Unbelievable.
@IzzyFolau has allegedly been denied the opportunity to play in the NRL for the remainder of the season because of “inclusivity”.
You can commit serious misconduct, assault people, even pressure your girlfriend into an abortion, and still be welcomed back. But quote the Bible, and you're finished.
https://t.co/azp3bMR3wW
“Let my people go,” is a divine command that echos throughout history, threatening every political leader that oppresses God’s people, through unrighteous laws, excessive taxation, and threats of violence. By cursing the people, they curse themselves.
@gt65dusk@CaldronPool If the only “evil” you can conceive of is “races,” blame your parents for failing to educate you—not me. As I said, you’re either playing dumb or you are dumb. Either way, you’re not worth my time, anon.
@gt65dusk@CaldronPool I talk of evil infecting the Western world and the only thing you can think of is “race.” You’re either disingenuous, dumb, or both. Move on.
In a culture where Christ’s commands are increasingly weaponised against Christians and where 'love' is often used as a rhetorical tool to stifle dissent, silence disagreement, or demand conformity, it’s crucial for believers to recover a biblical understanding of love.
What happens when an imported culture that doesn’t subscribe to the ideals of multiculturalism begins to gain dominance over the host culture, either through mass immigration or a higher birth rate?
Freedom without a moral framework becomes chaos.
The so-called liberation of unrestrained self-rule simply replaces external authority with internal tyranny.
And internal tyranny, unresisted, soon brings about external tyranny to contain its fallout.
"The Western world once enjoyed the peace produced by the gospel. We abandoned it, believing freedom could be found apart from God. All we gained in return was expulsion from the garden, cultural disintegration, and the shadow of death that now hangs over our civilisation."
"While we were told to fear a Christian theocracy, a more insidious shift occurred: the state began to absorb the functions of the church. The language of tolerance and pluralism was used not to keep the government neutral, but to sideline Christianity."
Hate speech laws are evidence that our governments can no longer inspire loyalty, trust, or solidarity.
They are an admission that policymakers have no unifying vision capable of bringing diverse people together voluntarily.
So instead, they use force.
A New South Wales police officer has been found guilty of dangerous driving causing death after an Indigenous teen, riding a stolen motorbike, collided with the officer’s parked vehicle.
Love and hate are inherently religious categories. So when politicians start framing policy in those terms, they move from governing material realities to enforcing a transcendent ideal—that is, they begin legislating their religion.
@DanielAngRC You understand the concept of a national flag, right?
Unless you’re suggesting it’s a global symbol, it is, by definition, divisive. It represents some, not all.
It might be a symbol of your citizenship, but more than that, it’s a symbol of our ethnicity.