Curt Landry Says You Can Help Protect the Religious Freedom of This Nation Right Now
Rabbi Curt Landry says with all the spiritual warfare surrounding the 2020 presidential election, including alleged fraud, the Constitution of the United States is being assaulted. In fact, it’s being attacked as never before in the 244 years of the country’s existence.
And, he says, that has huge ramifications on the religious freedom you and your fellow Americans have enjoyed for nearly 2 1/2 centuries. That religious freedom is in jeopardy, and many aren’t even fully aware of it. Invoking Patrick Henry’s famous quote from 1775, Landry says, “Give me liberty or give me death.”
It’s time, Landry says, for believers to get on their knees in constant intercessory prayer for God to intervene and help us maintain our religious liberty—to be “watchmen on the wall.” The next step in the 2020 presidential election, which is still in dispute, will happen on Jan. 6, 2021, when Congress meets to validate it. If there are objections at that meeting, a somewhat obscure law will be consulted to settle disputes about electors.
“If we want God to bless America, then we need to have a democratic republic that actually stands with His ways,” Landry told Dr. Steve Greene on a recent episode of Greenelines on the Charisma Podcast Network. “The separatists that came here 400 years ago, that’s what they came for. We cannot allow outside forces to steal that liberty.
“We have to have the spirit of Patrick Henry and say, ‘Give me liberty or give me death. But we also need to say liberty and justice for all. …
“For believers, in Second Corinthians, it says, ‘Now the Lord is the Spirit. And where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty,’ Landry said. “We have to have religious liberty to be able to demonstrate and preach the gospel. And we need this platform in the United States of America. Our Constitution is being tested. The last time it was tested was like in 1876, when there was voter fraud suppression. And that’s where we’re going again right now.”
For more about Rabbi Landry’s thoughts on the preservation of our religious freedom, listen to the rest of this podcast. {eoa}