A few months ago the Father spoke to me and said, remember two dates; Ramadan and the Day of the Dead.
Ramadan is a month set apart for Islam, and in 2010 is observed from August 11th to September 9th. The Day of the Dead is a day in which some cultures honor their forefathers, as a way of celebrating their lives.
The Father said, “Look up”, and I saw a huge question mark in the sky. He said this is a question that I am putting to the Muslim world during the season of Ramadan, day and night, hour by hour, awake and asleep, and the question is, “WHAT IS LOVE?”.
This is not a casual question, but a burning question that needs to be answered from deep inside. He said that the question mark will remain in the sky for 30 days. Today, I was thinking about this, and suddenly I heard a scream. It was a long protracted scream. It was a scream of many voices, and it arose out of hell. Suddenly I saw that it was coming from the Muslims who thought they would end up in Paradise and found that what they had believed is a lie. The scream was filled with betrayal and a realization of the truth. The scream really is simply THE TRUTH. So, as the Father showed, the question of love, and the scream of realization, will be side by side for 30 days.
One thing that the Father showed me about the Day of the Dead is that it occurs this year one day before the November 2nd elections. On Election Day every last person who fought in the Revolutionary War will be present, watching from the Cloud of Witnesses, to see what we will do for our liberty and the liberty of our children’s children’s children.

WHAT IS LOVE? What a powerful question and now we see this coming true, just as the Father showed Silvana.
The whole controversy around the mosque being built near Ground Zero really centers around that question. They try to cast the issue of the mosque being built where 3000 people were murdered by muslims as a constitutional question, but the real question is one of love.
Do we dishonor those who were killed; the heroes – firemen and first responders – who rushed up the staircases to rescue those in danger, people who leapt to their death out the windows to escape the unbearable heat and pressure, and do we cause greater suffering to their families? Would love cause them more harm?
I thought that Jon Barela, candidate for Congress in my district, said it best: “It is hurtful and insensitive to build it there. They should build it elsewhere.”
Exactly. It is hurtful. The very last thing we want to bring to the families of our honored dead. The opposition chides us for a lack of respect for all religions, while they ignore the victims that we have not forgotten on that day, and the pain of the families who remain.
WHAT IS LOVE? A very good question, Father. And now, the day of the dead makes sense as well. For it is the dead on 9/11 who will be part of the equation on November 1st (the Day of the Dead) as we prepare to go to the polls the following day, November 2nd.
God bless America, and the huge percentage who are against the travesty of building a mosque on hallowed ground, sacred by the ashes of those who died there. And God bless all who vote out of office, those who are too insensitive to care.
By: chartierney on August 28, 2010
at 6:25 am