With October fast approaching, it's time for all hands on deck. Democrats will be doing everything in their power to win the November elections, so Republicans must make the most of their opportunities, such as the decision last week by the National Teamsters Union to not endorse a Democrat for the first time since 1996.
Polls in every battleground state are conducted within a margin of error and subject to possible fraud, making the outcome nearly impossible to predict, no matter how hard you try.
The Church should give us eyes to see and ears to hear, but she doesn't. When the Church says, “It's just politics,” no, it's not.
To stay focused in the coming days and weeks, it's important to remember the stakes, especially when distractions and demotivation arise. Understanding the consequences of wrong action and recognizing what you're really fighting for will help you maintain your resolve.
During the COVID-19 epidemic, we learned that doctors, politicians, teachers, and the media were acting primarily as agents of a health system that demanded our obedience. When some of us questioned this, the situation became even more troubling.
The medical system stamps your child from birth and claims them as our own. We happily comply because we “trust the experts.” Then the public school system stamps your child again, demanding more vaccinations and, of course, the use of pronouns — but not grammatical pronouns. You are no longer diagnosed or treated, but instead trained to follow an algorithm. You become just a number in the system and lose your freedom. Then a bad flu shuts down your church because the true high priest of the culture spoke out.
But your training makes it okay. You follow orders even if your children are being sexed, your towns are filled with rapists and murderers, and the economy crashes. Half the Democrats are so well trained that assassinating their main political opponent is now a popular option. You've been assimilated. You're the Borg.
This is not just an election. It is a test of the American people. We claim to be more “educated” than ever before in human history, yet we willingly put our lives on autopilot to avoid anxiety and maintain comfort at all costs. This shows that we are facing a psychological pandemic.
The church should give us eyes to see and ears to hear, but it doesn't. When the church says, “It's just politics,” no, it's not. When the church says, “It's just medicine,” no, it's not. The church is what we worship and who we serve.
Let us not bestow false respect and expertise on those who have not earned it or do not deserve it, even under the best of circumstances. How can we call ourselves Christians if our yoke is no different from that of the pagans?
That is why the Biblical worldview is the primary guiding principle of my programming at Blaze Media. No other ethic on earth, whether you are a shaman, a medicine man, or a neurosurgeon, will treat you as anything more than a number. To each his own capacity, to each his own need, you are reduced to a cliché, a slogan. But you will not be seen as a child of God, and that will not be tolerated.
As Americans, we have been lying to ourselves for far too long about our role in this deception. The truth is simple, but it isn't easy. Every problem is a theological problem. Every choice a human being makes is an expression of worship. Everything is.
There is no “secular” world. Those who sold you secularism are now openly proving that that was the point all along. They are devilishly intent on replacing the old religion with a new one. And they looked around from humans to pigs, pigs to humans and back to pigs and couldn't see the difference. It always ends this way. Something always rules and something always gets worshipped. There is no way around these two iron laws of creation.
So will it be a lie of compromise, a lie of neutrality, a lie of coexistence? Or will it be a truth?
If you need to get used to something, why not try the truth once?



