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Struggling with feeling God’s presence

There can be a danger for a Christian to chase after feelings. It can place an unhealthy emphasis on self.

The Christian life is supposed to be about transitioning from the selfishness of the flesh to the selfless love of Christ by walking by the Spirit. Self can put us in the wrong direction.
But how do you know the Spirit is there if you can't feel it?
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Christmas

French priest and historian Louis Duchesne (1843-1917) proposed the influential "calculation hypothesis" for why Christmas is on December 25th, suggesting it wasn't just to replace pagan festivals.
I thought you were arguing that Christmas came from Saturnalia?

My statement was that if Saturnalia is over by Dec 23rd, it's not connected to Christmas on the 25th.
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Why I Always Have—and Always Will—Call Myself “Catholic” Before “Christian”

I hear it often — “I’m a Christian” — as if that means something definite. But today, it doesn’t. The word has been stretched so thin it could cover half the planet and still not touch a shred of truth. Everyone claims it. Pastors with podcasts, influencers with crosses in their bios, and politicians whose moral compasses spin like ceiling fans. It’s all become a label of convenience, not conviction. That’s why, before I call myself a Christian, I call myself a Catholic.

Across the Christian world, belief has splintered into tens of thousands of denominations — Baptists, Methodists, Pentecostals, Anglicans, Lutherans, and countless others, each convinced they’ve cracked the divine code. Some emphasize personal experience, others prioritize Scripture. Some worship in solemn silence; others in stadiums that feel more like rock concerts than reverence. There’s nothing inherently wrong with variety — the Christian story has always allowed for difference. But somewhere along the line, the center started to dissolve. The faith that once formed civilizations now struggles to form a sentence everyone can agree on. Once, Christianity bound empires, shaped laws, and inspired cathedrals that reached toward heaven itself. Now, it’s dissolved into a puddle of personal brands and private revelations. Where there was once a shared creed, there are now competing and incompatible interpretations.

Catholicism stands apart. Not always in moral superiority but in scope and depth. It’s the Mother Church, not a sibling trying to reinvent the family name. Its strength lies in its coherence — creed, confession, continuity. When Rome says “Catholic,” it means universal. The sacraments in Lagos are the sacraments in Lisbon, Lima, and Los Angeles. The same prayers echo through marble halls and modest rooms alike. There’s a structure. There’s a rhythm that resists reinvention. That’s no small feat in an era where the Ten Commandments are treated like suggestions—or worse, rough drafts.

Continued below.

11 Faces of Mary: A Worldwide Tour of Devotion and Beauty

From Ireland to Algeria and Mexico to Moscow, Catholic devotion to Mary shines in every culture.
William-Adolphe Bouguereau, “The Virgin of the Lilies,” 1899
William-Adolphe Bouguereau, “The Virgin of the Lilies,” 1899 (photo: Public Domain)

Across the Catholic world, devotion to Mary takes on distinct local colors — icons, statues, titles and feast days that reveal how every culture has encountered the Mother of God. Here is a brief tour of 10 beloved images of Our Lady, each reflecting a different facet of her maternal care.



France​

Our Lady of Grace is represented by the Miraculous Medal (also known as the Medal of Our Lady of Graces or the Medal of the Immaculate Conception), made by the French goldsmith Adrien Vachette and first produced in 1832. She appeared to St. Catherine Labouré several times in 1830, where she asked to have the medal constructed and promised graces to those who wear it. Her home is the mother house of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul in Rue de Bac, Paris, France, and her feast day is Feb. 7.



Guatemala​

Our Lady of the Rosary is represented by a silver statue made by an unknown artist around 1592, holding a large rosary in her right hand. Her home is the Church and Convent of Santo Domingo in Guatemala City. Annually, she is carried on a large float called an anda during an elaborate annual procession that takes place on Oct. 7, her feast day, the anniversary of the defeat of the Ottoman Empire at the Battle of Lepanto in 1571.



Ireland​

Our Lady of Knock is represented by a mosaic at the site where she appeared to locals in 1879, her home is the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Knock (also known as the Knock Shrine) in the village of Knock, County Mayo, Ireland. She is considered the Queen of Ireland, and her feast day is Aug. 17.

Continued below.

UPDATE: Former Maronite priest still presenting himself as a cleric, Denver Archdiocese warns

Andre Mahanna, a former Maronite Catholic priest who gained a national profile as a commentator, fundraiser, and advocate for persecuted Christians is continuing to present himself as a priest despite having been dismissed from the clerical state for financial impropriety, the Archdiocese of Denver announced Thursday.

In a statement, the archdiocese said Bishop Elias Zaidan of the Maronite Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of Los Angeles had dismissed Mahanna from the clerical state due to financial impropriety and that Mahanna is not permitted to act or present himself validly as a Catholic priest.

Mahanna has no priestly faculties, the statement continues, and is not authorized to “celebrate sacraments, preach, bless, or represent himself as a cleric in any setting.”

Catholics and members of the public should not engage in any invalid sacraments he is attempting nor give him money or support fundraising efforts connected to him, the archdiocese warned.

Continued below.

Trump claims Somali immigrants ‘come from Hell,' calls Ilhan Omar 'garbage'

President Donald Trump escalated his attack on Somali immigrants Tuesday, referring to Somali congresswoman from Minnesota, Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar, as "garbage" and suggesting Somalians "come from Hell."

Speaking at a Cabinet meeting, Trump described Somalia in the Horn of Africa as "barely a country" and accused refugees in the Twin Cities of having "ripped off that state for billions of dollars, every year, and they contribute nothing."

Pointing to what he claimed was around an "88%" welfare rate among Somalis in Minnesota, Trump added: "We don't want them in our country. Their country stinks. … When they come from Hell, they complain, they do nothing but [expletive], we don't want them in our country. Let them go back to their country and fix it."

It's unclear which data the president referred to in his claim about the Somali welfare rate in Minnesota. On Tuesday, House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, announcedthat more than $1 billion in federal taxpayer funds during the coronavirus emergency was "stolen in Minnesota under the leadership of Governor Walz and after repeated fraud warnings from hundreds of his own employees."

Continued below.

Israel criticizes Guinness World Records over rejection of Israeli entries

The Guinness World Records (GWR) officially revealed on Wednesday that it would no longer accept submissions from Israel or the Palestinian territories because of what the organization described as the “current climate.”

“We truly do believe in record-breaking for everyone, everywhere, but unfortunately, in the current climate, we are not generally processing record applications from the Palestinian Territories or Israel, or where either is given as the attempt location, except those done in cooperation with a UN humanitarian aid relief agency,” a GWR spokesperson told The Jerusalem Post.

The GWR revealed that it has adopted this policy since November 2023, a month after the Hamas Oct. 7 invasion and terror attack in southern Israel. The organization said it is monitoring the situation in the region and hopes to reverse the policy in the near future.

“We hope to be in a position to receive new inquiries soon,” the spokesperson said.

Continued below.

Medical school pays $10M settlement after denying religious exemptions to vaccine mandate

Students and staff at a medical school who were denied religious exemptions to a COVID-19 vaccine have reached a settlement exceeding $10 million, ending several years of litigation.

In a statement published Monday, attorneys announced that the University of Colorado Anschutz School of Medicine agreed to pay more than $10.3 million to 18 plaintiffs who unsuccessfully sought religious exemptions to the institution's policy requiring students and staff to take the COVID-19 vaccine. The settlement follows more than a year of negotiations.

Students and staff at a medical school who were denied religious exemptions to a COVID-19 vaccine have reached a settlement exceeding $10 million, ending several years of litigation.

Continued below.

Eve and the Fallacy of Moral Choices

I can certainly appreciate the rewritten "some people" add on.

You might realize that any translators that can't see the fact that devils and people walk in the same pair of shoes are only going to see PEOPLE and not our adversary.

That is exactly your position come to think of it.
Most Bible translations are done by a group of really good Biblical scholars who hat to agree or will include multiple translations in the footnotes, so can you point me to another translation of scripture supporting your interpretation?
Satan roams the earth, and some people are demon possessed, but Jesus drove out the demon from those possessed around Him, which was not everyone.
Satan is the tempter and Jesus was tempted by satan, but being tempted does not mean you automatically sin.
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Good news for America; bad news for Trump

Service members who follow an illegal order can be held liable and court-martialed or subject to prosecution by international tribunals. Following orders from a superior is no defense.

Our poll, fielded between June 13 and June 30, 2025, shows that service members understand these rules. Of the 818 active-duty troops we surveyed, just 9% stated that they would "obey any order." Only 9% "didn't know," and only 2% had "no comment."

When asked to describe unlawful orders in their own words, about 25% of respondents wrote about their duty to disobey orders that were "obviously wrong," "obviously criminal" or "obviously unconstitutional."

Another 8% spoke of immoral orders. One respondent wrote that "orders that clearly break international law, such as targeting non-combatants, are not just illegal—they're immoral. As military personnel, we have a duty to uphold the law and refuse commands that betray that duty."

Just over 40% of respondents listed specific examples of orders they would feel compelled to disobey.

The most common unprompted response, cited by 26% of those surveyed, was "harming civilians," while another 15% of respondents gave a variety of other examples of violations of duty and law, such as "torturing prisoners" and "harming U.S. troops."

One wrote that "an order would be obviously unlawful if it involved harming civilians, using torture, targeting people based on identity, or punishing others without legal process."


Trump says 'seditious' Democrats urging US troops to refuse illegal orders should face death

Is Hell Annihilationism or Eternal Torment

I say this because Dan was using the term, 'sheep,' as a favorable motif in relation to his minister and to his understanding of being a Christian.
I agree.

And it's good to have teachers, etc. But there's nothing wrong with checking them out vs God's Word. Dan doesn't feel he has the right to do so. But I feel that is our responsibility to do so. Because that's the only way we can know if they're leading us on the right path. He thinks because someone has a degree that means something. But not in this day and age. I found that out personally.

I quite agree with you that it is sad to see so many of our fellow brethren being more concerned with engaging other Christians via a "conflict" model of social interaction rather than in grace for fellowship.
Yes and that's sadly seems to be the MO of some on there. I admit I get pulled into these types of debates pretty heavily but I'm not setting out with the purpose to create a conflict. I just want to have honest discussions straight from the Gods' word, not man's.
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1 in 4 post-abortive women regret abortion decades later, study finds

My mother in the 70's had an abortion and she regrets it deeply. This was at the start of the feminism movement that we know today and she was putting herself and her husband at the time, through college. I know I've got a half-sister waiting for me in heaven and I know God has forgiven her for that.

I agree with this article that women aren't warned or told the whole story, which is why I think this abortion topic is more than just individual choice and has a more sinister backing because if it truly was all about women, then wouldn't there be protocols in place to make sure with 100% certainty that this is what the woman wants, despite knowing the risks? (And thats taking the moral argument out of the equation)
  • Agree
Reactions: Michie
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KJV

Most people who speak and pray using KJV vocabulary do so reflexively. They may not be open to reflecting on why much less be willing to share. It can be that they feel this usage reflects the piety they feel. I would be reluctant to ask one to explain himself as I do not see it so much as pretension as a way one chooses to express the reverence he may have in his heart.
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State leaders speak out about plans to expand the Islamic Academy of Alabama

Consider how difficult it is for Christian missionaries in Muslim countries when local newspapers run stories like this about the USA.
I certainly consider that the US is not a theocracy, and this kind of bigoted baloney should not have a place in our government.
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He’s a citizen with a Real ID. ICE detained him anyway. Twice.

No, we're arguing with you.
Did you read my posts in this thread? What in the world are you ranting about?
You don't necessarily speak for God, even when you quote the Bible.
Irrelevant and a Strawman.
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Tit for Tat Tariffs - The US versus the World

Costco Sues Trump Administration for Refund of Tariffs

The retail giant is seeking to recover money it has paid this year, should the Supreme Court rule that President Trump’s implementation of tariffs was unlawful.



The complaint, filed on Friday in the U.S. Court of International Trade, argues that Mr. Trump misused a 1977 law in his move to implement tariffs on products from more than 100 countries.

The lawsuit asserts that Congress, not the president, has the authority to set tariffs, and that Mr. Trump exceeded the authority granted to him by the law, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA.

“The text of IEEPA does not use the word ‘tariff’ or any term of equivalent meaning,” Costco states in the lawsuit, which was reported earlier by NBC News. The act allows the president to regulate or prohibit foreign transactions during a national emergency, but does not authorize the imposition of tariffs, according to the lawsuit.

Kush Desai, a spokesman for the White House, said in a statement that the “economic consequences of the failure to uphold President Trump’s lawful tariffs are enormous and this suit highlights that fact. The White House looks forward to the Supreme Court’s speedy and proper resolution of this matter.”

It has said in the past that its use of the IEEPA is lawful because the law gives the president the authority to “regulate” the “importation” of foreign property to deal with emergencies.

It's hard to see how it's an emergency. Imports have been impacting our economy for decades. Congress could have acted on tariffs at any time. There is no sudden emergency. Besides, Trump has a habit of creating a problem and then putting himself forward as the person who has solved it. He puts enormous, unprecedented and counterproductive tariffs on goods from China, for instance, then "negotiates," allows a lower tariff, and claims that he has solved the problem that he created. I'm not impressed.

Many of Trump's claims on tariffs have nothing to do with reality and his tariffs are alienating our closest allies. In some of his rambling speeches, he has claimed that Canada was soaking the US with high tariffs. In reality, most goods were passing over the border, in both directions, with negligible tariffs.
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What are we doing here?

We all say we are here to follow Jesus Christ to the reward of eternal life. Many have varying opinions on how to reach that goal, but I believe that is the goal of all of us.
Good news is that God loves us all, as He wants all men to be saved. Bad news is that we are still human and our flesh is at war with our spirit. We say we want to follow Jesus, but what do we do?
We all think we know the right way, but do we really? How do we find out? As fallen humans, we tend to believe what makes us feel good and helps us feel exalted.
If we follow that way, we become as sheep that go astray and each follows his own way. We go back to the original scriptures to try and avoid that, but the evidence is that way is incomplete. The original scriptures are subject to human interpretation, and their intended message becomes unclear.
Another way is to look at the Apostles and what they taught, but their records are incomplete from original manuscripts.
Some light can be shed by looking at the writings of those directly taught by the Apostles and see how the Gospel was being transmitted to future generations. Some say those generations apostacized and are not scripture so therefore unreliable. Did God really abandon His Church so quickly as to have it become publicly unstable in the second and third generations? I think that is a bit of a stretch in reason. I can perhaps see when secular authorities influenced the Church that argument can be made, although not necessarily true, but those taught directly by the Apostles and the generation that followed them?
What happened to the promise of the gates of hell shall not prevail?
Polycarp was taught directly by John the Apostle. He has one surviving writing in his letter to the Philippians, although not scripture, it gives us insight as to how the scripture was being taught.
Then we have Iraneus, who was taught by Polycarp. We have one of his writings intact called Demonstration of the Apostolic preaching.
Iraneus was also famous for a work called against heresies, which was written as a rebuke against the gnostics.
When we read the Demonstration of the Apostolic preaching, we get an idea of what was preached by those very close in time to Apostolic teaching. It is worth the read to see if what is taught today lines up with original Christian thought. Reading Agaisnt Heresies would give us an idea of what was taught by heretics contemporary to the Apostles.

I believe these works are worth reviewing and would be interested in others opinions on them, whether agree or disagree and why?

Peace be with you all. May Christ bless you and keep you and bring you to everlasting life
What I read in the scriptures is that the number who will be saved is few. I read that Jesus said Christians are taught by GOD through Jesus the mediator. I read that Jesus had a GOD and it was his FATHER. I read that human beings are totally mortal and must put thrift of immortality on. I see that men cannot properly interpret scripture because only the Holy Spirit of the FATHER does that. I see there was to be a great deception. I look at this world with 2.2 billion people all claiming to be Christians and I do not believe that. Many think we chose GOD and Christ but scripture says they choose us. There is something very wrong in what is called Christianity.
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Date of authorship of Revelation

Open to alternative views!

For the moment, I'll just say that while I think there's room to apply 666 to Nero, I prefer to read this number in a way that is consistent with the symbolic mode by which everything else is stated by Christ to John in the book of Revelation. And if we remain consistent in our applied hermeneutics, we won't artificially bring in a nod to gematria and assume that this is the interpretive key of the book when it might very well not be.

But, I could be wrong.
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The ANE perspective on creation & am I fence sitting?

The main thing for me is to keep in mind that Genesis 1 is primarily prophetic in nature and, as is seen in Mosaic, Deuteronomic Law, was written to differentiate Israel in its theology from that of its neighboring kingdoms.
Yes. Exactly so.
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White House displays lawn signs highlighting illegal immigrant crime

Whatever one thinks about the validity of the message, I think it is just plain tacky to start hanging messages on the White House fence. Of course, it isn't any more tacky than wearing a ball cap with a dress suit. So, there is that.
There is a perspective also in this country that sometimes the mainstream media can turn a blind eye to certain things, migrant criminal behaviour might be one of them. So this is quite a cheeky way to raise awareness of a pressing issue the media might ignore. God Bless :)
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What's on your mind?

There's nothing wrong with taking some time to relax (especially on a holiday!), but I almost never want to be productive. Our culture might call this "a struggle with procrastination" or "a symptom of depression," but in my case, I'm 99% sure the problem is just plain ol' sloth.

Sloth isn't the only sin causing me to doubt my salvation, though. Holistically, I do not live a life surrendered to God. By letting my desires dictate my choices, I've become my own lord and idol. It's me, not Jesus, enthroned on my heart.


I knew about his wives, but I didn't know about the pagan temples. That's interesting, thanks for sharing.

I wonder why God still considered him righteous. He certainly condemned other kings for doing the same. It's beyond my comprehension... I wish I could know how God sees me. Does he see me as a "Solomon," beloved and righteous in spite of my sin? Or does he regard me similarly to the evil kings who came after Solomon? I think those questions will remain unanswered until judgment day, barring some miracle.
I believe him considering Solomon righteous has to do with his promises to David Solomon’s father & Solomon himself. He has those same promises to those in Christ
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Los Angeles man arrested for throwing Molotov cocktails at security officers inside ICE building

“This case exemplifies how misleading and hateful rhetoric against federal law enforcement can and does result in violence,” First Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli said in a statement. “Irresponsible rhetoric by politicians and activists have real-world consequences. It must stop.”

They know this and won't stop the name-calling and the violent language. It's pushes people who are mentally on the edge into serious crimes.
<Looks at Trumps response to senators making a video about illegal orders>

Physician, heal thyself.
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