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While every casualty in Gaza generates international headlines, emergency UN sessions, and passionate campus protests complete with tent encampments and calls for divestment, the systematic extermination of African Christians - occurring on a scale that objectively dwarfs the Gaza conflict - barely registers in mainstream discourse.
Just last year, the UK government promised citizens there would be no national identity cards. The idea was politically radioactive - a symbol of Big Brother surveillance, of a state watching every citizen. Yet now, the government is preparing to announce digital ID mandatory for all adults, transforming a once-unthinkable intrusion into an impending reality.
When a national figure of Clinton's stature singles out a demographic--especially one defined by race, gender, and faith--she isn't merely criticizing ideas. She is putting a target on people's backs. She is telling millions of Americans that there is a class of villains who are inherently dangerous to society. And in today's environment, where anger routinely spills into violence, that is a profoundly dangerous game to play.
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has done it again. In a shocking display of arrogance, a spokesperson at its 2025 Churchwide Assembly publicly condemned certain Bible passages as "harmful" and "patriarchal." In other words, the ELCA is now on record declaring that God Himself made mistakes when He inspired His Word.
Fresh satellite images reveal what many feared: Iran is rapidly reconstructing its missile factories, the same sites Israel had buried in rubble just months ago.
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Over the past several weeks, thousands of Christians scrolled through YouTube and Facebook feeds only to be inundated with one video after another proclaiming that the Feast of Trumpets on September 23 would bring the long-awaited Rapture of the Church. Now we must address the fallout.
We sure have seen a lot of really crazy things happen so far this year. But in the minds of most Americans, there is one crisis that far outweighs everything else.
The war in Gaza may be drawing to its bitter end, but what comes next could shape the Middle East for decades. President Donald Trump is positioning himself at the center of the effort to chart a post-war order, a move that has set off both intrigue and concern as to where this might be heading.
Forgiving a killer is not a sign of weakness, nor does it absolve the perpetrator of legal responsibility. On the contrary, it is a spiritually courageous act that frees the victim's loved ones from the corrosive grip of bitterness, anger, and hatred--emotions that can silently poison a heart long after the crime has ended.
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