It is the big ‘buzz word’ of the moment; called the ‘Great Global Reset.’ The World Economic Forum is meeting in Lucerne, Switzerland in May 2021. In light of the Covid-19 pandemic, the participants want to restructure the world economy and people management as we adjust to a ‘new normal.’ While refraining from using the word ‘socialism,’ their stated goals include:
• The changes we have already seen in response to COVID-19 prove
that a reset of our economic and social foundations is possible.
•
This is our best chance to instigate stakeholder capitalism -
and here's how it can be achieved.
•
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2020/06/now-is-the-time-for-a-great-reset/
While their aims sound noble, there could be major implications (and alterations) for free market capitalism, individual freedoms, and rule of law. In recent years, climate change was used to push the globalist agenda but Covid-19 has given new impetus. The reset enjoys the support of the United Nations, International Monetary Fund, Prince Charles (at least regarding the climate) and the Vatican.
Let’s face it: In 2020 we saw things that were unimaginable even a year before.
• People
were ordered to stay in their homes;
• Small
businesses, the backbone of the economy, were closed;
• Children
were kept home from schools;
• Social
distancing and face masks were mandated;
• And, perhaps for the first time in UK and US history, church doors were order to be closed for worship.
In a reset, family, church, small businesses could be in the line of fire.
Is this the ‘new normal’ that’s being talked about?
Individuals at the WEF may or may not be sincerely and innocently motivated, but history teaches that humanistic (and theocratic) utopias, with peace and prosperity, never came to pass. Instead, the world got tyranny, oppression, war and genocide (think Stalin, Hitler, or Mao).
New World Order?
The globalist socialist dream is nothing new. Merging with secular progressivism, it has been around for at least a century. Here are some quotes from famous men:
•
George HW Bush: What is at stake is more than one small country, it is a big idea—a
new world order, where diverse nations are drawn together in common cause to achieve
the universal aspirations of mankind: peace and security, freedom, and the rule
of law. Such is a world worthy of our struggle, and worthy of our children’s
future (1991).
• Nelson Rockefeller: [there is] A fever of nationalism… [but] the nation-state is becoming less and less competent to perform its international political tasks… These are some of the reasons pressing us to lead vigorously toward the true building of a new world order… Sooner perhaps than we may realize… there will evolve the bases for a federal structure of the free world (1962)
•
Harry S. Truman: “It will be just as easy for nations to get along in a republic of the
world as it is for us to get along in a republic of the United States” (1945).
•
Mikhail Gorbachev: World progress is only possible through a search for universal human
consensus as we move forward to a new world order (1988).
One of the key drivers of progressivism and globalism was US President
Woodrow Wilson (1913-1921), who led America during the Great War. He desired,
yet failed, to get the United States to join the League of Nations. He created
the Federal Reserve Bank (FRB), a privately owned central bank. He also
instituted the federal income tax under the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). One
source commented that the IRS forced Americans to pay for the loans bankers
made through the FRB - ‘a brilliant piece of fund-raising.’
Wilson’s successors outlawed war in 1928 through the Kellogg-Briand
Pact, no doubt mindful of the terrible cost of World War I. It was a
well-meaning attempt at world peace, though from a humanistic view.
Unfortunately, it failed miserably, as World War II attests.
Whether malevolent or benevolent, man-made solutions will not work and
for good reason: they are based on the false premise that human nature is
basically good and that we don’t need God. We can solve all our problems
ourselves. Often it has unaccountable leadership, which is always a disaster
waiting to happen, even in the church life.
Furthermore, these ideologies have zero power when dealing with the
sin-issue in the human heart. Neither motivation, education, religion, welfare,
nor human effort can overcome the power of sin. Only the cross-centred gospel
of Christ can do that.
Despite past failures of controlled economic systems, globalist
socialism keeps trying again. If we are passive, apathetic, or indifferent,
then other people will decide our future for us. Yet God has a better and
higher way.
Revival
There is another solution. It is a form of reset, too. Yet, its effects
are vastly different.
It is called revival. It means to ‘come alive again.’
Revival applies to believers and the run-off can positively affect
non-believers and pre-believers.
There are many ways to describe it but it includes a renewed ‘first
love’ for the Lord, fear of the Lord, and a passion for His kingdom.
Revival means going back to the organic Christian faith, the basic
building blocks are: Repentance, confession of faith, the cross of Christ,
discipleship, the Word of God, the Great Commission and the fellowship of the
saints.
Revival has unswerving commitment to God and His truth.
Revival can be transformational on society. For example, the Wesleyan
Revival of the 18th Century was credited for saving Britain from the same sort
of blood-filled revolution that plagued France in 1789-1793. Azusa Street in
Los Angeles, 1906, ushered in the Pentecostal revival that swept the world and
continues to this day. America’s Great Awakening prepared the colonies for
independence based solidly on Christian foundations. Since that time, America
had a second great awakening.
What will it be: reset or revival? And awakening?
Let’s make up our mind to humble ourselves and seek God’s face for a
Third Great Awakening for America and the world.
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