I am a perfectionist. I do my stuff with a lot of care but careless later after work.
Trust noone, respect everyone, suspect everyone for a healthy nation
@JoshuaNdeg90704@RobertAlai Gachagua is free to vie. You can't wait for someone to tirelessly work as you sleep expecting to be backed. Who are you trying to impress
@_Sakko Simple Summary
Condition
Meaning
Relation to Down Syndrome
Clubfoot
Foot twisted inward
Sometimes associated
Spina bifida
Spine fails to close properly
Rare together
DDH
Hip joint not stable
More common
Craniosynostosis
Skull bones fuse early
True Christianity: A Faith in Search of Its Soul
Growing up, Christianity felt clear, disciplined, and demanding. We were taught that faith was not a performance but a commitment. Baptism, confirmation, and the public declaration of love for Christ Jesus were important
promising anything outwardly.
If current trends continue, the sacred may continue to be diluted. But history also teaches us that renewal often begins quietly—when believers choose integrity over popularity and truth over comfort.
True Christianity may yet survive—not in .
louder worship, or promises of wealth—but in returning to first principles. True Christianity was never about spectacle, status, or prosperity. It was about humility, truth, self-control, compassion, and service.
Faith was meant to transform the believer inwardly before
When spiritual leadership begins to resemble personal ambition, the entire faith community pays the price.
This raises a painful but necessary question: What happened to true Christianity?
A Call Back to the Beginning
Perhaps the answer lies not in new doctrines,
authority and interpretation.
Where Did We Lose the Plot?
In the 1970s and 1980s, pastors, vicars, bishops, and archbishops commanded deep respect. That respect has significantly declined—not because faith is irrelevant, but because trust has been broken too often.
this complexity. Early Christian writings were numerous. Over time, decisions were made about which books would form the canon. Today, Catholics recognize 73 books; Protestants recognize 66. These choices, shaped by councils and doctrines, continue to raise questions about
built around St. Peter’s Basilica, stands as both a symbol of faith and a reminder of Christianity’s complex past. Church traditions, doctrines, and leadership structures evolved over centuries—often shaped as much by politics and power as by theology.
The Bible itself reflects
servants of God and more like men using God. Trust eroded, and reverence faded.
History Repeats Its Lessons
Yet this tension between faith and power is not new.
Christian history itself is layered with controversy, human judgment, and institutional control. The Vatican,
and personal power blurred. Choir members, praise and worship leaders, and volunteers were drawn into situations that contradicted the values the church preached.
Gradually, believers began to see what many felt but feared to say aloud: some “men of God” appeared less like