Even In The Womb, Christ Was Both God And Man

As you help people see Jesus’s heart of love for children in the womb, you can remind those you share with of the Lord’s great love for them.

Phil Robertson reveals the TRUTH about race they won’t teach in schools



In this episode of "In the Woods with Phil," Phil Robertson argued that, while our culture has dueling narratives on race, only one is God's truth.

"The Bible says [we are] one race: human beings," Phil stated.

"'For in him we live and move and have our being.' As some of your own poets have said, 'We are his offspring,'" Phil quoted from the Bible (Acts 17:28). "Therefore since we are God's offspring, we should not think that the divine being is like gold or silver or stone—an image made by human design and skill. In the past, God overlooked such ignorance, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent."

"You have a conscience," Phil added. "It tells you what's right and what's wrong — and you know the difference."

Watch the video below to hear more from Phil Robertson:



Want more from Phil Robertson?

To enjoy more of this "Duck Dynasty" star's 70 years of unfiltered wisdom and uncensored common sense, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution and live the American dream.

Conservative group at Texas university receives threats after placing Bible verses in Easter eggs around campus



A conservative student group at the University of North Texas said the group received threats after distributing Easter eggs filled with Bible verses around the university campus.

What are the details?

On Sunday, members of the Young Conservatives of Texas UNT placed approximately 250 plastic Easter eggs filled with biblical messages of hope around the campus.

Kelly Neidert, the group's chairman, told the Christian Post that the group hid the eggs to celebrate Easter amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

"My group decided we wanted to do this event because our school has really strict COVID guidelines right now, and we just thought that putting some Easter eggs out with some Bible verses would be kind of fun for everybody and a good way to celebrate Eater without breaking our COVID guidelines," Neidert explained.

According to the College Fix, the backlash was swift and intense from students, parents, and UNT alumni.

"They're obsessed with harassing us just because that's what they like to do," she told the Christian Post. "They don't like that we're conservative, but I think that this probably was a little more inflammatory in their minds because of the religious aspect. And they don't feel included somehow ... [since] it's a Christian holiday. I think that was a lot of the problem they're having with this."

The majority of the abuse, Neidert said, focused on what was inside the eggs.

From the Christian Post:

Neidert retweeted screenshots of some of the students slamming the Easter eggs hunt. Some students accused them of littering, while others called for the student body to stomp on or trash the eggs. In reference to the Bible verses inside the eggs, one student wrote on Twitter: "Awesome! I was low on toilet paper."

Some eggs were found around campus with the Bible verse removed and condoms left inside.
After my fellow students destroyed my org’s abortion memorial, I should have known they would go out and destroy ou… https://t.co/VllCnsOuc2
— Kelly (@Kelly)1617046218.0

She continued, "Once the eggs were out, we got a lot more backlash from more students. They were trying to go stomp them. They said they would go throw them away, and they just sent some nasty messages to me and about the event."

Neidert said that at least one student told her to kill herself over the Easter eggs.

"Honestly, it happens a lot more than it should," she said. "I was upset like anyone would be, but I had to understand they are mean people and they don't know how to handle someone who has a different opinion than them. Their first instinct is to be violent and make threats. The only reaction is to be nice to them and don't let them get to you."

Neidert said that she and the rest of the group plan to remove any remaining eggs from the campus over this week.

“There is no way to separate celebrating Easter and Jesus, those things go hand in hand," she said in a statement to the College Fix, and admitted that she's "very disappointed" over the outcome.

"We were all super excited when we brainstormed the idea and picked verses together, we thought everyone can appreciate it, you don't even have to be Christian to read a [Bible] verse and appreciate it," she said. "We are very disappointed this is how it's gone down."

Woman receives birthday card with Bible verse from her mother — 2 years after her mother's death: 'It was meant for me to receive now'



An Ohio woman received a birthday card from her mother this year — except her mother passed away two years ago.

What are the details?

According to Newsweek, Katrina Jones of Youngstown, Ohio, recently discovered a birthday card in her mailbox.

Confused, she quickly opened the card, which was dated June 20, 2015.

"To what do I owe this honor?" she asked of the card, which was not just five years late in arriving, but six months late in celebrating her birthday.

The return address, she said, was her mother's address.

"Then I looked at the handwriting, and I said, 'That's my mother's handwriting,'" she recalled.

Ohio woman receives birthday card from late mother 5 years later https://t.co/ZPr2utBoOF https://t.co/A1v6diFcB6
— FOX8 WGHP (@FOX8 WGHP)1607950541.0

She opened the card and found birthday regards and a note with a Bible verse scrawled on it.

The note read, "I know the thoughts I have toward you sayeth the Lord. Thoughts of peace and not of evil."

The verse, from Jeremiah 29:11, reads, "For I know well the plans I have in mind for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare, not for woe!"

Jones said that she and her mother wondered about the missing card all those years ago, and never expected it to turn up on her doorstep two years after her mother's death.

"I do remember many years ago and I think I'm safe to say it must have been 2015 and I remember her asking, 'Hey, did you get a card from me?'" Jones recalled.

"Someone told me at work 'It wasn't meant for you to receive it back then,' it was meant for me to receive now," she added.

Jones, a customer service representative at Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield, shared the post on her LinkedIn page, writing, "It took 5 1/2 years for me to receive a birthday card and note from my mother. The message was right on time."