Lynsi Snyder isn’t budging. After waves of complaints over the years from customers upset over Bible verses printed on In-N-Out cups and wrappers, the company’s president made it clear the Scripture isn’t being removed. The verses have been part of In-N-Out’s identity for decades, rooted in the faith and values of the family that built the brand. While many companies rush to retreat when cultural pressure mounts, Snyder has chose to remain faithful and bold!

Jelly Roll had an unforgettable night at the 68th GRAMMY Awards, taking home Best Contemporary Country Album for Beautifully Broken on February 1, 2026.

As soon as he got on stage, he looked emotional and the very first person he thanked was Jesus: “Jesus, I hear you and I’m listening. Lord, I’m listening.”

He also gave a heartfelt shoutout to his wife, saying she literally helped save his life. “I’d ended up dead or in jail… I’d have killed myself if it wasn’t for you and Jesus,” he admitted.

Jelly Roll then thanked his team, his label, and country radio, then he pulled a Bible out of his pocket and opened up about how dark his life once was.

He shared that there was a time when he felt completely broken—so broken that all he had in a jail cell was “a Bible this big and a radio.”

He said he believed those two things could change everything: “Music had the power to change my life, and God had the power to change my life.”

And then he ended with a message that hit the whole room:

“Jesus is for everybody. Jesus is not owned by one political party. Jesus is not owned by no music label. Jesus is Jesus and anybody can have a relationship with him. I love you, Lord!”

In-N-Out Burger has something on its cups and wrappers that quietly drives certain people crazy: tiny Bible verse references.

Not a sermon. Not a pamphlet. Not a preacher in the drive-thru.

Just a little reference like “John 3:16” printed small on the packaging; easy to ignore if you don’t care, but impossible to tolerate if you hate the idea that God belongs in public life.

And here’s what matters: the family behind the brand has repeatedly made it clear this isn’t an accident or a marketing stunt—it’s a family tradition tied to faith.

Lynsi Snyder explained that the tradition began under her uncle Rich in the early ’90s after he came to faith, and she later expanded it to include more items. In other words: it’s part of who they are, not a phase they’re trying on.

So when criticism “renews” (and it always does), what’s the real issue?

It’s not the ink. It’s the authority.

Because in 2026, people don’t just want neutrality. They want silence—especially from Christians. They don’t mind beliefs as long as those beliefs stay invisible, private, and powerless.

But Christianity is not meant to be hidden like shame.

Jesus said, “Whoever is ashamed of Me and My words… the Son of Man will be ashamed of him” (Luke 9:26).

He said we are a light, not a secret (Matthew 5:14–16).

And Scripture reminds us that “the fear of man lays a snare” (Proverbs 29:25).

That’s why this In-N-Out situation lands so hard: it’s a tiny example of a massive cultural demand—bow to the pressure, scrub the faith, and apologize for believing.

And Lynsi Snyder’s refusal to erase the verses sends a message that Christians desperately need right now:

You don’t have to be loud to be faithful.
You just have to stop folding.

A Bible reference on a cup won’t save anyone. Only Christ saves.

But the point is this: when a culture can’t even tolerate a reference, it’s not asking for “inclusion.” It’s a demanding submission.

#christian #inandoutburger #faith

Nicki Minaj Just Said the Music Industry Does “Rituals” — Then Dropped “GOD WILL NOT BE MOCKED” on the Grammys Night

The other night, Nicki Minaj went straight for the throat of the music industry, and didn’t do it with gossip. She did it with God.

In a post on X, she warned that “as they do their ritual tonight,” God would expose it, that it would “backfire,” and she declared, “God will not be mocked.”

That’s why this hit so hard: she wasn’t just mad. She framed it as spiritual.

What did she say, exactly?

She posted (paraphrased):

She believes “rituals” are happening in the industry that night

She expects God to reveal what’s hidden

She believes their plans will backfire

She invoked the name of Jesus and said, “God will not be mocked.”

What has she been “calling them out” for?

In the broader wave of posts being reported, she suggested there are dark, hidden practices in the industry; human s@crifices*

Christians do believe in spiritual warfare. The Bible is not naive about evil, deception, and darkness. (Ephesians 6:12; John 3:19–20)

But Christians also have two non-negotiables:

God will not be mocked.

That’s Scripture (Galatians 6:7). And it’s a warning to every person and system that plays with darkness like it’s entertainment.

Don’t bear false witness.
Christians don’t get to accuse without truth (Exodus 20:16). We “test everything” and hold fast to what is good (1 Thessalonians 5:21). And we test claims, not just vibes (1 John 4:1).

So the “wow” moment here isn’t “Nicki proved rituals.” She didn’t, but they’re known for doing them by multiple sources; they’re known to black list, cut ties, and even kill for the sake of the industry that we have seen documented cases on.

The “wow” moment is that, in front of the whole culture, she essentially said:
You can play your games, but God is real, God sees, and God judges.

And that is a message modern entertainment absolutely hates.

While the world remains largely silent, a spiritual storm is raging across Nigeria. In what many are now calling a ‘genocide wearing the mask of chaos,’ the Nigerian Church is standing firm against a relentless wave of violence. Recent reports from 2025 reveal a staggering reality: an average of 32 Christians are martyred every single day.

Since 2015, the destruction has been systematic and chilling. Islamist extremists have incinerated over 18,000 churches and wiped out 2,200 Christian schools. Yet, the fire of faith has not been extinguished. In the very places where walls were leveled and ‘where blood was spilled,’ believers continue to gather. They are not retreating; they are worshipping in the ruins.

This is not a story of victimhood, but of ‘the power of a faith that cannot be extinguished by terror.’ As one observer noted, these believers are ‘declaring that Jesus is worth everything,’ even as they face the threat of death for the ‘crime of calling Jesus their Lord.’ Nigeria now accounts for roughly 80% of all Christians killed for their faith worldwide. The global Church is being called to ‘shake awake’ and recognize that ‘if one part of the body suffers, we all suffer.’ In the darkest corners of the North and the Middle Belt, the light of Christ is shining through the courage of those who refuse to abandon their hope. It is time to stand with them, speak their names, and ‘pray without ceasing.’

Details are in the comments

#PersecutedChurch #StandWithNigeria #FaithUnderFire #PrayForNigeria #JesusIsLord

At 68, doctors found a large cancerous tumor on his left kidney. “It was devastating,” said his wife, Athena. Doctors removed the kidney, but follow-up scans revealed the cancer had spread to Gregory’s lungs. Multiple nodules pointed to metastatic kidney cancer, a diagnosis with no cure and an average life expectancy of less than a year.

“I was broken,” Gregory said. “But I heard the Lord say, ‘I know about it.’ And peace came over me.”

Oncologists explained treatment options like chemotherapy, but warned they would only extend his life, not heal him. After prayer and consideration, Gregory and Athena chose to forgo treatment and trust God instead.
Gregory immersed himself in Scripture, speaking verses of hope and healing daily, while Athena gathered prayer support from her church.

Two months later, Gregory returned for scans. “The nodules had shrunk,” said oncologist Dr. Ted Logan. “They were too small to measure. It was very rare.”

Doctors called it a “spontaneous regression.” Gregory called it a miracle. “I stood up and shouted, ‘Lord, thank You! I know You healed me!’” he said. That was in 2016. Since then, every six-month checkup has shown no sign of cancer.

“There is always hope in Jesus,” Athena said. “Don’t stop praying.” Gregory agrees. “When we pray, the Lord hears.”

Nicki Minaj is calling out the Hollywood Satanic cult

Evangelist Franklin Graham publicly praised Jelly Roll for openly sharing his Christian faith during his acceptance speech at the 2026 Grammy Awards, calling it “the only bright spot” of the night. In a social media post, Graham said Jelly Roll gave “a clear testimony of how the power of God—the Word of God—transformed his life.”
Graham thanked the singer for “being brave and taking a stand in front of this audience and the world,” affirming his message by adding, “You’re absolutely right—Jesus Christ is for everybody.”

#FranklinGraham #JellyRoll #Grammys #ChristianFaith #JesusChrist #PublicTestimony #FaithInPublic #CelebrityFaith

In a world that often measures a man by his physical dominance, UFC Heavyweight Champion Jon Jones chose a different battleground to address: the human soul. During a post-fight press conference that shifted from technical strikes to spiritual depth, Jones opened up about the core tenets of his walk with God.

Jones didn’t shy away from the concept of human frailty, stating, ‘In the Christian faith, we believe that we’re all born into sin.’ He traced this brokenness back to the Garden of Eden, explaining that the moment ‘Adam bit that apple,’ humanity became naturally inclined toward mistakes. For the man often called the ‘Greatest of All Time,’ this wasn’t an excuse, but a confession of a shared human condition that no world title can fix.

‘It’s a decision to accept Christ into your heart,’ Jones emphasized, noting that faith isn’t about achieving perfection, but about a change in orientation. He described the spiritual journey as a deliberate effort to ‘walk in the light instead of the darkness.’ Even as the crowd cheered his physical victory, Jones pointed toward a higher calling, reminding everyone that true strength is found in acknowledging one’s need for a Savior.

His message was clear: whether you are a world champion or an everyday worker, the grace of Jesus remains the only power capable of redeeming a ‘broken nature.’ In his own words, ‘I think we are all rotten at the end of the day, and trying to do the right things’ is only possible through Him.

Details are in the comments

Photo Source: UFC

#JonJones #FaithInChrist #UFC #JesusLovesYou #ChristianAthlete #SpiritualStrength

3 Doors Down frontman Brad Arnold continues to confront his stage 4 cancer diagnosis with open declarations of faith, confidence, and hope. In a recent update, Arnold reassured supporters about his condition, writing, “I’m doin’ great, fam! Almost every day, I feel a little better. Things seem to be going great.”

He made clear that prayer and faith are central to how he is facing the illness. “With so much faith behind me and my own faith within me, I have no doubt of the outcome of this fight,” Arnold said. “God will continue to fight this battle for me … and God doesn’t fail.”

Despite the cancer having spread to his lung, Arnold emphasized that fear has no hold on him. “We serve a mighty God, and He can overcome anything,” he said. “So I have no fear. I really, sincerely am not scared of it at all.” Reflecting on his well-known song, he added, “Now, I believe ‘IT’S NOT MY TIME’ is really my song.”

Arnold has also spoken openly about how sharing Jesus has become the most meaningful part of his life and career. “Last year alone, I got to share the message of Jesus with about 680,000 people,” he said. “That is the highlight of my career if I never get to do anything else.” He added that even potential loss does not deter him: “I don’t care if it costs me my career. I don’t care if it costs me my life. It’s the greatest thing I’ve ever got to do.”

In a message directly to his followers, Arnold reminded them of their purpose, writing, “Never EVER doubt that YOU have a purpose… to worship God,” and urged them to “put God first instead of your feelings, even your well-being, and watch God’s purpose for your life spring to life.”

Instead of chanting “ICE out” at the Grammys like most of the others, Jelly Roll took his opportunity to put the attention on JESUS!

“I know they’re going to try to kick me off here, so just let me try to get this out. First of all, Jesus, I hear you, and I am listening, Lord, I am listening, Lord. Second of all, I want to thank my beautiful wife. I would have never changed my life without you. I would’ve ended up dead or in jail. I would’ve killed myself if it wasn’t for you and Jesus. I thank you for that. There was a time in my life, y’all, that I was broken. That’s why I wrote this album. I didn’t think I had a chance, y’all. There were days that I thought the darkest things—I was a horrible human. There was a moment in my life that all I had was a Bible this big and a radio the same size in a six-by-eight foot cell, and I believed that those two things could change my life. I believed that music had the power to change my life, and God had the power to change my life. And I want to tell y’all right now, Jesus is for everybody. Jesus is not owned by one political party. Jesus is not owned by any music label. Jesus is Jesus, and anybody can have a relationship with Him. I love you, Lord.”

Nicki Said “THEY DO RITUALS”… and Christians Need to Stop Acting Like Darkness Is a Fairy Tale

Nicki Minaj didn’t post a cute little “prayer.”
She dropped a warning.

“As they do their ritual tonight… God will not be mocked.”

That sentence hits like a hammer because it’s saying what millions of people whisper about the music industry but are scared to say out loud:

There’s a dark side.
A side that chews people up.
A side that buys silence.
A side that rewards humiliation.
A side that makes people do things they later look haunted by.

Now, let’s be extremely clear, as Christians:
We do NOT need to invent “human sacrifice” stories to admit the industry has real evil in it.

We already have public, documented examples of exploitation that are not “conspiracy.”
For example, in the Sean “Diddy” Combs case, federal authorities conducted raids in 2024 as part of a sex trafficking investigation.

And in 2024, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for SDNY announced he was charged in federal court with counts including racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking (he pleaded not guilty).
That is not “internet rumors.” That is the government saying: this is serious enough to charge.

So when people talk about “the dark side,” they shouldn’t smirk like it’s superstition.
Scripture has been saying this the whole time:

We don’t wrestle against flesh and blood (Ephesians 6:12).
People love darkness rather than light (John 3:19–20).
What’s done in secret gets exposed (Luke 8:17).
And yes—God will not be mocked (Galatians 6:7).

But Christians also have a boundary the internet refuses to respect:

You don’t get to accuse without evidence.
“False witness” is sin (Exodus 20:16).
We test spirits and claims (1 John 4:1).
We examine, not hallucinate (1 Thessalonians 5:21).

So here’s the punchline:

Nicki didn’t “prove” rituals.
She signaled what many suspect.

And Christians don’t have to chase fantasies to see the truth:
A machine that worships fame will eventually demand a price.

Money.
Bodies.
Souls.
Silence.

The gospel response isn’t panic.
It’s clarity.

Darkness is real.
Evil is real.
And Jesus Christ is still King, whether the industry likes that or not.

#christian #nikiminaj

A woman named Mary had been suffering from rheumatoid arthritis for over a decade. Her condition caused severe pain, swelling, and limited mobility in her joints. Despite numerous treatments and medications, her symptoms worsened, and doctors told her that permanent disability was likely.

As her pain and immobility progressed, Mary attended a Kathryn Kuhlman healing service where fervent prayer was offered in Jesus’ name on behalf of those seeking healing.
During the service, Mary experienced an immediate and complete relief from pain and swelling. She was able to move her joints freely for the first time in years.

Medical evaluations confirmed that the inflammation and damage previously visible in her joints had dramatically reversed, a result her doctors described as medically inexplicable.

If you need healing in your body just remember that “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever.”-Hebrews 13:8

A woman named Mary was clinically dead for several minutes during childbirth after her heart stopped and doctors worked to revive her. Mary later reported that she left her body during the medical emergency.

She found herself in the overwhelming presence of God, flooded with a love and forgiveness so intense she knew she was standing before Someone holy—and personal. While there, she was given a clear message: “Your son is going to live.”

As Mary regained consciousness, she told medical staff that while she was unconscious, she had seen the top side of a ceiling fan in the hospital room and noticed a small red sticker—something not visible from her bed. The nurse grabbed a ladder. Mary was right. And her son lived—just as she was told.

This case included verifiable details observed while patients had no measurable brain activity, challenging the claim that all such near death experiences are hallucinations. Jesus is real!

A quiet revival is taking place inside the gaming world. Across platforms like Roblox, Fortnite Creative, Minecraft, Discord, and Twitch, believers are openly talking about Jesus — hosting prayer gatherings, worship moments, and Scripture discussions inside the games themselves.

Even well-known streamers have joined the conversation. Influencers like Ninja have publicly declared “Jesus is King” before massive audiences, helping remove the stigma around faith in gaming culture.

This bold visibility is one of the reasons Gen Z is encountering Christ in unprecedented numbers — meeting the gospel in the very spaces where they already live, play, and connect.

James Drain was permanently blinded after a traumatic injury destroyed his optic nerves. Doctors documented his condition, confirming he had no light perception and no medical path back to sight.

Years later, while in Clawson, Michigan, James encountered the gospel and chose to be baptized at Grace Apostolic Church. As he came up out of the water, he began to see light—then shapes— then faces. Within minutes, his sight was restored.

What makes this testimony remarkable is that it was medically documented. His blindness and optic nerve damage were on record, and following the baptism, doctors confirmed that his vision had returned with no natural explanation.

Turning Point USA has announced the lineup for their All American Halftime Show during the Super Bowl! Will you be watching?!

On this International Holocaust Remembrance Day, Evangelist Franklin Graham shares a sobering reflection from his visit to the Auschwitz concentration camp. Having met survivors across Europe and Israel—and even hosting them in his family home in North Carolina—Graham notes the thinning ranks of those who witnessed these horrors firsthand.

‘Walking through the gas chambers and seeing the crematorium ovens firsthand has a profound effect,’ Graham shared, describing the weight of standing where millions perished. For Graham, the site is a physical manifestation of the ‘evil that exists in this world,’ a darkness that historical education alone cannot erase.

Reflecting on the depths of human depravity witnessed at Auschwitz, Graham points to a singular spiritual solution. He remains steadfast in the conviction that the ‘only hope—the only cure’ for such pervasive evil is a spiritual transformation. He calls on people to ‘repent of their sins and turn to God through faith in His Son, Jesus Christ.’

As the world pledges to #NeverForget, Graham’s message serves as both a memorial to the victims and a modern-day call to faith. He reminds his followers that while the ovens are now cold, the battle against the root of such evil is won only through the grace of the Savior.

Details are in the comments

#NeverForget #HolocaustRemembranceDay #FranklinGraham #FaithInChrist #Auschwitz

Shannon and her husband Jerry were vacationing with their children when she suddenly began experiencing severe headaches. Within hours, the situation escalated. Shannon lost feeling on the left side of her body, and her condition rapidly deteriorated. Paramedics rushed her to a nearby hospital where doctors diagnosed her with a brain bleed.

Specialists explained that she had an AVM, a congenital defect involving tangled blood vessels in the brain and that when it ruptures, it often results in permanent disability or death.
The family returned home to await surgery. During that time, Shannon’s condition worsened. She could no longer walk unassisted, experienced double vision, and required constant care. Despite her weakness, Shannon continued volunteering at the Christian school her children attended.

Nearly one hundred students gathered around Shannon and began praying for her healing. Family members recall sensing the presence of the Holy Spirit during the prayer as the children laid hands on her and cried out to God.

Days later, Shannon was admitted for surgery. But within minutes, the procedure came to an abrupt halt. The AVM was no longer present. One nurse reportedly told the family, “God healed you.”

Shannon was discharged and returned home fully restored. Today, she lives without limitations and continues serving her family, church, and community. The Iverson family credits prayer and God’s intervention for her healing!

Many people claim that Christianity supported slavery, but that belief falls apart when you actually examine history. Slavery in America did not originate from the Bible. It grew out of economic greed, racial ideology, and political power, with Scripture later twisted to justify what people had already decided to do. That distortion is NOT the same thing as biblical endorsement.

Historically, the abolition movement was driven by Christians. The earliest and most consistent voices calling slavery a moral evil were Bible-believing believers who argued that owning another human being violated God’s design for human dignity. Evangelical revivalists, Quakers, Black pastors, and Christian reformers led the charge, appealing directly to Scripture to make their case.

They pointed to biblical truths that undermined slavery itself: that all people are made in the image of God, that man-stealing is condemned as sin, that Christ erased ethnic and social divisions, and that injustice would be judged by God. These arguments didn’t defend slavery—they dismantled it.

Even Frederick Douglass made this distinction. He forcefully rejected what he called “the Christianity of this land,” while passionately defending “the Christianity of Christ.” His critique wasn’t of the Bible, but of those who claimed its authority while *violating* its commands.

Slavery survived by MISUSING Scripture. It ended because people returned to its TRUE meaning.
The idea that Christianity caused slavery is a modern narrative—not an honest reading of history.

In 2 Kings 6:1–7, God doesn’t perform a “religious” miracle for show. He steps into a blue-collar problem and shatters the smug unbelief our age worships. A group of prophetic disciples is building, working, expanding—then the axe head flies off and sinks. Iron sinks. That’s the point. One man panics and confesses what modern people refuse to confess: “Alas… it was borrowed” (2 Kings 6:5). Translation: “This isn’t mine. I’m accountable. I have a stewardship problem now.”

And right there is why this story offends the modern heart. Because it exposes how fake our “grown-up” worldview really is. We love the idea of God as an inspirational concept, but we despise God as an Authority who cares about details, debts, responsibility, and borrowed things. We want a faith that comforts us, not a God who corrects us. Yet the Bible keeps doing this: it drags spiritual people back into real life. Tools. Work. Ownership. Consequences.

The man doesn’t give Elisha a motivational speech. He asks a practical question: “Where did it fall?” (2 Kings 6:6). That question alone destroys a whole generation of excuse-making. God doesn’t reward vague panic. He confronts you with specifics. Where did you drop it? Where did you drift? Where did you compromise? Where did you lose what you were entrusted with?

Then Elisha throws a stick into the water—and the iron floats (2 Kings 6:6). No theatrics. No circus. Just God saying, in effect: “You think the world is sealed off from Me? Watch this.” The miracle is not God “breaking nature” as if He’s wrestling His own laws. It’s God reminding you that laws are His servants, not His prison. Creation is not ultimate. The Creator is. And when He chooses, He can make the heavy rise and the sinking return.

But the sharpest moment isn’t even the floating. It’s what comes next: “Take it up.” So he reached out his hand and took it (2 Kings 6:7). God provides the impossible, then commands participation. He doesn’t enable passivity. He restores what was lost, then forces the man to act like a steward again. Grace doesn’t erase responsibility—it resurrects it.

Here’s the indictment: people pretend they reject miracles because they’re “rational,” but the truth is uglier. They reject miracles because miracles mean accountability. If God can make iron float, then God can weigh your excuses. If God is near enough to care about a borrowed axe head, then He’s near enough to call out your borrowed life—your borrowed breath, your borrowed time, your borrowed body. And that is terrifying to a culture that wants freedom without consequences.

This is why the story is so “small” and so devastating. God didn’t float iron to entertain doubters. He did it to expose hearts. He showed that He sees the humble worker, the honest confession, the fear of owing what you can’t repay. And He showed that He is not the distant deity of self-help spirituality—He is the living God who can intervene, correct, and restore.

So yes, iron sinks. And sinners sink. And guilt sinks. And shame sinks. But the God of Scripture specializes in raising what cannot rise—then telling you to reach out your hand and take back what you thought was gone forever. If that offends you, it’s not because the story is childish. It’s because it’s true, and it puts you under God instead of letting you keep God under you.

And here’s the uncomfortable conclusion: the miracle wasn’t mainly about an axe head. It was about a man learning that everything he touches—work, tools, money, time, responsibility—falls under the gaze of God. The question isn’t whether iron can float. The question is whether you will finally stop pretending your life is your own.

#BibleTruth #Christianity #Faith

Evangelist Shane Pruitt, the Southern Baptist Convention’s Director of Next Gen Evangelism at the North American Mission Board (NAMB), is making waves with a direct comparison between biblical Christianity and Islam. In a recent viral post, Pruitt sought to clarify what he views as irreconcilable differences between the two faiths.

‘Christianity is true. Islam is not,’ Pruitt wrote, setting a definitive tone for the discussion. He challenged the common cultural notion of universalism by stating plainly, ‘God and Allah are not the same.’ His post systematically broke down contrasts in core doctrines, ranging from the nature of the Creator to the finality of the afterlife.

Pruitt focused heavily on the identity of Jesus, noting that while Christianity teaches He is ‘fully God and Savior,’ Islam recognizes Him only as a prophet. He further highlighted that Christianity centers on Christ’s ‘crucifixion and resurrection,’ events that Islam historically denies.

Addressing the path to salvation, Pruitt emphasized the Christian belief in ‘grace through faith’ in Christ’s finished work, contrasting it with the Islamic focus on submission and human effort. As a leader focused on the next generation, Pruitt continues to urge believers to have a ‘spine and a backbone’ when standing for biblical truth.

Details are in the comments

Photo Source: Shane Pruitt / NAMB

#ShanePruitt #Christianity #GospelTruth #BiblicalWorldview #JesusSaves

The Unseen Reality: Why Billy Graham Trusted the Word Over Feelings
In a world driven by shifting trends and personal “truths,” the late Rev. Billy Graham offered a perspective that remains a bedrock for millions of believers today. His stance on the supernatural wasn’t born of imagination or folklore, but of a deep-seated conviction in the authority of Scripture.

‘I believe in angels because the Bible says there are angels,’ Graham famously stated, ‘and I believe the Bible to be the Word of God.’ For the man often called America’s Pastor, the existence of the unseen realm was not a matter of debate but a fact verified by the same Book that promises eternal life through Jesus Christ.

To Graham, angels were never mere symbols or holiday myths. He described them as God’s secret agents—messengers and protectors who operate across the pages of the Old and New Testaments. He taught that they are an invisible army, serving at God’s command to comfort the suffering and guard the faithful.

While modern culture often urges us to follow our feelings, Graham pointed back to the unchanging. He believed that if we can trust God for our salvation, we must also trust Him when He reveals the spiritual reality beyond our sight. As Isaiah 40:8 reminds us, the grass withers and flowers fade, but the Word of God stands forever.

Details are in the comments

Photo Source: Billy Graham Evangelistic Association Archive

#BillyGraham #Angels #BiblicalTruth #Faith #JesusSaves

A woman named Mrs. Minnie Kennedy, a resident of Los Angeles, California, had been suffering from advanced paralysis that left her unable to walk without assistance. As her condition worsened, Mrs. Kennedy attended a healing service led by evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson at Angelus Temple. During the service, prayer was offered in Jesus’ name, and Aimee commanded healing through the authority of Christ.

Immediately after prayer, Mrs. Kennedy stood up and began walking on her own–something she had been unable to do for years. Witnesses, including medical professionals present in the service, observed the transformation. Following the event, medical examinations confirmed restored mobility with no medical explanation for the sudden reversal.

If you need healing in your body, remember: “Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and forever.”-Hebrews 13:8

Man in Greece shows Jesus Christ flag.

https://scontent.ffod1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t39.30808-6/626081453_1320488136783534_4149460875177472338_n.jpg?stp=dst-jpg_p526x296_tt6&_nc_cat=101&ccb=1-7&_nc_sid=127cfc&_nc_ohc=zSFnzYGsx_8Q7kNvwFxunQZ&_nc_oc=AdnCHvHkSs0lxLG8Xyq6GhndbJJLp5yDMdwJOl9KEAb7gqgI2r2nI0YQR7zIrnObb8I&_nc_zt=23&_nc_ht=scontent.ffod1-1.fna&_nc_gid=acR1MXhvNdNrHJBQq9YPrA&oh=00_AftGCW2f5AGEoWgyQAP2pyASDdlskho2YqCpomUfVwN-Hw&oe=698825AD The Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America has deposed and excommunicated former minister Samuel Ketcham, 42, over his promotion of white supremacist ideology.

Delegates from 17 congregations voted Jan. 24 to remove Ketcham after concluding his online writings misused Scripture, violated his ordination vows, and represented “serious sin” contrary to the gospel and the unity of the church.

Ketcham, who has described himself as a “race realist,” defended slavery, praised the Confederacy, and argued that protecting the white race should take priority over global Christian mission.

After the ruling, Ketcham responded publicly, accusing church leaders of abandoning the “simple gospel.” In a statement to the presbytery, he insisted that salvation is offered to all people regardless of race, writing:

“It doesn’t matter what the color of your skin is… Christ is willing to save you… ‘Him who cometh to me, I will in no wise cast out.’ …COME! COME!”

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