- The Jesus Testimony
- The
Congressional Testimony of Jesus Christ – U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee
Hearings on U.S. Immigration Reform – Special Session
- By Bill Dahl
-
- Enough!
-
-
Once again, the voice of the Christian God is
being muted by the fear-laden adrenal reactions of our elected officials
in Washington D.C., who claim the name of Christ, yet deny the application
of His Gospel, when confronted with the choice of satisfying special
interests, or implementing our God’s clear teachings on this matter.
Senate Majority leader Bill Frist introduced his own immigration reform
Bill this past week, S. 2454 entitled Securing America's Borders Act
(He could have titled it the “Liberty and Justice For All Act,” but
that’s really not what this fellow has in mind). However, the provisions
in the Frist bill are nearly identical to the bill under discussion as put
forth by Senate Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter.
-
-
Instead of triumphantly dispensing relief from
oppression, Congress is hell-bent on implementing punitive,
enforcement-based public policy. This effort runs completely contrary to
the biblical mandate to provide relief and comfort to the oppressed. The
voice of this effort is distinctly protectionist, defensive, exclusionary
and will serve only to create more victims of poorly integrated national
public policy. Once again, man remains the biggest conundrum for those who
claim the name of Christ and those who profess that the United States was
founded and rests upon the application of biblical principles, tenets of
the Christian faith.
-
-
Enter Jesus.
-
- Jesus:
“Father, I know what we’ve said. However, enough is enough. I’ve got to
make a physical appearance in the U.S. Senate to straighten some things
out.”
-
- God the
Father: “Son, do what you must. When
you make your appearance on the Senate floor, do you need Me to bellow:
“This is my Son, whom I love; with Him I am well pleased.”[i][i]
-
- Jesus:
“Yes Father. It probably wouldn’t hurt.”
-
- God The
Father: “Go with My blessing. Return
as soon as your work is completed.”
-
-
- Listen
up!
-
- As the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee
hearings on U.S. immigration reform had concluded for the day, Chairman
Specter had asked the Senate Committee members to remain in room 226 of
the Dirksen Senate office Building where the Committee’s hearings are
held. Senate staff, the media and the public had left. Security had locked
the main entrance to the Hearing room. The Senators were alone and tired
after a very long, raucous debate.
-
-
As they discussed various points from the day’s
testimony, Senator Feinstein exclaimed in a loud voice, “Excuse me sir!
This is a closed session for Committee Members only. How did you get in
here? You’ll have to leave immediately.”
-
-
Jesus adjusts the witness microphone in front
of Him and says, “It’s my pleasure to be here this afternoon. I only
require a few minutes of your time.”
-
-
Senator Kennedy interrupts and shouts, “Who are
you!”
-
-
A Voice instantly fills the Senate chamber
boldly proclaiming, “This is my Son, whom I love. With Him I am well
pleased. Listen to Him!”[ii][ii]
-
-
Senator Hatch faints at hearing the voice of
God. Senator Biden is speechless with a tear running down his left cheek.
The rest of the Judiciary Committee members are slumped, trembling,
whimpering in their seats frantically fidgeting and worriedly throwing “Is
it really Him?” back and forth at one another.
-
- The
Opening Exchange
-
-
Senator Specter raps his gavel. In a voice
crackling with emotion, he pulls his microphone toward him and flips the
switch to tape the testimony. He says, “I hereby call this special session
of the United States Senate Judiciary Committee into special session.
Please state your name and occupation for the record.”
-
-
Jesus:
“My name is Jesus Christ. I am the Son of God.”
-
-
Senator Specter:
“And why are You here today?”
-
- Jesus:
“I am here to provide you with testimony on what you must do for My
children who are presently oppressed by your current immigration
policies.”
-
- Senator Specter:
“Jesus, this is a very complex issue. It is one that gets citizens,
schools, healthcare providers, social service agencies and undocumented
immigrants alike all worked up. It’s taxing all the limited resources of
this nation. People are fed up. I can assure you that we are trying to do
the right thing for all concerned. I’m sure you too will be pleased with
the outcome as well.”
-
- Jesus:
“I’m not so sure about that Senator.”
-
- Senator Kennedy
sheepishly leans forward and asks, “Why’s that?”
-
- Jesus:
“ Senator Specter’s response “makes you wonder if you have fashioned a
gospel around your culture, technology and social economy rather than
around the person of Christ.”
[iii][iii]
-
- Senator Feinstein:
“It’s more complicated than that. Most of these undocumented immigrants
are viewed as aliens, strangers, a danger and a burden to many
communities. There’s a lot of animosity directed toward them. This
animosity lives within each of our respective constituencies. These are
voters!”
-
- All Senators nod in agreement with Senator
Feinstein’s comments.
-
- Jesus:
“If you hate someone because they are different from you, you’d best get
on your knees until you can say you love them, until you have gotten your
soul right with Christ.”
[iv][iv]
-
- Senators Feingold, Durbin, Schumer. Graham,
Brownback, Coburn, Sessions, Cole, DeWine and Kyl rise from their seats
visibly shaken. They move to the area in between the Senators seated above
them and the witness table. They crumble to their knees, heads buried in
their hands, weeping.
-
- Senator Leahy:
“Jesus, who do You think is to blame for this conundrum we find ourselves
in?”
-
- Jesus:
“The entire world is falling apart because nobody will admit they are
wrong. But by asking God to forgive you, you are willing to own your own
crap.”
[v][v]
-
- Senator Grassley:
“We take our commitment to apply Christian principles to our nation’s
public policy very seriously. Our postmodern world is complex. So is our
democracy. It’s much more difficult today to be a Christian, particularly
as an elected official. Don’t get me wrong. I’m a believer.”
-
- Jesus:
“What I believe is not what I say I believe; what I believe is what I do.”
[vi][vi]
As it relates to the legislation before this Committee, maybe it’s time to
get real rather than continue along the path of attempting to satisfy
those who have the most money, a well-oiled PR machine and/or claim My
Name. “Maybe we don’t need a new, improvised version of what already
hasn’t worked in the past.”
[vii][vii]
-
- Criminals & Lawbreakers:
-
- Senator Biden:
“To become an undocumented immigrant in this, or any other nation, one
must break the law. To many of our citizens, all the arguments begin and
end with this one fact. How do you respond to this?
-
- Jesus:
“Your nation has become one when “you are not worrying about deadly
diseases, you worry about homicidal strangers.”
[viii][viii]
How many times do I have to repeat myself? “Don’t be afraid!”[ix][ix]
Your people are more concerned about dieing in a plane crash than they are
about dieing from heart disease, as they sit in their seats eating a sack
of doughnuts, waiting for take-off.
-
- You are a nation that is mixed-up. As I
have said, “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth
and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for
yourselves treasures in heaven. For where your treasure is, there your
heart will be also.”
[x][x]
-
- “When the Kingdom is our treasure we switch
from hoarding to giving. When we focus on Kingdom priorities we liberally
share our wealth. And in the process we not only restore and liberate the
poor but also ourselves. We free ourselves from anxiety and the bondage of
worry.”
[xi][xi]
-
- “Citizenship means looking out for one’s
neighbors and giving a hand to those less fortunate. But it also means
understanding the big issues of one’s times, seeing past the hype and
spin, and working together to hold political leaders accountable.”
[xii][xii]
That’s why I’m here today. Your priorities are all mixed up. I’m here to
speak on behalf of undocumented immigrants who are afraid to speak up.
-
- “Criminals, lawbreakers, potential
terrorists and economic burdens,” these are all stereotypes that
hard-hearted people have drummed up to demonize, exclude and oppress
millions of My children in this nation. As I have said, “Be
on your guard against the yeast of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy.
There is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed, or hidden that will
not be made known. What you have said in the dark will be heard in the
daylight, and what you have whispered in the ear in the inner rooms will
be proclaimed from the roofs.”
[xiii][xiii]
-
- Those who characterize undocumented
immigrants in your nation like this, ask them,
"If any one of you is without sin, let
him be the first to throw a stone.”[xiv][xiv]
-
- Economic Burden:
-
- Chairman Specter:
“I fully appreciate what You have just testified about. However, this
illegal immigration problem has become a significant economic burden for
this nation. How do you respond to that?
- Jesus:
“Economic factors do powerfully shape the way you look at things. Salary,
the income of your friends, the value of your house, and your social
status – all these factors shape your thinking. They provide a set of
lenses that alter your view of the world. You cling to theological beliefs
that support and legitimate your economic status. Financial factors filter
your Bible reading and tint your religious lenses so your beliefs
conveniently support your economic lifestyles.”
[xv][xv]
-
-
“You typically don’t have any problem counting
money in this country. Yet, when the equation involves people, that’s when
the math gets murky. Unfortunately, you have developed a tendency to
forget how to count people accurately when it comes to socio-political
issues. It really boils down to counterfeit counting or, counting
only the folks that somebody defines as worth counting, the ones that
truly matter. The figures you throw around depend upon the position you
are attempting to support. This is what I refer to as arbitrary arithmetic
or arbithmetic: the rules for counting change depending upon the
reason underlying your count. Whether people count or not is
dependent upon some pre-defined subjective definition that somebody makes
up.
-
-
We have arrived at a critical juncture in our
world that demands that we revisit the madness of our arbithmetic,
as characterized by the following author: “The first step is to measure
whatever can be easily counted. This is OK as far as it goes. The second
step is to disregard that which can’t be easily measured or to give it an
arbitrary quantitative value. This is artificial and misleading. The third
step is to presume that which can’t be measured easily really isn’t
important. This is blindness. The fourth step is to say that which can’t
be easily measured really doesn’t exist. This is suicide.”[xvi][xvi]
-
- Perhaps it’s time
to heed the words of the psalmist when he wrote, “Blessed
is the man whose sin the LORD does not count against him and in whose
spirit is no deceit.”[xvii][xvii]
It’s time to re-examine the deceit we’ve come to accept within your math
from a moral and spiritual standpoint.
-
-
Spurred on by the relentless pursuit of
prosperity and the ruthless defense of what you already have in the name
of economic progress, The U.S. has become comfortable with
diminishing the sacred value of each child of Mine to an economic cost.
Faces, names and souls have been replaced with dollar signs denoting their
perceived contribution to, or detraction from the burgeoning global
economy.
-
-
It’s at this juncture that you must
face the fact that you have marginalized My Children in your world. You
have erected idols commissioned with prayers for His blessing of
abundance. The shadows from these idols obscure your view of the poor, the
needy, the displaced, the undocumented immigrant and the refugee. In our
nations economic calculations, these people, My children, have become
costs, economic burdens without faces or voices. Their needs continue to
be diminished, overlooked and devalued in state and congressional policy
deliberations, as well as in the individual and collective hearts of those
who claim to be Disciples of Mine.
-
- When you define people as costs
that require containment and/or elimination, you elevate the pedestals
that proudly support the idols of efficiency, self-determination,
self-righteousness and patriotic fervor. You add a backdrop adorned with
subtly subdued, fear-laden images and a swatch of scarcity designed to
remind everyone that they might risk losing what they have if they don’t
go along with the proposed formula for this nation’s future. Yes, this is
the calculation you have arrived at for becoming the greatest
nation on the face of this planet.”
[xviii][xviii]
-
- “We must never
overlook the fact that the message of the Bible is above all a message
preached to the poor, the burdened, the oppressed, the underprivileged.”[xix][xix]
-
- The Children of Undocumented
Immigrants:
-
- Jesus:
“There is one thing that particularly troubles me about the ongoing
immigration reform deliberations before this Committee.”
-
- Senator Kennedy:
“Yes, and what might that be?”
-
- Jesus:
“Where’s the discussion about the kids?
-
- Senator Kennedy:
“Please proceed.”
-
- Jesus:
“One critically important dimension of the Mexodus issue your
Committee is charged with addressing is the well-being of the children of
undocumented Mexican immigrants living in the U.S. I will refer to these
innocent children here as ‘Chillegals.’ Most of these children, My
children, began their journey to your country as infants, wrapped in
blankets, and coddled in the arms of their parents as they made their way
across the border.
-
- As it relates to the plight of the millions
of Chillegals residing in the U.S., these infants and children
never had the capacity to consent or dissent to the actions taken
by their parents. Yet, you hold them responsible and oppress them, based
upon the immoral treatment afforded them under current public policy. This
is Victimmigration: The ongoing oppression of infants and children
of illegal Mexican immigrants in the U.S.”
[xx][xx]
-
- I beg you Senators,
as I have said before, may it guide you today,
"Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the
kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these."
[xxi][xxi]
May the outcome of your deliberations provide them with an immediate path
to citizenship.
-
- The Opportunity:
-
- “You see, from a purely historical
standpoint, the plight of undocumented Hispanic immigrants residing in
the U.S. can be accurately characterized by the term Hispurgatory:
A moment in U.S. history when the resident, undocumented Latino
immigrant population is caught in a state of legal limbo. Their standard
of living is typically well below the official poverty level. Their
daily existence is one of endurance and survival. They are motivated by
the hope that their service to this country as upstanding, creative,
contributing, law abiding residents will be rewarded someday with
legitimate, official acceptance by the government of this, your Promised
Land.
For these Latinos, the hope for citizenship in the U.S. is heaven.
Visions of better jobs, education, healthcare, housing, protections
against discrimination, racism, the ability to be all one can be, to
contribute to the United States economy and culture on an equal
footing…these are the elements of their hope. The country they departed
was, at least, economically oppressive. If the prospects for a better
life for their families in their country of origin was without hope,
then, that is hell. Hope led them here. Hope keeps them here. They hope
that you will awaken from your self-righteous indignation and accept
them formally into this, the Promised Land. Until then, they remain
among you, their lives suspended precariously between a worldly heaven
and hell, in a state of Hispurgatory.”[xxii][xxii]
-
- “I tell you the truth, whatever you did
not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for
me.”[xxiii][xxiii]
-
-
A voice booms through the chamber:
“The same law applies to the native-born and to the alien living among
you![xxiv][xxiv]
“Administer true justice; show mercy and compassion to one another.
1Do not oppress the widow or the
fatherless, the alien or the poor.”
[xxv][xxv]
-
-
Jesus:
“Thank You Father.”
-
-
Concluding Testimony:
-
- Chairman Specter:
Could You succinctly summarize your testimony for us today?
-
-
Jesus:
“Of course. I’ll be glad to. The words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
uttered some 40 years ago are particularly appropriate for your nation in
2006: “There is a certain bitter irony in the picture of this country
championing freedom in foreign lands and failing to ensure that freedom to
twenty million of its own.”[xxvi][xxvi]
It is time to confront the truth that current misguided patriotic fervor
has infected your discussion of U.S. immigration policy reform to the
detriment of this nation’s soul, and your future. The character of the
future of this nation is being formed today. It’s time to make amends.
It’s time to take the first step in the right direction. Come on Congress!
Craft legislation that provides an immediate path to citizenship for the
millions of My children, your brothers and sisters.
-
You hold the hose of hope in your own hands. My
prayer is that you will take your foot off the hose and water the parched
soul of this nation. You must trust that God shall create a bountiful
harvest, which will contribute to the nourishment of the soul of this
country for generations to come.”[xxvii][xxvii]
-
The Senators look up from frantically jotting
notes.
-
Chairman Specter
speaks in astonishment: “He’s gone!”
-
Senator Feinstein:
“I’m not so sure about that.”
-
Senator Biden:
Wow! Do we have our work cut out for us now or what! Somebody call Bill
Frist and tell him it’s not going to be as easy as building a border fence
and designing a guest worker permit program. It is clear from the
testimony we heard this evening that “Being a Christian isn’t just
believing in God and being good. It involves a commitment to change the
world. Christians are expected to be part of a movement that will make
the world that is, into the world that ought to be.”[xxviii][xxviii]
Let’s get on with it shall we?
-
Contemplation:
-
Do we trust Him America?
-
It’s about us America, not them.
-
“The world is watching us. They are watching
and wondering whether we will be different.”[xxix][xxix]
-
“We are not to ignore the homeless, the
helpless, the disenfranchised. Entrepreneurial faith is not given so we
personally can have more, but so that we can give more to others.”[xxx][xxx]
-
The choice is ours. The consequences are
eternal.
-
+ Click here to urge your senators to promote compassionate immigration
reform
-
-
- Author’s
Note: The quotations used in
this article do not represent the opinions of the respective authors cited
on U.S. immigration policy reform. They are solely used by this author to
make a pertinent point and may be deemed as used out of context.
-
- About the
Author:
-
- Bill is a
freelance writer. Bill is an outspoken advocate and activist for U.S.
immigration policy reform. Bill and his wife worked for several years with
Hispanic young adults ages 14-22. This
particular neighborhood in Santa Ana, CA that is considered to be one of
the most densely populated areas in the United States. The area is well
known for its high crime rate, gang activity, drug activity, violence and
devastating poverty. Their work focuses on enhancing the lives of
children, teens, young adults and their families residing in this area by
working together to make their dreams and hopes a reality.
-
- Bill is
published in numerous professional publications, magazines, websites,
newspapers and newsletters. He is the author of several manuscripts,
presently under consideration for publication. Bill earned a Bachelors and
Masters degree at Washington State University.
-
- You can enjoy
Bill’s writing on his website(s) at
http://billdahl.net/ and
http://www.theporpoisedivinglife.com/.
For reprint permission,
Contact Bill at
wsdahl@bendbroadband.com.
-
- Bibliography - NOTES
-
-
1
Matthew 3:17
-
-
2
Matthew 5:5
-
-
3
Miller, Donald, J. Searching For God Knows What, Thomas Nelson
Publishing, Nashville, TN Copyright 2004 by Donald Miller, p. 156.
-
-
4
Miller, Donald, J. Searching For God Knows What, Thomas Nelson
Publishing, Nashville, TN Copyright 2004 by Donald Miller, p.190
-
-
5
Miller, Donald, J.
Blue Like Jazz – Nonreligious Thoughts on Christian Spirituality,
Thomas Nelson Publishing, Nashville, TN Copyright 2003 by Donald Miller,
p.53.
-
-
6
Miller, Donald, J. Blue Like Jazz – Nonreligious Thoughts on Christian
Spirituality, Thomas Nelson Publishing, Nashville, TN Copyright 2004
by Donald Miller, p.110.
-
-
7
Henderson, Jim a.k.a. “LOST” –
Discovering Ways To Connect
With The People Jesus Misses Most.
Waterbrook Press, Colorado
Springs, CO Copyright 2005 by James K. Henderson P. 31.
-
- 8
Glassner, Barry
The Culture of Fear-Why Americans Are Afraid of the Wrong Things,
Basisc Books – A Member of the Perseus Group, Copyright 1999 by Barry
Glassner, p. Xiii.
-
- 9
Mark 6:50
-
-
10
Matthew 6:19-21
-
- 11
Kraybill, Donald B.
The Upside
Down Kingdom,
Herald Press Copyright 1978 and 1990 by Herald Press, p. 110.
-
-
12
Peterson, Peter G. Running on Empty – How the Democratic and Republican
Parties Are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It,
Farrar, Straus And Giroux, New York, NY Copyright 2004 by Peter G.
Peterson p. 232
-
-
13
Luke 12:1-3
-
-
14
John 8:7
-
-
15
Kraybill, Donald B. The
Upside Down Kingdom,
Herald Press Copyright
1978 and 1990 by Herald Press, p. 104.
-
-
16
Handy, Charles The Age of
Paradox
Harvard Business School
Press © 1994 p. 221
-
-
17
Psalm 32:2 – NIV
-
-
18
Dahl, Bill Count Me In – Why The Math Matters, 2005
http://billdahl.net/articlesRead.php?id=13
-
-
19
Merton, Thomas. Seeds, SHAMBHALA, Boston © Copyright 2002 by
Robert Inchauti p. 111.
-
-
20
Dahl, Bill Victimmigration, 2005
http://billdahl.net/articlesRead.php?id=51
-
-
21
Matthew 19:14
-
-
22
Dahl, Bill Hispurgatoy,, 2005
http://billdahl.net/articlesRead.php?id=27
-
-
23
Matthew 25:45
-
-
24
Exodus 12:49
-
-
25
Zechariah 7: 9
-
-
26
Hoskins, Loette I Have a Dream – The Quotations of Martin Luther King,
Jr. Gossett & Dunlap Publishers, Copyright © 1968 by Droke House
Publishers, Inc. p.3
-
-
27
Dahl, Bill MexGen – Profiling the Paradox – 2005
http://billdahl.net/articlesRead.php?id=33
-
-
28Campolo,
Tony. You Can Make a Difference-High Voltage Living in a Burned Out
World, W Publishing Group Nashville, TN
Ó
Copyright 1984 by Anthony Campolo p. VIII
-
- 29
Burchett, Dave.
When Bad Christians Happen to Good People, WaterBooks Press Colorado
Springs, CO
Ó
Copyright 2002 by Dave Burchett p. 84.
-
- 30Caldwell,
Kirbyjon & Kallenstadt, Walt with Sorensen, Paul Entrepreneurial Faith
– Launching Bold Initiatives to Expand God’s Kingdom, WaterBrook Press, A
Division of Random House, Inc.
Ó
Copyright 2004 by Kirbyjon Caldwell, & Walt Kallenstadt, with Paul
Sorensen, p. 20.
- Bill Dahl
- P.O. Box 2308
- Redmond, OR USA 97756
-
mailto:wsdahl@bendbroadband.com
-
http://billdahl.net/
-
http://www.theporpoisedivinglife.com/
-
-
[iii][iii]
Miller, Donald, J. Searching For God Knows What, Thomas Nelson
Publishing, Nashville, TN Copyright 2004 by Donald Miller, p. 156.
-
-
[iv][iv]
Miller, Donald, J. Searching For God Knows What, Thomas Nelson
Publishing, Nashville, TN Copyright 2004 by Donald Miller, p.190
-
-
[v][v]
Miller, Donald, J. Blue Like Jazz –
Nonreligious Thoughts on Christian Spirituality, Thomas Nelson
Publishing, Nashville, TN Copyright 2003 by Donald Miller, p.53.
-
-
[vi][vi]
Miller, Donald, J. Blue Like Jazz – Nonreligious Thoughts on
Christian Spirituality, Thomas Nelson Publishing, Nashville, TN
Copyright 2004 by Donald Miller, p.110.
-
-
[vii][vii]
Henderson, Jim a.k.a. “LOST” –
Discovering Ways To Connect With The
People Jesus Misses Most.
Waterbrook Press, Colorado Springs, CO Copyright 2005 by James K.
Henderson P. 31.
-
-
[viii][viii]
Glassner, Barry The Culture of
Fear-Why Americans Are Afraid of the Wrong Things, Basisc Books –
A Member of the Perseus Group, Copyright 1999 by Barry Glassner, p.
Xiii.
-
-
[xi][xi]
Kraybill, Donald B. The
Upside Down Kingdom,
Herald Press Copyright 1978 and 1990
by Herald Press, p. 110.
-
-
[xii][xii]
Peterson, Peter G. Running on Empty – How the Democratic and
Republican Parties Are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can
Do About It, Farrar, Straus And Giroux, New York, NY Copyright
2004 by Peter G. Peterson p. 232
-
-
[xv][xv]
Kraybill, Donald B. The
Upside Down Kingdom,
Herald Press Copyright 1978 and 1990
by Herald Press, p. 104.
-
-
[xvi][xvi]
Handy, Charles The Age of
Paradox
Harvard Business School Press © 1994
p. 221
-
-
[xix][xix]
Merton, Thomas. Seeds, SHAMBHALA, Boston © Copyright 2002 by
Robert Inchauti p. 111.
-
-
[xxv][xxv]
Zechariah 7: 9
-
-
[xxvi][xxvi]
Hoskins, Loette I Have a Dream – The Quotations of Martin Luther
King, Jr. Gossett & Dunlap Publishers, Copyright © 1968 by Droke
House Publishers, Inc. p.3
-
-
[xxviii][xxviii]
Campolo, Tony. You Can Make a Difference-High Voltage Living in a
Burned Out World, W Publishing Group Nashville, TN
Ó
Copyright 1984 by Anthony Campolo p. VIII
-
-
[xxix][xxix]
Burchett, Dave. When
Bad Christians Happen to Good People, WaterBooks Press Colorado
Springs, CO
Ó
Copyright 2002 by Dave Burchett p. 84.
-
-
[xxx][xxx]
Caldwell, Kirbyjon & Kallenstadt, Walt with
Sorensen, Paul Entrepreneurial Faith – Launching Bold Initiatives
to Expand God’s Kingdom, WaterBrook Press, A Division of Random House,
Inc.
Ó
Copyright 2004 by Kirbyjon Caldwell, & Walt Kallenstadt, with Paul
Sorensen, p. 20.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this
material is distributed by HispanicVista.com (www.hispanicvista.com)
without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for research and educational purposes.) |