Steven Spielberg saying his new movie Disclosure
Day will have Christians questioning their faith in God. I promise you Steven it will not. It will only reinforce my knowledge that demons are among us and that Jesus was right about everything.
“It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong.”
— Thomas Sowell
The sad truth is that not everyone will achieve something grand in their lifetime. Some of us may just have to find meaning in the little moments that make up life. This isn't surrender; it's simply reality.
🚨 NICK SHIRLEY JUST NAILED IT: “The idea of wokeness is essentially the idea to remove God from EVERYTHING!”
“The idea that a man can be woman means that God made a mistake.”
“But God is the truth. Wokeness really is the idea of just removing God and filling it with something else.” 💯
Lord, please remove every false ministry and strange god from the high places. Let righteous men with your wisdom sit in high governmental places in our cities and nation. Let the spiritual foundations that were built in our cities,communities and nation be restored! IJN Amen
Christian identity is not achieved but received. In the economy of grace, our identity is anchored in the person of Christ rather than our personal performance or history. To be "in Christ" means your standing before the Father is as secure as the Son's own righteousness.
It used to be that marriage was the starting point. Two people came together with almost nothing but each other, and they built everything side by side: careers, homes, families, dreams.
The process of building wasn’t just something practical, it was bonding. It forged loyalty. It required sacrifice. It taught interdependence. Today, we’re told to have it all before we marry. A stable career. A house. A good savings account. independence.
But by the time two people finally come together, they’ve spent years learning how to do life alone, how to protect themselves, prioritize themselves, rely only on themselves, and somehow we wonder why it’s so hard to build a life with someone?
Marriage is no longer a beginning. It’s an accessory to an already-built life, but two self-contained, self-sufficient lives do not easily merge. There is no “ours”, now there is only “yours” and “mine.”
Individualism didn’t just redefine marriage.
Individualism is its death.