKS

ANNIVERSARY OF THE GREEK ''NO''(Gr.OCHI) TO MUSSOLINIOCTOBER 28 1940


HOW GREEK ARMY WON THE NUMEROUS ITALIANS OF MUSSOLINI

Friday, October 10, 2008

THE LIES OF ''THE SECRET''.THE FALSE THEORIES OF RHONDA BYRNE



A Review of The Secret by Rhonda Byrne



by Donald S. Whitney






I had never watched an entire episode of Oprah until her program on The Secret. In the promo for the show, Oprah announced that the program would present "the secret" to making more money, losing weight, finding the love of your life, and achieving job success. Who could resist hearing more about such a claim, especially when it is made by the most influential woman in America and touted as the key to all her success? Apparently I wasn't alone. After the show, Oprah's website was overwhelmed, emails poured in, and within hours The Secret had become the best-selling book in the nation.



A week later, while unpacking in a hotel room, I powered up the TV. Oprah and two guests from the week before appeared on the screen, effusive about the transforming power of The Secret. Her website called the episode, "A follow-up to the show everybody is talking about!"
People are not only talking about The Secret, they are buying it. I am writing this review in a Barnes & Noble bookstore, and this particular branch has completely sold out of the book—again. Only two days ago—so I am told—a storewide announcement assured a horde of anxious shoppers that another large shipment of the book had arrived and would be brought to the sales floor momentarily. Readers quickly grabbed every copy. Almost impossibly, The Secret is even outselling (at this writing) the final Harry Potter book. And if that weren't enough, the audio edition of the book follows these two as the nation's number-three seller.
The Australian author of The Secret, Rhonda Byrne, introduces the book by admitting, "A year ago, my life had collapsed around me" (p. ix). Through searching for answers in a variety of books new and old, she began to trace what she believed was a common thread in them all. She dubbed it the "Great Secret—The Secret to Life" (p. ix).


Byrne became convinced that this was the key to explaining the success of "the greatest people in history" (p. ix). As she started practicing this secret, Byrne says that her life immediately began to change in ways nothing short of miraculous. She decided to make a video called The Secret to share her discoveries with others. In March of 2006 it was released on the Internet, but soon went to DVD. By late autumn, the phenomenal success of the video placed it on two episodes of Larry King Live. Shortly after, two of the teachers featured on The Secret were guests on Ellen Degeneres' daily TV show. Before Christmas, The Secret DVD had spun off a book by the same title which Oprah Winfrey catapulted to the top of the charts in February of 2007.


The essence of The Secret is "the law of attraction." According to Byrne and the twenty-nine co-contributors whom she quotes extensively, everything in the Universe (which is always capitalized and usually synonymous for "God") vibrates on a particular frequency. When you think in harmony with the frequency of something, you attract it to you. If you think about wealth, you will receive wealth. If you think instead about your debt, you will receive more debt. You attract what you think about; your thoughts determine your destiny.


Byrne restates the law of attraction in various ways: "Nothing [good or bad] can come into your experience unless you summon it through persistent thoughts" (p. 28). "Your thoughts are the primary cause of everything" (p. 33). "Your current reality or your current life is a result of the thoughts you have been thinking" (p. 71). According to the product description on the DVD, "This is The Secret to everything—the secret to unlimited joy, health, money, relationships, love, youth: everything you have ever wanted.


Byrne promises with ironclad certainty: "There isn't a single thing that you cannot do with this knowledge. . . . The Secret can give you whatever you want" (p. xi). By it "you will come to know how you can have, be, or do anything you want" (p. xii).


In the final analysis, The Secret is nothing more than Name It-Claim It, Positive-Confession, Prosperity Theology (without God and the Bible), built on a foundation of New Age self-deification. In other words, the book is just another version of what some TV preachers have taught for decades, namely, if you will sustain the right thoughts, words, and feelings, you will receive whatever you want. But The Secret adds this important twist: your thoughts can bring anything into your life because you are god.


Books that promise health and wealth for their practitioners are published every day. But few associate such promises with Byrne's breathtaking audacity. She proclaims to her readers,
You are God in a physical body. You are Spirit in the flesh. You are Eternal Life expressing itself as You. You are a cosmic being. You are all power. You are all wisdom. You are all intelligence. You are perfection. You are magnificence. You are the creator, and you are creating the creation of You on this planet (p. 164).


If that weren't blasphemous enough, realize that the book your neighbors and coworkers are reading more than any other also tells them,
The earth turns on its orbit for You. The oceans ebb and flow for You. The birds sing for You. The sun rises and it sets for You. The stars come out for You. Every beautiful thing you see, every wondrous thing you experience, is all there for You. Take a look around. None of it can exist, without You. No matter who you thought you were, now you know the Truth of Who You Really Are. You are the master of the Universe. You are the heir to the kingdom. You are the perfection of Life. And now you know The Secret (p. 183).


This would be beautiful if it were addressed to the God of Heaven. But as Byrne thinks this is what we should say to the person in the mirror, it is the heresy of heresies. Her "Secret" is nothing less than Satan's original lie in the Garden of Eden, "You will be like God" (Gen. 3:5).
It is no exaggeration to say that this book implicitly (and sometimes explicitly) denies virtually every major doctrine in the Bible. For starters, the authority of Scripture is undermined in The Secret, because the Bible apparently has value only insofar as it (according to Byrne) teaches The Secret.


Moreover, the Bible is neither unique nor supremely authoritative, for Byrne maintains that the holy book of every religious tradition contains The Secret. Thus Byrne's teaching is eclectic, that is, she believes that all religions and their scriptures are equally valid in their authority and basically teach the same thing.


Without mentioning Jesus, she quotes Him in Matthew 21:22 and Mark 11:24, claiming that the teaching to ask, believe, and receive in prayer is the way to "create what you want in three simple steps" (p. 47). And of course, it is not God we're to ask, but "the Universe." Thus The Secret is pantheistic, that is, it teaches that God is not a Person; rather He is to be equated with the totality of everything.


Despite this brief nod to the Bible, Byrne's book is marketed upon the implication that readers probably would never discover The Secret on their own. "It has been passed down through the ages, highly-coveted, hidden, lost, stolen, and bought for vast sums of money. . . . Now The Secret is being revealed to the world" (from the back cover). Thus the book is Gnostic, that is, it makes you dependent upon a small, elite group (namely, Rhonda Byrne and her panel of enlightened experts, "avatars," and relatively obscure historical sources) to tell you what you need to know. In fact, in true Gnostic style, Byrne and her illuminati expressly refer to what we need to know as a secret—"the Great Secret." And of course, you must pay—in this case, the price of the book or the DVD—to learn The Secret.


There's no mention of sin in The Secret. The cause of all the problems in the world and in our individual lives is merely bad thinking, specifically the failure to recognize and appropriately use the law of attraction. Therefore the solution to everything lies within us. And that, of course, eliminates the need for a Savior, a Substitute, or a Sacrifice. The cross and resurrection of Jesus become irrelevant.


Curiously, there's not a single reference to death or the afterlife in the book. Apparently this is a non-issue for contributors to The Secret, for one of them assures us, "no one will stand in judgment of [your life], now or ever" (p. 177). Another, when questioned about this on Oprah's second show on the book, suggested that Heaven and Hell were present experiences, not future destinations.


So as with nearly all false teaching, the flaws of The Secret are most visible when you examine what it has to say about the Bible and Jesus.
If I had to commend something about The Secret, I would mention its emphasis on gratitude and the importance of the thought life. Byrne devotes several pages to "The Powerful Process of Gratitude" (pp. 74-80). Though she does not base it on the Bible, Byrne nevertheless encourages just what the Bible teaches in 1 Thessalonians 5:18, "in everything give thanks." She says that regardless of the situations awaiting her, "By the time I am ready for the day, I have said 'Thank you' hundreds of times" (p. 76). Remarkably, she never says to whom thanks should be given. Nor is her motivation kindred to the one stated in the verse above: "this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus."


Regarding the thought life, The Secret reminds us that there is a powerful connection between our thoughts and our actions. While the thoughts Byrne wants us to repeat are typically contrary to Scripture, she rightly observes that the thoughts we constantly affirm influence our feelings and our behavior. This conforms to the declaration of Scripture that Christians are "transformed by the renewing of your mind" (Romans 12:2). For us to live for the glory of God and in increasing conformity to Christ requires not only that we grow in our knowledge of God's Word, but also that we constantly reaffirm specific truths of Scripture, despite feelings or circumstances that contradict them.


The problem with The Secret is that it focuses our hope selfward and not Godward. It is all about self-empowerment, self-fulfillment, and getting whatever we want. But Jesus warned, "For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul?" (Matthew 16:26). The Secret disregards the fact that God has a Law and we have broken it (James 2:10). What Byrne fails to realize about her law of attraction is that our sinful hearts deceive us (Jeremiah 17:9) and attract not only more sin and guilt, but ultimately, the wrath of God.


However, God in His mercy sent His Son to receive this wrath as a Substitute for all who will repent of their selfishness and believe in Him. And "through the true knowledge of Him"—not Rhonda Byrne's book—"His divine power has granted to us everything pertaining to life and godliness" (2 Peter 1:3).


"The Secret to everything" (to use Byrne's term) is God Himself. And God, the "Great Secret," has been revealed in Jesus Christ, "in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge" (Colossians 2:3). God has freely told us in the Bible everything we need to know about discovering the unlimited "treasures of wisdom and knowledge" found in Christ. And He remains an unknown Secret only to those who will not look for Him there.


Donald S. Whitney.For more short, reproducible pieces like this, see http://www.biblicalspirituality.org/

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

YURI GAGARIN:THE FIRST ORTHODOX IN SPACE


By the Rev. Metropolitan of Nafpaktos Hierotheos Vlachos



Source : http://www.parembasis.gr/2007/07_11_07.htm

PROPAGANDA
For (and in) many issues, a news item undergoes propaganda which distorts its content and is thenceforth exploited for the reasons and the purposes of a specific ideology. The same thing happened in the case of Yuri Gagarin.

Gagarin, as all we of the previous generations know, was a Soviet – and he was the first man to fly in outer space. On the 12th of April of the year 1961 he circled the earth in one orbit and then landed in the Soviet Union. He became famous the world over, and a hero in his own country. He went on tour in many other countries and became a parliamentary representative of the Upper Soviet. He died a few years later, in 1968, when the small plane he was in crashed during a training flight.
Apart from the above, Gagarin also became well-known for the phrase he is said to have stated, that: “I went up to space, but I didn’t encounter God” – a phrase that was used extensively by the atheist propaganda of the time. And I say “he is said to have stated”, because recent publications are claiming the opposite.

Specifically, an article titled “Yuri Gagarin, the Christian”, which was translated into Greek by Maria Biniari from the Russian site Interfax Religion and published in the periodical “KAINE KTISIS” (New Creation), in the June 2007 edition, includes an interview with General Valentin Petrov, Professor of the Air Force Academy ‘Yuri Gagarin’ and personal friend of the cosmonaut, in which it was stressed that Gagarin was a Christian. Among other things, it stated that “Gagarin was a baptized faithful throughout all his life…he always confessed God whenever he was provoked, no matter where he was.”
In fact, there is a description of his visit –on the day of his birthday in the year 1964- to the Lavra of Saint Serge and the conversation that he had with the Prior of that Holy Monastery. When the Prior asked him “Who will believe me, if I tell them that Gagarin was in my cell?” Gagarin replied “this, is for those who don’t believe”. He had a photograph taken, of himself with the Prior, and he gave it to the Prior, with the following dedication written on it: “To the Prior, with my best wishes, Yuri Gagarin”.

According to the testimony of his friend Petrov, Gagarin “often, during his speeches - especially to young people but also to the Central Committee - had openly said that the temple of the Savor Christ (which the regime had destroyed) should be rebuilt, both as a monument for the military victory but also as an amazing work of art”.

The question, however, is how the “news” circulated that Gagarin himself had supposedly said he had not encountered God in space. Petrov insists that Gagarin never said that phrase, and that those words had come from Khrushchev. He narrated the following:

“Furthermore, that famous phrase which has been ascribed to him - “I went to space, but I didn’t see God” - well, in actual fact it was Khrushchev who had said it. It was heard during a meeting of the Central Committee, whose desire it was to promulgate anti-religious propaganda. Khrushchev had mockingly addressed the following words: ‘Why didn’t you step on the brakes in front of God? Here is Gagarin, who flew up to space, and yet, even he didn’t see God anywhere’.
Immediately after that, those words were placed into another’s mouth, because the people would have believed more in Gagarin’s words than Khrushchev’s.

And Petrov, Gagarin’s friend, who claims that he was the first representative of the army who had accepted catechesis by the Saint Serge Institute and that many students of his had also asked to baptized, gives us his personal testimony:

“I do not force anyone…I always remember that Yuri Gagarin had said: “An astronaut cannot be suspended in space and not have God in his mind and his heart.”

From this incident, it is clear how propaganda operates, by presenting white as black, and vice-versa. Faith in God is not a matter of sensations and of logic, but of the heart. And such an experience of the heart has immense power – not only to overthrow each dark propaganda, but entire atheist regimes.
Ν. Ι.




By:OODE.gr

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

''IN SEARCH OF CHRISTIAN FREEDOM''



An extremely book by Raymond Franz,an ex-jehovah curious member of ''Watchtower''


IN SEARCH OF CHRISTIAN FREEDOM


The ABSOLUTE APOSTATE BOOK.


The book that brings down the dogmas of Jehovah's witnesses.