On the mournful day of September 18, 2020, the notorious and staunchly anti-Christian United States Supreme Court Justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, took her last breath. In the eyes of the left, she was a crusader for women's rights, a paragon of virtue, and a fervent Jewish advocate for "justice." Yet, her deeds stood in stark defiance of the divine, as if taunting the heavens themselves.
Even evangelical leftists, such as a feminist Bible study teacher from JD Greear's Summit Church, lauded the ultra-liberal justice, claiming that Ginsburg "made so many lives better." However, Ginsburg's unwavering support for abortion placed her squarely within God's condemnation in Proverbs 8:36, as one who "hates me loves death." In her rebellion, Ginsburg spurned the Almighty and embraced the darkness.
While it is true that the judgement of souls is reserved for God alone, the Scriptures provide guidance in discerning the true nature of an individual. It is said that we shall "know them by their fruits," and indeed, healthy trees do not yield tainted harvests. Ginsburg's fruit was infested with decay, and on that fateful September day, she was met with the chilling words of Jesus, "I never knew you, depart from me, you worker of iniquity."