I realize that not everyone knows the Babylon Bee is a satirical publication.
After all "The Bee" is frequently fact checked by far left activists who seem to miss the nuance of satire and rush to publish disclaimers that the Bee's satire is fake news. Not everyone has a modicum of common sense.
With that said, an email found its way to my inbox, with a story so bizarre that I was compelled to double check to ascertain if the email was from Babylon Bee or its sister publication; "Not The Bee." To my horror, the message was from the latter and not the former; it was from Not The Bee, publisher of non-satirical actual news.
In all editorial fairness, Not The Bee found a story on Lifenews.com explaining how the so called church of Satan plans to open abortion clinics where, under the pretext of religious rites, they will distribute abortifacients to those pregnant women over the age of consent and not more than eleven weeks along.
Lifenews reports:
Licensed medical workers will screen patients during a virtual appointment, and then prescribe abortion drugs through pharmacies that will mail them in "a discreet package," the group said. Women will be charged a pharmacy fee of about $90, it continued. The satanic group also set up a 24-hour abortion hotline.
Eventually, The Satanic Temple leaders said they want to expand their new abortion practice to states that ban abortions. Their group has filed lawsuits in several states challenging their legal protections for unborn babies on religious grounds.
[...] The satanic group claims killing unborn babies in abortions is a religious ritual, and restricting it violates its "fundamental tenets," according to an article on Glenn Beck's website. Its leaders also claim pro-life laws are rooted in "Christian nationalism" – even though people of all faiths and no faith believe basic human rights should apply to all human beings.[1]
Babylon Bee make this point;
Hey, to all the haters, and above politics "third-wayers" out there who shout down those on the Religious Right who have been saying for decades that abortion is satanic, we will accept your apologies now.[2]
Yes, for years many of us in the Pro-Life movement have suggested that the procedure of abortion was in and of itself a Satanic act. The act of murdering an innocent child. Perhaps the claim is more than metaphor.
In the title of this missive, we metaphorically ask if Moloch is alive, or more precisely, is the worship of Moloch alive. If you are not familiar with "Moloch" read this excerpt:
As we read in Leviticus 18:21, the worship of Molech included infanticide: specifically, it included the murder of infants as a pagan sacrifice.
For many years it was thought that Molech was one of the pagan deities of the Canaanites, but debate exists among scholars as to whether he is actually a Phoenician pagan deity.
Whatever the case may be, God was very clear in his prohibition of Molech worship and sacrifices. According to Scripture, this worship took place primarily in the Hinnom Valley at Topheth, a place in the valley that translates to "pit of flame" (2 Kings 23:10).
Molech is usually depicted as a bull-headed anthropomorphic deity, which was heated until glowing like flames. Then, as the pinnacle of worship, an infant would be placed in his hands while his devotees listened to the infant cry as it burned to death before their eyes.
Such worship demonstrates such a depth of depravity, such a disregard for the sanctity of life —innocent life — that only the most moral degenerate could justify it.[3]
Wiki-pedia has this to say:
The activity of causing children "to pass over the fire" is mentioned, without reference to Moloch, in numerous other verses of the bible, such as in Deuteronomy (Deuteronomy 12:31, 18:10), 2 Kings (2 Kings 16:3; 17:17; 17:31; 21:6), 2 Chronicles (2 Chronicles 28:3; 33:6), the Book of Jeremiah (Jeremiah 7:31, 19:5) and the Book of Ezekiel (Ezekiel 16:21; 20:26, 31; 23:37)[4]
If you really care to study history, real history and not the propaganda disseminated by the far left, you will find some interesting facts.
From the Planned Parenthood website we find:
Planned Parenthood traces its roots back to a nurse named Margaret Sanger. Sanger grew up in an Irish family of 11 children in Corning, New York. Her mother, in fragile health from many pregnancies, including seven miscarriages, died at age 50 of tuberculosis. Her mother's story — along with her work as a nurse on the Lower East Side of New York — inspired Sanger to travel to Europe and study birth control methods at a time when educating people about birth control was illegal in the United States.
On October 16, 1916, Sanger — together with her sister Ethel Byrne and activist Fania Mindell — opened the country's first birth control clinic in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Women lined up down the block to get birth control information and advice from Sanger, Byrne, and Mindell.[5]
The Reuters News Service, published a "Fact Check" on comments attributed to Margaret Sanger, which claim that she sought to control the birth rate in Black American communities. The editorial staff at Reuters gave it as their opinion that the statement had been taken out of context, you can read the entire so called fact check here.
However they did not dismiss the historical fact that Margaret Sanger was involved in the Eugenics movement:
The NYU's Margaret Sanger Papers Project acknowledged that Sanger was a supporter of eugenics, a now-discredited practice of selective breeding with specific characteristics, and described "The Negro Project" as controversial from the onset and "constructed in terms and with perceptions that today smack of racism."
The National Human Genome Research Institute, a branch of the government explains Eugenics as:
Eugenics is the scientifically erroneous and immoral theory of "racial improvement" and "planned breeding," which gained popularity during the early 20th century. Eugenicists worldwide believed that they could perfect human beings and eliminate so-called social ills through genetics and heredity. They believed the use of methods such as involuntary sterilization, segregation and social exclusion would rid society of individuals deemed by them to be unfit.[6]
In an article on Episcopis Comtemplationes in October '22; The Atlantic Magazine actually endorsed forced sterilization, we looked at how the government and other institutions forced sterilization on those they deemed to be inferior.
In looking at these historical facts, we see a pattern emerge in which elitists seek to control populations (communities other than their own) in the name of creating a better world. In essence they have established a false God and through abortion and other means, continue to sacrifice children on the altar of their belief system. Their religion, for that is what their ideology is, constitutes a religious cult that thrives on the death of the unborn.
How can that reality be anything but demonic?
[1] https://www.lifenews.com/2023/02/01/satanic-temple-opens-new-abortion-clinic-to-kill-babies-in-ritualistic-abortions/
[2] https://notthebee.com/article/a-satanic-temple-is-launching-a-tele-health-initiative-to-perform-religious-abortion-rituals-and-i-will-be-accepting-my-apologies-now
[3] https://www.christianity.com/wiki/angels-and-demons/who-was-moloch-in-the-bible.html
[4] https://en.wikipedia.org//wiki/Moloch
[5] https://www.plannedparenthood.org/about-us/who-we-are/our-history
[6] https://www.genome.gov/about-genomics/fact-sheets/Eugenics-and-Scientific-Racism
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