By Hazel Holland
Saturday
 morning, January 13, 2007 God clearly spoke the words, “The Last 
Samurai” into my mind as I was in the bathroom getting ready for church.
 I was surprised to hear the title of a movie about a Japanese warrior 
that I had no interest in seeing at the time it was shown.
As
 I mused about this word, wondering what was on God’s heart, I received 
another word two days later on Monday morning, January 15, 2007. God 
spoke the words, “Custer’s Last Stand” into my mind the same way.  Again I
 received a witness in my spirit that God was drawing another important 
parallel between “The Last Samurai”, “Custer’s Last Stand”, and the 
reluctance of Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) leadership to let go of their Adventist heritage even when it falls short of being in agreement with God’s Word, and does violence to the gospel.
Not having seen “The Last Samurai”, and knowing very little about Japanese history, I emailed my friend, Ramone Romero, who lives in Japan, and who wrote the Forward to this book, hoping to find the needed historical background to this movie so that I could discover what God was saying.  Ramone
 not only gave me the historical background of “The Last Samurai”, but 
also “Custer’s Last Stand.” Along with both background summaries came an
 interpretation that God had given him for these two words, and it lined
 up with what I had already received from the Spirit.
As you prayerfully read the background summaries of these two words, along with the interpretation Ramone
 received from the Lord, I pray that the eyes of your heart may be 
opened to see how God is pouring forth His heart of concern and love 
toward His children who remain stuck in the malaise of Adventism.
 This word is given to forcefully remind us that history has a way of 
repeating itself. Men in positions of leadership and power who are 
blinded by pride often make tragic errors in judgment. Unfortunately, 
they are often exonerated by their followers who also believe the lie, 
and perpetuate the deception by passing it on to the next generation... 
 
 Background of “The Last Samurai” 
The
 “Last Samurai” is a fictional character who rebels against the 
government because of  its  immorality  as  it modernizes.  The movie 
portrays noble motives for the samurai’s rebellion based on honor, 
honesty, better ethics and a better way of life.
However,
 in the real life historical samurai rebellion, the primary motive was 
self-preservation of their unique and privileged social class. The 
true-life samurai rebellion was a last desperate attempt to hold onto a 
traditional social caste and position of power that crippled the country
 by marginalizing and denigrating a great many of its people.   
Modernization was resisted because it would put an end to the old 
system. The movie ignores the historical truth and adopts the myth of 
the superiority of the old bushido system.   It is filmed through rose-tinted glasses, portraying a noble fight to preserve a fictional ideal that never quite was.
What is God saying?
Like
 old “bushido”, the Law also “keeps people in their place.”  This 
“Ancient Stronghold that  is called a “ministry of condemnation and 
death”, keeps people from rising above sin and death in their lives, be-
cause
 a veil covers their eyes.  The abolition of the Samurai class and 
feudal Japanese society spelled freedom for many people.  Of course it 
took many years for attitudes to change (and some things are still being
 changed), but in general, it was this crumbling of an ancient 
stronghold (“bushido”) that liberated many classes of people in society.
I
 believe God is saying that “The Last Samurai” applies to many Adventist
 leaders who are unwilling to let the “old” go.  They are looking 
through rose-tinted glasses at Adventism’s heritage and insist on 
holding onto a delusion.  They may feel like they are fighting to the 
death to preserve a noble code of honor, a noble Adventist history.   
But, in truth, it  is a  fictional  ideal, because  the history never  
really existed as  they want  to believe.  The mythical heritage of 
Adventism  they  invoke  is  a creation of imagined self-importance.  It
 glorifies Adventist pioneers and their teachings while glossing over 
the deception, error, condemnation and spiritual abuse that existed from
 the beginning.
Additionally,
 Adventism has always felt it  as more  correct  and more “moral” 
because  it  re-instituted  the Old Covenant Law.  It returned to the 
old written code and pointed the finger of accusation at Christians who 
did not do the same.  It sang the virtues of the old system and claimed 
that without the Law, we are deficient and morally lost.  In  truth, 
however,  the Bible states  that we are no  longer under the old code 
(the Law), because the purpose of the Law was to reveal sin  and death  
so  that we might cling  to  Jesus  instead!   The Law was “the ministry
 of  condemnation”  and “the ministry of death”.     In  the presence of
 Life Himself how could the ministry of death hold greater 
appeal?  How could the Adventist pioneers have been induced to prefer condemnation?
The
 old samurai looked upon suicide as noble and as an honorable way out of
 a situation.   In a sense, it was often seen as the consummation of an 
honorable life, deed or heroic effort.   It fulfilled the Bushido 
code
 of honor and was, in a way, the perfection of honor.   After the “last 
samurai” lost the battle and stabbed himself,  his dying words were 
“It’s perfect”.
Just
 as the bushido, Adventism is committing spiritual suicide.  Adventism 
honors the Law of death as the way to perfection, just as the samurai 
viewed suicide as the summit of perfection and honor?  
Background of “Custer’s Last Stand”
Lt.
 Colonel George Armstrong Custer had gained renown during the 1800’s  
for his  valor  in  leading American  army  forces  into  battle with 
Native Americans in the “Indian wars”.  He is remembered best, however  
or his monumental underestimation of  the combined forces of the Sioux 
and Cheyenne nations  in  the battle of Little Bighorn in eastern 
Montana. Custer  came with  a  force of between 200- 600 soldiers, while
 those who were defending their ancient ways of life had amassed an army
 nearing 1800 warriors.
Some 
 estimate  that  within  half  an  hour  the  defending  Native   
Americans had decimated Custer and all of his soldiers from the Seventh 
U.S. Cavalry.   America tried to redeem the debacle by calling  it 
“Custer’s Last stand”, implying that a brave American army officer had 
nobly given his life to defend his country against the invading 
savages.  The over-confident, short-sighted  Custer  was  transformed  
into  an  icon of bravery and courage.   Truth, however, was much  less 
complimentary.   The Native Americans were,  in  fact, making  a  last  
stand  to defend a way of life that went back many centuries against 
newcomers who were  trying  to eradicate  them  from  the  face of  the 
Earth.  The  Americans  had  corralled  them  onto  reservations with  
the  arrogant claim of  generosity–giving  them back  a  fraction of  
the  land  that was theirs to begin with. The European immigrants had 
brought with them disease, suffering and death. With the confiscation of
 their lands went the very commodity that constituted their identity.  
What Are the Parallels?
Historical 
 revisionism  has  plagued Adventism  from  the  beginning.  Just as 
Custer’s defeat was recast as a heroic stand against encroaching  evil, 
so was Adventism’s erroneous  date-setting  for  the  Second Coming  
reborn  as  the  Investigative  Judgment,  spawning “The  Great Advent 
Movement”. Adventism’s  last  ditch  strategy was to turn the “Great 
Disappointment” into a glorious new truth. But just as in many other  
distortions, Adventist teaching has redefined  the word “truth” to  
stand  for error.  The words of God will stand against them as He 
searches their motivations and continued cover-up of His truth.  
 
“So justice is driven back, and righteousness stands at a distance; truth has stumbled in the streets, honesty cannot enter. Truth is nowhere to be found, and whoever shuns evil becomes a prey. The Lord looked and was displeased that there was no justice. He saw that there was no one, he was appalled that there was no one to intervene.” (Isaiah 59:14-16, NIV) Behind propaganda is the desire to hide the truth with bravado.
“So justice is driven back, and righteousness stands at a distance; truth has stumbled in the streets, honesty cannot enter. Truth is nowhere to be found, and whoever shuns evil becomes a prey. The Lord looked and was displeased that there was no justice. He saw that there was no one, he was appalled that there was no one to intervene.” (Isaiah 59:14-16, NIV) Behind propaganda is the desire to hide the truth with bravado.
Perhaps 
 you,  too,  have  believed  the myths  about Adventism—its noble, 
heroic heritage, its moral code, its last-day prophet. Perhaps you have 
taken comfort in the culture that appears to have been prospered by God 
and believe that the whole package is of great worth. Perhaps you have 
determined that you will not cheaply throw away this pearl of great 
price.  Take another look.  The “moral code of great worth” (the Law of Moses) is
 Adventism’s “bushido”.  It's Adventism’s ancient stronghold that has brought 
unexpected bondage and immorality.  The history of “Adventism’s  Stand” 
 in  refusing  to  jettison  the  failed  1844  prophecy  has  led to 
numerous doctrines  that do  violence  to  the  gospel. Within  those 
doctrines hides a stubborn defiance against repentance for willfully 
covering up the haughty legacy of pride, control, power, and an 
institution built on false prophecy.  
Do you think that other Christian denominations besides SDAs have the law of Moses as their "bushido" in some of their teachings? If so, what are your thoughts on this subject?
See: The Naked Truth: Exposing the Deception of Adventism, Chapter 12: "Adventism's Ancient Stronghold", p. 154-158.
Do you think that other Christian denominations besides SDAs have the law of Moses as their "bushido" in some of their teachings? If so, what are your thoughts on this subject?
See: The Naked Truth: Exposing the Deception of Adventism, Chapter 12: "Adventism's Ancient Stronghold", p. 154-158.

No comments:
Post a Comment