Detectives from Los Angeles Police Department, Robbery-Homicide Division have arrested David Burke known as D4vd for the murder of Celeste Rivas. Burke is being held without bail.
I really don’t like hearing non-Christians talk about Easter as if it’s some abstract allegory. It’d be better not to talk about it at all.
Good Friday isn’t about sacrifice. It’s about Jesus’s sacrifice. God-made-flesh shed his blood on the cross for our sins, so that by grace through faith we could be forgiven and reconciled to God.
Acts 4:12: “And there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.”
I'm sorry I just found out that the hockey goalie for Team USA has an Instagram account where all she does is rate Ceasar Salads.
I love my country so much sometimes.
Effective January 1st in California, it's illegal to declaw a cat because it's inhumane and causes chronic pain.
Yet a 13-yr-old girl can go to the doctor to surgically remove her healthy breasts.
If you don't see the issue here, then YOU are the issue.
So let me get this straight. Erika Kirk was placed in the CEO role because it was Charlie’s will for her to succeed him, and the TPUSA board voted on it in accordance with his wishes.
•That is legitimate authority
•That is honor for her husband’s legacy
•That is organizational order carried out according to Charlie’s will
Yet for some reason, Candace believes she has the right to publicly question Erika’s position and behave as if she gets to overrule Charlie’s will and the TPUSA board. The jealousy is not even subtle at this point. It’s loud, transparent, and embarrassing.
Candace is a piece of work. The level of disingenuous envy it takes to attack a widow for stepping into the role her husband entrusted to her reveals far more about Candace’s character than it ever will about Erika.
The audacity of some of y’all to say that Candace or anyone else is “the only one” asking questions and turning over every stone. Really? You don’t think the mother of his children might care a little more? His best friends? His closest colleagues? And how do you know they’re not asking questions and doing everything possible to pursue truth and justice? Do they have to turn their investigations into a monetized podcast series for it to be legitimate?
Your aborted baby had a heartbeat.
Your aborted baby had a heartbeat.
Your aborted baby had a heartbeat.
Your aborted baby had a heartbeat.
Your aborted baby had a heartbeat.
Your aborted baby had a heartbeat.
Your aborted baby had a heartbeat.
Your aborted baby had a heartbeat.
@NJBeisner I feel this every time I watch one of her videos. I watch hoping that I’ll understand what her theory is, and each time, I leave more confused. She goes down a million rabbit holes and closes ZERO loops. She throws out a bunch of intricate details that sound important but aren’t.
I wasn’t going to respond to Candace publicly, but I was genuinely hurt by her accusation that I don’t care about who killed Charlie because I expressed concern for the lives of people who have been implicated in her series on CK’s murder.
That couldn’t be further from the truth. Charlie was my friend. He encouraged me, prayed for me, championed me and gave me advice when I needed it. We linked arms for the gospel, and I miss that so much. I very much care about justice for him.
But you know who cares about justice for Charlie far more than any of us? His family. His friends and colleagues who were with him every day. I trust that they are asking the right questions to the right people in the right way. That they are doing so in a manner that doesn’t stir up suspicion against innocent people. In a way that doesn’t hinder the actual investigation into who was involved in Charlie’s murder. I want to see due process play out uninhibited.
And, yes, I do feel deeply for those who have been unfairly maligned by implications of guilt. That’s really scary, serious, and wrong.
Most of all, I care about how Christians seek truth. “Just asking questions” isn’t a justification for slander. The God who created us and weighs our words has a lot to say about how we speak and what we seek.
Today’s episode: