Itâs amazing how quickly the gatekeepers of culture decide whatâs acceptable.
In June, every logo becomes a rainbow. Every stadium, every jersey, every broadcast gets a political message.
But put a Bible verse on your cap? Suddenly thatâs âcontroversial.â
Put an American slogan front and center? Suddenly thatâs âdivisive.â
The NFL had no problem painting political movements in the end zone. Major League Baseball has no problem turning every June into a month-long corporate activism campaign.
Yet the moment someone wants to celebrate faith, patriotism, or traditional values, weâre told those things donât belong in sports.
Funny how the people preaching inclusion always seem to have a very specific list of viewpoints theyâre willing to include.
If rainbow logos belong in sports, then so do Bible verses.
If political messages belong in sports, then so do messages celebrating faith, family, and country.
The double standard isnât subtle anymore. EVERYONE sees it.
Time to set the record straight:
The rainbow has NOTHING to do with Pride Month.
Itâs Godâs covenant with Noah, his unbreakable promise after the flood.
It belongs to God and God only.
An opinion that might have an edge to it: I donât care how much âpotentialâ he had or how he was a âgood kid,â according to his family.
He murdered someone for practically nothing. A minor clash of egos that happens daily at schools around the world.
If heâs capable of killing someone for nothing, he is a danger to society. Period.
A proper society locks guys like that up for a veryyyy long time (or capital punishment) to prioritize the safety of others. A 19-year-old who can plunge a knife into a kidâs heart turns into a man who is capable of much worse.
Mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent.
Someone elseâs life may have been saved by this verdict.
Lock him up. Give him a Bible. Pray for him. But do not ask me to have sympathy for the killer over his victim.
Iâm glad Austin Metcalfâs family got justice and can begin healing.
When Jesus encountered the woman caught in adultery (John 8):
He told the woman, "He didn't condemn her", but He didn't say, "go live your truth and be your authentic self."
He said, "go & sin no more."
Jesus doesn't affirm people in their sin, He calls people to repent of it.
Cowboys 1st-round pick Caleb Downs walk-up song at the NFL Draft was Christian song âKing of Gloryâ by CeCe Winans
âYes the world
Will bow down and say You are God
Every man
Will bow down and say You are Kingâ
Proud to see so many top picks giving glory, honor & praise to Jesus
Fernando Mendoza is launching the Mendoza Family Fund to raise money to fight MS, which his mother has.
Mendoza personally committed $500,000 to the National MS Society.
Satan got Adam and Eve to focus on one fruit when God had given them a whole garden. That's how he works. He gets you to focus on that one thing you don't have. Instead of all the blessings you do have.
Trust that God knows what you need, and will supply it when you need it.
When you take a shower, you don't clean yourself before getting in, right? You step in as you are, and the water washes you clean.
It's the same with walking with Jesus, you don't have to clean yourself up first. Come as you are, and let Him do the rest.
Iâm sick of lukewarm Christians and unbelievers twisting Scripture to justify cowardice.
âLove your neighborâ and âlove your enemiesâ does NOT mean affirming sin, excusing evil, or staying silent while people walk straight toward destruction. Thatâs not love, thatâs apathy dressed up as virtue.
Biblical love is bold. It tells the truth. It warns. It confronts. It cares more about someoneâs eternal soul than their temporary comfort.
Real love says: repent, turn to God, and receive the free gift of salvation, because hell is real and truth matters.
The modern church has perverted love into tolerance. But love that refuses to speak truth is not love at all, itâs betrayal.
I donât know how you talk about Easter without saying the name of Jesus.
Easter is about Jesus, Kamala.
His death. His resurrection.
Not just ârenewalâ and âhope.â
Jesus.