Friend,
Welcome to the Friday Five! Every Friday we share our top five
articles, stories, and quotes for you to read and share with your
friends and church families.
We
would be very grateful if you could make a donation of $100, $50, $25,
or $10 today towards our work producing these Friday Fives and
fighting for your values on the public square!
1. NC VALUES: 2020 Election
Recap
Many of you have called, texted, and emailed about the North
Carolina election, so as the votes are still being counted, we wanted
to put out this summary of what we know this afternoon:
Why the results in North Carolina are still not
final:
- The State Election Board reported they are in the process of
reviewing 40,766 provisional
ballots (ballots from voters who may have voted
in a different precinct, were not registered but attempted to vote, or
whose eligibility may be otherwise questioned).
- Election boards across the state are also continuing to review and
accept up to 116,200 absentee and overseas
military ballots which must be postmarked on or
before November 3rd. Under state law, these ballots would normally
only be counted if they are received by tomorrow, November 6, but
because of a lawsuit filed in federal court by Democrat attorneys
weeks before the election, the U.S. Supreme Court has extended the
deadline to November 12th. These absentee ballots were requested but
have not been returned, and they include voters who voted in person
instead of returning their absentee ballot. So many of these ballots
will be disqualified.
- North Carolinians will not know the final outcome until the
official county by county canvassing on November 13th. It is worth
noting that not all the provisional ballots will end up counting in
this election. In 2016 voters cast about 60,000 provisional ballots,
more than half of which weren’t counted.
Given the closeness of some of the races, check out this
North State Journal article about how the North Carolina Attorney
General and Chief Justice outcomes are likely days away.
2. VIDEO: Dan Forest Concession
Speech
We congratulate our endorsed candidates for the Council of
State--Mark Robinson who won the Lt. Governor’s race, Dale Folwell who
won re-election as State Treasurer, Josh Dobson who won the
Commissioner of Labor race, and Catherine Truitt who won the
Superintendent of Public Instruction race. We are also deeply dismayed
that North Carolina voters failed to elect Dan Forest to the
Governor’s office, E.C. Sykes as Secretary of State, and Jim O’Neill
as Attorney General (although this race could well move into the win
column as votes continue to be counted). We can only trust in God’s
timeline and that each of these great men has a future leadership role
in our State.
3. NORTH STATE JOURNAL:
Fitzgerald: No one wants an HB2 debate, again!
“Destructive gender ideology, which is enshrined under SOGI laws,
threatens the right of parents to raise their children consistent with
their beliefs. People of faith should not be treated like second‐class
citizens. Tolerance is a two‐way street. Tolerance and respect for
good‐faith differences of opinion are essential in a pluralistic
society like ours. They enable us to peacefully coexist with each
other. SOGI laws ostracize and marginalize people who hold decent and
honorable beliefs about marriage, sex and gender.
We urge mayors across our state to heed the words of our own North
Carolina Constitution which says, “No human authority shall, in any
case whatever, control or interfere with the rights of conscience,”
and the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent reaffirmation of religious
liberty, when it stated, “We are also deeply concerned with preserving
the promise of the free exercise of religion enshrined in our
Constitution; that guarantee lies at the heart of our pluralistic
society.” People of faith should be welcome in our cities, not
targeted and punished.
To our city leaders we say: listen to important stakeholders like
female athletes, small business owners and people of faith. Our voices
are important. It’s time for a different approach.”
4. N&O: NC first lady
apologizes for Facebook comment about ‘flipping off’ Trump
supporters
“North Carolina first lady Kristin Cooper apologized Thursday night
for a Facebook comment in which she said she “flipped off” President
Trump supporters by the State Capitol in downtown Raleigh days before
the election.”
“According to a screenshot of the comment that circulated on social
media, Kristin Cooper responded to a comment about the event on
another Facebook user’s private page.
Her comment included: “There was a pitiful family
group waving those flags by the Capitol today. I flipped them off and
told them to go home. Was flipping off a brainwashed kid my finest
hour? Probably not, but I can live with it.”
5. DAILY SIGNAL: Is Voter Fraud
Afoot? A Look at 7 Claims
“As might be expected during the undecided presidential contest
between Donald Trump and Joe Biden, pundits and typical voters alike
are voicing more concerns about voter fraud and unfair election
practices.
Already numerous internet rumors have been proven wrong or lack
evidence. That doesn’t mean every assertion will prove to be without
merit, however.
Conversely, some legitimate questions about ballot counting have
enough evidence behind them to support litigation. That doesn’t mean
such questions won’t ultimately have satisfactory answers.
Here’s a sampling—based on what currently is known—of seven claims
in the postelection chaos.”
WEEKLY PRAYER: LIFE
LORD, we recognize that you are Sovereign over all creation. We
recognize you made man from the dust, and in your mercy crowned
creation with man and woman made in your image. What a wonder it is
that you would bestow upon us this blessing and
responsibility!
We pray LORD that we would not take this for granted. We pray
that both this great responsibility, and this great dignity, may
motivate us to love you more, love our neighbor more, and love
ourselves more
LORD, may we as a culture truly see and believe that children
are a blessing from the LORD—born or unborn; able
or disabled. All children should have an opportunity to
experience the liberty of life.
"At that time the disciples came to Jesus and asked, 'Who,
then, is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?' He called a little
child to him, and placed the child among them. And he said: 'Truly I
tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will
never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever takes the lowly
position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And
whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me. If anyone
causes one of these little ones—those who believe in me—to stumble, it
would be better for them to have a large millstone hung around their
neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.'" (Matthew
18:1-6)
Amen
Will
you chip in $100, $50, $25, or even $10 to help the NC Values
Coalition continue to fight for your rights? You can donate by
clicking here.
Sincerely,
North Carolina Values Coalition
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