Oh, happy day! Trump’s victory restores faith and fire



About a week before Election Day on November 5, my wife and I participated in early voting. After filling out our ballots and placing them into the machine, I noticed the name on the side of the box belonged to a company that had sparked concerns during previous elections.

I turned to the attendant and asked, “Did our ballots get processed properly?” She laughed and replied, “Yes, everything is good. But if you’re worried, you can always come back tomorrow and vote again.” I shook my head and said, “No, we can’t. We’re Republicans.”

Remember that the deep state remains entrenched, so men and women of good will still need to keep up the fight through Inauguration Day.

A week later, we learned that everything had indeed worked as it should. While New York State, where we voted, predictably turned blue, Donald J. Trump secured an impressive number of electoral votes and won the popular vote by a healthy margin.

To borrow the title of an old gospel song: “Oh, Happy Day!”

However ...

Many of us on the right have friends and family members on the left who struggle to cope with Trump’s election victory. Some have chosen to shun us simply because our candidate delivered a resounding win on election night. They had fully expected a different outcome. After all the impeachments, slander, Justice Department weaponization, assassination attempts, and the $1 billion Democrats poured into campaigning against him, they were certain Trump’s defeat was inevitable, and his goose was properly cooked.

The Democrats threw everything at him, yet nothing stuck. For many of us, Trump’s victory wasn’t about him being “Teflon Don” but rather a sign that God isn’t done with America. It seems the Almighty intends to use Trump to steer this nation back toward righteousness. Proverbs 14:34 comes to mind: “Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin condemns any people.”

This victory was a collective effort. Whether people fasted and prayed earnestly or engaged politically as awakened citizens, everyone played a role — from "the greatest to the least." Across the country, the battle raged. Key figures like Tulsi Gabbard, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Elon Musk, and Vivek Ramaswamy hit the campaign trail to support the Trump-Vance ticket. Influential voices on X.com, such as Jack Posobiec and even the satirical account Catturd, added to the momentum. Together, they rocked the deeply entrenched deep state until the giant refrigerator toppled over with a mighty crash.

Kamala Harris proved to be the worst candidate in at least half a century, projecting an even less favorable image than Michael Dukakis riding in a tank. Her candidacy floundered under its own weight, but Joe Biden’s influence didn’t help either.

Biden, battling the effects of senility, repeatedly undermined the Harris-Walz campaign. He appeared to emerge from his fog at the worst moments, throwing shade on the ticket. The image of Biden in a MAGA hat, paired with his habit of rambling incoherently like an out-of-control Slip ’n Slide, further eroded the Democrats’ credibility on a near-daily basis.

But the last-minute awakening of the church cannot be overstated.

The Democrats’ allegiance was unmistakable throughout the campaign, and it became painfully clear during a Harris rally in La Crosse, Wisconsin, in mid-October. When two pro-lifers shouted, “Jesus is Lord!” and “Christ is King!” from the crowd, Kamala’s knee-jerk reaction was to dismiss them, saying, “You’re at the wrong rally!” One wonders what David French and the “Evangelicals for Harris” crowd would have to say about that.

Scripture encourages Christians with the words, “Wake up, sleeper, rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.” Perhaps, the Great Political Awakening has helped to allay a heavenly judgment on this country.

One must also be reminded of the Prodigal Son, specifically, the verse that tells us “when he came to his senses.” It is as if the church writ large, Catholics and Protestants alike, came to its senses and congregants rose out of their pews and poured into the voting booths. The religious faithful could no longer be oblivious to the evil of a runaway government — the destruction of our society and culture had become all too palpable, something I point out clearly in my book “Obvious: Seeing the Evil That’s in Plain Sight and Doing Something About It.”

So now something has been done about “the evil in plain sight,” but it is only the beginning. We must not return to a state of slumber. America’s “Happy Day” is still quite a number of years down the road.

Remember that the deep state remains entrenched, so men and women of good will still need to keep up the fight-fight-fight right on through Inauguration Day. President Trump’s triumphant return to the White House is just the beginning of the long, hard road to uprooting a bloated bureaucratic regime and returning America to the glorious constitutional republic we were always meant to be.

Glenn Beck is rallying skeptical religious voters to Trump with this critical warning



Blaze Media co-founder Glenn Beck took the stage at former President Donald Trump's rally in Prescott Valley, Arizona, Sunday afternoon to help encourage skeptical voters — particularly women — to cast their ballots for Trump in November, outlining the stakes for young ladies as well as discussing the Republican nominee's happy family.

"I am here today because this is the election that will decide who we are, where our children live, the opportunities that they will have," Beck began to raucous applause. "This is sacred to me, a sacred duty and honor, not to just be here but also to vote. We need to get people out to vote for Donald Trump."

'It is time for the good people that know the difference between right and wrong to stand up and save the republic.'

"You don't need me to tell you we live in what I believe are prophesized times. We are living in a time where evil is literally called good, and good is evil, where men can become women."

"I know there are some women that say, 'I don't know, I just can't vote for Donald Trump,' Beck conceded, before thundering a warning that "the policies of the left and Kamala Harris are destroying our women! They are undermining us as parents!"

"Anybody who says that they should be able to counsel my child in secret," he cautioned, "is a predator!"

"And for people who say, 'I don't know if they can vote for Donald Trump,'" the top national radio host continued, "the one thing that you cannot question is his children. His children love him and honor him. His children, quite honestly, with that much wealth and that much fame, they should be crackheads!"

The rally in the former ranching and mining area of Arizona once called Lonesome Valley attracted tens of thousands of spectators, who began lining up the day before, when Trump was still speaking 250 miles to the west, in Coachella, California.

Arizona is a swing state. In 2020, it went for President Joe Biden by just 10,000 votes.

Polling for 2024 has consistently shown Trump leading Vice President Kamala Harris by five points, while polling has shown Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Rep. Ruben Gallego consistently running six or more points ahead of Republican candidate Kari Lake. That large a spread in the polls has raised eyebrows among political consultants, however, who note that voters willing to "split the ticket" and vote for different parties for Senate and president are increasingly rare in our hyper-partisan age.

Beck, a former Never-Trumper who has since become an enthusiastic Trump supporter, has positioned himself as a prominent evangelist to skeptical Republicans, independents, and former Democrats, especially Mormons — a conservative-leaning population that has been cool toward the 45th president's bluster.

For example: While the only Mormon-majority state, Utah, consistently votes Republican, its Republican governor, Phil Cox, has never voted for Trump and embraced (and endorsed) him only after the attempt on his life shortly before the Republican National Convention. Mormonism is the third largest religion in Arizona, representing roughly five percent of the population.

"Every Sunday, if you go to church," Beck said, "you break bread in remembrance of Him. 'This is my body, which I have given up for you.' The left has perverted that to the point to where it is, 'This is my child's body, which I will give up for me.'"

"That is evil," Beck exclaimed, "and must not continue! We are looking at a relationship with evil that cannot be tolerated."

"It is time for the good people that know the difference between right and wrong to stand up and save the republic. It is time to call on God's army that is armed with our voices and our votes."

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Pro-Life Christians Should Vote For Trump Despite His Weak Abortion Stance

Donald Trump remains the best candidate for Christian voters concerned about preserving the sanctity of life.

Kirk Cameron says evangelical Trump supporters are waking up to see 'socialism and communism' knocking on their doors — and they're rallying to stop it



Conservative Christian actor Kirk Cameron says that evangelicals are rallying to vote for President Donald Trump because they can clearly see "socialism and communism" at the door.

What are the details?

In an interview with Fox News' "America's Newsroom," Cameron said that people of faith are worried that the country will descend into socialism or communism if a Democrat is elected president.

"I see people of faith waking up to the scary idea that socialism and communism are knocking on our doors this Halloween season, and they're disguised in the costumes of public health and social justice," Cameron said.

Cameron, an entertainer outspoken about his faith, added that the enthusiasm for President Donald Trump is staggering.

"I can tell you that as I travel the country and teach in churches, I'm seeing a couple of things that are just astounding. ... The enthusiasm level for people going out and rallying for a presidential election is unbelievable: 96-mile car trains, 30,000 vehicles, 58,000 people in Pennsylvania. Regardless of the side of the aisle you're on, this enthusiasm level is unprecedented."

'Non-essential'

Fox News reports that Cameron and other evangelical Trump supporters held an event titled "Non-Essential" in order to rally the more than 40 million inactive Christian voters to cast a ballot for the president on Tuesday.

During the interview, the California resident also pointed to Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-Calif.) as an example of what "non-essential" also means.

"Our governor just deemed going to church non-essential and Thanksgiving, with all my grown children in my living room, non-essential," he added.

Anything else?

In October, Cameron told the Christian Post, "I think if someone had said to us six months ago, 'There's a virus that's going to shut down every business, you're not going to be able to go to church for Easter, and your kids are not going to graduate from high school and they can't even start back in school in the fall,' I think we would have said, 'That's nuts. You're crazy. What kind of conspiracy theory person are you?' And here we are today with just everything upside down."