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  1. Michelle Danielson Tinkham says:

    Such a good, timely, Biblically sound message. I know I’m reading this over a year since it was written (I found the link through Pinterest while working on compiling a lost of immature vs mature Christian attributes) but it’s still spot on, which tells me that it is soudly written on Biblical truths. Thank you for being a voice in the wilderness, for being willing to feed Believers the meat of the Word in a world where so many just want to sip select verses that go down smoothly. My husband and I too are called to feed Believers the meat of the Word… It’s not a popular thing to do, but it brings glory to God and if it only keeps one sister or brother on the Narrow Way then it was all worth it.

  2. This is a wonderful teaching. However, I have a concern about the use of the term “wokeness”. As a Christian, I never condone sexual immorality. I have strictly Biblical beliefs regarding sexual sin. Now, I’ve always heard the term “wokeness” in regards to racism and racial discrimination. Many people that I know (including Christians) either believe that people of color are inferior, not deserving of equality and full freedoms, or that racial disparities and racial discrimination no longer exist, especially since the USA elected a bi-racial president! There are more acts of racism than one can imagine! These are the people who need to be “woke” (sic) or awake! They have obviously never read that there is no partiality with God and that He made all nations out of one blood. Grace and Peace to you!

  3. Sad this author thinks gender dysphoria isn’t a real medical condition. I suppose she knows more than the medical community.

    It’s also sad and quite frankly a little scary that she thinks transgendered individuals can’t participate in God’s kingdom. She may just get a wake-up call from the Lord in the next life.

  4. I understand where your article is coming from and I do believe in God’s judgement. I know and am not looking forward to the day where I will stand before God and have to give an account for all the sins I committed, especially the ones where I knew better and was just acting in fear and rebellion. However, not all of us who need to hear over and over again God’s message of grace and hope want an excuse to sin or don’t want to hear about the reality of the wrath of God. Often, some of us have struggled with fear precisely because of hyper-fixation on God’s judgement and wrath and have thus gotten ourselves into major addiction based on traumas that are based in that side of Christianity. As human beings, we are capable of twisting anything. So just like God’s love, grace and mercy is twisted by humans to excuse their sins, also the law, standard and wrath of God has also been used as an excuse to abuse and demean people, Christians and non-Christians, all in the name of “tough love” and “standing up for righteousness”. Some people who operate in this think they are fighting the good fight of faith and saving people from the enemy by their brutal honesty when they are actually brutally damaging the person they are trying to save. Instead of fighting the enemy, it comes across that they view the people they are trying to save as the enemy and seem to be fighting them. That’s not true and that’s not what they’re doing, but the way that they try to burn out sin does sometimes hurt and wound. And not to a redemptive degree. Oftentimes, some of us genuinely feel trapped in our struggles. We don’t want them and we get the unconscious message that if we are not able to snap out of it and obey perfectly, then we are not truly saved and we are more undeserving than those Christians who always lived a good life, never got in trouble, and are more disciplined Christians than we are, even though it says in Romans 3:23 that all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. So, it’s not always that we want grace as a cop-out and that we don’t know that we will be called out on Judgement Day, regardless of how helpless we felt or not. But we need grace as a sense of hope.

  5. Also…you stated:

    “We excuse ourselves on the basis of our intentions, while God judges us on the basis on our actions.”

    You got that part wrong because the new covenant is all about what’s in the heart. While God does judge based on actions in the OLD TESTAMENT, the work of Christ is about no such thing. The only actions are the fruits of faith. The whole premise of living in Christ is to overcome judgment under the old covenant. Good works come in spite of imperfect trials. After all, Jesus did proclaim that as followers, we would be subject to tribulations. To believe otherwise is to call Jesus a liar.

    That said. You are right IF we’re not saved under Christ.

    Man cannot possibly master the sinful nature of the flesh. Hence the reason for the new covenant. Like Paul said about his own struggles with not always being able to do good when he should, knowing its a battle with his old self. The heart says it all. We’re not going to purify our flesh. Christ has raised us out of that, effectively separating the “old man” from the “new man”. Two people living in the same body till death. One goes under while the other does not. The difference between the old and new is that the follower of Christ is now at the wheel way more often than the son of Adam.

    I say this to all BROTHERS and SISTERS.

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