Mosf Objective Testimony 12 7
tempted to ask, as you would be tempted to ask: what is the
moral (?) lesson that our children will learn from Tamar’s sweet
revenge? Of course we do tell our children fables, not really for
their entertainment value, but that through them some moral
may be imparted. “The Fox and the Grapes,” “The Wolf and the
Lamb,” "The Dog and his Shadow,” etc. However simple or silly
the story, a moral is aimed at.
‘CHRISTIAN PARENTAL DILEMMAS’
Dr. Vernon Jones, an American psychologist of repute, carried out
experiments on groups of schoolchildren to whom certain stories
had been told. The heroes of the stories were the same in the
case of the different groups of children, but the heroes behaved
contradictorily to each group. To one group “St. George,” slaying
the dragon emerged a very brave figure, but to another group,
fleeing in terror and seeking shelter in his mother’s lap. “THESE
STORIES MADE CERTAIN SLIGHT BUT PERMANENT CHANGES
IN CHARACTER, EVEN IN THE NARROW CLASSROOM SIT
UATION,” concluded Dr. Jones.
How much more permanent damage the rapes and murders,
incests and bestialities of the “Holy Bible” have done to the
children of Christendom, can be measured from reports in our
daily newspapers. If such is the source of Western morality, it is
no wonder, then, that Methodists and Roman Catholics have
already solemnized marriages between HOMOSEXUALS in their
“Houses of God." And 8 000 “gays” (an euphemistic term for
sodomites) parade their “wares” in London’s Hyde Park in July
1979, to the acclaim of the news and TV media!
You must get that "Holy Bible” and read the whole chapter 38
of Genesis. Mark in “ red” the words and phrases deserving this
adornment. We have reached verse 18 in our moral (?) lesson —
"AND SHE CONCEIVED BY HIM."
CAN’T HIDE FOR EVER
Three months later, as things were bound to turn out, news
reached Judah that his daughter-in-law, Tamar, had played the