In this servant's heart is a seeking to honor the works of his hands and thereby gaining honor from people. He finds a kind of satisfaction in being an obedient servant to the Gong; for the Gong is an expert fisher of men.
When the mallet of demagoguery hits the Gong, the Gong reverberates with the sound of death. And indeed, there was death, and there will be death again, and it will not be few.
Among all the leadership callings, there are a very few calling that can match the burden of the calling of a demagogue.
Recall that it was the Lord God who hardened the demagogue Pharaoh's heart. And recall also that it is the Lord God who places and removes kings.
To the Gong, do as according to the dictates of your demagogue heart. When your time is fulfilled, as in the days of Pharaoh, there shall be a glaring contrast between man's honor and God's glory; between man's thoughts and God's thoughts; between man's ways and God's ways.
Because they rule the land, the Gong and his servants are forced to live by the sword. But as it is written: "Whoever lives by the sword, will also die by the sword." When their time is fulfilled, it shall be like the fate of Pharaoh and his soldiers.
O how high are your thoughts, O Lord! And O how great are your ways!
"For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord. As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts." (Isaiah 55:8-9)