@usanewshq In order to get to the point of moving at 50kph with the car, the drone had to "avoid" so to speak the interior of the car as it accelerated. Every time the car accellerated, it had to adjust its pitch. Constant speed is fine, its just the acceleration.
@KirkCameron Sounds pretty real to me. Ive heard other stories like this from other people, real people who i know. Just beacause the stories are weird doesnt mean they're not true
When I was Muslim, I compared Muhammad’s last words to Jesus’ last words.
Not just the facts, but the spirit behind them.
And bro, the difference is staggering. It shook my devout Muslim faith.
According to Sahih al-Bukhari, Muhammad’s final words included: “May Allah curse the Jews and the Christians. They made the graves of their prophets into places of worship.”
Those are words associated with his final moments.
No forgiveness. No reconciliation. No peace.
Now compare that to Jesus.
Beaten, betrayed, tortured, hanging on a cross with nails through His wrists, Jesus says:
“Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
And then: “It is finished.”
One dies speaking curses.
The other dies extending forgiveness.
One ends by drawing lines and reinforcing division.
The other tears the veil and reconciles heaven and earth.
And whether people like it or not, final words reveal something deeply personal about the heart.
That contrast shook me.
Because one man’s final moments reinforced separation, while the other’s changed eternity through mercy, sacrifice, and love.
Please sit with that honestly.
Mockery is the cheapest form of social bonding. It welds a group together by giving them someone to laugh at, and it costs the one being laughed at something real. We have learned to do this without flinching, in comment threads and at dinner tables and from our pulpits. The laughter feels like fellowship, but it is built on a small humiliation, and the soul of the one mocked is paying for it whether we know it or not.
Spiritual nonchalance often arises not from overt rebellion but from a quiet, pragmatic atheism-of-habit: living as if God and the soul matter “in theory,” but not enough to re-order time, attention, or desire. What occurs as a result in the soul, is that this creates dis-integration: One part of the self confesses transcendence. Another part is just living for getting things done, looking good, and staying comfortable.
One reason God wants to transform us and make us like Christ is so that we can have the joy that God has in loving others. He wants to give us His joy of love.
God made a promise to Israel, Israel failed, and God moved on. Gave the promise to someone else. Replaced the original with an upgrade?
Is that really the character of Christ?
If you believe it, you have a bigger problem than eschatology. You have a God who walks away.
Think about what Christ actually did. He came to Israel. His own people. They rejected Him. They handed Him to Rome. They shouted “crucify Him.” By every measure of the “conditional promise” argument, that was the moment God should have been done.
The condition was broken as definitively as it could possibly be broken. The chosen people rejected the Son of God to His face.
And what did Christ do?
He died for them anyway.
On the cross He prayed “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” He didn’t say “Father, transfer the covenant. They failed the condition.” He said forgive them.
After the resurrection, He didn’t go to Rome. He didn’t go to the gentiles first. He appeared to His Jewish disciples. He sent them to Jerusalem first. Acts 1:8. “You will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” Jerusalem first.
The character of Christ does not transfer covenants when people fail. The character of Christ pursues, forgives, restores, and keeps His word even when the other party breaks theirs. That is the entire Gospel. If God’s faithfulness depended on human performance, every one of us would be lost. Not just Israel. All of us.
If God replaced Israel for failing the condition, He would have replaced Peter for denying Him. He would have replaced you for every sin you’ve committed since the day you believed. He would have replaced me.
God does not break covenants. He fulfills them. He extends them. He grafts in new branches without cutting off the root. Romans 11:18. “Do not be arrogant toward the branches. It is not you who support the root, but the root that supports you.”