Heal your sick friends by your sympathy and support. Give life and vigor to them. They are physically alive but they have stopped living wonderful and meaningful lives. Let them know that they are accepted and loved by God.
I’m fighting for a western civilization where none of them had to die.
We’re not fighting red vs. blue.
We’re fighting good vs. evil.
Darkness vs. light.
We must win.
"Christ can save you from the bane of boredom. He awaits to give you a sense of direction and take the dissatisfaction out of your life." —Billy Graham
Tony Robbins asked his son a deeply philosophical question after reading the entire Bible in five days:
“Do you think God grows?”
He’d watched his son adopt a strict, hellfire version of Christianity and instead of arguing, Tony fasted, read the Old and New Testament cover to cover, and gently challenged him to seek his own direct experience with God rather than someone else’s filtered version.
True spiritual growth often begins when we stop accepting inherited dogma and start wrestling with the divine ourselves, allowing our understanding of God (or truth) to evolve along with us.
Have you ever had a moment where your understanding of God, truth, or meaning fundamentally shifted through personal experience?
Chris Williamson reading Mark Manson’s “10 years of therapy in 1 minute” is gold.
Here’s the condensed wisdom:
1. No one is coming to save you. You’re responsible for your life — even the parts that aren’t your fault.
2. Strong boundaries beat weak ones every time.
3. Most problems don’t get “fixed.” You just learn to live well with them.
4. Your mind lies constantly. Tell it to shut the fuck up.
5. Stop trying to convince people to like you. The right ones won’t need convincing.
6. Sometimes the best move is letting a dream die.
7. Only a few people will truly matter long-term. Keep them close.
Mark’s reaction? “Why isn’t this taught in schools?”
Which of these hits you the hardest right now?
🔥 “Everybody has a rulebook you live by. You just got to tell us what it is.”
Classic Charlie Kirk pressing the tough questions on morality, truth, and where your principles actually come from. No dodging allowed.
As an Ex-Muslim turned Christian, you know what's twisting my mind right now?
The Prodigal Son wasn't just a story about two brothers.
It was a story about humanity.
Specifically, it is about Jews and Muslims.
One son stayed close and became self-righteous.
One son ran far and became broken.
Both needed the Father, deeply.
The older brother reminds me of those who stayed near the house but became bitter when grace was extended to others: Jews.
The younger brother reminds me of every person who wandered, searched, failed, and finally came home: Muslims.
What does the Father do?
He runs, embraces, restores and celebrates the returning son.
No probation period, no earning your way back: Just total grace.
That's what makes the Gospel so powerful. The Father isn't looking for perfect sons.
He's looking for sons who come home.
The story was never about rule breakers versus rule keepers: It was about a Father inviting both to the table.
The rebel and the religious.
The far off, the near: They have the same Father and the same invitation.
They have the same open door, and the celebration isn't complete until the whole family is home.
God's Word never ceases to amaze me.
Thank you, Jesus! Amen! Have a great weekend.