@bldgodlymanhood A man anchored in the word holds the line.
Daily time builds conviction that outlasts comfort.
Few sustain it every day.
Well done my friend
A man who leads his home in faithfulness builds more than any physique.
Character holds when looks fade.
Scripture sets the measure... https://t.co/gA6ilUKask
Kevin is a faithful pastor, father, husband, theologian, and Christian. It doesn't get much more masculine than that. Posts like this (and the comments in support of it) are way more of a threat to biblical masculinity than someone's physique.
Oh, and I've read the book and given it to young men in my church. You should definitely buy a copy.
When a man chooses God family and responsibility over vanity, pressure from the crowd fades.
Not looksmaxxing but steady obedience. https://t.co/9eKKDAellR
👨👦👦 Young men are turning to God, family, and responsibility.
All the while, the "manosphere" pushes denigrating women, sexual degeneracy, "looksmaxxing," and vanity.
What is the right path?
@AlexMcFarland joins The Sentinel Report to share what biblical masculinity looks like.
A man who anchors to Scripture holds the line for others.
Biblical masculinity binds what compromise would break.
When allegiance is settled, the culture steadies. https://t.co/aFsvwJQz8P
The Bonding Agent
“Biblical masculinity is cultural gluten. Without it the cookie just crumbles to pieces in your hand, and is tasteless on top of that. Or someone at the organic equivalent of DuPont comes up with an artificial bonding agent that either doesn’t work or turns the cookie into an all-natural shower tile” (Mere Christendom, p. 75).
Look, I get being masculine and speaking boldly. But if there are no levels of restraint to your speech (posts), then that is most certainly not biblical masculinity. The anons are out of control. God sees.
The Bonding Agent
“Biblical masculinity is cultural gluten. Without it the cookie just crumbles to pieces in your hand, and is tasteless on top of that. Or someone at the organic equivalent of DuPont comes up with an artificial bonding agent that either doesn’t work or turns the cookie into an all-natural shower tile” (Mere Christendom, p. 75).