I Prayed have prayed

Pray against this new push for the ERA and against other efforts to force abortion on demand in this country.

But it is easier for heaven and earth to pass away than for one dot of the Law to become void.
(Lk 16:17)

… Proponents of the Equal Rights Amendment have claimed that they only need three more states to ratify it, instead of 38 as the Constitution requires. In doing so, they’re asking for special treatment, not equal treatment.

In March 1972, Congress sent the ERA to the states. The measure had a seven-year limit, which had been requested by its proponents, for ratification.

The amendment, which read “Equality of rights under law shall not be denied or abridged … on account of sex,” was ratified by 30 states within 12 months. But, in the next six years, only five more states ratified it, because lawmakers learned that the ERA wasn’t just about securing equal pay for equal work or enshrining women in the Constitution.

In her 1971 testimony, U.S. Rep. Bella Abzug of New York and an advocate for women’s rights, said that the ERA would eliminate “all existing legal distinctions based on sex” and would reject “the assumption that sex is ever a reasonable legal classification.”

Thus, under the strict scrutiny of the courts, no law could ban abortion or prohibit the use of tax money to pay for abortion, because only women become pregnant. Tax exemptions for churches that have only male clergy would be illegal. Women could be drafted alongside men to fight in ground combat units. Women-only private facilities, as well as separate boys’ and girls’ sports teams at public schools, also would be banned. Prisons, hospital rooms and school dorms — as well as private schools — would not be allowed to have separate facilities based on sex.

Every effort to amend the ERA to allow common-sense sex-based distinctions failed. Radical ideology won….

The extension was challenged. In the 1981 case Idaho v. Freeman, a federal court ruled that the time limit originally set for ratification was reasonable and that Congress couldn’t change it.  (The U.S. Supreme Court later declined to hear an appeal of the ruling, ruling the issue moot because the ERA had failed to be ratified.)

Now, some proponents claim that, because the wording on the ERA’s seven-year limit is in the amendment’s preamble, Congress has the power to change it. But this question was decided decades ago — in the 1939 U.S. Supreme Court decision Coleman v. Miller, the court ruled that a time limit for ratification is valid whether it’s placed in the preamble or in the body of a resolution. Additionally, 24 states ratified the ERA with the wording on the seven-year limit included. How can those ratifications be valid today, nearly 40 years after the original deadline?…

By 1982, 35 states had ratified the ERA, and five had rescinded their ratifications. In 2017-18, two states — Illinois and Nevada — attempted to resurrect the amendment and ratified it.

Despite these recent political maneuvers, the Virginia General Assembly should acknowledge the facts and stop posturing on a dead ERA. (Excerpts from Bob Marshall article in The Virginian-Pilot)

The Informer January 22, 2019 PDF Version

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Lynn Rickert
February 9, 2019

“Behold the hand of the Lord is not shortened, that it cannot save; neither is His ear heavy that it cannot hear. But your inquiries have separated you from your God; And your sins have hidden His face from you. For your hands are defiled with blood and your fingers with iniquity; your lips have spoken lies, your tongue has muttered perversity.
….Then the Lord saw it and it displeased Him that there was no justice. He saw that there was no man, and wondered that there was no Intercessors. Therefore His own arm brought salvation for Him….When the enemy comes in like a flood, The Spirit of the LORD will lift up a standard against him…”
(experts from Isaiah 59)

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