The LGBTQ movement and our culture at large has sought to redefine love as affirmation and acceptance of person. So for me to love you is to for me accept, embrace, agree and affirm your lifestyle. Conversely, on this view, for me to hate you is to not affirm or disagree with your lifestyle. Question: Do people really hold this view? Or this just a rhetorical angle people have? Because if a family member was on crack cocaine it would seem most loving to disagree with their lifestyle and to encourage them to stop.
“Love” that never warns is not love at all.
If a child runs into traffic, love screams.
If a building is on fire, love warns.
If a doctor finds cancer, love tells the truth.
Jesus spoke more about judgment and hell than almost anyone in the Bible, not because He was cruel, but because He loved people enough to warn them.
A culture obsessed with affirmation often mistakes cowardice for compassion.
Muslims may die for what they believe.
The apostles died for what they claimed they personally SAW:
the resurrected Jesus Christ.
That’s a completely different category of evidence.
📺 https://t.co/Ae4ow19vwX
Muslims die for what they believe is true.
The apostles died for what they claimed they personally SAW—the risen Jesus Christ.
That’s a completely different category.
📺 https://t.co/Ae4ow19vwX
Jesus intentionally put Matthew the tax collector and Simon the Zealot on the same team.
In modern terms…
That’s like putting a hardcore Trump strategist and a Bernie Sanders strategist in the same ministry.
And somehow… they didn’t kill each other.
Serious question:
Has politics become more important to American Christians than the Kingdom of Jesus?
Be honest. I want to hear your thoughts.
📺 https://t.co/iTuOkImdeq
Serious question:
If even atheist scholars admit the resurrection evidence is historically powerful…
what’s keeping people from believing?
📺 https://t.co/Tg5C1cgoIJ
God’s kingdom wasn’t built by perfect people.
It was built by broken people…
like Peter.
And if God can use a train wreck like Peter…
He can use you.
📺 https://t.co/Ae4ow19vwX
The church wasn’t built by prosperity preachers in designer suits, Rolexes, private jets, and mansions.
It was built on the blood, tears, suffering, and sacrifice of the apostles.
That’s what built Christianity.
📺 https://t.co/Ae4ow19vwX
You can’t build a foundation on a foundation.
Ephesians 2:20 says the apostles and prophets were the foundation of the church.
Foundations are laid once.
That’s why today we have elders and deacons—not new apostles.
📺 https://t.co/Ae4ow18XHp