Tyson Goodsell was a 17 year old student
who got k*lled in COLD BLOOD by a
GANG of Somalis in Minnesota.
The mainstream media refuses to talk
about him, but I will!
Rest In Peace Tyson Goodsell! 🙏♥️
I will never become a trillionaire.
I will never become a billionaire.
I will likely never become a millionaire.
But I have Jesus, and that makes me wealthy beyond measure.
Let God arise, let his enemies be scattered: let them also that hate him flee before him.
As smoke is driven away, so drive them away: as wax melteth before the fire, so let the wicked perish at the presence of God.
But let the righteous be glad; let them rejoice before God: yea, let them exceedingly rejoice.
Psalms 68:1-3
"You cannot be a Christian and not have the Holy Spirit. When Jesus comes to live within your heart, the Holy Spirit comes to live within your heart."
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Born of the Spirit | Dr. David Jeremiah
"The amazing thing is you don't have to explain anything to the Holy Spirit. He already knows your worries and your struggles, and He carries them straight to God's throne."
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The Promise of the Spirit | Dr. David Jeremiah
The devil will use people close to you to destroy your peace, to make you doubt your faith, to stress you and tempt you in ways you never even thought of. Do not allow him to win.
🚨 UPDATE: 8 people charged in Sex Ring “Underground Bunker” for Paying adults to Rape their Children and Pets — Ages 3-16. Trial delayed as mom pleads guilty and flips on co-defendants
In Bibb County, Alabama, eight suspects ran a sex trafficking ring out of an underground bunker where children as young as 3 were drugged, bound, and raped with adults paying to abuse them.
Animals were also targeted.
Rebecca Brewer and mother of some of the victims, pleaded guilty to sexual torture and nine counts of first-degree kidnapping. As part of the deal she agreed to testify against the other seven defendants.
The trial for the remaining suspects has been delayed while the case expands, including a federal investigation into at least one of them.
These monsters turned their own kids and pets into victims for profit.
How long will it take for every last one of them to face real justice?
Masturbation is a SIN.
It feeds lust, robs you of self-control, and distances you from purity. The Bible calls us to flee sexual immorality and honor God with our bodies (1 Cor 6:18–20).
You can overcome it through prayer, discipline, and renewing your mind (Romans 12:2).
Appointed by God - Seth and the Sovereignty of the Substitute Line
Key Passage: Genesis 4:25
Introduction
Genesis 4:25 is one of those quiet verses that can be overlooked if a man is only reading for motion and not for doctrine. “And Adam knew his wife again; and she bare a son, and called his name Seth: For God, said she, hath appointed me another seed instead of Abel, whom Cain slew.” That word “appointed” carries far more weight than many readers first realize. It is not the language of accident. It is not the language of mere biology. It is not the language of blind succession. It is the language of providence. It is the language of the Lord stepping into the wreckage of a broken family and showing that history has not escaped His hand. Abel is dead, Cain is cursed, blood has cried from the ground, and yet God has appointed another seed. That means God is still governing after the tragedy. He is still ordering after the violence. He is still preserving what He intends to preserve.
That is what makes Seth such an important figure in the unfolding of Genesis. He is not simply one more child in the household of Adam and Eve. He is identified by Eve herself as one appointed by God in the place of Abel. That means Seth is tied to divine purpose in a way the text wants you to notice. Cain may have thought that by slaying Abel he had silenced a righteous witness and altered the future in his own favor. But heaven’s answer to Cain’s violence was not panic. It was appointment. The Lord did not have to improvise. He did not have to recover ground He almost lost. He appointed another seed. That is a mighty statement about sovereignty. History is not running loose in Cain’s hands. The devil does not get the last move. Bloodshed does not seize the throne from God.
And that is why this verse preaches so strongly to anyone who has ever watched evil seem to take the upper hand. There are moments in history, in churches, in families, and in nations when it looks like wickedness has struck a decisive blow. A faithful witness falls. A righteous man is cut down. Truth seems wounded. A godly line appears broken. But Genesis 4:25 stands there like a granite pillar saying that God still appoints. God still orders. God still preserves. The substitute line does not continue because sinners become less violent. It continues because the Lord remains sovereign after the violence. Seth is not just another son. He is a witness that God’s hand moves quietly but decisively after tragedy, and that what God appoints, the world cannot cancel.
Chapter One: The Word “Appointed” Declares Divine Government
The whole burden of this essay rests first on that one word: “appointed.” Eve does not say merely that she has had another son. She does not say only that life goes on. She says, “God… hath appointed me another seed instead of Abel.” That means she interprets the birth theologically. She sees the hand of God in it. She understands that this is not random replacement but divine arrangement. That is very important. The verse is teaching that heaven is not absent from human continuation. The Lord is not only the Creator at the beginning of the race. He is the Appointer in the continuation of the race.
This matters because fallen man constantly imagines history as if it were a loose collection of events, collisions, crimes, births, and deaths, all ultimately moving by human force. But Genesis 4:25 cuts across that whole idea. Cain’s murder was real. Abel’s death was real. Eve’s sorrow was real. Yet above those painful realities stands the God who appoints. That means providence is not destroyed by tragedy. In fact, providence often shines most clearly when it appears in the aftermath of tragedy, because then the reader sees that the Lord still orders what men thought they had disordered beyond repair.