“Sodom and Gomorrah, the tale of two cities imbedded in the most vulgar, crude epidemic of vile moral corruption to human dignity, has been a story that has left a mark in Bible History, never to be forgotten; this, such lowly contempt depicted in every form of debilitating practices to the physical, the mental, the emotional, the intellect, the Spiritual life of all who practiced obscenities defying God openly.
It would not take a microscope in our time to find all the similarities we are in the midst of, wherein human behavior is as bad as or even worse than what took place in Sodom and Gomorrah.
Justification of immorality is based on human beings denying the Purpose of all the Gifts God endowed man with, and in turn abusing the Gifts in the most abominable way, outwardly declaring that response to self-degradation is in keeping with the times in which we live.
When one speaks of the necessity for self-control, for self-discipline to restrain one’s willingness to partake in obscenities, killing the unborn, promiscuity, permissiveness, homosexuality, lesbianism, desecration to sound Spiritual matters, vulgarity in language, crudeness, based on immodesty in clothing; also, becoming victims to drugs, to alcohol, to pornography, to animalistic pleasure-seeking moments, plus playing games to stimulate the minds, motivating control over other people, desperately trying to find roles of power over other people — my, what a sick society we live in.
On one side of the coin is morality, on the other side immorality. This coin, in a toss, would never allow immorality to land right side up because morality, in its powerful strength, would automatically put down and hide immorality. We do not advocate that man gamble with the toss of a coin to make a decision to accept morality or immorality, but the expression was only used to draw attention to the power, the strength and the power, over which morality has over immorality.
Some men find walking a tightrope a challenge, a performance, a way to get attention, and an inward quest for a type of danger to their life. Every day men, women and children walk a tightrope, unseen of course, but nevertheless, as realistic as a wire over an abyss because that Precious Gift from God, ‘the will’, is the decision maker to choose right from wrong, and a wise human being looks at the odds of danger over a monetary thrill, foolish challenge, falling into sin, or eliminating the chance to be a Saint Forever.
Ask yourself the next time you have to make a decision: ‘As I am made to the Image and Likeness of God, what would His Will be for me?’”