Yes, Jesus Christ cares about 'politics'

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"Jesus Christ brought about a spiritual revolution, not a political one!"

You’ll often hear this cope coming from the non-Apostolic apologetics types.

Everything Jesus was about was political because that's all politics is; it's a material demonstration of one’s spiritual essence.

There’s a weird compulsion among many self-professed Christians to separate the spiritual realm from the physical realm. They go to church on Sundays. They read their Bibles every now and then. They get on their knees and make their prayers every night. They feel good inside.

But as soon as those chores are completed, it’s back to the “real” world. God is compartmentalized. God has his “place.”

Outside church, God is nothing more than imaginary.

Because, don’t you see, Jesus saved our souls, but he didn’t challenge any political orthodoxies. He wanted you to go to the designated place of worship one day out of the week but didn’t care what you did with the rest of your allotted time here in the physical plane. After all, Jesus clearly made a distinction between the spiritual realm and the physical realm.

Except all of that couldn’t be farther from the truth. And I don’t need to allude to any specific red-letter verses from Scripture to wake you up. All I need is to direct your attention to his person.

What does it mean when the Bible says that the Word became flesh? More precisely, what was accomplished by the Word becoming flesh? The answer? Reconciliation.

Our world was officially reconciled with the kingdom of Heaven by the coming of Jesus Christ. Our material realm was reunited and synchronized with the spiritual realm.

What else are we possibly saying when we say that God became man?

We’re saying that there is no separation between the spiritual and the physical. If God was indeed here in our very midst, it means that the physical is spiritual. That the political is spiritual.

Which means that all politically imbued "shoulds" — "We should give women the right to abort"; "We should take our 10th booster shot"; “We should let children get gender-affirming medical procedures” — are a culmination of one's spiritual framework brought to the surface.

Everything Jesus was about was political because that's all politics is; it's a material demonstration of one’s spiritual essence.

And if you’re a Bible-believing Christian, then it only follows that you must believe that Jesus Christ’s existence in the physical realm is proof of that.

Once that realization is internalized within your being, there’s no going back to the default mindset of neatly separating politics from religion. Because politics is religious. And if you think otherwise, take a good hard look in the mirror next time someone shouts “Trust the science” in your face during the next government-mandated lockdown.

If you're someone who separates the political revolution from the spiritual revolution, I just have to assume you're evil. Because how exactly am I supposed to trust someone who compartmentalizes and shelves his morality that conveniently?

Bigfoot is real — and more dangerous than you think

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“I’m a romantic; I would like Bigfoot to exist. I’ve met people who swear they’ve seen Bigfoot, and I think the interesting thing is, every single continent there is an equivalent of Bigfoot or Sasquatch. There’s the yeti, the Yowie in Australia, the Chinese Wildman and on and on and on.” – Jane Goodall

This was me. I was a romantic. I romanticized the idea of Bigfoot being real, like many have and still do. I thought it was innocent, playful, fun. So I decided to write about it.

'I knew this being was not of God, but an ultimate deceiver. I knew eternity was at stake. And it’s at stake for you too if you continue in this search.'

Before I did this, I wanted to speak to this man who had been studying and searching for Bigfoot for the last 10 years.

An obsession begins

Jacob is in his early 60s, both a husband and a father. His son is a friend of mine, and when we were young, he would tell me stories of going with his father on Bigfoot adventures.

Usually, when something mysterious or paranormal happens, the person telling the story would be eager to have a listening ear. This was never the case with my friend. He showed extreme restraint and hesitancy.

He didn’t want his listeners to think he was crazy because he knew what he would say sounded ... crazy. He knew what he saw, and he believed it with his whole heart, although he never expected me to believe him as well.

Fast forward five years, and I never once stopped thinking about his words, which I will relate to you shortly. In short, the most honest and level-headed guy I knew told me something so mind-blowing that I became infatuated with the idea that Bigfoot was real. Honestly, I became nearly obsessed.

'Something I never wanted to experience again'

My friend's story went like this:

My father started joining all these Bigfoot groups, and it began as a small side hobby that he grew to love. He would travel all over the country with these groups of cryptid hunters, mystics, Sasquatch believers, etc.

We would all poke fun at him, but he started to take it really seriously. He started to have these — encounters. These stories that he was shy to tell but when he would tell them you would be dumbstruck by how much belief he had in his eyes. I never knew my father to be a liar. I trusted him, and I still do. So one day I went with him.

My father and I lived in the northeast ,and we traveled up and over to Washington state, very close to the Canadian border. We camped. In my head I was thinking this is just a cool camping trip with my dad where we can bond and I can get a glimpse into his world.

It ended up being more than that. Much more. My father told me that to see a Bigfoot you had to camp under the stars with no tent, no fire, and no electronics. So that's exactly what we did. We had our cots under the stars out in the middle of the forest, just us and the anxious feeling growing inside my chest.

Dad never seemed nervous or scared so I knew if he had seen them they weren’t to be feared, but I still felt on edge. Even without the event of a Bigfoot sighting, I was thinking of bears, wolves, mountain lions. He said that the minute we put the campfire out we would start to hear things, feel things, and maybe even see things. My heart raced. He was right.

The fire goes out, and we immediately hear the sound of running feet. Smaller feet, like children playing a game of tag. Bipedal. It’s pitch black, and you can’t even see your hand in front of your face. The moon was hidden by clouds. The stars barely peeked through. I’m tucked into a sleeping bag, and I feel something run up and touch my side. I'm frozen.

I still hear the sound of small feet, and then I hear something much bigger. The heaviest steps I’ve ever heard. One heavy step, then another, closer and closer. Closer. I feel the presence of a large body standing before me, I can see nothing but a dark massive outline.

Then something happened. The smaller bodies came close like they were its children. One of them stepped onto my body. I couldn’t breathe. It walked across me, and it did this two more times. The steps went over to my father’s cot and eventually trailed off out of our camp. We could hear the family of footsteps leave.

I laid completely still, unable to move. The next morning I knew what we had experienced was real — and something I never wanted to experience again.

A universal figure

This story has haunted me. What were they? Are they peaceful? Are they spirits? Demons? Mormons believe Bigfoot is the spirit of Cain. New Agers believe he’s an alien.

I thought it was an ancient native creature that only showed itself to certain people in certain places at certain times. My mind went straight to all the indigenous cave drawings of Bigfoot.

Every tribe, every culture around the world has their own depiction of a large bipedal figure. These cultures are separated by time and geography, yet they all claim to have seen a similar creature.

Corbis via Getty Images

Was this what they saw? I had to know. So I made a cup of coffee, and I went and sat in the chair on my balcony, and I called my friend's father, Jacob.

'Are you a child of God?'

I thought he might be out on one of his Bigfoot hikes up in the Alaskan wilderness, but he answered the phone almost as if he were expecting me to call. We hadn’t spoken in years, and it honestly felt intrusive for me to reach out and interview him, but he was prepared to speak to me that day. It was a day that changed my life.

You see, Jacob is a man of God. If you belong to God, you can feel the anointing on him, and if you don’t, you might just get this sense that he’s different. I told Jacob why I was calling, and he said, “I will tell you anything you want to know. I have 10-plus years of stories that would chill you to the bone, but I want you to know that I don’t partake in this anymore. I no longer look for Bigfoot, nor do I wish to see one ever again.”

Ok. What? I was shocked. Something must have happened. I asked the only reasonable question in my mind. “Why?”

Jacob asked me this: “Are you a child of God?”

I said yes, and he said, “I know. Which is why I must warn you and urge you to stay away from this new curiosity in Bigfoot. He’s not what you think, and I had to find that out the hard way.”

I felt an immediate check in my spirit that I needed to listen closely to what this man was about to say to me.

My first thought was that it was a demon. I said this out loud, and he confirmed. He didn’t want to use the word demon because he wasn’t positive, so he chose the phrase “spiritual being.”

“Have you ever heard of a shapeshifter?” Jacob said.

I said yes.

“Satan was a shapeshifter. He took on the appearance of a snake in the garden.”

He continued:

“That’s what these creatures are. They are very real, more real than you could imagine. When I realized what they were and the spell they had on me for all these years, I made my exit."

"I still talk to my friends who are in the Bigfoot groups, and they are all just as deceived as ever. Their families are all rife with sickness and disease. All of them. Destruction follows them wherever they go, and it took me some time to notice.”

I’m going to tell you two stories that he told me. One is of his many encounters with Bigfoot up in Oregon. The other is the encounter that haunts him to this day and the reason why he left it all for good. Although if you ask him today, he will say that the creatures are just waiting for him to return. They wait for their invitation back into his life. Patiently. Watchfully.

Inviting the spirit in

Here is his first story:

There is a large group of career Bigfooters up in Oregon, and I hadn’t yet been there but knew the community was strong, and I’d be with a solid group that knew their way around. The leader of the group had been doing this for 20 years, and he took a liking to me.

I’ll never forget what he said right before we set up camp. “You know Jacob, if you really want to see Bigfoot, all you have to do is invite the spirit in.”

Red flags started going off in my mind. Invite the spirit in? That didn’t sit well with me. I had seen Bigfoot many times already because if they know you're looking, they love to reveal themselves. Maybe he was right. Maybe I was inviting them in. I thought about this our entire hike up the mountain.

We made camp just below the snow line. It rained for two days and two nights, and on the third day I decided to invite the spirit in. Although this began to grieve my heart, it was too late, because the fire had gone out at camp, and my cot was under the stars.

I was away from the group, close to the old gravel road that loggers would use. It was dark and cold. I lay there for a few hours, and as I was about to drift off into sleep I heard it. The steps. Heavy. Crunching the gravel.

With each step you could almost feel the earth vibrate. It got to the edge of my cot and stood over me, but I didn’t get the sense it wanted to hurt me. My face was covered by the sleeping bag, but the group told me to never try and startle them but to always remain still with no sudden movements. So I was a corpse.

I could hear it breathing. Long and steady breaths. Heavy like its feet. This next part might not make sense but the being scanned me. It scanned my right shoulder down to my elbow, and I can’t describe the sensation. I just knew the being was looking at this part of my body through the sleeping bag and something was happening.

The being slowly walked across the road, and I started hearing voices in a language I have never heard before. It was speaking to other beings. They were talking back and forth. It came back over to my cot for a few seconds and then walked back up the road and disappeared.

'They know you now'

It was only two hours from sunrise, and I woke up and hurried closer to the camp. While I was walking, I noticed something. My right shoulder, which normally held a constant dull ache, no longer hurt. The ache was gone.

I told the leader what happened, and he didn’t seem surprised at all but said, “They know you now. You’ll never have to search for them again because they will find you. They’ll come to you wherever you are.”

Again, I felt red flags. I was confused because had the being healed my shoulder? I was too shocked to even consider what it was that I was dealing with but knew that I almost needed to see them again. The obsession grew.

We packed up camp and started heading down the mountain. What happens next might sound odd and paranormal if you will.

The leader and I had trailed behind the group to where they were out of sight, but we could hear the distant voices. All of a sudden (and I know this sounds crazy), we saw this orb of light. It was round, white, and blueish, 20 feet up into a tree.

We both saw it, and it was BRIGHT. I looked over and said, “Are you seeing this?” and again this was no surprise to the man at all for he spoke in a hushed voice saying, “It’s an orb. Those are spiritual beings that have not manifested an earthly form yet. I have one that follows me around all the time. It won't hurt you.”

My mind was tired. My eyes were heavy. We got closer to the tree, and right in front of us were footprints. Not from the group because they weren’t boot prints, but they were large bare feet prints with five toes, bipedal.

A demon of the ages

I'm sitting in my chair still listening to Jacob tell me all this. I have a million questions. You would think that he would have excitement in his voice, but his tone was always one filled with remorse and even disdain.

“If the being healed your shoulder, do you think that it's truly evil?” I asked.

I’m sure the snake giving Eve an apple seemed like a nice gesture at the time. He just wanted to give her knowledge after all. Harmless.

“I asked myself the same thing," replied Jacob. "Now, looking back on it, I believe this is how they deceive you. If they do this miraculous gesture, they know you will always come back and always be dependent on them. What man would believe he needs God in his heart after that?”

He continued. “Every spirit on earth has a name. This spirit's name just happens to be Bigfoot.”

I looked down at my bare arms, and they were covered in goosebumps. I’ve experienced demons before. Growing up I would spend the night at my best friend's house, and every time we would both wake up in the middle of the night and have to cast a demon out of her room. I think it was attached to her mother.

I remember my mother’s stories of growing up with a witch for a grandmother. The seances, the rituals, the disturbed spirits in the house. She warned me and my sisters about the dangers of witchcraft.

I always think of Saul. God denied Saul as king of Israel for he tried to contact the dead with a medium. God considered this a great offense. An offense enough to deny him kingship. For Saul spoke to the spirit he summoned. The spirit of Samuel. Many say it wasn't actually Samuel he spoke to but something else.

The enemy waits to devour

This final encounter that Jacob tells me about is one I’ll never forget. I’m even hesitant to share, but I believe it could help those who were on the same path as me. Curiosity begins innocently, but our enemy is always waiting to devour:

After the Oregon trip, I went back home to the northeast. We live tucked away in the woods. I kept thinking about the leader of the group telling me that I didn’t need to look for them anymore because they would find me.

I had half the right mind to never go searching again, but I told myself I would try one last time in the comfort of my own backyard, and then I would back off.

My flesh did not want me to back off. It was fighting me. I went out back where our shed stood in the far left corner of the yard. I hid my cot behind it so it would be out of sight from my wife because I knew she would make fun of me. I stood there looking at it on the ground in broad daylight, and I said out loud, “I’ll be here tonight. I’ll be right here.”

I thought if I said it out loud, they might know. I felt ridiculous. At that moment, my cell phone rang in my pocket, and it was my son. He asked me if I wanted to go to this church event with the grandkids, and I hadn’t seen them in a few weeks, so I said, "Of course."

I went to the event and spent time with family and ended up being out later than expected. By the time I got home, I was so tired and craving a good night's rest in my own bed, so I did just that and said I’d go out to the cot tomorrow.

In the early morning, my wife woke up and went to shower. The second the water turned on, I heard the metal ladders in the shed all clang to the ground. I shot up in the bed. Hands trembling. It felt as if they were trying to tell me something. Like, “Where are you?”

I sat there in bed and turned the lamp on. I knew they were out there.

The name of the beast

Before he continued he asked me this question.

“Are you familiar with the term 'mindspeak'?”

I said, “Like telepathy?”

“Yes. Exactly that. This is how they communicate."

“I sat in bed and I asked a question out loud that I regret," Jacob continued. "I asked the being his name. It answered. It answered through mindspeak, where it pushed its thoughts into my mind clear as day. More vivid than spoken words.”

“Akee.”

“The second it told me its name, I knew that I had to close the door on this. It could push thoughts into my head. I felt sick.”

When Jacob spoke the name to me I felt my throat close. I sat in silence and waited for him to speak again.

“I have never felt something grieve the Holy Spirit more than I did in that moment. The second I realized it could speak to me, I knew this being was not of God, but an ultimate deceiver. I knew eternity was at stake. And it’s at stake for you, too, if you continue in this search.”

Jacob went on to tell me that in the five years of his absence from their world, he can feel them waiting for him. He knows that all it would take is if he were to give a simple invitation.

May we turn from darkness

In this very real spiritual world around us, what spirits have you invited into your life?

I wrestle with putting the demon’s name in writing. I keep removing it. We have heard many of their names in scripture. Legion, Lucifer. The Book of Enoch lists them as well.

Their names do not have power, and I did not want to bring attention to a being that craves such attention, but I wanted to deliver the truth. There is only power in the name of Jesus Christ, and they tremble at His name.

After reading this, you might feel fear. I did. So I want to remind you that if you are a child of God, and not just a creation of God, you were not given a spirit of fear. Death has been defeated. Since the time of Christ’s death, He has been sitting at the right hand of the Father advancing His kingdom and putting all enemies under his feet.

"For he must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The last enemy to be destroyed is death." — 1 Corinthians 15:25-26

"Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness; rather, expose them." — Ephesians 5:11

Evolution: A fairy tale for progressives

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When I was a child and I was being indoctrinated in school with the evolution meme, my teacher (who was actually pretty based) asked the class a question: "So which is it? God or evolution?"

I raised my hand and gave an answer: "Why couldn't God have simply created evolution?"

I got some praise from some classmates (especially the supposedly smart ones), but my teacher treated that answer as a cop-out and wasn't satisfied.

Looking back on that moment as a full-grown adult, I realize just how childish my answer was and just how childish I was for believing in evolution.

God, the Logos, the unmoved mover, can't create a nonsensical, chaotic process that magically transforms inanimate, microscopic particles into living, breathing, fully fleshed-out organisms.

For intelligent design to come from random chaos is ridiculous and impossible and would have no trace of God's fingerprints. My answer truly wasn't thought through and was, in fact, a cop-out. (I was in seventh grade.) The truth is that you do have to choose one or the other.

To my seventh-grade brain, evolution made sense.

"Animals just changed over time!" I thought. "The monkeys look kind of like us. We must have just come from them millions of years ago."

In retrospect, I think I and many others in my generation were subliminally psyoped by the liberal notion of "progress" that pervaded every aspect of our culture in the 1990s and 2000s. Clearly, we were more socially enlightened and technologically advanced than any other civilization in history. We as the human race were living proof that "progress" was real.

So why wouldn't that apply to biology as well? We must have "progressed" from tiny specks of dust to fish, to monkeys, to humans.

But if we think about this with just a modicum of rigor, we began to detect traces of absurdity. Take so-called transitional fossils — fossils of species that would link modern species and ancient species. We've found very few, if any, so few that evolutionary biologists like Stephen Jay Gould had to come up with an entirely new model (punctuated equilibrium) to make evolution make sense.

That's just one example. The deeper you dig, the dumber and more childish it gets.

As adults, we must learn to put childish things away. That means using critical reasoning skills instead of slurping up the slop we slurped up as a child. The superstition that we all came from monkeys is a good place to start.

Archaeologists unearth long-lost temple believed to be the very site where Jesus Christ performed miracles

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Archaeologists believe they have unearthed a long-lost temple which is said to be the very site where Jesus Christ performed miracles.

Recent archaeological excavations in Israel may have revealed the hidden location of where Jesus Christ preached and healed people, according to New Testament accounts.

The archaeologist believes this could be the long-lost temple from over 2,000 years ago that could prove the Biblical narratives mentioning Chorazin.

Archaeologists descended upon a synagogue built in 380 AD that was discovered in 1905. The synagogue is located in the ancient city of Chorazin, which is now part of Korazim National Park in northern Israel.

The archaeologists moved giant rocks that appeared to be strategically placed inside the synagogue and also removed the floor during the excavation.

The excavation revealed an even older temple, buried beneath the synagogue floor.

Behind the rocks, the team discovered pottery, coins, and cookware.

“We can’t date the rocks themselves, but we can date the items found between them," stated lead archaeologist Achia Cohen-Tavor of Dagesh Tourist Archaeology.

Cohen-Tavor explained in a YouTube video documenting the excavation, "What I can date is the pottery and, hopefully, coins coming from between the rocks and definitely what's beneath them. Whatever I get from between those stones would be dating the construction of the synagogue here."

Cohen-Tavor declared, "This is a groundbreaking discovery. I have been excavating all over [the globe], and, for me, it's definitely one of the most important excavations I've ever directed."

The archaeologist believes this could be the long-lost temple from over 2,000 years ago that could prove the Biblical narratives mentioning Chorazin.

Chorazin is well-documented in the New Testament, especially in the Book of Matthew, which mentions the city as a place where Jesus preached and healed people.

However, Jesus eventually cursed the towns of Chorazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum because the inhabitants did not accept his teachings to repent despite witnessing the miracles that he provided the citizens.

Matthew 11:20-24 reads:

Then He began to denounce the cities in which most of His miracles were done, because they did not repent. "Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the miracles had occurred in Tyre and Sidon which occurred in you, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes. Nevertheless I say to you, it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon in the day of judgment than for you. And you, Capernaum, will not be exalted to heaven, will you? You will descend to Hades; for if the miracles had occurred in Sodom which occurred in you, it would have remained to this day. Nevertheless I say to you that it will be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment, than for you."

The 4th-century synagogue at Chorazin features a "Seat of Moses," an ancient chair carved from a basalt block. This chair is where rabbis and other religious leaders would sit and read the Torah.

The "Seat of Moses" is mentioned in Matthew 23:1-3: "Then Jesus said to the crowds and to his disciples: 'The teachers of the law and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat. So you must be careful to do everything they tell you. But do not do what they do, for they do not practice what they preach.'"

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'A king will die': 4,000-year-old Babylonian tablets finally deciphered to reveal disastrous omens

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Researchers have finally deciphered a set of 4,000-year-old Babylonian tablets that had ominous omens of doom and destruction.

The four clay tablets dating back some 4,000 years likely originated in Sipparan — an ancient Babylonian city southwest of what is now Baghdad, Iraq.

'There will be an attack on the land by a locust swarm.'

The Babylonian tablets were written in cuneiform — the earliest system of writing that was developed by the ancient Sumerians of Mesopotamia around 3,400 to 3,300 BCE. The term "cuneiform" comes from the Latin word cuneus, meaning "wedge," and forma, meaning "shape," referring to the wedge-shaped formations made by a stylus on the soft clay tablets.

The British Museum acquired the tablets between 1892 and 1914. However, the tablets have never been fully translated until now.

The translation of the ancient artifacts was recently published in a paper featured in the Journal of Cuneiform Studies. The paper was written by Andrew George, an emeritus professor of Babylonian at the University of London, and Junko Taniguchi, an independent researcher.

The paper titled "Old Babylonian Lunar-Eclipse Omen Tablets in the British Museum" declares that the artifacts are "the oldest examples of compendia of lunar-eclipse omens yet discovered and thus provide important new information about celestial divination among the peoples of southern Mesopotamia in the early second millennium BCE."

The paper reads: "They are all found to bear witness to a single text, which organizes the omens of lunar eclipse by time of night, movement of shadow, duration, and date."

The Babylonians were deeply driven by astrology and invented the 12 zodiac signs and the horoscope.

Babylonians recorded the movements of the celestial bodies, the stars, and planets and recognized patterns in them. They believed celestial phenomena were divine signs from the gods and could predict joyous and catastrophic events.

One of the most significant celestial phenomena for the ancient people was lunar eclipses — when Earth’s shadow falls on the surface of the full moon. The Babylonians were able to predict lunar eclipses with fair accuracy for the time.

Babylonians believed that "events in the sky were coded signs placed there by the gods as warnings about the future prospects of those on earth," George and Taniguchi wrote in the paper. "Those who advised the king kept watch on the night sky and would match their observations with the academic corpus of celestial-omen texts."

According to NASA, Babylonians believed lunar eclipses meant evil omens were coming that involved their kings.

The Babylonians went as far as appointing substitute kings so they would be the victims of the wrath of the gods instead of the real king. The substitute king was reportedly killed so the omen was always correct.

The tablets claim that if "an eclipse becomes obscured from its center all at once [and] clear all at once, a king will die, destruction of Elam,” referring to a region that is now located in modern-day Iran.

A prediction proclaims if there is "an eclipse begins in the south and then clears" that it will result in the "downfall of Subartu and Akkad," referring to two other regions of the time.

Another omen warns that "a dearth of straw will occur; there will be losses of cattle" if an eclipse occurs on a certain day of the month.

"There will be an attack on the land by a locust swarm," one omen reads.

The tablet text foresees that a "large army will fall" if a lunar eclipse occurs.

George told Live Science, "The origins of some of the omens may have lain in actual experience — observation of portent followed by catastrophe."

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Does the 6th commandment apply to elections?

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Almost a month ago, President Donald Trump miraculously escaped an assassination attempt during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Yet, within days, this horrific event was overshadowed by two others: Joe Biden dropping out of the presidential race and Kamala Harris being elevated, with much media fanfare, to the top of the Democratic Party ticket.

The corporate media now focuses on three main objectives: canonizing Harris, glossing over Biden’s obvious inability to continue as president, and keeping the intricately orchestrated attempt to execute a former president on the back burner.

As we learn from scripture, “The anger of man does not achieve the righteousness of God.” We can express our displeasure passionately but peacefully within the scope of the law.

Had the assassination of Trump succeeded, the entire country would have been thrown into turmoil. The deep state would have undoubtedly emerged from the shadows to crush any demonstrations against this unspeakable act, making its actions against the January 6 protesters seem mild by comparison.

Are the media mouthpieces of deep-state Democrats succeeding?

With each passing day, it seems more Americans are accepting the idea that since Trump wasn’t seriously hurt, it’s no big deal — never mind that two rally participants were seriously injured and one died heroically protecting his wife and daughter. People are dismissing the incident as politics as usual, assuming the Secret Service has learned its lesson and will at least try to do better in the future.

Letting our guard down

Not so fast. Remember, this was not the first time Trump was denied adequate security, and the result was death and destruction. Before the events of January 6, the president offered the National Guard to protect the Capitol. Then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi turned him down, and four patriots lost their lives that day. Even though Trump has been blamed for leading an insurrection on January 6, isn’t it odd that he wanted the Capitol to be protected by armed guards so that his “troops” could attack them with prayer books and rosaries and cardboard signs?

We have been asked to accept an awful lot these past four years, haven’t we?

But what if there had been a different version of events? What if it had been the Trump administration’s responsibility to protect a candidate challenging the president for election? If any candidate running against Trump was not able to receive adequate protection and an assassin even came close to killing him or her, would the press have simply fluffed it off? Would the media not rightly have exposed the dangerous actions posed by willful dereliction to safeguard his opponent or, worse, complicity in such a treasonous act?

Again, if the roles had been reversed, it is not hard to imagine that the media, politicians, and cultural elites led by hordes of Hollywood heavyweights, would not have labeled the Republican Party “a threat to democracy.” And anyone voting for Trump (who has already been tarred as a “literal Hitler”) would be considered an enemy of the state.

Instead, the very person second in command of the Democratic Party, Kamala Harris, has now been elevated as the party’s savior — and we are being told that she well-deserves that sacred mantle.

But where are the people who voted for Harris? Where is the Democratic Party’s democratic process?

Perhaps it is fitting that pundits are saying the Democrats enacted a coup to remove Joe Biden from the 2024 presidential race. After all, it was a coup in the 2020 election that got him installed in the White House in the first place.

Besides the commandment stating “Thou shalt not murder,” the eighth commandment must also apply here, not only to individuals but to nations. “Thou shalt not steal” means our election process should be squeaky clean, with polling places and ballot boxes devoid of tampering.

American society, whether Christian or Jewish, has abided by the Ten Commandments in the past and must adhere to those basic tenets today. When one political party decides to break two of those rules to remain in power, every patriot must be willing to rise and end the tyranny.

Will we do it?

'Fight! Fight! Fight!' in a joyful way

As Howard Beale (played by Peter Finch) blurts out in that prophetic 1976 film “Network”: “First you’ve got to get mad!” Will we finally get mad enough as a country this election season to say along with Beale: “I’m as mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this anymore!

Of course, we need not and should not be violent in this conflict. As we learn from scripture, “The anger of man does not achieve the righteousness of God” (James 1:20). We can express our displeasure passionately but peacefully within the scope of the law.

Or will we sit back and let stealing an election — or even potentially looking the other way while a political rival is murdered — be the new norm in our once-great constitutional republic?

Bread for the belly, flesh for the soul: How the gift God gave Elijah points to an even greater gift

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After Elijah slaughtered the prophets of Baal, Jezebel threatened to do likewise to him, prompting the prophet of the one true God to flee. Elijah left his servant in Beersheba, then departed by his lonesome into the wilderness, where he asked for death beneath a juniper tree: "It is enough; now, O Lord, take away my life; for I am not better than my fathers."

It appears that even one of the greatest prophets fell victim to the desperation many might feel today when struck by a feeling of isolation, confronted more broadly with signs of demoralization and desacralization, or even when met with the basic hardships life inevitably throws our way.

In Elijah's case, the children of Israel had forsaken God's covenant, thrown down his altars, and slain his prophets.

"I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life, to take it away," Elijah gloomily told the Lord at the foot of tree.

Fortunately, God did not oblige his prophet.

Instead, an angel of the Lord furnished Elijah with cake and water, twice instructing him to "arise and eat," indicating that otherwise, the "journey is too much for you."

Whereas Elijah's nourishment would last him 40 days, Christ will sustain us forever.

As it says in Psalm 34, "The angel of the Lord encamps around those who fear Him, and He delivers them."

The psalm says further, "The righteous person may have many troubles, but the Lord delivers him from them all."

Elijah was given food to sustain him for 40 days and 40 nights — the apparent length of his journey to Horeb, where at the mount of the Lord, he learned why he couldn’t previously throw in the towel and give up the ghost.

God sent an angel to provide his despairing prophet with cake and water. God has sent us his only son, Jesus Christ — to provide us sinners with his flesh and blood.

Whereas Elijah's nourishment would last him 40 days, Christ will sustain us forever.

In John 6, Christ tells us, "I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never go hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty."

"Very truly I tell you, the one who believes has eternal life," Christ said. "I am the bread of life. Your ancestors ate the manna in the wilderness, yet they died. But here is the bread that comes down from heaven, which anyone may eat and not die. I am the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats this bread will live forever. This bread is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world.”

Different denominations may interpret the bread of life discourse differently. Catholics, for instance, understand Christ is speaking not only of faith in him but of him in the Eucharist.

It should be clear across the board, however, that our shared faith in Christ and relationship with him will fuel us for our respective journeys.

In Horeb, Elijah received his marching orders. In the twofold commandment, we have ours. In Ephesians 4-5, St. Paul provides some additional instruction on how we, so nourished by Christ, should comport ourselves along the way.

Ultimately, Paul indicates we must "follow God’s example, therefore, as dearly loved children and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God."

Our nourishment was made possible through Christ’s sacrifice for us. It appears only fitting that we remain full on our journeys by sacrificing for one another.

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Faith and doubt: The journey of a struggling Christian

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I grew up in a clichéd Texan fashion. I was raised Southern Baptist, with church every Sunday from an early age, along with youth group meetings all through middle school and high school. My faith was the center of my life.

I kept it up when I went to college. In fact, I became more active, eventually becoming a youth leader for all grade levels at both my home church and the church near my school.

So I guess I’m stuck in this in-between: a struggling Christian who knows better but cannot seem to find his way to acceptance or forgiveness, despite the example of many people with worse circumstances who have done just that.

That changed after graduation, when a succession of events led me into a crisis of sorts. I found myself betrayed and isolated by both of the churches I called home. My wife and I lost our first child, who was stillborn. Reeling with anger, frustration, and hurt, I stepped away from the faith.

I thought that I just needed time, but now it’s been five years since I’ve even been inside a church building, let alone picked up a Bible (which is sad, because throughout the years, I’ve amassed quite a collection). My "prayers," if you can call them that, consist mainly of sarcastic complaints and accusations.

How did this happen? How did I go from an active church member and evangelical, pursuing the great commission and devoting most of my time to teaching the lessons of Jesus Christ, to a bitter, churchless man who shivers at the idea of going back to early Sunday mornings and late Wednesday nights?

That’s what I set out to find. But my quest so far has left me with more confusion and isolation than anything.

I began talking to the people in my life who were still active in the church and still strong in their faith. The problem with this was quickly apparent: Whatever they had to say, I'd heard it all before. Even the pastors I spoke to, despite their eloquence and erudition, had nothing to tell me that I hadn’t already learned in my years of ministry.

Worse, I realized I was now on the receiving end of the exact same advice I'd given countless students throughout my years as a small group leader. It had been easy enough to tell people, “Trust in God. His ways are always the right ways. He knows better than us. Go to Him, and He will comfort you. Lean on God, and He will give you the answers you seek.” Putting these words into practice in my own life was much more difficult.

I may know it’s the right path to follow, but my stubbornness and pain often block the way. What if my trust that these tragedies have a larger purpose is misplaced? What if, five years down the road, I still don’t see the bigger picture? These are questions I don't know how to find peace with. I'm afraid I never will.

I seem to have two options. The first is simply to accept that I’ll never be the Christian I once was, something I find painful to contemplate. The second is to give up looking for an "answer" to what I've been through, stop throwing a hissy fit, and go back to the faith. That also seems like an impossible task.

I know there are those who have dealt with more tragedy than I who remain strong in their faith, but I don’t know how they do it. Part of me questions whether it’s all an act, an act I was also pretty good at when I was a regular church attender, an act that will eventually collapse for them as it did for me. Or perhaps I just can't admit that I'm failing where they remain steadfast.

But what did I want the Christians I spoke with to say? What was I expecting from them? I’m reminded of a line from Tenth Avenue North's song "Someone to Talk To": "But when I tell them where I’m at, they tell me where I ain’t.”

I'm also reminded of the song's chorus: “Can I say that I’m lonely? Say that I’m scared? If I tell you what I’m feeling, will I still get to stay here? I’ve got broken hallelujahs and lies along with truth. Can you handle my confusion? I need someone to talk to.”

I understand why the Christians I spoke to all said the same things, and again, they aren’t wrong. But it’s not what I needed to hear. Maybe there was no right thing for them to say.

After I failed to find reassurance within the church, I began to look outside it. I heard about a loose group of Christians engaged in “spiritual deconstruction.” Like me, they had grown up with a traditional faith that they now found lacking. In response, they began to pick apart the assumptions behind their worldview to find what went wrong. This sounded perfect!

I soon realized there were two major problems with this movement. First, this so-called "deconstruction" seemed to be no more than a cover for atheism, or — at best — agnosticism. Not only did these people reject the notion that God was good or that Jesus Christ was their Savior, they rejected the very existence of God in the first place.

This seems to have led not to liberation but to bitterness — a bitterness deeper than my own. They don’t just not believe; the disdain they have for the faith is loud and toxic. The arrogance they have that they are correct, that everything they used to believe is a lie, was enough to turn me away completely.

I can't imagine myself ever getting to point where I denounce God’s existence. If you asked me right now: “Do you believe in God?” my answer would be yes. If you asked me right now: “Did Jesus Christ die for your sins?” my answer, again, would be yes. This is precisely why I feel so betrayed. God exists, and He is good; why, then, did he allow me to suffer like this?

But this intense confusion over what seems like God's broken promises is preferable to the idea that there is no God and there are no promises. That my experiences are purely random, just a case of bad luck. That’s not a life I want to live either. If anything, that’s more terrifying.

The second problem with the deconstructionists is that they were almost entirely left-leaning politically. In fact it is politics that seems to have prompted most of them to start questioning their faith. Unable to accept the church's position on homosexuality, abortion, the Israel-Palestine conflict, and other issues, they left the church.

I, on the other hand, have become more conservative since leaving the church. More pro-life, more anti-drug, and more pro-capitalism and free market. The only thing I have maybe become more liberal on is that I tend to believe God is a more perfect judge and there may be a lot more people in heaven than Christians realize.

But that may be a coping mechanism I have created for myself to handle the fact that I’ve become a person I swore I would never be: a bitter, angry, "exvangelical" who spits at the idea that God’s will is the perfect way. And now that I have a child, I’m even more worried about where I’ll end up — and where my son will end up — if things don’t change.

So where does that leave me? Current Christians can’t help me, as much as I know they want to, because my problem isn’t theirs to fix. Deconstructioners can’t help because they’ve decided to completely shift and become the antithesis of who they once were. I don’t fit in with either group. Neither has the solution I’m seeking. It’s between me and God.

So I guess I’m stuck in this in-between: a struggling Christian who knows better but cannot seem to find his way to acceptance or forgiveness, despite the example of many people with worse circumstances who have done just that. Someone who is still angry that the worst of his suffering was caused by doing what he thought God was leading him to do. Someone who can't understand why some of the biggest blessings in his life, including the birth of his beautiful son, occurred after he left the faith. How does that make sense?

This story doesn’t have a happy ending. Not yet, at least. Maybe I'm just writing this so that any people out there going through something similar can realize they are not alone. That they're not the only ones on this long, uncertain journey, hoping for a happy conclusion, missing the security of their old faith, and striving with all their heart to get it back.

Public high school football players get baptized on school field, sparking First Amendment debate

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Florida public high school football players got baptized on a school field last month, which has sparked a First Amendment debate on freedom of religion and the separation of church and state.

Brevard Public Schools said the baptisms took place July 18 after an off-season football conditioning session at Astronaut High School in Titusville, Florida Today reported. Titusville is just under an hour east of Orlando and a few miles west of the John F. Kennedy Space Center.

'I could not be more proud that 25 young adults gave their lives to Christ and the kingdom grows! ... The community is overwhelmingly rejoicing with these young adults! God will use it for good!'

Video of one of the baptisms shows a player sitting in a metal tank filled with water. A man tells the player he's going to baptize him "in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit." The man then dips the player's head backward into the water, and pulls his head back up again as he tells the player, "Risen in new life." The crowd around the tank then applauds.

The caption of the Instagram post containing the video indicated that 25 players were baptized. The post drew a number of comments as well; one commenter asked, "Why is religion making its way into schools? This isn’t a religion school ... Hmm. I don’t like this." Another commenter declared, "That is awesome. Praise God!"

Brevard Public Schools didn't know about the baptisms until Monday, Florida Today reported, citing district spokesperson Janet Murnaghan.

"The event was not a school sponsored activity," Murnaghan said. "It’s our understanding that it was student driven."

The post's caption also said Brevard School Board chair Megan Wright's church performed the baptisms, and that 25 players took the plunge.

Florida Today said Wright didn't respond to its request for comment but noted that she said on her personal Facebook page that while she had "no part" in the baptisms, the moment was a happy one.

Megan WrightImage source: Brevard (Fla.) School Board website

"I could not be more proud that 25 young adults gave their lives to Christ and the kingdom grows!" Wright wrote, according the paper. "... The community is overwhelmingly rejoicing with these young adults! God will use it for good!"

Florida Today said Astronaut High Athletic Director Matthew Ahlstedt declined to comment.

More from Florida Today:

Students, teachers and other employees at a school can engage in private religious expression within the school, according to the U.S. Department of Education. However, public school employees can't lead activities like prayers or devotionals, and they can't try to persuade students to participate in, or not participate in, religious activities, according to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Students, on the other hand, can engage in religious activities with their peers and try to convince other students to join them.

Florida law generally aligns with federal law, saying that students may organize religious activities. School personnel can participate in religious activities on school grounds, as long as these activities are initiated by students before or after the school day, if the activities are voluntary and if they don't conflict with school personnels' responsibilities.School districts are also required to give religious groups the same access to their facilities that they would give to secular groups without discrimination based on the group's religion.

Anything else?

July's baptisms were far from the first time such an event took place:

  • When two student-athletes were baptized on a Tennessee public high school football field in August 2019, a "concerned area resident" got in touch with the Freedom From Religion Foundation, which in turn fired off a letter demanding the district "stop promoting and endorsing religion to students."
  • A few months prior, the FFRF objected after a video depicted "several football players" being baptized on Alabama public school property.
  • The FFRF prevailed in September 2015 when a Georgia school district acknowledged that an event during which more than a dozen football players were baptized on public school property violated official policy.

(H/T: OutKick)

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Harrison Butker refuses to back down after speech controversy — then he shares Christian message for his critics

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Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker told reporters this week that he stands by the content of a controversial graduation speech.

In May, the three-time Super Bowl champion became the newest cancel-culture target after he delivered a pro-Catholic commencement speech that affirmed traditional values at Benedictine College. His speech went viral, resulting in a petition — with nearly 240,000 signatures — demanding he be fired; one critic even said a woman should replace him.

'I'm still going to love you no matter what your opinions are, no matter how different we may be.'

On Wednesday, Butker spoke with the media at the Kansas City Chiefs training camp, fielding multiple questions about the controversy.

"I prayed about it and I thought about it and I was very intentional with what I said and I stand behind what I said," Butker said.

"And I really believe if people knew me as a person and understood that I was coming from a place of love and not a place of trying to attack or put people down, that I only want the best for people. And that's what I was trying to say there. And I think the people that were in that gymnasium all understood what I was saying," he added.

In his graduation speech, Butker urged the female graduates not to believe the "diabolical lies" of the culture, which tell women that being a mother and wife is not a worthy vocation. Critics accused Butker of misogyny and devaluing women.

But he said on Wednesday those accusations are far from true.

"I think my whole career I've talked about how I'm a husband and I'm a father before it comes to me as a kicker. It's something I've always preached," he said.

"My wife had never heard me speak publicly and she was there for that moment ... And I was getting emotional, looking at her crying and understanding that she has sacrificed so much for me," Butker continued. "She has completely changed her life around and she has made sure she is focused on being the ultimate wife and the ultimate mother.

"And I love her so much for that. And I see how happy and excited she is day to day to wake up and embrace that life," he explained. "And she pushes me to be a better husband and a better father and focus on my three children and focus on her over maybe trying to be the best kicker I can be out on that field."

Most importantly, Butker shared a message for his critics — one that reflects his Christian faith.

"I want people to know that no matter what I say, it might be the complete opposite of you: I'm still going to love you no matter what your opinions are, no matter how different we may be," he said. "I'm going to love you and we're going to get along and probably be good friends."

Earlier this week, Butker signed a new contract with the Kansas City Chiefs — a four-year extension worth $25.6 million — making him the highest-paid NFL kicker of all time.

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