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  • (Ray Comfort) Have you heard of Adolf Hitler?

  • No.

  • You don't know who he is?

  • No.

  • ♪♪♪

  • [cheering]

  • ♪♪♪

  • (Adolf Hitler) [speaking German]

  • ♪♪♪

  • I'm Ray Comfort.

  • I'm Jewish, and I'm deeply concerned that a generation

  • is forgetting one of the greatest tragedies

  • in the history of the human race.

  • Adolf Hitler sanctioned the murder

  • of eleven million people,

  • including six million Jews, through what's commonly called

  • the Holocaust.

  • In Germany, statues of Hitler are forbidden,

  • and his Nazi salute is illegal. And in Austria,

  • if you even deny the Holocaust took place,

  • they'll throw you in jail.

  • Germany so wants to keep alive the memory of that horror,

  • it has mandatory Holocaust education for its children.

  • This is because it's been rightly said that

  • those who forget history are destined to repeat it.

  • (Ray Comfort) Adolf Hitler, what do you know about him?

  • He was a, um-- what's it called?

  • He was kind of a president.

  • (Ray Comfort) What do you know about Adolf Hitler?

  • I really don't know anything about it.

  • (Ray Comfort) Have you heard of Adolf Hitler?

  • Um, no.

  • (Ray Comfort) You never heard of him?

  • No.

  • I vaguely remember him.

  • (Ray Comfort) Who was Adolf Hitler?

  • Um, he was the guy that's in--was he German?

  • I really don't know that much about him.

  • (Ray Comfort) Who was Adolf Hitler?

  • Um...

  • uh, this guy--with a--

  • he had a mustache.

  • (Ray Comfort) Who was Adolf Hitler?

  • He was a communist, right, leader of Germany?

  • Who was Adolf Hitler?

  • I don't know.

  • You have no idea at all?

  • No.

  • Uh, he was a communist.

  • Um, is he like a actor or someone?

  • He's like, something about Holocaust.

  • (Ray Comfort) So tell me what you know about Adolf Hitler.

  • Uh, I don't know anything about him.

  • Have you ever heard of him?

  • No, I haven't.

  • Who's the guy with the mustache?

  • Um, don't know, I'm sorry.

  • (Ray Comfort) You're about to meet Steve.

  • As you'll see, Steve is a self-proclaimed neo-Nazi

  • who loves Adolf Hitler, hates Jews and people of dark skin.

  • White people are up here,

  • and then there's [bleep] and Jews.

  • So, the white man is the best man.

  • (Ray Comfort) What's the purpose of man's existence?

  • To get drunk and have a blue Mohawk.

  • What was Jesus Christ?

  • (Ray Comfort) Savior of the world.

  • No, he was a [bleep] Jew!

  • And what do Jews do?

  • They lie!

  • Christianity is a Jewish trick, but it hasn't tricked me,

  • because I'm Greek and I'm smarter than that.

  • (Ray Comfort) Spell the word "shop."

  • Shop? S-h-o-p.

  • (Ray Comfort) What do you do when you come to a green light?

  • Stop.

  • (Ray Comfort) Green light.

  • Oh. Go. [laughs]

  • (Ray Comfort) See, now, if you can make a mistake

  • with something as simple as that--

  • [Yeah that was good.]

  • (Ray Comfort) just think if you're making a mistake

  • with this whole philosophy.

  • I'm not. You're making a mistake!

  • I don't hate black people because they're black.

  • I hate black people because they're pieces of [bleep],

  • because they ruin every [bleep] neighborhood

  • they come into, because they do bad things

  • to my people because of the color of our skin.

  • This country is [bleep], and I hate America.

  • America is run by a bunch of little weak [bleep] Jews

  • that were like, that couldn't stand up for themselves,

  • so they had to make up a fake God to protect them,

  • because they're a weak race.

  • Jesus was a Jew,

  • and if He were in Auschwitz, I'd give Him a tattoo.

  • Adolf Hitler was not evil.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, what do you have to do to be evil?

  • He killed six million Jews, and blacks, and gypsies,

  • and homosexuals.

  • I don't believe that; I think that's a lie.

  • I don't think he killed that many people.

  • I love Hitler.

  • (Ray Comfort) Why?

  • Because he wanted to cleanse the world of non-white races.

  • (Ray Comfort) Don't you think he was evil?

  • Evil? No, no.

  • Who was Adolf Hitler?

  • The leader of the Nazis.

  • He ran the fascist movement in World War II, right?

  • Good guy, bad guy?

  • He was intelligent, but he was-- what he was doing was bad.

  • (Ray Comfort) Have you heard of Adolf Hitler?

  • Yes. Yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) What did he do?

  • He killed a lot of people and tried to take over the world.

  • (Ray Comfort) Good guy or bad guy?

  • Bad!

  • (Ray Comfort) I've got to ask you this question.

  • It's not a racist question,

  • but are you German?

  • Bin ein Deutschlander.

  • And do you know what Hitler said, is he said Christianity

  • is a nice religion, but let's let it die out.

  • He put the Jewish people in concentration camps.

  • And he basically brainwashed the whole German civilization

  • into believing that Jews were evil,

  • and he needed to get rid of them.

  • He started World War II.

  • (Ray Comfort) It's 1939, you've got a high-powered rifle,

  • and Adolf Hitler is in your sights.

  • Do you take him out?

  • (female) Absolutely.

  • (Ray Comfort) Okay, so you didn't hesitate.

  • Would you take him out?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) Okay, it's about 30 years earlier.

  • Mrs. Hitler is pregnant with Adolf.

  • Would you take her out?

  • If I knew what he was going to do?

  • (Ray Comfort) Mmm-hmm.

  • Yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you shoot him?

  • (Ray Comfort) If you go back 30 years earlier,

  • and Adolf Hitler's mother is pregnant with Adolf,

  • and you've got a high-powered rifle,

  • and you had got one shot, would you take him out?

  • Would you kill her to kill him?

  • (Ray Comfort) Did he kill millions of Russians?

  • (Ray Comfort) Did you lose any relatives?

  • ♪♪♪

  • ♪♪♪

  • ♪♪♪

  • (Ray Comfort) Adolf Hitler hated Christianity.

  • He called it a disease and once said,

  • "The heaviest blow which ever struck humanity

  • was Christianity,"

  • adding that it was an invention of the Jew.

  • He killed or imprisoned genuine pastors

  • and replaced them with his own Nazi pastors.

  • He also replaced the cross with a swastika,

  • printed 100,000 copies of his own twisted Bible,

  • rewrote the Ten Commandments,

  • and then created his own Aryan, anti-Semitic, non-Jewish Jesus.

  • But most importantly, all this sprung from the fact

  • that Hitler had created his own image of God

  • and was what the Bible calls an idolater.

  • He had another god before the God of the Bible.

  • Like Judas Iscariot, he professed to be a follower

  • of Jesus of Nazareth, but his motive was for

  • his own evil agenda, and that agenda was very clear.

  • He said, "He alone who owns the youth gains the future."

  • Adolf Hitler deceived the youth of Germany.

  • He deceived many within the traditional church.

  • But most of all,

  • he deceived the millions of Germans who believed his lie

  • about the supremacy of the German race.

  • ♪♪♪

  • (Ray Comfort) History tells us of one man who was present

  • when the Nazis killed 1,600 Jews on April 6, 1942.

  • He witnessed them being shot and then being buried alive.

  • (male #1) I saw them do the killing.

  • At 5:00 p.m., they gave the command,

  • "Fill in the pits."

  • Screams and groans were coming from the pits.

  • Suddenly, I saw my neighbor Ruderman

  • rise from under the soil.

  • His eyes were bloody, and he was screaming,

  • "Finish me off!"

  • A murdered woman lay at my feet.

  • A boy of five years crawled out from under her body

  • and began to scream desperately, "Mommy!"

  • That was all I saw, since I feel unconscious.

  • (Ray Comfort) It's 1943, a German officer

  • has pointed a machine gun at you and told you

  • to get in a bulldozer and drive it forward.

  • You look in front of you. There's a big pit.

  • Hundreds of Jewish families have been shot,

  • and they're in the pit.

  • Many of them are dead, but some of them are still alive.

  • He's telling you to bury them alive.

  • [Gasps.]

  • (Ray Comfort) You know that if you say no, he's just going to say okay,

  • and shoot you with his machine gun.

  • Oh, my goodness.

  • (Ray Comfort) Okay, and someone else is going to do it.

  • He's going to do it.

  • Would you do what he says?

  • I don't know.

  • Wow, I think that's a powerful question.

  • (Ray Comfort) If you do what he says, he's going to let you live.

  • Would you drive the bulldozer forward?

  • No.

  • No.

  • (Ray Comfort) Why not?

  • They're going to die anyway.

  • Because I'd rather die not doing that,

  • knowing that I was the cause.

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you drive the bulldozer?

  • Absolutely not.

  • I think I would do it forward only because of the fear

  • of my own life and fearing that I have no other choice.

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you do what he says?

  • Absolutely.

  • I would not.

  • (Ray Comfort) What about you?

  • Would you drive it forward?

  • No, I would take the shot.

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you do what he says?

  • Probably, yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) You'd just bury those Jews?

  • Yeah, if it was me or if it was my life,

  • I would probably do that, yeah.

  • I'd do it.

  • (Ray Comfort) Okay, let's say that the soldier said to you,

  • "Look, I don't want you to bury these people alive.

  • I'm just going to give you my gun,

  • and you just finish them all off.

  • Just shoot them."

  • Would you do that?

  • Nah, that would be harder to do.

  • Yeah, that would be something--

  • (Ray Comfort) It's almost more merciful

  • to be shot than buried alive, don't you think?

  • Oh, I think so, yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, you wouldn't shoot them, but you'd bury them?

  • Yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) What's the difference?

  • Because I would think that most of them would be dead.

  • That would be the--

  • (Ray Comfort) But there's some still alive.

  • Yeah, I would probably try to put that out of my mind.

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you do what he says?

  • Absolutely not.

  • He may as well shoot me.

  • (Ray Comfort) If he said, "Take my gun.

  • We've got a dozen officers pointing their guns at you.

  • I want you to shoot those Jews."

  • No, dude, no, no.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, you wouldn't shoot them?

  • Nah, I don't like--

  • (Ray Comfort) But you'd bury them?

  • If--

  • Well, then, I would probably do it just to save myself

  • and my family.

  • (Ray Comfort) If he said to you, "I want you to take this machine gun

  • and finish those Jews off," would you do that?

  • No, I wouldn't kill anybody.

  • I couldn't do it.

  • (Ray Comfort) But you're burying them alive,

  • which is worse than being shot with a bullet.

  • You're killing me, man.

  • That's a tough decision.

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you do what he wants?

  • (Ray Comfort) You'd just drive it forward?

  • You wouldn't hesitate?

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you drive it forward?

  • No.

  • No, I would not.

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you do what he wants?

  • No.

  • (Ray Comfort) Why not?

  • Well, for one, that's not morally right to me.

  • What can one person do, if just that one person

  • got out of the bulldozer?

  • You know what I mean?

  • Like, then their life is gone, too.

  • It's that everyone needed to rise up against him, you know?

  • And I think that's what a lot of people were--

  • where was the world, you know?

  • Where was everybody? You know?

  • (Ray Comfort) Maybe everybody is made up of individuals that would say,

  • "I could never bury human beings alive.

  • I'd rather die than do that."

  • Do you value life?

  • Of course.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, you wouldn't take a human life?

  • You value human life?

  • (male #2) Yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) How do you feel about abortion?

  • (male #2) Mmm, it all depends.

  • That's a tricky subject.

  • (Ray Comfort) Sounds like you value human life.

  • I do value human life.

  • (Ray Comfort) Alicia, how do you feel about abortion?

  • Uh...

  • I feel that, um, it's a woman's right to choose,

  • and every situation is a different situation.

  • I'm for abortion.

  • You know, that's a tricky situation.

  • I am pro-life, but you know, until you're--it's really easy

  • from the outside to say I'm going to do this,

  • and I'm going to do that,

  • but until you're actually in that situation,

  • there's no saying what you will do.

  • I mean, it's really--

  • (Ray Comfort) If you're pro-life, do you believe it's a baby in the womb?

  • Absolutely, yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) When does it become a life?

  • Well, it kind of does at the start,

  • but it's not as much until after three months.

  • (Ray Comfort) This is actual footage of a baby in the womb

  • at just six weeks, six days of age.

  • You can clearly see the baby's eyes, hands, and heartbeat.

  • There's a fetus there, not a baby.

  • (Ray Comfort) You don't think it's a baby?

  • Not yet, not until three months.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you think it's a baby in the womb?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) Okay, finish this sentence for me, okay?

  • It's okay to kill a baby in the womb when--

  • I don't know.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you think it's a baby in the womb?

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) Okay, finish this sentence for me:

  • It's okay to kill a baby in the womb when--

  • If it comes from something that shouldn't have happened.

  • (Ray Comfort) When does it become a life?

  • That's a tough one.

  • (Ray Comfort) Here's a question, if you're in doubt.

  • Okay, I'm a construction worker,

  • and I see a building, and I say to you,

  • "I'm just going to blow up that building in a minute.

  • There's a possibility there's somebody in there.

  • I just don't know, but I'm going to blow it up anyway."

  • What would you say to me?

  • I'm not sure if there's life in that building or not,

  • but I'm going to blow it up anyway.

  • Have you had an abortion?

  • Actually, yes, I have.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you feel guilty about it?

  • No.

  • (Ray Comfort) What justifies the killing of a baby in a womb?

  • If you can't support it when it comes out.

  • I think it's better to have a plan.

  • I think it's--you know, if you're going to do something

  • like that, you should definitely give it much, much more thought.

  • It's not something you should, you know, just lightly say,

  • "Oh, well, let's just go do it."

  • You know?

  • (Ray Comfort) Can you see that's like saying, "Look,

  • before you bury those Jews alive,

  • just give it some thought and then bury them alive"?

  • Ah.

  • (Ray Comfort) Can you see the--

  • Yeah, I see where you're going with this.

  • I guess you could say it's kind of the same thing.

  • (Ray Comfort) Here's you, Frank.

  • You would give your life for Jews who were going to

  • die anyway, and yet you won't speak up against

  • the murder of children in the womb.

  • I would like you to say that is wrong

  • to kill a child in the womb.

  • The safest place on earth is a mother's womb.

  • And to actually go in there and destroy a human life.

  • Why?

  • For selfish reasons.

  • Well, depending, I guess, right?

  • I mean, it would depend on the reasons.

  • (Ray Comfort) Well, tell me a reason for killing a baby in the womb.

  • Well, I mean, you know, if it's rape

  • or something like that.

  • You know what I mean?

  • Which is, I know, a tough decision, but that's mentally,

  • you know, for--

  • (Ray Comfort) Why is it tough?

  • Why would you kill the baby for the crime of the father?

  • Which is worse, murder or rape?

  • You're murdering a child, taking another life

  • because of the crime of the father.

  • Who knows when life begins?

  • I wouldn't know.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you think God knows when life begins?

  • I think yeah, probably.

  • (Ray Comfort) And do you know what the Sixth Commandment is?

  • No, no.

  • (Ray Comfort) It says, "You shall not kill."

  • So you should say it's never right to kill a child

  • in the womb. And Hitler declared Jews as non-humans,

  • and that's what you're doing when you're saying,

  • "That's not a baby until three months.

  • That's what I think."

  • It's very subjective.

  • And if you're not sure, it's taking a terrible risk

  • with somebody else's life.

  • Imagine if someone said that about you when you were

  • just three months old, and they decided to kill you

  • because of selfish reasons.

  • I wouldn't want other people to judge me,

  • so I wouldn't want to do that to other people.

  • So whatever their decision is, you know,

  • it's between them and God.

  • It's their baby.

  • (Ray Comfort) Whose baby?

  • The mother.

  • (Ray Comfort) She's got the right to kill it?

  • If she can't--if she feels she can't take care of it or she--

  • (Ray Comfort) So that's the criteria.

  • I can't take care of this.

  • It's going to interfere with my life.

  • I'll kill it.

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) Wow.

  • [rewind sound]

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you value human life?

  • Yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) Are you a Christian?

  • Um, in a sense.

  • I believe in God completely.

  • (Ray Comfort) So what's the Sixth Commandment?

  • I don't know.

  • (Ray Comfort) "You shall not kill."

  • Why would you advocate the murder of a child

  • in the womb, if you know God says,

  • "You shall not kill"?

  • You should be dogmatically against the killing of children

  • in the womb.

  • It's the safest place on earth, a woman's womb.

  • So why would you say it's okay to kill children in the womb?

  • There's no way that you're going to change my opinion

  • on this, because I believe it is a woman's choice.

  • I just, I personally would not do it,

  • but I believe it should be a choice.

  • You know, there's all sorts of medical problems.

  • There's all sorts of birth defects, whatever, so you know

  • that their quality of life is going to be pretty much

  • restrained into a 9 x 9 hospital room.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, you're saying--

  • Do you really think that it's fair to kind of live that--

  • I mean, what type of quality of life is that?

  • (Ray Comfort) The Nazis are in front of you.

  • They're going to kill kids with Downs Syndrome.

  • They're going to kill them all.

  • They did this.

  • Uh-huh.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you think that's okay then?

  • No, absolutely not.

  • (Ray Comfort) They've got a bad quality of life.

  • Definitely not.

  • And who's to say that they have a bad quality of life?

  • There's no possible way that that child would have

  • a good life, so why raise that child to have a bad life?

  • (Ray Comfort) How can you make that judgment when the child is not born?

  • Um--

  • (Ray Comfort) I could say that about any child.

  • This child could have a bad life.

  • I think I'll kill it.

  • What about you?

  • It's okay to kill a baby in the womb when--

  • Um, when you're really messed up,

  • and you're about to beat that kid or something.

  • (Ray Comfort) We're talking about a holocaust in America,

  • in our country that's sanctioned by the government.

  • Do you think it's okay to kill kids in the womb?

  • I don't think it's okay.

  • I just don't think that, um--

  • (Ray Comfort) But isn't that like what Nazi Germany was about?

  • It's like saying, "What Hitler did was wrong.

  • I think it's his choice.

  • I don't think it's okay, but he did it,

  • and it was his choice to do so,

  • and he had the sanction of the German people, because

  • they allowed him in. And so it's okay, but even though,

  • you know, I don't agree with it."

  • Can you see it's a similar thing?

  • Uh, I guess when you put it like that,

  • it is very similar, yeah.

  • It's very similar to say that-- I guess me saying that it's okay

  • for someone to choose is the same thing as saying

  • it's okay for Hitler to choose.

  • (Ray Comfort) So are you going to change your stance on it?

  • Yeah, it's definitely,

  • it's definitely making me think, yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) I'd like you to feel like you would in Germany,

  • when Jews were being killed all around you.

  • You'd be horrified.

  • And we've got a holocaust in America where real babies

  • are being murdered because of a woman's choice,

  • and it's legal.

  • It's like Nazi Germany.

  • He did it legally.

  • He didn't do anything legally wrong.

  • But I think, in some situations, it can be necessary.

  • I think--

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you think it's a baby in the womb?

  • Yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) So finish this sentence off for me.

  • Killing a baby in the womb is okay when--

  • Oh, there we go.

  • Never.

  • (Ray Comfort) Brittany, I noticed you called it a child.

  • So finish this sentence for me.

  • It's okay to kill a child in the womb when--

  • Well.

  • Maybe it's just okay if you adopt it out and

  • just not keep it, 'cause if somebody is not ready for it--

  • (Ray Comfort) So you're saying that you're changing your mind

  • about abortion right now?

  • Yeah, yes, yes.

  • It sounds bad when you put it in that kind of words.

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you ever vote for someone who was

  • for the killing of children in the womb?

  • No.

  • (Ray Comfort) Well, that's great.

  • So, have you just changed your mind about abortion?

  • Yeah. It's not something I've thought about much,

  • but I figured if I was ever in a situation like that, I'd just

  • give it up for adoption if I couldn't take care of it myself,

  • so--

  • But I've never really thought about it like that,

  • I guess.

  • (Ray Comfort) Isn't that great to give it up for adoption

  • instead of killing it?

  • Yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) It's a wonderful option, adoption.

  • And just as you felt strongly about the life of Jews,

  • and we needed to rise up as one person and speak against it,

  • don't you think we need to do that

  • when it comes to the issue of abortion?

  • I think you have a valid point there.

  • I never paralleled those two.

  • (Ray Comfort) The Holocaust and abortion?

  • Yeah. Yeah.

  • I feel like it should be allowed, because it is a choice,

  • but I feel like I personally would not do it.

  • It's just--

  • (Ray Comfort) So you wouldn't kill Jews,

  • but it's okay for someone else to kill them?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) So what would you say to someone like you in Germany

  • that says, "Well, you should never kill Jews,

  • but I think people should have the right to do it."

  • I don't think--oh.

  • (Ray Comfort) Because that's what you said.

  • Yeah, that is what I said,

  • huh? Okay.

  • (Ray Comfort) So have you just changed your mind about abortion?

  • Yes, I've just changed my mind about abortion.

  • (Ray Comfort) So are you going to vote differently in the future

  • when you do vote?

  • Yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you mean that?

  • Yeah.

  • So are you changing your mind about abortion?

  • Yeah, when you put it that way, it does change your mind.

  • It's never okay to kill a baby in the womb.

  • (Ray Comfort) Okay, so are you going to change your mind

  • about abortion?

  • Yes, I am.

  • (Ray Comfort) Are you going to vote differently in the future?

  • Yes, vote against abortion.

  • (Ray Comfort) It's okay to kill a baby in the womb when--

  • In my heart, I would say never.

  • (Ray Comfort) So have you just changed your mind about abortion?

  • Yes, I have.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you think it's a baby in the womb?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, what justification is there for killing

  • a baby in the womb?

  • Can you think of one?

  • Um, for killing a baby in the womb--

  • Um, well, I think everyone's situation is--

  • (Ray Comfort) Give me a situation where you could say,

  • "Yep, that's justifiable.

  • You can kill that baby because of--"

  • Um...

  • you know what?

  • I can't think of one.

  • ♪♪♪

  • (Ray Comfort) Adolf Hitler hated the Ten Commandments

  • and wanted to free people from them.

  • He called the Commandments the curse of Mount Sinai

  • and said that the God of the Bible was a tyrant

  • who tells us to do the things we don't want to do.

  • Clearly, Hitler didn't like the thought of

  • "You shall not kill,"

  • because it didn't fit into his hate-filled worldview.

  • Although he's an extreme example, it's common practice

  • to have a low moral standard when we free ourselves

  • from the Ten Commandments or when we're unaware

  • of their true meaning.

  • It's encouraging to realize that people

  • are willing to change their minds about abortion.

  • When people see things from a different perspective,

  • they're able to think clearly and often make

  • honest, intelligent choices.

  • As I spoke with people about abortion,

  • our conversation often led to the issue of morals,

  • where morals came from,

  • and ultimately the issue of the afterlife.

  • Hey, what happens after someone dies?

  • Do you think there's a heaven?

  • Sure, we're going to go to heaven.

  • Yes, sir.

  • No, I think that that was something,

  • like heaven and hell are just kind of made up.

  • (Ray Comfort) Are you afraid of dying?

  • No, I'm not afraid of death.

  • Where are you going when you die?

  • At the moment, hell.

  • (Ray Comfort) Steven, what do you think happens when someone dies?

  • Do you think there's an afterlife?

  • Uh, I don't know, probably not.

  • (Ray Comfort) Probably not?

  • So, this is all there is?

  • I think so, yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you believe God exists?

  • I don't think so, no.

  • (Ray Comfort) If there is a heaven, do you think you'd get there?

  • Are you a good person?

  • Oh, yeah, for sure.

  • God wouldn't be mad at me.

  • I'm a good person morally.

  • Yeah, I'm a good person.

  • I'd hope so.

  • Yes, sir.

  • I believe in God.

  • I believe in good.

  • I don't do nobody no harm.

  • (Ray Comfort) If there's a heaven,

  • do you think you're good enough to go there?

  • Are you a good person?

  • Yeah, I think I'm a good person.

  • (Ray Comfort) Why would you go to hell?

  • Because of my lifestyle I'm living.

  • There is no hell.

  • I don't believe that there is a judgment.

  • (Ray Comfort) You don't?

  • No, I don't believe that.

  • (Ray Comfort) Then what's going to happen to Hitler on Judgment Day?

  • He's in hell.

  • (Ray Comfort) How many lies have you told in your life?

  • Oh [bleep], I don't know.

  • Thousands, I guess.

  • Lies, lies?

  • Too many to count.

  • Oh, countless.

  • (Ray Comfort) What do you call someone who tells countless lies?

  • A liar?

  • (Ray Comfort) Have you ever stolen something?

  • In my lifetime?

  • (Ray Comfort) Mmm-hmm.

  • Sure, of course, yeah.

  • Uh, yes.

  • Sure.

  • (Ray Comfort) What do you call someone who steals things?

  • A thief.

  • (Ray Comfort) So what are you?

  • A liar and a thief.

  • (Ray Comfort) Have you ever used God's name in vain?

  • Absolutely.

  • Sure have.

  • Absolutely, [bleep].

  • (Ray Comfort) Have you ever used God's name in vain?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) I heard you use His name just before,

  • probably about 30 seconds ago when you talked about lying.

  • Do you realize that's called blasphemy when you use

  • God's name as a cuss word?

  • It's very serious.

  • Sure, I guess it is, yeah.

  • (Ray Comfort) Now Jesus said, "If you look at a woman and lust for her,

  • you commit adultery with her in your heart."

  • Have you ever done that, looked at a woman with lust?

  • Shoot me now.

  • Yes, sir.

  • Yeah.

  • I like fornicating.

  • It's fun.

  • (Ray Comfort) Yeah, well, you can like raping and bank robbery.

  • It can be fun, but it's not right.

  • Have you ever looked at a guy with lust?

  • No, I'm gay.

  • I commit adultery about every two minutes maybe.

  • (Ray Comfort) Have you ever looked with lust?

  • Yes.

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, Alicia, by your own admission, you're a lying,

  • blasphemous adulterer at heart, and you've got to face God on

  • Judgment Day, and we've looked at four of the Ten Commandments.

  • Oh, my goodness!

  • (Ray Comfort) You had sex out of marriage?

  • Yep.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, listen to this, David.

  • This is why you don't want to believe in God.

  • You're a self-admitted lying, thieving, blasphemous adulterer,

  • fornicator--

  • Uh-huh.

  • And you have to face God on Judgment Day. And the thought

  • of being morally responsible to Him is abhorrent to you,

  • so you deny His existence.

  • Does that make sense?

  • Yeah, it makes total sense.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, John, you're in big trouble on Judgment Day.

  • By your own admission, you're a lying thief, a blasphemer,

  • adulterer at heart, and a fornicator.

  • Wow, that's a lot.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, will you go to heaven or hell?

  • From the way it sounds, hell.

  • (Ray Comfort) Does that concern you?

  • Absolutely.

  • No, no, no, no, no, no.

  • You've got it all wrong.

  • Guilty.

  • (Ray Comfort) Would you go to heaven or hell?

  • Hell.

  • (Ray Comfort) Does that concern you?

  • Yeah!

  • (Ray Comfort) So does it concern you that if you died today

  • and God gave you justice, you'd end up in hell?

  • Not really, no.

  • Well, don't try to change me around.

  • I am the way I am, and I don't give a [bleep].

  • (Ray Comfort) You'll be guilty of breaking the commandments.

  • So does it concern you that if you died today,

  • you'd end up in hell?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) So you're starting to think about your life

  • and how valuable it is?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) Does it concern you that if you died today

  • and God gave you justice, you'd end up in hell?

  • I think God's a loving God,

  • and I think He would see my heart.

  • (Ray Comfort) You know, He does, and He sees a liar, and a blasphemer,

  • and an adulterer at heart.

  • But if you're repentant,

  • there's something you can actually do,

  • because of God's kindness, to have all your sins forgiven.

  • Do you know what God did for sinners, any idea?

  • He sent His Son, Jesus Christ,

  • to the earth to, um, die on the cross for the sinners.

  • (Ray Comfort) So if God judges you by the Ten Commandments on the

  • Day of Judgment, do you think you'd be innocent or guilty?

  • Guilty.

  • (Ray Comfort) Heaven or hell?

  • Hell.

  • (Ray Comfort) Does that concern you?

  • Yes, it does somewhat.

  • (Ray Comfort) You know, God gave you a conscience,

  • so you know right from wrong.

  • You know it's wrong to lie, and steal, and fornicate,

  • and blaspheme.

  • It's written on your heart.

  • Right.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you understand the legal implications of what He did?

  • God's a judge.

  • In His eyes, you're guilty, because you violated His law,

  • the Ten Commandments.

  • You're heading for a place called hell, God's prison,

  • without parole, but Jesus stepped in

  • and paid your fine on that cross.

  • That means God can legally dismiss your case,

  • because your fine was paid for by another.

  • I don't know, don't you think it's funny, though,

  • that God would put a nice guy like me in hell?

  • (Ray Comfort) But a criminal might say that to a judge, but the judge

  • will do that which is right, even if it's a nice guy.

  • If he's raped and murdered,

  • he's going to get the book thrown at him.

  • And you've violated God's law.

  • Even though you might be a nice guy, you're a self-admitted

  • lying thief, blasphemer, adulterer at heart.

  • God will give you justice, but He's not willing

  • that any perish.

  • He's given you something that says, "I don't want to die."

  • Listen to it, man.

  • You've got a cross in the middle of your eyes.

  • Think about what Jesus did on that cross.

  • Think about how much God cares about sinners,

  • that He would do that.

  • And in the Bible verse,

  • "For God so loved the world

  • that He gave His only begotten Son,

  • that whoever believes in Him

  • should not perish but have everlasting life."

  • Then He rose from the dead.

  • And what you've got to do is repent,

  • turn from your sins, trust in Jesus.

  • God will give you everlasting life.

  • He'll forgive your sins.

  • Does that make sense?

  • Yes, sir.

  • (Ray Comfort) And the thing that will save you is God's goodness,

  • the Savior, Jesus.

  • He's like a parachute.

  • Turning to a parachute won't save you,

  • but putting it on will.

  • And the moment you put on the Lord Jesus Christ,

  • the minute you put your trust in Him, Alicia,

  • God will forgive your sins, dismiss your case,

  • and grant you the gift of everlasting life.

  • God will forgive our sins, including abortion,

  • and grant us the gift of everlasting life.

  • Does that make sense?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you have a Bible at home?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) Are you going to think about this?

  • Yes.

  • (Ray Comfort) So, if you died today and God gave you justice,

  • you'd end up in hell.

  • There are two things you have to do to be saved.

  • You've got to repent, not just confess your sins,

  • but turn from them, and trust alone in Jesus Christ.

  • When do you think you'll do that?

  • Well, probably as soon as possible.

  • Wouldn't everybody?

  • (Ray Comfort) Do you have a Bible at home?

  • Yeah, I've got a Bible at home.

  • (Ray Comfort) Well, would you please think about this?

  • Yeah, of course, sure, sure.

  • Why not?

  • Shortly after the war had ended, the American military

  • made those living near the concentration camps

  • go through them.

  • They wanted them to see firsthand what had caused

  • the smoke to billow from the chimneys of those camps

  • and to witness what the leaders that

  • they had allowed into power had done.

  • Notice their lighthearted demeanor as they

  • entered the camp, obviously unaware as to the horror

  • that had taken place in their own backyard.

  • And look at the change on their faces once they realized

  • what had actually taken place.

  • No doubt there's an abortion clinic near you.

  • Perhaps you should pay them a visit to see what actually

  • takes place behind their walls, so that you can witness

  • firsthand what's happening in your own backyard.

  • Over 50 million human beings have been murdered

  • in America's holocaust, sanctioned by political leaders

  • who've been put into power by the American people.

  • Please never, ever give your vote to any politician

  • who advocates the murder of a child in the womb.

  • So, are you going to vote differently and think

  • differently about this?

  • Yeah, I think I would.

  • I think I definitely would, because you're right.

  • I had just said about the Holocaust,

  • where was the world?

  • If everyone would have banded together, you know,

  • make a difference.

  • I couldn't have said it better than Alicia.

  • If you need help in any way regarding the issue of abortion,

  • please go to HeartChanger.com for details.

  • We would love to get "180" into the hands and homes

  • of every person in America and throughout this whole world.

  • If you feel the same, we need your help now.

  • Please go to HeartChanger.com for details.

  • Thank you.

  • ♪♪♪

  • ♪♪♪

  • ♪♪♪

(Ray Comfort) Have you heard of Adolf Hitler?

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