Your Question About Easy Weight Loss

Sandra asks…

How did Hitler implement policies in an attempt to change society?

weight loss cardiff answers:

With a heavy hand.
I would really recommend the book by Albert Speer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich which takes you inside the dealings of Hitler. Speer was one of Hitler’s cronies and the book was written while he was in prison.
For treatment of religion you could read Bethge’s biography of Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
Others listed below:

Carol asks…

why does the holocaust challenge our faith and hope for humanity?

im in school and this is one of the questions.

weight loss cardiff answers:

In dealing with the problem of evil in the world, we run into many problems like this one. Could God have prevented the Holocaust? Yes, He could have. He could also have prevented Stalin’s massacres in the U.S.S.R., the Spanish Inquisition’s torture of dissidents, and Nero’s reign of terror. In each case, God allowed evil men to exercise a certain amount of power for a short period of time.

Ultimately, we do not know the reasons for what God allows. His ways and thoughts are infinitely higher than ours (Isaiah 55:8-9). His sovereign plan takes in the whole scope of history, past, present, and future, encompassing every possible course of action, every cause and effect, every potentiality, and every contingency. There is no way we could possibly fathom the intricacies of His design. By faith, we trust that His plan is the best plan possible for restoring fallen humanity and a cursed world to righteousness and blessing.

But we can understand this: God’s permission is not the same as His approval. God permitted Adam to eat of the forbidden tree, but He did not approve of the action. In the same way, God’s allowing the Holocaust in no way suggests His approval of it. God is grieved by the sinfulness of man and the hardness of his heart (Genesis 6:6; Mark 3:5).

We also know that God has done everything possible to redeem us from the sin which would destroy us. He gave His only Son, who sacrificed His life for our sin and took our penalty. All who turn to Jesus Christ in faith are saved. The sin in this world, and horrors such as the Holocaust, are a direct result of mankind’s continued rebellion against God.

While nothing can justify the Holocaust, we do see at least one good thing which came from World War II: Israel now exists as a nation. The Holocaust was a primary reason the White Paper of 1939 was rescinded, freeing Jews to immigrate to Palestine. The fact that, as of 1948, the Jews have a restored national identity helps to fulfill such biblical prophecies as Ezekiel 37 and Matthew 24. Defeating Nazism and giving the land of Israel back to the Jews is a classic example of God’s thwarting Satan’s plan and bringing about good in spite of the evil.

In all of His doings, God is just (Psalm 145:17). The blame for the Holocaust lies squarely on the shoulders of sinful humanity. The Holocaust was the product of sinful choices made by sinful men in rebellion against a holy God. If the Holocaust proves anything, it is the utter depravity of man. Just fourteen years after “the war to end all wars” (World War I), Hitler rose to power. What is even more shocking is that millions followed him, enabling his horrific policies and pursuing a path to national destruction.

And while Nazism took hold in Germany, where were the European churches? Some, it is true, stood fast against the evil in their midst, and some churchmen, such as Dietrich Bonhoeffer, paid the ultimate price for dissenting. But they were the minority. Most churches of the era acquiesced to Nazi Party rules and remained silent while the Jews were slaughtered. Where were the world leaders? Other than England’s Winston Churchill, the world’s politicos took the route of isolation or appeasement. Neither worked. Where were the good, decent people? Edmund Burke is often quoted as saying, “All that is necessary for evil to triumph in the world is for enough good men to do nothing.” Although there were a few Germans and other Europeans such as Oscar Schindler and Corrie ten Boom and her family, who risked their lives to save thousands of Jews from annihilation, most remained silent and the Holocaust ensued. The question is not so much “Why did God allow the Holocaust?” but “Why did we?”

God gives mankind freedom of choice. We can choose to follow Him and take a stand for righteousness, or we can rebel against Him and pursue evil. The problem resides in the heart of man. “The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?” (Jeremiah 17:9). Until man’s heart turns to God, the world will continue to witness “ethnic cleansings,” genocides, and atrocities such as the Holocaust.

Laura asks…

Was there ever a ‘German underground’ to fight against the Nazis?

I have a hard time believing that all Germans in the 1930s worshipped Hitler and supporters the views of the Nazis.
Was there any kind of coordianted ‘underground’ movement in Germany before- and during WW2 to fight against the Nazis and take out Hitler?

weight loss cardiff answers:

Most definitely! Granted many of these small groups were quickly found out by the Nazis and eliminated, but there certainly was an anti-Nazi presence in Germany. Dietrich Bonhoeffer was probably one of the most well known voices against Hitler. Below is some very basic information on him and his efforts to get Hitler out of power (namely an assassination attempt) and his resistance to the party’s policies (helping Jews escape), which led to his execution.

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Your Question About Easy Weight Loss

Sharon asks…

Is the natural destiny of human society to wipe out all human emotions?

When you think about modern society you can see how we do everything we can to destroy human emotions. The medical world has been fighting death for centuries just to avoid the emotion of grief for as long as possible even though death is as natural as birth. Now humanity is vastly over populated.
The pharmaceutical industry has produced a mountain of different medications to remove any trace of negative emotion we are feeling, sometimes even good emotions are targeted.
If you look at the most recent edition of the psychology handbook of mental illness, almost every single natural human emotion, (good or bad) is categorised as a mental disorder.

These are only some of the more obvious examples but it seems to me that the natural evolution of modern man is to eradicate all human emotions.

If I was a religious person, particularly a Christian, I would certainly be worried that the devil is taking over. Thank god I’m not. Haha.
@California
I certainly am not taking anything out of context at all, in fact, I am by far not the only one saying this. I recommend you do a bit of research on the eugenics and trans-humanism currently being researched by some of the most powerful elite on the planet. Then maybe check the websites of other people who have researched this to see documented proof of this elites actual agenda – and why they are currently manipulating the social, economic and political landscape of the planet. Not believing anyone would do such a thing is not a good enough excuse. In fact, ignorance makes you just as guilty in my opinion. I don’t mean to offend you when I say this.

weight loss cardiff answers:

ILLUSIONS OF PSYCHOLOGY
The Reference list

1. Sigmund Freud, (1856-1939) “The Future of an Illusion.” Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday,
1964.
2. Sigmund Koch, ed., Psychology: A Study of a Science (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1959-1963).
3. Sigmund Koch, “Psychology Cannot Be a Coherent Science,” Psychology Today (Sept. 1969).
4. Karl Popper, “Scientific Theory and Falsifiability” in Perspectives in Philosophy, Robert N.
Beck, ed. (New York: Holt, Rinehart, Winston, 1975).
5. Thomas Szasz, The Myth of Psychotherapy. Garden City: Doubleday/Anchor Press, 1987.
6. Thomas Szasz, The Myth of Mental Illness. New York, N.Y.: Perennial Library, 1974.
7. Bernie Zilbergeld. The Shrinking of America: Myths of Psychological Change. Boston: Little,
Brown and Company, 1983.
8. Carl Rogers, quoted by Allen Bergin, “Psychology and Religious Values,” Journal of
Consulting and Clinical Psychology, Vol. 48, p. 101.
9. Christopher Lasch. The Culture of Narcissism. New York: W. W. Norton & Norton Company,
Inc, 1979.
10. Martin and Deidre Bobgan. PsychoHeresy: The Psychological Seduction of Christianity.
Santa Barbara, CA: Eastgate Publishers, 1987.
11. E. Fuller Torrey. Witchdoctors and Psychiatrists. New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1986.
12. Christina Hoff Sommer, Dr. Sally Satel. “One Nation Under Therapy: How the Helping
Culture is Eroding Self-Reliance. St. Martin’s Press, 2005.
13. Dr. Tana Dineen. “Manufacturing Victims: What the Psychology Industry is Doing to
People.” Constable and Robinson; New Ed edition (September 27, 1999).
14. Dietrich Bonhoeffer. “Voices in the Night.” Zondervan (July 1, 1999.)

MORE RELATED FREE EBOOKS:
http://www.psychoheresy-aware.org/bksonline.html
AND LOTS OF RELATED (FREE) INFORMATION ON THESE:
http://www.mediaspotlight.org/
http://thenazareneschool.com/resources

Donald asks…

How does the Salvation Army show discipleship in its work?

I have got one fact but I need at least 3 more. Please help!!
Thank you 🙂

weight loss cardiff answers:

“Christianity without discipleship is always Christianity without Christ” – Dietrich Bonhoeffer

the Salvation Army has a tradition of discipleship built right into the structure:

Cradle Roll
YP Company
Junior Soldiers
Corps Cadets
Senior Soldiers
Soldier’s meetings
Local officership
Candidateship
Officer Training

From birth through adulthood including every age group and vocation, the Salvation Army has already in place a context for discipleship.

David asks…

What happened to Nazi Germany between the two world wars?

-important people (scientists, writers, political leaders)
-important movements (artistic, intellectual, or scientific)
-recap their role in WWI?

weight loss cardiff answers:

The rise of the Nazis was after World War I and not long before World War II.
Look for serious texts on ‘Weimar’ Republic. One artistic movement of the time was ‘Bauhaus’.
One of the important philosophers/theologians of the time was Dietrich Bonhoeffer. You may wan to research the ‘Confessing Church’.
Look for writings of such sociologists as Max Weber.

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Carol asks…

How long do you think they take to think up these questions?

R&S seems to have more than their fair share of posers and haters. Do some just sit around all day thinking up questions like these or do you think they are spur of the moment kinds of things?
Since farmers are intelligent designers, does this mean opponents of ID shouldn’t eat farmed food?
Would it be considered bad manners for R&Sers to raid the Etiquette section?
Protestants how can we tell the difference between a real women and an Imp?
Spiritually speaking Fundies Protestants Does the Devil Steal infants?

weight loss cardiff answers:

Not long because we keep getting pretty much the same ones over, and over, and over…yet every poster seems to think that they… In their infinite brilliance… Have stumbled upon THE unique truth that has eluded 20 centuries worth of theologians.

YES, St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Augustine, Karl Barth, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Martin Luther, John Knox, C.S. Lewis, St. Ambrose, all pale in comparison to some suburban 15 year old going under the name of “Darth Hefner” that can’t use a spellchecker.

The other one is, I do wish we could see a question that applied to reality at some point. Most of the questions are strictly “Straw Man” arguments. Something that had some logic to it would be nice.

I do enjoy it when Lime Green Ninja posts…he/she is smart, and knows big words, and is educated.

David asks…

Christians what resources are you using or have used to study Theology outside the Bible?

I have found The Truth Project to be the most amazing resource of all time.
http://www.thetruthproject.org/ check out the trailer if you’re interested.

Also the download section will show you teasers of each part of the series.

So what do you recommend as the best resource for studying Biblical theology and Christian worldviews?

weight loss cardiff answers:

C.S. Lewis is almost essential for being an intelligent 21st century Christian. Francis Schaeffer’s work, especially “The God Who Is There” and “How Then Do We Live.” This was the stuff that really strengthened me after I was first born again in the 80s. At the current moment the most important teachers out there are N.T. Wright and Tim Keller. Just google their names, or go to your big local bookstore. John Piper is pretty vital as well, and whenever you’re down or feeling doubt or pain, Brennan Manning is the man to read. Going back a few years, Charles Spurgeon’s stuff from the 19th century holds up amazingly well. If you really want to stretch your brain as well as your spirit, read “The Cost of Discipleship” by Dietrich Bonhoeffer or anything by Reinhold Niebuhr. Of course anything by Wesley, Luther, or Augustine is always good – don’t let Augustine’s being a Catholic put you off, he worked in the 3rd-4th centuries before that church became corrupted. (Speaking of Catholics, Fulton J. Sheen’s work is 98% excellent, as he was speaking to people first as a Christian and only secondly as a Catholic.) I’d also recommend Peter Kreeft, William Lane Craig, and Thomas (Thom) Howard, if you’re “philosophically” inclined.
But here’s the point. Keep Jesus at the center, and the Bible as your main resource. We are called to follow Jesus, not to attend churches or read books or study theologians. If these books don’t help you follow Jesus or enhance your daily walk with him, forget ’em. Best wishes!

George asks…

Where can I find a quote from a well respected person saying that one is only responsible for his own actions?

I would prefer the person not be still alive (Such as an artist or author) unless the person is a respected politician or theologian.

weight loss cardiff answers:

Here are some-
1.We can believe what we choose. We are answerable for what we choose to believe.

John Henry Newman (1801 – 1890)
English theologian.
2.If you board the wrong train, it is no use running along the corridor in the other direction.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906 – 1945)
German theologian.
3.For man is man and master of his fate.

Alfred Tennyson (1809 – 1892)
British poet.
4.
Ultimately, those who are depressed have to take responsibility for their own condition and so need to understand as much about it as possible.

Lewis Wolpert (1929 – )
British biologist and writer.

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Maria asks…

What did the rest of the world do during the holocaust?

We’re writing essays about this and, well, I need some help. I would prefer if you could link me to something explaining what the rest of the world was doing about this, why it took so long to notice it, and what could have been done differently. I need links since we need to write sources, but some personal knowledge will help too.

Thanks.

weight loss cardiff answers:

In dealing with the problem of evil in the world, we run into many problems like this one. Could God have prevented the Holocaust? Yes, He could have. He could also have prevented Stalin’s massacres in the U.S.S.R., the Spanish Inquisition’s torture of dissidents, and Nero’s reign of terror. In each case, God allowed evil men to exercise a certain amount of power for a short period of time.

Ultimately, we do not know the reasons for what God allows. His ways and thoughts are infinitely higher than ours (Isaiah 55:8-9). His sovereign plan takes in the whole scope of history, past, present, and future, encompassing every possible course of action, every cause and effect, every potentiality, and every contingency. There is no way we could possibly fathom the intricacies of His design. By faith, we trust that His plan is the best plan possible for restoring fallen humanity and a cursed world to righteousness and blessing.

But we can understand this: God’s permission is not the same as His approval. God permitted Adam to eat of the forbidden tree, but He did not approve of the action. In the same way, God’s allowing the Holocaust in no way suggests His approval of it. God is grieved by the sinfulness of man and the hardness of his heart (Genesis 6:6; Mark 3:5).

We also know that God has done everything possible to redeem us from the sin which would destroy us. He gave His only Son, who sacrificed His life for our sin and took our penalty. All who turn to Jesus Christ in faith are saved. The sin in this world, and horrors such as the Holocaust, are a direct result of mankind’s continued rebellion against God.

While nothing can justify the Holocaust, we do see at least one good thing which came from World War II: Israel now exists as a nation. The Holocaust was a primary reason the White Paper of 1939 was rescinded, freeing Jews to immigrate to Palestine. The fact that, as of 1948, the Jews have a restored national identity helps to fulfill such biblical prophecies as Ezekiel 37 and Matthew 24. Defeating Nazism and giving the land of Israel back to the Jews is a classic example of God’s thwarting Satan’s plan and bringing about good in spite of the evil.

In all of His doings, God is just (Psalm 145:17). The blame for the Holocaust lies squarely on the shoulders of sinful humanity. The Holocaust was the product of sinful choices made by sinful men in rebellion against a holy God. If the Holocaust proves anything, it is the utter depravity of man. Just fourteen years after “the war to end all wars” (World War I), Hitler rose to power. What is even more shocking is that millions followed him, enabling his horrific policies and pursuing a path to national destruction.

And while Nazism took hold in Germany, where were the European churches? Some, it is true, stood fast against the evil in their midst, and some churchmen, such as Dietrich Bonhoeffer, paid the ultimate price for dissenting. But they were the minority. Most churches of the era acquiesced to Nazi Party rules and remained silent while the Jews were slaughtered. Where were the world leaders? Other than England’s Winston Churchill, the world’s politicos took the route of isolation or appeasement. Neither worked. Where were the good, decent people? Edmund Burke is often quoted as saying, “All that is necessary for evil to triumph in the world is for enough good men to do nothing.” Although there were a few Germans and other Europeans such as Oscar Schindler and Corrie ten Boom and her family, who risked their lives to save thousands of Jews from annihilation, most remained silent and the Holocaust ensued. The question is not so much “Why did God allow the Holocaust?” but “Why did we?”

God gives mankind freedom of choice. We can choose to follow Him and take a stand for righteousness, or we can rebel against Him and pursue evil. The problem resides in the heart of man. “The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?” (Jeremiah 17:9). Until man’s heart turns to God, the world will continue to witness “ethnic cleansings,” genocides, and atrocities such as the Holocaust.

Http://www.gotquestions.org/God-allow-Holocaust.html

Steven asks…

How did the Nazis and Germans attempt to eliminate an entire group of people?

Other than the obvious (of concentration camps) how did they (Germans and Nazis) attempt to rid the world of certain peoples.

weight loss cardiff answers:

Propaganda…..have the populace not react to exterminations, jews were portrayed as parasites…e.g. Fungus, rats….a blight on humanity to be exterminated.
Dehumanization…..the were not human beings, but a sub spices to be eradicated.
The Milgram experiment in psychology has two dangerous proposals, that if the conditions are right and a person has no strong existential convictions it is vary easy to have someone harm another individual. Physical distance one, it is easier to harm an individual the greater the distance. E.G….that’s the reason for gas chambers. SS troops were having nervous brake downs killing civilians by burning them to death alive, or machine gunning them in pits. It was easier and more efficient to heard them into killing factories such as camp Dora, take the people but them into a gas chamber and have the SS officer turn a valve in another room, clean killing the SS officer never saw the face of his victims. Prisoners would haul the bodies out, the SS never soiled their hands in clean up of their murders, they just instigated and over saw to it. The last point to Milgram was that if a authoritarian person gives an order and takes full responsibility for it, it is easier to illicit someone to do the job for you, even in causing bodily harm. Police brutality, or a sadistic doctor, because these people are in high authority and high esteem it takes along time to build up a case because of these factors. Well, the SS did not start off as thugs, they were highly educated men, good citizens in their communities, so the authority they had, even to its murderous perverseness had power. The men following SS orders felt that the responsibility fell on the officers not the individual caring out the order, because of trust in that authority. There was another psychology experiment on peer pressure affecting judgment. 99 people were in on the experiment stating that a short line was long, the odd man out would state that the short line was long, and after the experiment would state he was right. So peer pressure can affect an individuals judgment to act wrongly, but the individual still believes they are acting right. Mild brain washing still happens today……military training, in a time of war a officer gives the order to fire (think about it……you are pulling a trigger on a human being taking their life), the soldier needs to be conditioned to the task. I am pro military, pro democracy God bless canada and america, was raised on moms apple pie, the love of queen and country, and watching G.I. Joe cartoons on saturday. But if one dose not have the strictest faith in God, and related morality, if the conditions are right, anyone can go to base instincts of pack mentality and kill without question. There were some men, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, that resisted the nazis, a theologian and a spy that paid for his beliefs with his life in a concentration camp 3 weeks before the wars end.

Michael asks…

How was the church a threat to the Nazis?

In what ways could the church be seen as a threat to the Nazis?
What opposition did some people in the Church give the Nazi’s and why?

weight loss cardiff answers:

The Christian churches under thoughtful leadership of such theologians as Dietrich Bonhoeffer posed such a threat to the Nazis they had to push them underground. Read about the ‘Confessing Church’.
When others would suggest the churches ‘cooperated’ they neglect the pressure put on the congregations by the Nazis. Churches were forced to remove all ‘religious’ trappings and replace them with those of the state.
One reliable source from inside Hitler’s own group of cronies not only supports this but is among the first to explain it to the outside world.

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