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For the rebirth of a Christian civilization.
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Forwarded from Reformed Memes (Rayzor)
Forwarded from βš‘️AZT-Pilled ✝️ (Spike52 ✝️ γ‚·γ‚°γƒžη”·ζ€§)
Forwarded from Toastpilled (π”π”žπ”±π”±)
"You will own nothing and be happy":
Forwarded from Gab.com
This is what happens when the moneychangers run your country
So much for "based Eastern Orthodoxy"
Forwarded from Autism Central
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Forwarded from Reformed Memes (Rayzor)
I'm seeing folks calling the destruction of the Georgia Guidestones "prophetic." This is an occassion for a good lesson -- in Scripture, destruction always *follows* a prophecy clearly predicting it and enumerating the sins being punished. In addition, God has spoken clearly in His word and so has no need to communicate through naked events. Thus, in no sense could this be considered "prophetic." That being said, it's still pretty funny. Let's just appreciate God's good providence without reading in hidden messages, ok folks.
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Forwarded from Gildas’ Plea
Today in 1415 John Huss was burned at the stake.

"What I have taught with my lips I now seal with my blood."
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Forwarded from Presbyterian and Reformed (Peter Ramus)
Why is it considered normal for people in the same church to have radically different political views?
Presbyterian and Reformed
Why is it considered normal for people in the same church to have radically different political views?
Because Christians no longer believe the law God gave to Moses is a good framework for organizing a society. Rather than obey God, they think it would be better for man to construct his own laws. With politics just as with theology, when people drift away from Scripture, it's only a matter of time until they become openly apostate.
I have a question for any Baptists (and especially Reformed Baptists) here: Can you express to me in a brief logical syllogism your best and strongest argument as to why only those who make a "credible profession" of faith and repentance should be baptized?

And when I say "logical syllogism" I mean a classical three-term argument: a) Atlanta is in Georgia, b) I am in Atlanta, therefore c) I am in Georgia. It must be in that form. Thank you.
I recall the statistic "for every 1% unemployment increases, 40k people die." I'm sure one could pick apart the methodology, but I'd be fascinated to hear a similar stat on inflation.
Forwarded from Disclose.tv
JUST IN - US inflation surges to 9.1%, the highest in 40 years and way hotter than expected.

https://www.disclose.tv/id/1547198036245372929/

@disclosetv
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Forwarded from Christian Apologetics
The Danger of Praying for Revival:

We should first define our terms – revival is certainly a biblical concept in that God does give new life and victory to the church at certain times. However, the modern conception of a sudden, unforeseen, emotion-sodden bolt from heaven is completely absent from Scripture and unknown throughout most of church history. That this second conception is dangerous should be agreed on by all.

But I still argue that praying for a more biblical idea of revival can be dangerous. Many Christians who are enamored of revival get lost in the idea and fail to take practical steps to further Christ’s dominion. Instead of moving the needle in the small but tangible ways that they can, they sit idly on the sidelines praying for revival. This is foolish since all major victories for the church were preceded by decades – if not centuries – of hard and thankless toil by millions of nameless and faceless saints unrecorded by history. It is enough to be one of these saints. God who sees in secret will reward them.
Forwarded from Fundamental Christianity
The Covenanters: committed to the full reform of the Scottish Kirk, they rode into battle under the banner of crown & covenant. Their saints found martyrdom with pistol in hand, battling the forces of popery & despotism. Bathed in light, they vigorously contended for the Scottish Presbyterian faith.
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Forwarded from The Wardrobe πŸ‘‘
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Forwarded from Morgoth's Review
C.S Lewis on the problem of the conformist midwit:

β€œWhy you fool, it's the educated reader who CAN be gulled. All our difficulty comes with the others. When did you meet a workman who believes the papers? He takes it for granted that they're all propaganda and skips the leading articles. He buys his paper for the football results and the little paragraphs about girls falling out of windows and corpses found in Mayfair flats. He is our problem. We have to recondition him. But the educated public, the people who read the high-brow weeklies, don't need reconditioning. They're all right already. They'll believe anything.”
― C.S. Lewis, That Hideous Strength
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