Iβm against tax payer funded stadiums, no matter the gender.
@richmondljr
Faith leader, podcaster, and nonprofit professional passionate about the church, leadership, and healthy masculinity. Host of the Future Christian Podcast, exploring how to help church leaders navigate into the future.
Iβm against tax payer funded stadiums, no matter the gender.
The Epstein story is the first time since Trump descended the golden escalator in 2015 that heβs lost control of the narrative. Maybe after Bidenβs win in 2020βbut even then, he made his voice heard with Jan 6 and launching back into campaign mode almost immediately. Feels noteworthy and important.
Correction, I think this was actually written in 1917 or so.
Nearly 140 years later and this is still basically the same strategy used by church planters in the West. And certainly accurate.
From the article: βThe church would be wrong to convince itself that it is only relevant when it engages in direct political action. The worship of God, with an awareness of what is happening in the world, is also a form of protest.β
I know itβs far more popular to simply bash on Christian nationalism, but we canβt protest CN and Project 2025 by saying, βDonβt impose your beliefs on others,β and then turn around and try to impose our own.
If we want our values to shape public life, we have to allow others the same opportunity.
Blaming Evangelicalism for all our societal woes makes for good social media clickbait but it doesnβt have data to defend the idea.
substack.com/@ryanburge/n...
Iβm convinced the a core fear of humans is that we are alone in the worldβand worseβwe donβt have what it takes to save ourselves.
From a new book βEmbracing a Mixed Ecology.β
Her and other people of faith being kind and generous is about the most one can reasonably βdo,β which is what makes it so hard. Simply being a vessel of Godβs loving presence, trusting that the Spirit can work. Itβs so hard because itβs so counterintuitive.
Those questions have to be the biggest challenge to the Christian faith and all one can honestly say is βIβm sorryβ and βI donβt know.β And pray for them on your own.
Last night my wife told me about hearing some stories of church hurt/abuse and questions of theodicy from coworkers and it kept me up, weighing heavily on my heart.
π ugh
I can bet there will be MULTIPLE politically aimed resolutions at (CC)DOC General Assembly next week, probably even one condemning CNβcertainly a paradoxical and probably hypocritical act in itself.
Anyone who says "This is what they voted for" in response to the tragedy unfolding in Texas is having a vile thought and needs to sit shamefully in a corner until they learn what solidarity is.
Are there really examples of this? Appalling if so.
These words from Susan Neiman really hit the nail on the head. Wokism tells white people they will always be bad. So, many have realized βif Iβm always going to be bad, I might as well enjoy being bad.β
I get the anger and the grief. But if all the left offers is scorn for this country, we leave folks choosing between cynicism and Trumpism. We need a vision that loves America enough to heal her.
Shocked π
I have been trying to make this point for some time! When something is everything, it is nothing.
The βbig, beautiful billβ is a morally reprehensible, ugly monstrosity.
Iβd recommend this book from Michael Hester. He does a deep and thorough analysis of all things related to online/digital worship.
We need more union organizersβnot activist elitesβin Democratic leadership. Organizers build coalitions and win lasting change. Activists too often chase purity tests and online clout
How is this still a thing!? Polis of all people, claiming to constantly be saving taxpayerβs money!??!
Where are my Episcopal clergy peeps? This is worth a listen!! podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/f...
This still resonates with me. Itβs not that God plans suffering, rather I think God is always able to bring good from pain.
My favorite FST guy Jack Shitama just talked about our cultural anxiety on a recent podcast. Can our anxieties be a result of rapid technological change?
This book is so much more than I expected!
Note especially that last sentence!