America watched as church leaders in 2020 put the gathering of the saints on par with the meeting of the Rotary Club. Today, those churches are experiencing the results.

America watched as church leaders in 2020 put the gathering of the saints on par with the meeting of the Rotary Club. Today, those churches are experiencing the results.
If it feels like liberty is dying, and our republic is waning, it is because we’ve stopped caring about either.
As a self-governing people, our job is not to curse the surrounding darkness but to build a better and brighter light for the future.
It’s not over-priced hammers or frivolous trips that drive government spending; bad ideas about government is the problem.
Liberty isn’t achieved in timid nibbles, but through bold actions.
Think of the rich young ruler in the New Testament as Hunter Biden to understand the story.
Even with defeat inevitable, the people of Gamla decided to go down fighting.
Praying for our republic’s politicians and not the citizens is like asking a physician to alleviate the symptoms without addressing the disease.
There is no end to the litany of things about which to be angry – but it doesn’t mean we have to be endlessly upset.
It is up to the politician to have a plan to meet the citizens’ demands.
If we are to govern our republic, we must first govern ourselves.
Mary Nichols, one of the founding members of Texas Caregivers for Compromise, shares how citizens organized and motivated legislators to act.
Backing down from a principled fight is the quickest way to lose.
For our system of government to work, for liberty to be preserved, politicians must remember they are the citizens’ servants.
In politics, we’re encouraged to be distracted by the “game” between the Elephants and the Donkeys – even as the Republic is stolen from us.
Several of the state’s heralded barbecue rulers trace the deep roots of their family tree back to a century-old gymnasium in Taylor.
The decades-long Texas Right to Life story is one of everyday Texans deciding to finally do something to stop the greatest human rights violation in history.
Jesus didn’t tip-toe around the sensitivities of the political and social elite, and neither should we.
We must be willing to stand up and raise our voices, to defend and improve the lives of those around us.
We are witnesses to the bounty the blessing of liberty can bring, but in our sloth we risk – like the people of Chorazin – shrugging it off… and falling woefully away.
Let us live not for recognition, but for impact. Let us not seek fame, but to be of lasting value.
Jesus didn’t deserve to be born in a Bethlehem manger any more than we deserve the mercy He so lovingly offered at the cross.
Glad tidings of peace don’t come when we expect it, but when (and how) God knows we need it.
A dirty room won’t clean itself, and neither will a dirty government.
We must choose our response.