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Admin

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  1. Do Muslims Worship The Same God

    Do Muslims Worship The SAME God As Christians?
    By Brian S. Holmes
     Posted June 14, 2023
     In Christian Theology, Comparative Religion
    0
    Is Islam From God: A Biblical Christian Perspective
    Abstract
    Many Jews and Christians believe Muslims worship the same God, they just understand and relate to him differently. Is it more reasonable to believe Islam comes from the same source as Ancient Judaism and Christianity, or Satan, the founder of all false religion? Muslims believe Muhammad, the founder of Islam, to be the last and greatest of God’s prophets sent to correct misunderstanding and bring humanity back to right relationship with God. If true, presumably Islam would provide deeper understanding and intimacy with God, and more thoroughly, succinctly, and cohesively explain God’s interaction with humanity. However, if false, it would pattern Satan’s characteristics and agenda in the Bible which is typically to contradict the essential aspects of Ancient Judaism and Christianity. This paper examines the key historical events, overarching biblical narrative, and fundamental principles of Ancient Judaism and Christianity, and compares them with Islam to determine if Islam is from God or Satan.
    Israel and Ancient Judaism
    Israel.
    The nation of Israel was founded by God, through Moses, who he appeared to in a burning bush in Midian. God sent Moses to free the Israelites from slavery and bring them into the “Promised Land.” God said to Moses, “Say this to the people of Israel: ‘The LORD [Yahweh], the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you.’ This is my name forever, and thus I am to be remembered throughout all generations… gather the elders of Israel together and say to them, ‘…the God of your fathers… appeared to me, saying, “I will bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt to the land of the Canaanites…” (The Bible. ESV, 2001, Ex. 3:17) The Israelites hadn’t earned, nor did they deserve this privilege; God wanted a people that knew and reflected him to the world. Moses told Israel, “The LORD [Yahweh] your God has chosen you to be a people for his treasured possession, out of all the peoples who are on the face of the earth… not because you were more in number than any other people that the LORD set his love on you and chose you… but it is because the LORD loves you and is keeping the oath that he swore to your fathers…” (The Bible. ESV, 2001, Deut. 7:6-9)
    Abrahamic Covenant.
    Recorded in Genesis, God taught Moses his history of interaction with humanity, especially Moses’s ancestors leading up to their captivity in Egypt. God taught him how he called a seventy-five-year-old man named Abraham to trust him, leave his country, and travel thousands of miles to Canaan. God promised him that he would make him into a great nation, and through him all the families of the earth would be blessed (Gen. 12:1-3). Abraham and his wife Sarah struggled with how this could be possible, as they were both elderly and childless. Abraham proposed Eliezer, a member of his household, to become his heir. But in a vision God told him, “This man shall not be your heir; your very own son shall be your heir… “Look toward heaven, and number the stars… so shall your offspring be.” And he believed the LORD, and he counted it to him as righteousness.” (The Bible. ESV, 2001, Gen. 15:4-6) God’s covenant with Abraham wasn’t based not on his own righteousness or law keeping, but his faith: his trust in God’s plans and supernatural provision. A fundamental principle emerges here: a righteousness imputed onto a person by God based simply on their trust in God and his provision. Abraham’s righteousness by faith in God is referenced in Deuteronomy 24:13 and Psalm 106:31.
    Human Effort (Law) vs. Trust in God (Faith).
    After ten years of waiting on God’s yet- to-be-fulfilled promise, Abraham was eighty-six years old and still childless. His wife Sarah and he determined it best to take matters into their own hands and have Abraham lay and conceive a child with Hagar, Sarah’s young Egyptian servant. She gave birth to a son named Ishmael. Though we can empathize with their frustration and doubt, it was an act of faithlessness and disobedience. Thirteen years later it’s apparent God agrees because he appears to Abraham and tells him, Sarah, his now ninety-year-old wife, will supernaturally conceive and in one year bear him a son named Isaac. God says, “I will establish my covenant with him as an everlasting covenant for his offspring after him.” (The Bible. ESV, 2001, Gen. 17:19) Sarah struggled with jealousy towards Hagar and Ishmael and didn’t want any confusion about who would receive their inheritance. Mournfully Abraham agrees, and with God’s approval, Hagar and Ishmael were excommunicated. God promised to bless Ishmael and make him into a great nation too. However, it was always God’s plan to reward Abraham’s faith and bless the world through his miraculous son Isaac, “the child of the promise.” Ishmael was an unfortunate example of the consequences of relying on human wisdom and effort, rather than trusting in God’s plan, timing, and supernatural provision.
    Abraham’s Faith Tested.
    Years later God tells Abraham, “Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering.” As they approach the site, Isaac asked where the lamb for the offering was. Abraham responded, “God will provide for himself the lamb for a burnt offering, my son.” (The Bible. ESV, 2001, Gen. 22:2,8) The last second before plunging his knife into the chest of his already-bound-on-the-altar son, God says “stop” and a ram miraculously appears to be offered instead. God told Abraham, “because you… have not withheld your son, your only son, I will surely bless you… and in your offspring shall all the nations of the earth be blessed…” (The Bible. ESV, 2001, Gen. 22:16-18) Abraham believed God’s promise to provide descendants through Isaac. “He considered that God was able even to raise him from the dead…” (The Bible. ESV, 2001, Heb. 11:19)
    Twelve Tribes of Israel.
    God also tested the faith and established covenants with both Isaac and his son Jacob. Jacob has a life changing encounter with God who renames him “Israel” (Gen. 32:28). Jacob/Israel’s twelve sons later become the twelve tribes of Israel. Each family tribe was preserved, perpetually, God making covenants and prophesies within them. God’s covenant with King David to have a descendant to be Messiah would be from his same tribe: Judah.
    Passover.
    The evening before Pharaoh agreed to release the Israelites, God instructed every Israelite household to sacrifice a lamb and paint the doorposts of their home with its blood. The blood was a sign for God’s angel of death to “pass over” them. The firstborn son of every home in Egypt without this blood would die that night. For those trusting God, he allowed a lamb to be killed as a substitute in place of their firstborn sons. This was also an allusion to how he provided a substitute for Isaac. God commanded Israel to have an annual Passover holiday to remember and teach the significance of this event to all future generations forever (Ex. 12).
    Penal Substitutionary Atonement.
    Sin incurred the wrath of God, deserving the penalty of death, but God, in his grace, allowed an animal to die in the place of a repentant sinner as their substitute. God said, “For the life of the flesh is in the blood, and I have given it for you on the altar to make atonement for your souls…” (The Bible. ESV, 2001, Lev. 17:11) God desired to dwell within Israelite as their king. However, he’s righteous and holy and will not tolerate being around sin or mixing with the common, so he had the Israelites build him a temple to dwell in. He gave detailed ceremonial laws necessary to be ritually “clean” to enter the temple, designating certain foods and activities as clean and unclean. God provided detailed laws for how to give offerings for blessing or the forgiveness of sin and designated the tribe of Levi as priests to manage it. Fifteen hundred years animals were sacrificed daily for individuals’ sins, and several annual holidays, where sacrifices were offered on behalf of the entire community. This regular practice was also an allusion to Passover and Abraham’s near sacrifice of Isaac, where animals died as our substitute.
    Christianity: Logical Fulfillment of Ancient Judaism
    Christianity accepts the history, laws, and prophecies in the Jewish Scriptures as true and provides a richer explanation, continuation, and progression of Ancient Judaism. Jesus is the promised Jewish Messiah; a descendant of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; from the tribe of Judah, and royal heir to King David. God prophesied that the righteous Messiah would be unjustly killed, but he would be pleased by this because he would be a penal substitutionary atonement for the sins of his people (Isa. 53). This occurred when Jesus was crucified. He’s the embodiment of the ram offered in Isaac’s place and every single animal sacrificed. He was crucified on Passover day. Jesus is the ultimate Passover Lamb of God whose one-time perfect sacrifice takes away the sins of the world (John 1:29; Heb. 10:1-18). Jesus fulfilled every covenant and hundreds of prophecies.
    God prophesied that the Messiah would be divine (Isa. 9:6-7). As Jesus, Yahweh, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, became flesh. He was conceived by the Holy Spirit in the womb of the Virgin Mary, born as truly God and truly man (Col. 1:15; John 1:1-3,14). This is how God could both fulfill the covenant promises of a human descendant and establish an eternal kingdom with himself as king. Because Jesus bypassed conventional conception, he didn’t inherit the fallen sin nature of Adam and was sinless with unhindered spiritual communion with God. As human he can represent humanity and be our eternal high priest, superseding the Levitical priesthood in the order of Melchizedek, which was also prophesied (Heb. 1-10). As both the lamb and the priest, he is the fulfillment of the Law, making both Jews and Gentiles who trust in and belong to him justified, forgiven, and “clean.” (Matt. 5:17; Rom. 3:21-26). Righteousness by faith in Christ is the fulfillment of Abraham’s “righteousness by faith” (Jam. 2:23; Gal. 3:6, Rom. 4).
    God promised a covenant where both Jews and non-Jews could receive his spirit, and he would write his laws on their hearts and minds so they could know him and receive eternal life. Through faith in Jesus, people become adopted by God as their father, and spiritually regenerated when God’s Holy Spirit comes to live inside of them forever. They become the new temples of God (1 Cor. 3:16-17)—which is why God has not rebuilt the temple in Jerusalem. Followers of Jesus can now live in a relational, intimate, and supernaturally powerful way, led by God’s Spirit, to reflect him in the world and share the “good news.” This gospel is how Jesus is fulfilling God’s covenant to bless all nations on earth through Abraham’s descendant (Gal. 3:6-29).
    Islam: Illogical, Divergent and Regressive
    The Bible anticipates people rejecting the gospel and persisting trying to earn salvation through human effort. Galatians 4:21-31 described the futility of continuing in “slavery” to “Law,” akin to Hagar/Ishmael, when “freedom” is provided through Jesus, akin to righteousness by trusting in God’s provision (Isaac). Nonetheless, Islam does exactly this. It ignores every notion of eternal covenants between God and people. Abraham and all other biblical figures are believed to be mere prophets, esteemed only for their obedience to God’s laws. Ishmael is even considered the greater over Isaac, born as the result of Abraham marrying Hagar, conceived as a good decision. Islam believes that it was he who Abraham nearly sacrificed to God. (IslamicFinder.org) But in Islam there are no covenant promises through that son, nor is there a future temple, priesthood, sacrificial system, concept of atonement, or righteousness by faith developed. So why God would’ve asked Abraham to offer Ishmael, contextually, makes no sense at all. Islam is a simple pagan religion based on laws to appease a deity, making it nothing like Judaism or Christianity.
    Law.
    The five pillars of Islam are: “1) Faith or belief in the Oneness of God (Allah) and the finality of the Prophethood of Muhammad; 2) Establishment of the 5 daily prayers; 3) Concern for and almsgiving to the needy; 4) Self-purification through fasting in the month of Ramadan; 5) The pilgrimage to Mecca for those who are able.” (WhyIslam.org, para. 2) Islam is: 1) the denial of essentials of Judaism and Christianity—God’s covenants, God’s desire to dwell with humanity as king; the perfectly righteous standard of God requiring death to atone for sin; Jesus’ divinity, crucifixion, atonement, salvation by faith, spiritual regeneration; 2) the eminence of Muhammad; and 3) the institution of new religious laws. Islam lacks sufficient coherency and connection to everything before it. The entire system of Jewish law and religious practice implemented for over 2,000 years is overridden, without explanation, with new Islamic laws. Interestingly, many of the “unclean” Jewish foods continue to also be forbidden in Islam—even though there is no temple and thus zero reason for this. It’s a completely illogical deviation from the pattern.
    Prophecy.
    Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, David, and every prophet of Israel, had God speak directly to them. However, Muhammad didn’t hear from God directly. Every message he received, he was told it was from God, but they were provided second-hand from an angel claiming to be the Gabriel from the Bible. Islam is based on thousands of messages received by Muhammad alone from Gabriel alone, over a twenty-three-year period. This contradicts precedent, where for millennia, every other angelic visitation in the Bible was rare and didn’t provide random “information” but rather specific directives. Muhammad’s frequent communication with the same disembodied spirit is how the Bible describes psychics contacting familiar spirits (demons). In Christianity, Jesus is God and God’s Spirit dwells inside Jesus’s disciples. Muhammad’s source of revelation is thus both dissimilar and unimpressive. Despite the Bible being 66 books written by 40 authors spanning over 1,500 years, it has a unified narrative and voice, arguably God’s. However, the Qur’an has a distinct narrative and voice unlike any others in the Bible.
    Islam claims to embrace the same key biblical figures, but it eliminates all meaningful historical relevance of these people and the multifaceted story that connected them. Islam uses their names but asserts that they’re merely “prophets, who taught Islam”—an accusation with zero historical evidence. Those Christian doctrines Islam preserves—Jesus’ virgin birth, miracles, messiahship, and bodily ascension—are irrelevant and illogical within the Islamic narrative.
    Conclusion
    Christianity provides a continuation, richer explanation, and spiritual progression of Ancient Judaism. Islam is a total distortion and regression of both narratives, stripping all history and spiritual development from its antecedents, leaving behind nothing more than a simplified, entirely law-based sixth-century pagan religion. It brings its adherents farther from the true God and true spirituality in nearly every possible way, all without offering valid explanations for such dramatic differences. Based on the evidence, I conclude that Islam does not come from the same source as Ancient Judaism and Christianity but is rather a satanic counterfeit religion.
    References
    English Standard Version Bible. (2001). ESV Online. https://biblehub.com/esv/
    IslamicFinder.org. Biography of Prophet Ismael (Hazrat Ismail)
    Retrieved May 20, 2023, from https://www.islamicfinder.org/knowledge/biography/story-of-prophet-ismail/
    WhyIslam.org. (2014, November 4). The Five Pillars of Islam.
    Retrieved May 20, 2023, from https://www.whyislam.org/the-five-pillars-of-islam/

  2. James O’Keefe: Charlie Kirk Was the Greatest Man I’ve Ever Known

    James O’Keefe: Charlie Kirk Was the Greatest Man I’ve Ever Known
    Charlie Kirk Staff
    Investigative journalist James O’Keefe delivered a deeply personal tribute to Charlie Kirk, calling him “the greatest man I’ve ever personally known.” O’Keefe reflected on their friendship, Kirk’s faith and consistency, and the movement he built from scratch into a national force.
    O’Keefe recounted their first meeting in a Chicago diner in 2012, when Kirk was just 18 years old with “ambitious, grandiose, and seemingly improbable” plans to create a mass youth movement. Over the years, O’Keefe said, Kirk became not only a political leader but a moral and spiritual guide who helped him through his darkest times, even providing financial support when O’Keefe was struggling to rebuild.
    JAMES O’KEEFE: Charlie Kirk’s death is a dark moment for America per President Trump. It’s also a turning point for you and me, a call to action and a time for choosing.
    First let me tell you about my relationship with Charlie. Charlie was the greatest man I’ve ever personally known. He was a moral, kind, generous and irreplaceable man. Charlie was Turning Point USA, the organization he founded. We are sad today, because he represented the best of America and what we as men aspire to be.
    What set him apart was that he was the least hypocritical man I’ve ever known. He practiced what he preached in his professional and personal life like no other. Now, as for what he built, I would often watch him work and utter to myself, he’s a force of nature. He was a modern-day William F. Buckley Jr. meets Rush Limbaugh meets community organizer, and it hurts to see him gone from this earth after all that was seemingly planned for him. Many of us know he would have one day been President.
    As Kierkegaard once said, “The most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly the one that you’ll never have.” For those of you who have never met Charlie Kirk, this feels like a death in the family. But for those of us who did know him, and thousands of us were his friends, that says a lot about his character. By the way, we’re heartbroken and grieving with a depth we’ve never before experienced in our lives.
    I first met him in a Chicago diner in 2012 when he was 18, and I was 27. He was persistent in reaching out to me, looking to obtain a meeting, to receive guidance and advice on what he set out to build. He spoke confidently at this diner about his plans to build a mass movement of young people. I remember thinking at the time just how ambitious, grandiose and seemingly improbable all these plans seemed, even for this precocious kid. But it was a world-changing idea.
    Yet few people actually had the X factor that Charlie Kirk had. That was actually something that one of my previous board members, Jim Young, said — many people recognized that in him. Sitting across from me was this teenager with a half-eaten sandwich, speaking with the quiet conviction of Martin Luther: “Here I stand. I can do no other.”
    I saw him shortly thereafter, living on a couch at Lee Handel’s house on Palm Beach Island. Lee was a donor I was soliciting for money on that day. Charlie was running around the country, sleeping on couches, starting this organization out of his parents’ place in Chicago. He was indefatigable, relentless, executing his vision. I vividly recall Rush Limbaugh saying, “Everywhere I go, I run into Charlie Kirk.” He said that at the time, while at Mar-a-Lago.
    A decade later, Charlie built his mass movement. But the irony was, it was now me, 10 years his senior, asking him for advice. I had to start all over. I was in the rebuilding phase, and he was on the phone with me, coaching me through my darkest days. I remember pulling over to the side of the road on the highway, pacing through the grass next to the overpass as we had profound conversations about the difference between knowledge and wisdom, as he tried to help me find God in the face of unimaginable evil and betrayal.
    And I’ll never forget the question he asked me on the phone that day. He said, “Do you love yourself, James?” He made me be a better person.
    Then shortly after that, in San Diego in September of 2023 at the Turning Point Faith Conference, he summoned me on stage. This was not planned. On stage with Pastor Rob McCoy, he asked the entire convention center of 1,200 pastors to pray for me. Charlie put his hands on my shoulder and said, “I want us to pray for James O’Keefe and show him some encouragement during the difficult time he’s going through.”
    But it wasn’t just spiritual advice. Charlie prayed as if it depended on God. He acted as if it depended on him. For example, he helped me make payroll one month that year, 2023, when I was rebuilding the company. That was an act that moved even the nonbelievers on our staff.
    Many others who knew him have many similar stories like this. I looked up to him and deeply admired him. He was a role model of what a man ought to be — a better man than we, a model of civility and heroism in an age where those things have been under constant attack.


  3. ERIKA KIRK’S BATTLECRY: Charlie’s Mission Will Continue. We Will Never Surrender

    ERIKA KIRK’S BATTLECRY: Charlie’s Mission Will Continue. We Will Never Surrender
    Charlie Kirk Staff

    Mrs. Erika Kirk addressed the world on Friday night in an inspiring and heart-wrenching speech that paid tribute to her martyred husband Charlie. Speaking from a podium next to his empty chair in his broadcast studio, she honored him, spoke of her love, affirmed their shared faith in Jesus Christ, and promised to carry on his work with Turning Point USA The mission continues. For Charlie.
    Mrs. Kirk’s words went beyond simple gratitude for those who cared for her husband and those he cherished. They rang out as a rallying call—for the movement he built, for the country, and for the wider world.
    Mrs. Kirk’s Full Speech:
    Good evening. My name is Erika Kirk. Charlie Kirk is my husband.
    I first want to thank the local, state, and federal law enforce enforcement who worked tirelessly to capture my husband’s assassin so that he can be brought to justice. I want to thank the first responders who struggled heroically heroically to save Charlie’s life. and the police who acted bravely to make sure that there were no other victims on that terrible afternoon.
    I want to thank the officers who have protected our Turning Point USA family these past two days. And I want to thank the Turning Point USA board, the COO, Justin Strife, and my husband’s chief of staff, the amazing Mikey McCoy, for all their work in these terrible days to be the stability for our family and for the wider Turning Point USA family as well.
    My heart is with every one of my husband’s employees who lost a friend and a mentor. I want to thank the staffers of this his amazing Charlie Kirk show who helped him broadcast from this studio, this this chair every day. He loved it. He loved what he did. I want to thank the millions of people who have shown their love for Charlie here in Phoenix, across America, and worldwide.
    I want to thank my husband’s dear friend, Vice President Vance, and his phenomenal wife, Usha, for their love and support. You guys honored my husband so well bringing him home. You both are tremendous.
    I want to thank President Trump and his incredible family for the same. Mr. president. My husband loved you. And he knew that you loved him, too. He did. Your friendship was amazing. You supported him so well, as did he for you.
    Two days ago, my husband Charlie went to see the face of his savior and his God. Charlie always said that when he was gone, he he wanted to be remembered for his courage and for his faith. And one of the final conversations that he had on this earth, my husband witnessed for his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.
    Now and for all eternity, he will stand at his savior’s side wearing the glorious crown of a martyr.
    Charlie loved loved life. He loved his life. He loved America. He loved nature, which helped him always bring him closer to God. He loved the Chicago Cubs. And my goodness, did he love the Oregon Ducks.
    He would want me to say, “Go Ducks.” So, I have to, since they play on Saturday. So, go Ducks. But most of all, Charlie loved his children and he loved me with all of his heart. And I knew that every day I knew that he made sure. I knew that every day. Every day he would ask me, “How can I serve you better? How can I be a better husband? How can I be a better father?” Every day. Every day. Such a good man.
    He still is a good man. He was the perfect father. He was the perfect husband. Charlie always believed that God’s design for marriage in the family was absolutely amazing. And it is. It is. And it was the greatest joy of his life. And over and over he would tell all these young people to come and and find their future spouse, become wives and husbands and parents. And the reason why is because he wanted you all to experience what he had and still has. He wanted everyone to bring heaven into this earth through love and joy that comes from raising a family. It’s beautiful.
    Charlie always said that if he ever ran for office, I know a lot of you asked if he ever was going to, but privately he told me if he ever did run for office that his top priority would be to revive the American family. That was his priority. One of Charlie’s favorite Bible verses was Ephesians 5 verse 25. “Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her.” My husband laid down his life for me, for our nation, for our children. He showed the ultimate and true covenantal love. I will never ever have the words to describe the loss that I feel in my heart.
    I honestly have no idea what any of this means. I know that God does, but I don’t. But Charlie, baby, I know you do, too. I know you do. So does our Lord.
    And our world is filled with evil. But our God, you guys, our God is so good. So incredibly good. And we know that for those who love God, all things work together for good for those who are called according to his purpose. Already, I have seen the worldwide outpouring of love for my husband. I’ve heard the testimonies from people my husband inspired to get married, to start families, to seek out a relationship with God. It’s the most important one of all.
    The evildoers responsible for my husband’s assassination have no idea what they have done. They killed Charlie because he preached a message of patriotism, faith, and of God’s merciful love. But they should all know this. If you thought that my husband’s mission was powerful before, you have no idea. You have no idea what you just have unleashed across this entire country, in this world. You have no idea. You have no idea the fire that you have ignited within this wife. The cries of this widow will echo around the world like a battlecry.
    To everyone listening tonight across America, the movement my husband built will not die. It won’t. I refuse to let that happen. It will not die. All of us will refuse to let that happen. No one will ever forget my husband’s name. And I will make sure of it. It will become stronger, bolder, louder, and greater than ever. My husband’s mission will not end, not even for a moment. And one of Charlie’s greatest talents was his ability, this phenomenal ability to choose great people to follow him.
    He could always find the ones who could handle any setback. And it’s almost like he knew. He just he could see it in you. Even when you couldn’t see it in yourself, he just knew. He knew you could handle it. You thought you only had 5% left. And he knew you had 15. He knew you were ready to go that extra mile even when you didn’t. He always challenged people around him to work harder and to be better. He never gave up. And I love knowing that one of his one of his mottos was never surrender.
    So I want to tell you that that we’ll never surrender. We never will ever ever. Our campus tour this fall will continue. There will be even more tours in the years to come. America Fest here in Phoenix this December will go on. It will be greater than ever. The radio and podcast show that he was so proud of will go on. And in a world filled with chaos, doubt, and uncertainty, my husband’s voice will remain. And it will ring out louder and more clearly than ever. and his wisdom will endure.
    My favorite too, but my husband’s favorite word in the English language was “earn.” He would call all of you to be people of action who earn the future America deserves. So, to all of the young people who felt inspired by my husband’s faith in hard work, all of you already know what Charlie would want you to do. You know, you know, if you’re in high school or if you’re in college, go find your local Turning Point USA chapter. Join it. Stay involved.
    He wants you to make a difference. And you can. You can. The movement’s not going anywhere. And it will only grow stronger when you join it. If there isn’t a chapter, you can’t find one. Then start one. There is no excuse. You can start one. And as my husband used to say in this room every single day, if you want to get involved, the best way you can do that is going to tpusa.com. That’s what he would say every day from this chair. every single day. I watched his show every day and he would always say, “If you want to get involved, go to tpusa.com.” If you’re a pastor, join our movement at TPUSA Faith. And if you’re a parent, I highly recommend that you come to America Fest in December.
    Sign up right now for that because we would love to see you. I would love to see you. Charlie would. He’ll be there. He’ll be there in spirit. Bring your kids. Bring your family. But most important of all, if you aren’t a member of a church, I beg you to join one.
    Our battle is not simply a political one. Above all, it is spiritual. It is spiritual. The spiritual warfare is palpable. Charlie loved his savior with all of his heart. And he wanted every one of you to know him, too. He wanted everyone to know that if they confess, if they confess the Lord Jesus Christ who rose from the dead, then they will be saved.
    Hear me when I say this: nobody is ever too young to know the gospel. Nobody … nobody is ever too young to get involved with saving this beautiful country. This country my husband loved and still loves. And nobody is ever too old either. There’s no age limit.
    I know my husband is still here. He’s watching over us. I don’t remember the last time I slept. And I couldn’t sleep last night. And Charlie, baby, Charlie, I promise I will never let your legacy die, baby. I won’t. I promise I’ll make Turning Point USA the biggest thing that this nation has ever seen. I promise. Charlie, I love you. I love you, baby. Rest in the arms of our Lord as he blankets you with the words I know your heart always strived to hear “Well done, my good and faithful servant.”
    When I got home last night, Gigi, our daughter just ran into our my arms. And I talked to her and she said, “Mommy, I missed you.” I said, “I miss you, too, baby.” She goes, “Where’s Daddy?” What do you tell a three-year-old? She’s three.
    I said, “Baby, Daddy loves you so much. Don’t you worry. He’s on a … he’s on a work trip with Jesus, so he can afford your blueberry budget.” And my goodness, am I so humbled to witness Charlie, you alongside Jesus right now doing what you always want to do, baby. Making heaven crowded, right? That’s what it’s all about. Making heaven crowded. I can’t wait to see you again one day. Thank you all again who love my husband, who supported him, who wrote him an email every single day during his radio show. He read all of them. All of them.
    God bless you all and may God bless America.
  4. How To Walk in the Spirit

    You can be guided by the Holy Spirit 24/7. Here are five steps to help you learn how to walk in the spirit.
    What’s the first thing you think of when you wake up in the morning? A cup of coffee? How comfortable your bed is? Your list of things to do? Every decision and step we take each day is driven by something—a growling stomach, a sense of responsibility, a desire for success. Your day is determined by one of two driving forces—your flesh or your spirit.
    What’s the default setting and the natural thing to do? To let the flesh control you. The flesh is loud and demanding. It likes to have its own way, and it sure doesn’t give up easily. It may not seem like it, but you have control over what controls you. You aren’t meant to let your flesh rule your life—you’re meant to walk in the spirit and live on a higher level, where victory reigns and righteousness rules. You can walk in the spirit and be guided by the Holy Spirit 24/7.
    Do you want to know how to walk in the spirit? You can do it! The Spirit of God is in you right now. You may not feel like it, but He is there—speaking to you, directing you to freedom and blessing. God wants you to operate in the realm of the spirit—not in this natural world—because that’s how you live the life you’ve always dreamed of. That’s how you claim victory—by walking in the spirit.
    If you’re feeling discouraged and defeated—there is a better quality of life available to you when you walk in the spirit, but it won’t happen overnight. It is a transformation from one degree of glory to another and one move of obedience to another. To begin enjoying the blessings of a Spirit-led life, here are five steps to help you learn how to walk in the spirit.
    Step No. 1: Walk in the Spirit by Throwing Off Hindrances
    “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.” –Hebrews 12:1, NIV
    Notice this verse doesn’t say anything about gently removing things one at a time. No! It says to throw them off. If you’ve ever seen someone who has come in contact with fire ants or bees, you know they don’t stop and consider whether they should remove them, and they certainly don’t do so slowly. They make a vigorous and determined effort to get those pests away from them. Why? Because they know the damage and pain that could be inflicted if left unaddressed.
    So, don’t sit around wondering if you should stop sinning or cast the devil out of your life—get rid of it! You weren’t created to be a slave to anything.
    What is a hindrance?
    Anything that is out of line with the Word of God is a hindrance. That’s why Satan is so determined to strap hindrances onto your spirit. He wants to slow you down and keep you from reaching THE BLESSING. Hindrances can include any of the following:
    Sexual vice, impurity, unholy desires, greed
    Anger, rage, bad feelings toward others, cursing, slander, foul-mouth abuse and shameful utterances
    Adultery, fornication, idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, strife, envy, murders, drunkenness and anything like them (Colossians 3:5-6; Galatians 5:19).
    How can you throw off hindrances?
    “We do this by keeping our eyes on Jesus.” –Hebrews 12:2
    To get rid of those things that are slowing you down, and to walk in the spirit, the natural world has to become small in your heart and mind, while the things of God become bigger and bigger. If you have a sin habit in your life—something you know isn’t pleasing to God—now is the time to rid your life of it as fast as you would get away from fire ants and bees.
    Maybe there are some things you watch on television you shouldn’t be watching. Things that deplete your spirit. There are times when you just need to say “no” out loud when something is displeasing to the Father. Even shout it out if you need to. Say, “No, I do not receive that. I cast down every high imagination that tries to exalt itself against God.”
    Allow the Holy Spirit to correct and guide you as you work toward walking in the spirit every day. He will help you not only to separate yourself from the world, but to desire the things of God more than anything else.
    Step No. 2: Walk in the Spirit by Sowing to the Spirit
    “He who sows to the Spirit will of the Spirit reap everlasting life.” –Galatians 6:8, NKJV
    The New Testament in Modern English by J. B. Phillips says, “A man’s harvest in life will depend entirely on what he sows.” This means, if you want to walk in the spirit, you can’t sow your time to the world. You’ve got to sow to the spirit to reap the harvest of a blessed and fulfilled life—lacking nothing.
    How do you sow to the spirit?
    With your time. Many Christians don’t grow because they don’t get the Word into themselves. If you don’t give God time, natural voices will overwhelm His Spirit in your life.
    Sure, you have things you need to do in the natural—but they shouldn’t take up all your time. Give your spirit the opportunity to feed on the Word of God, fellowship with Him, and build yourself up in faith.  It doesn’t take a lot of time. Kenneth E. Hagin once prophesied the importance of giving the Lord a tithe of your time—just an hour or two each day. You might say, I don’t have an hour! But the truth is—you’ll make time for anything if it’s important enough. There are no shortcuts to the good life.
    When you sow to the spirit, it will take you into a realm where you’ve never been before. In fact, when you get to a place where the truth of God’s Word is so real, the Spirit of God will rise up on the inside of you and you’ll do things you never would have done before.
    Step No. 3: Walk in the Spirit by Presenting Your Body as a Living Sacrifice
    “Present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service.  And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.”—Romans 12:1-2, NKJV
    At first, that sounds like a big commitment. It is! But that’s what Jesus did for us—He presented His body a living sacrifice. But what does this really mean for us? How do we present our body as a living sacrifice to God?
    Lay aside the things of the world. This means being willing to give up activities, friends or habits that don’t match God’s best for our lives—walking away from anything that is not pleasing to the Lord.
    For more on guarding your heart from the world, find it here.
    Obey righteousness, not the flesh. The reason people get so good at sin is because they practice it. For example, a person doesn’t become an alcoholic the first time he takes a drink. He had to practice drinking until the flesh was trained to demand it. To become good at obeying the Holy Spirit, we must practice.
    Make a daily decision. You make a decision to put on the Spirit each day the same way you would put on a coat. Pastor George Pearsons presents himself to the Lord as a living sacrifice, according to Romans 12:1, by speaking the following declaration first thing every morning:
    Father, I present my body to You as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to You, for this is my reasonable service—my divine worship for You. I command my body to submit to my spirit. Father, according to Hebrews 12:1-2, I lay aside every weight and the sin that so easily entangles me so that I may run with patience the race that is set before me, looking unto Jesus, who is the Author and Finisher of my faith.
     In Jesus’ Name, I am taking command of my body. Body, mind, you can’t tell me what to do or think. Spirit man, you’re in charge. Body and mind, you submit to the spirit.
    As you continue to present yourself to the Lord, it may take some time for things to straighten out, but if you’re willing to be obedient, it won’t take long. It would be backward for us to say we’ll get things right in our lives first, and then walk in the spirit. As we obey the Holy Spirit’s leading first, the other things in our life will straighten out.
    Step No. 4: Walk in the Spirit by Praying in the Spirit Daily
    “For we do not know what prayer to offer nor how to offer it worthily as we ought, but the Spirit Himself goes to meet our supplication and pleads in our behalf with unspeakable yearnings and groanings too deep for utterance.” –Romans 8:26, AMPC
    The most powerful way to begin walking in the spirit is to start praying in the spirit—it is the gateway to living life above what you have ever known. Praying in the spirit accomplishes so much all at once.
    It charges and strengthens your spirit.
    It enables you to overcome the weakness of the flesh—any bad habits.
    It makes it easier to receive from God and keep what you have received.
    It strengthens your ability to resist the devil.
    It causes your inner man to rise up in adversity.
    It reveals things to your spirit you could never know by your own ability.
    Step No. 5: Walk in the Spirit by Obeying the Promptings of the Holy Spirit
    “The sheep follow him, for they know his voice.” –John 10:4, ESV
    The Holy Spirit is ALWAYS speaking to you. There’s an answer to every problem you’re facing today—whether financial, health or family related. The worst problem in your marriage, health or finances is only one word from the Lord away from a complete turnaround. How can you access these answers? Through heeding the voice of the Holy Spirit.
    The question is: How far do you want to go in your walk with God?
    So many times, people will say I’d go to Africa or China if God asked me to, yet they won’t obey Him in the small things. They won’t forgive someone; they won’t stop watching ungodly television programming; they won’t spend time with Him daily.
    That’s what happened to Peter. He told Jesus, “I’d die for You,” yet when Jesus simply asked him to watch and pray with Him one hour, he fell asleep.
    Everything God tells you to do is important.  So, tune in to the Spirit of the Lord in all things, even when He’s telling you something that seems small, or something you don’t want to hear.
    Confess this every day: “I hear the voice of the Good Shepherd, and a stranger’s voice I will not follow” (John 10:5).
    When you obey the promptings of the Holy Spirit, you will be in the right place at the right time, doing the right thing with the right people. And you will have success and victory in everything you do.
    When you take these five steps toward walking in the spirit, there will be no limit to what you can achieve. You will stop letting your flesh control you and begin living a Spirit-led life of peace, joy and blessing beyond anything you’ve ever hoped or imagined. You will live the God kind of life right here on earth!
    Original Post: https://blog.kcm.org/how-to-walk-in-the-spirit/
  5. Fasting by Jentzen Franklin

    Posted at 08:33h in Christian Blog, Christian Book Reviews, Christian Devotional Book Reviews, Christian Living, Christian Non-Fiction Book Reviews by Lea Peters 0 Comments
    Jentezen Franklin’s book, Fasting: Opening the Door to a Deeper, More Intimate, More Powerful Relationship with God, explores fasting and its transformative effects on a believer’s life. Grounded in Biblical principles, Franklin emphasizes that fasting goes beyond mere food abstinence; it is a deliberate act of devotion intended to deepen one’s relationship with God.
    My insights from “Fasting”
    The book’s central theme is the Biblical basis for fasting. It discusses the different types of fasts found in Scripture—absolute, normal, and partial—and offers guidance on choosing the right fast according to personal circumstances and spiritual objectives.
    The link between fasting and prayer is thoroughly explored. The book highlights that fasting alongside prayer enhances our spiritual sensitivity and aligns our hearts with God’s intentions.
    Franklin emphasizes the importance of managing our Physical, Mental, and Spiritual Expectations.
    Fasting has both challenges and rewards, including physical hunger, mental clarity, and spiritual breakthroughs.
    Finally, advice on implementing fasting in daily life is explored for Practical Application. Readers are encouraged to approach fasting with a spirit of humility and dedication.

    Fasting by Jentezen Franklin
    What I took away from “Fasting”
    1. Fasting is a personal discipline that fosters a partnership with God.
    2. There are various types of fasts. I need to discern what God is calling me to.
    3. Fasting serves to control the flesh. Jesus fasted, so I should too.
    4. I need to blend faith and patience into my experience when I fast. Results aren’t always immediate.
    5. The question I must ask myself during the fast is, what is God’s goal for the fast? Not what my goal is for the fast.
    6. A lack of repentance and unforgiveness will invalidate any fast. I need to approach a time of fasting with self-awareness.
    Who should read “Fasting”?
    I highly recommend Fasting by Jentezen Franklin to all believers, regardless of their current stage on the spiritual journey. Whether you’re new to fasting or have fasted before but wish to deepen your understanding, this book offers Biblical insight and practical guidance that can transform your spiritual life.
    Many Christians today overlook fasting, treating it as optional or outdated—but Franklin reawakens its significance as a powerful, God-ordained discipline. Through this book, readers will better appreciate how fasting can unlock a more intimate, focused relationship with God. Franklin explains the “how” and the “why” of fasting, helping believers grasp its spiritual impact—from breakthroughs in prayer to increased spiritual clarity to a renewed hunger for God’s presence.
    This book holds significant value for individuals seeking guidance, longing for renewal, or experiencing spiritual dryness. It’s also perfectly suited for church leaders and small group discussions, offering clear instruction and motivation to reinstate this frequently overlooked practice in our spiritual journeys.
    Ultimately, Fasting empowers and motivates believers to seek God with greater intensity, sacrificing physical desires to attain everlasting rewards.

  6. Your Past Has Purpose

    In prayer this morning the Lord showed me that all our suffering, past failures, loss, abuse, hurts, and dysfunction serves as a platform in our life for God to work if we will allow him too. We often ask God why, or feel low, or even get depressed about the things we have been through that caused us hurt and pain. He impressed me this morning that it all has purpose ... HIS purpose!
    According to Luke 4:18, if He is going to use us to fulfill His vision of preaching the gospel to the POOR, healing the BROKENHEARTED, preaching deliverance to the CAPTIVES, recovering of sight to the BLIND, and setting at liberty them that are BRUISED, then we can actually THANK God for all our hurt, loss, and problems. They position us to be able to bring this gospel with a heartfelt compassion, sympathy, and care because we have been there and know the redeeming power of God!
    Today, I thanked God for letting me grow up in the "hood" (inner city) where people were poor and sin was rampant, for being raised by a single mother, for the abuse and dysfunction I saw and experienced, and for the loss in my family and the cycle of sin. It doesn’t make sense in the flesh to thank God, but spiritually, These are to whom and to where Jesus called us to preach the gospel, according to Luke 4:18. It has set the platform for great ministry!!
    I am passionate about proclaiming the Gospel to the hurting, poor, and wounded souls. I am glad that God has allowed me to walk the path I have had to walk. Now I get to see others experience the same freedom in Christ that I have found! Evangelism is my love! The inner city, the poor, and the wounded has my heart! 
    Don't allow the Enemy to depress you. Don’t begrudge your past or your hurts. Embrace them, love through them, preach through them, and do the work of Luke 4:18 that Jesus called you to do! YOU have purpose, my friend! Now you have a platform to minister from!

    Credit: https://kathyshaw.net/blog/f/your-past-has-purpose (Kathy Shaw Ministries)
  7. Broken Hallelujah: When God’s “No” Is Still His Goodness

    The Testimonies We Don’t Always Tell
    Many are the plans in a person’s heart, but it is the Lord’s purpose that prevails. Proverbs 19:21 NIV
    We love stories that end in joy.
    The kind where the waiting is rewarded, the prayer is answered, and the promise is fulfilled.
    We celebrate the woman who finally had the baby, the man who finally got the job, and the couple who finally got married. And we should.
    But what about the stories that don’t end that way?
    What about the woman who never became a mother… and still found purpose?
    What about the person whose long-awaited “yes” never came, yet they chose to stay faithful?
    This is a reflection on both.
    A story about hope fulfilled, and hope surrendered.
    And how, in both, God is still good.
    When the Movie Feels Like a Mirror: Watching “Broken Hallelujah”
    A few weeks ago, I watched a Nigerian film called Broken Hallelujah. I’m a Nollywood girl through and through, so when I saw a new faith film from my favourite actresses, I had to tune in.
    The story follows a woman who was barren for close to a decade. A faithful woman of God. A woman who loved the church, served alongside her husband in ministry, and built a beautiful life, except for the one thing her heart ached for: a child.
    Year after year, she believed.
    Year after year, nothing happened.
    The movie beautifully portrayed the pain, the broken faith, the marital strain, and the quiet heartbreak of waiting on God for something so good, so deeply longed for. And then, God answered. Not just with one child, but triplets.
    The ending was powerful. It was what we often call a “happy ending.”
    And it was deeply moving.
    But what happened the next day in class is what truly shifted something in me.
    When the Prophecies Don’t Come True
    In my Christian counselling class, my lecturer shared her personal testimony. Her story echoed the movie, but with a very different ending.
    She, too, was barren for many years. She had received countless prophetic words about motherhood. One in particular stood out: a word that she would conceive a baby girl before the year ended.
    So she planned. She believed. She took pregnancy tests month after month.
    But by the end of the year… nothing.
    And to make matters worse, she had gone up for prayer with three other women. All of them fell pregnant shortly after. Except her.
    Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but a longing fulfilled is a tree of life. Proverbs 13:12 NIV
    Her hope became heavy. She grew bitter. Angry. She stopped going to church, stopped praying, and stopped serving.
    And yet, God was still pursuing her.
    The Divine Question That Demands a Response
    As she processed the disappointment with the Lord, something unexpected happened. God asked her a question:
    “Would you be willing to surrender this one thing you desire most, so you can become who I’ve truly called you to be?”
    She couldn’t answer immediately.
    Then Jesus said to his disciples, ‘Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. Matthew 16:24 NIV
    To let go of something so precious—something so longed for—is no small ask. But eventually… she said yes, just like the disciples.
    She let go—not of the desire completely—but of the expectation. She placed it on the altar. Not as a bargaining chip, but as a sacrifice of trust.
    And in that surrender, God revealed her real assignment.
    Called to Mother Nations
    God had called her not just to mother one child, but to mother many. Through her work as a Christian counsellor, she began healing marriages, guiding women, leading hurting people to Jesus, and helping the broken find freedom.
    “Sing, barren woman, you who never bore a child… because more are the children of the desolate woman than of her who has a husband,” says the Lord. Isaiah 54:1 NIV
    She is now a spiritual mother to many. Her “yes” to God’s will bore fruit far beyond anything she could have imagined.
    Her story reminded me that we serve a God who gives purpose, even when He doesn’t give us what we asked for.
    Two Stories. One God. No Less Faithful.
    So here I was, reflecting on these two stories
    One ends with triplets.
    One ends with a purpose beyond expectation.
    And both are valid.
    Both are beautiful.
    Both are testimonies of a God who writes different endings for different people, but is never less faithful in any of them.
    Do I Love God More Than the Thing I’m Praying For?
    This reflection confronted me.
    How many times have I measured God’s goodness based on what I received from Him?
    How often do I come to Him with a prayer list, but not with the humility to ask:
    “Lord, what do You want for my life?”
    Delight yourself in the Lord, and He will give you the desires of your heart. Psalm 37:4 NIV
    We love this verse. But “delight” doesn’t mean manipulating God into saying yes. It means coming so close to Him that His desires become our own.
    That’s a harder kind of faith.
    But it’s the one that sustains.
    The Testimonies We Need to Hear More Of
    I love the stories of “God did it!”
    But we also need to hear:
    “God didn’t do it the way I thought, but I trust Him anyway.”
    These are the testimonies that anchor people. That disciple heart. That reminds us faith is not about outcomes, it’s about obedience.
    Even if He does not… Daniel 3:18 NIV
    This kind of faith isn’t built on the fire being quenched.
    It’s built on the God who walks with us in it.
    What If His “No” Is an Invitation Into Something Greater?
    We must ask ourselves:
    Are we surrendered enough to live out God’s story, even if it doesn’t look like our dream?
    Because sometimes, the greatest act of faith isn’t waiting for the door to open.
    It’s choosing to be content with where He’s placed you now.
    Watch the Film + Reflect For Yourself
    🎥 Watch Broken Hallelujah here: [https://youtu.be/modAD9y-9Tw?si=-VrcWl21_n78risE]
    📖 Reflect on these questions:
    What is one desire I’ve been struggling to surrender to God?
    Have I asked Him what His desire is for my life?
    Am I willing to follow, even if the path looks different from what I hoped?
    Whether God gives us what we’re waiting for or calls us into something different, He is still good. Still faithful. Still enough.
    Let’s build a faith that loves Him more than the things we’re asking Him for.
    A faith that says, “Even if not… You are still worthy.”
  8. Serving with Joy

    Serving is not just a duty—it’s an act of worship. Whether it’s helping a neighbor, volunteering at church, or simply offering a kind word, our service reflects the heart of Christ.
    Joyful service flows from gratitude. When we remember all that God has done for us, we can’t help but pour His love into others. Even the smallest acts—like a smile, a meal shared, or a hand extended—can be seeds God uses for His glory.
    Reflection Question:
    Who can you bless this week through a simple act of service?

  9. Finding Peace in the Storm

    Life’s storms come in many forms—financial struggles, broken relationships, or uncertain futures. Jesus never promised us a life free from challenges, but He promised His presence through them all. His peace is not the absence of trouble—it’s the presence of God in the middle of it.
    When the waves feel too high, remember Peter walking on water. As long as his eyes were on Jesus, he stayed above the waves. The same is true for us—when we fix our eyes on Christ, His peace steadies us.
    Prayer:
    Lord, help me to trust You when life feels overwhelming. Teach me to rest in the peace only You can give. Amen.

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