When Life Does Not Make Sense

This last week in Facebook I read a story of a mother who is a believer and yet she felt that God had forsaken her. I was also reminded of a conversation with a man I play golf with when he made a statement, “If there is a God how could he allow my daughter to have MS.” Then there is a young couple I know with two children and the mother dies of cancer. How about an older couple I love who served God their whole lives spreading God's word, and the wife gets a crippling disease and then God takes her husband home, and now she is all alone in a care-home. Or how about the man who never wanted to make a vow to God but was led by God to make one. This man did everything that he said he would do and yet God did not answer the man's prayer in the way he thought. 
Life at times seems very confusing and difficult to understand; yet when our life is over, and we stand before God and ask him "why?" He will say that when you were going through these things you were only halfway through your book of life. Just like a mystery novel halfway through never makes sense, it only makes sense when you know the ending.
I wish I could say wise and comforting words to the young couple, the father and his daughter, or the elderly couple, those whose lives seem so useless now.  But as the one who made the vow to God and didn't get what he expected then, I can say: WAIT! Wait to see what God has planned for your life, with all the hurts and losses and even doubts about God. Don't give up your faith in the LORD! Stay in His Word believing what He says. It's in the waiting on God that we come to know Him better and better and how He feels about us and how His plans and ways are so much higher than ours.  God is for us, not against us!
When our life is complete will others who have watched your life be able to say that your life was not useless at all? 2 Corinthians 4:16-18 "Therefore, we do not lose heart. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So, fix your eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal."
When life gets hard it is very hard see this glory that God is talking about, therefore, we must be patient and soon we will understand it all. For now we only see through a glass dimly, but later we will see Him as He truly is: face to face.  Our life in retrospect will make beautiful sense and give glory to God.

The Courage to Act

If we had known the attacks of September 11 were coming, would we have stopped them? Of course we would have. We would not have cared who discovered the plot or what political party they belonged to. We would not have argued about their other beliefs or policies. If someone had the ability to stop thousands of Americans from being murdered, the only reasonable response would have been to act. This is why the debate about Iran matters.

 

Supporters of President Trump’s actions believe the danger is not theoretical. Iran has spent years building missiles, strengthening armed groups across the Middle East, expanding military power, and pushing its nuclear program closer to weapons capability. None of this has happened in secret. It has happened openly while the world debated, delayed, and hoped the problem would solve itself.

Threats like this do not suddenly appear in a single moment. They grow slowly. Year after year the weapons become stronger, the alliances become deeper, and the danger becomes harder to stop. By the time the threat becomes obvious to everyone, it is often already far more powerful than it should have been.

 

Some critics say we cannot predict the future. That is true. No one can see the future perfectly. But history shows that patterns reveal direction. Governments reveal their intentions through what they do. When a regime builds weapons, threatens its neighbors, funds violence across a region, and moves closer to nuclear capability, those are not isolated events. They are warnings.

 

Winston Churchill once warned the world about ignoring danger while it is still growing. He said, “An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last.” History proved the cost of ignoring those warnings.

 

What troubles many Americans is the double standard. When other presidents used military force, many critics said very little. Bombings, strikes, and foreign interventions were accepted. But when similar decisions came from President Trump, the same voices suddenly described those actions as reckless or dangerous.

 

That raises a simple question. If stopping a growing threat could prevent a disaster later, why oppose the action simply because of who is making the decision?

 

History rarely punishes people for stopping danger too early. It punishes nations that waited too long. The real tragedy is not that warnings were missed. The real tragedy is that the warnings were seen, debated endlessly, and ignored until the cost became unbearable.

 

If the danger from Iran is ever proven to have been real and growing, Americans may look back and realize that someone finally chose to act while others only argued. And for that moment of decision—when action was taken instead of delay—many will simply say thank you to President Donald J. Trump for having the courage to act when others would not.

 

The Friend Who Tells the Truth

“As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another.” Proverbs 27:17

 

No one grows strong spiritually in isolation. When we are left alone with our own thoughts and desires, it becomes easy to justify our choices and overlook the quiet ways we begin to drift from God. Accountability places someone beside us who is willing to speak truth into our lives and help keep us on the path God intends.

 

True accountability requires humility. It means allowing another person to see us honestly—both our strengths and our weaknesses. It also requires trust. We must believe that the person speaking into our lives genuinely wants what is best for us and desires to see us walk closer with God.

 

Scripture describes this clearly: “As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another.” Sharpening is not gentle work. Steel scraping against steel creates friction, yet that friction produces a blade that is sharp and useful. In the same way, honest counsel from someone who loves God may be uncomfortable, but it strengthens our character and our walk with Him.

 

Not every voice sharpens us. Some voices dull us instead. The wrong counsel often tells us what we want to hear rather than what we need to hear. A wise accountability partner is someone whose heart is devoted to God and who is willing to speak truth with both courage and compassion.

 

Receiving correction is rarely easy, but it protects us from drifting further from the life God intends. Hebrews tells us to spur one another toward love and good deeds. A spur may be small, but it moves the horse forward when it begins to slow or wander. In the same way, loving correction can redirect us before we move too far off course.

 

Finding someone who can hold us accountable is not always easy, but the kind of person we choose matters greatly. Look for someone whose life reflects a genuine desire to follow God. They are not seeking approval from people but from God. They listen carefully before speaking, and when they speak, they do so with honesty and compassion.

 

This person does not rush to judge or assume the worst. Instead, they seek understanding and help us see what we may not see about ourselves. Their goal is not to control or condemn, but to strengthen our faith and help us remain faithful to the path God has set before us. Often God places these people in our lives through ordinary relationships—a trusted friend, a mentor, a pastor, or someone who has simply walked with God longer than we have.

 

Without accountability, the human heart slowly drifts. A.W. Tozer once wrote that every farmer understands the hunger of the wilderness. No matter how carefully a field is planted or how strong the fences are built, if the farmer neglects the land long enough, weeds will return and the field will slowly become wild again.

 

The same is true of our hearts. Left alone, the weeds grow quietly. Truth becomes dull. Conviction fades. What once was clear slowly disappears beneath the overgrowth. The friend who tells the truth helps clear the weeds before they choke the field, calls us back when we begin to wander, and stands beside us so we remain steady on the path God has set before us.

 

A Walk and Two Questions

The other day I was out on one of my regular walks, talking with the Lord the way I often do. Walking has become a time when I speak openly with Him, sharing what is on my heart and mind. As I walked, two questions kept rising within me. “Lord, why did You create humans in the first place, knowing how wicked we would become?” “And who am I that You would still think of me with love?”

 

Those questions stayed with me as I walked. I had been reading about the things happening in our world, and the weight of it was hard to ignore. Everywhere you look there seems to be more wickedness. Violence fills the news. Nations rise against nations. Lies are accepted as truth, and truth is rejected. Families fall apart, and many people openly turn away from God.

 

When I think about it, God existed long before this world was ever formed. Before the earth, before the stars, before time itself, God simply was. He lacked nothing and needed nothing from His creation. Yet He chose to create mankind in His image, giving us the ability to know Him and to walk in relationship with Him.

 

In the beginning, that relationship was real. God walked with Adam and Eve in the garden. There was no distance between the Creator and His creation. But humanity chose its own way, and sin entered the world. The wickedness we see around us today is the result of that separation from God.

 

Yet even in the condition we have become, God’s intention toward us has never changed. His intention was love. Not because we deserved it, and not because we remained faithful, but because His love is greater than our sin.

 

The greatest proof of that love is what God was willing to do for us. He did not remain distant from our broken world. Instead, He entered it. God became a man in Jesus Christ. The Creator stepped into His own creation and took on the limitations of humanity. He felt hunger, exhaustion, sorrow, rejection, and suffering. He lived among the very people who would misunderstand Him, mock Him, and ultimately crucify Him.

 

Yet He came anyway. He came because even in our sin, God still loved the people He created. And if the Creator of the universe was willing to enter our broken world, carry our suffering, and give His life for us, then perhaps the answer to those questions becomes clearer.

 

We may not fully understand why God chose to love us. But the cross leaves no doubt that He does.

The Older I Become

The older I become, the more aware I am of how quickly life moves. Years that once seemed long now pass in what feels like moments. Seasons come and go, children grow up, and memories quietly accumulate behind us. What once felt like the beginning of life slowly becomes a collection of stories we look back on.

 

Sometimes when I reflect on those passing years, I’m reminded of the song “Remember When.” The song walks through the seasons of life—young love, building a family, raising children, and eventually looking back across the decades. One moment life is just beginning, and before you know it, you find yourself remembering when the kids were little, remembering when the house was full of noise and laughter, remembering when the future seemed so far away. Life quietly fills with those “remember when” moments, reminding us how quickly time moves.

 

Those reflections have a way of turning our hearts toward deeper questions. If life moves this quickly, what truly lasts? What lies beyond the years we spend here?

 

This morning my thoughts were drawn to what awaits those who know Jesus Christ as their personal Savior. For the believer, our future is not defined by the uncertainty of this world. While everything around us seems to shake, the promises of God remain unshaken. The older I become, the more I realize that death is not the end of the story for those who belong to Christ. It is the doorway into the life God has prepared for us from the beginning.

 

Paul reminds us of this incredible promise in 1 Corinthians 15:42–44:

“It is the same way with the resurrection of the dead. Our earthly bodies are planted in the ground when we die, but they will be raised to live forever. Our bodies are buried in brokenness, but they will be raised in glory. They are buried in weakness, but they will be raised in strength. They are buried as natural human bodies, but they will be raised as spiritual bodies. For just as there are natural bodies, there are also spiritual bodies.”

 

When I read Paul’s words, I’m reminded of the transformation of a caterpillar. For a time it crawls along the ground, limited to the world beneath it. Then one day it forms a cocoon and disappears from sight. To anyone watching, it almost seems as if its life has come to an end, hidden away and motionless. Yet inside that quiet cocoon something remarkable is taking place. The old form is being changed into something entirely new. In time the cocoon opens, and what emerges is no longer a creature bound to the ground but a butterfly with wings. What once crawled now rises into the air, able to travel to places it could never go before.

 

In many ways, Paul is describing something far greater for those who belong to Christ. Every human life eventually reaches the moment when this earthly body gives way to death. Whether buried, scattered, or returned to dust in some other way, our bodies do not escape that reality. Yet the promise of God is not limited by the way our bodies leave this world. The same power that raised Christ from the grave will one day raise all who belong to Him to a new and eternal life.

 

That promise has become more meaningful to me as the years pass. The body we live in now carries the marks of this fallen world. It knows sickness, fatigue, temptation, and the slow wearing down that comes with time. But Scripture reminds us that what we experience now is not the end of our story.

 

When I watch the turmoil in the world today—nations threatening one another, families divided, cultures losing their moral compass, and people searching desperately for peace—I am reminded that this world was never meant to be our final home. Creation itself seems to be longing for restoration. The chaos we see around us only points to how deeply this world needs redemption.

 

For those who belong to Christ, that redemption is not a distant hope. It is a certainty. The day is coming when the struggles that define this life will be gone forever. There will be no more sickness and no more death. There will be no more shame from sin and no more battle with temptation. The limitations that bind us to time and space will disappear, replaced by a life that will never fade, never weaken, and never end.

 

Sometimes I imagine that one day this entire life will simply become another “remember when.” Remember when we walked by faith. Remember when we struggled with weakness. Remember when we lived in a world filled with sorrow and uncertainty. Those memories will fade in the presence of something far greater—the life God has prepared for those who love Him.

 

The older I become, the more this truth settles deeply into my heart. This life, with all its beauty and all its struggles, is only the beginning of the story God is writing. The aches we feel, the losses we endure, and the brokenness we see around us are not the final chapter. One day, through the power of Christ, what is mortal will give way to what is eternal.

 

And on that day, those who belong to Him will stand in a life untouched by death, untouched by sin, and filled forever with the glory of the One who saved us.

 

When the World Trembles, Stand in Faith

Fear is everywhere today. People fear sickness, financial collapse, losing their homes, or the future their children and grandchildren will inherit. Some fear dying. Others quietly fear being forgotten and left alone. Fear creeps into the heart and begins to shape the way we see everything around us.

 

Turn on the television or read the headlines and the message is constant. Wars are expanding across the world. Nations threaten each other with devastating weapons. Economies shake and markets swing wildly. Here in California families struggle under rising costs, communities deal with crime, and every fire season brings the threat of entire towns going up in flames. Every headline seems to whisper the same message: be afraid.

 

Fear has always been one of the most powerful tools used to control people. Franklin D. Roosevelt once said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” Fear paralyzes the mind. It causes people to freeze, surrender courage, and follow whoever promises safety.

But God speaks a completely different message to His people.

 

He warns us not to think the way the world thinks or fear the things the world fears. The Lord says there is only One who is worthy of our fear—only One who should make us tremble—and that is God Himself. When we place Him above every crisis, every threat, and every uncertainty, the fears of this world begin to lose their power.

 

Scripture reminds us, “When I am afraid, I will trust in You.” Faith does not ignore danger, but it refuses to bow to it. Faith anchors the heart in the authority of God rather than the instability of the world.

 

So how do we overcome fear? We overcome it by fixing our eyes on God instead of the noise around us. We open His Word. We pray. We obey His instruction. We keep a clear conscience before Him and stand for what is right. As Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “Faith is taking the first step even when you don’t see the whole staircase.”

 

The world may tremble. Nations may rage. Headlines may shout fear every day. But the person whose hope is anchored in God stands on something the world cannot shake.  And when faith rises, fear loses its hold.

The War Between Control and Trust

Drive down any highway and look at the billboards. Scroll through social media for five minutes. Watch a commercial during a major event. The message is relentless. A woman’s body sells cars, perfume, fitness programs, even hamburgers. She is posed, polished, filtered, and perfected. Her worth is framed by youth, shape, skin, and sex appeal. If she fits the mold, she is celebrated. If she does not, she is quietly sidelined. Aging is treated like failure. Modesty is treated like insecurity. If she refuses to play the game, she risks becoming invisible. So many women feel the pressure to adjust, to reveal more, to speak louder, to be bolder than they truly are—because fitting in feels safer than standing apart.

 

At the same time, men are often reduced to comic relief. Sitcoms and commercials portray husbands as clueless and dependent. Fathers are shown as irresponsible. Leadership in a man is questioned or mocked. When that narrative repeats long enough, it shapes expectations. Women begin to assume men cannot lead well. Men begin to doubt that their strength is wanted. Suspicion replaces trust.

 

Beneath all of this is a deeper conflict—a war between control and trust. Genesis 3:16 reveals where it began. After sin entered the world, God told the woman, “You will desire to control your husband, but he will rule over you.” Before sin, there was harmony. After sin, there was tension. The desire to control took root, and the response became either domination or retreat. Partnership was replaced by struggle.

 

The desire to control often grows out of fear. If a woman believes she cannot rely on a man, she may feel she must take charge. If culture tells her she is alone, she may decide control is her only security. But control does not create peace. It creates resistance. It invites withdrawal or conflict. The more one side tightens its grip, the more the other side either pulls away or pushes back.

 

I saw this tension up close when Carol and I attended a new church. I began a men’s ministry, and men were stepping into strength and responsibility. Though I was not in formal leadership, the fruit was clear. At a gathering, the pastor’s wife approached me, lifted her hands, and placed them along her cheeks like blinders, narrowing my vision so my eyes locked only on hers. The gesture felt deliberate and forceful, as if she were establishing control before speaking. She told me to focus on her because she was going to lay down how she wanted me to teach the men. It was not collaboration. It was control. In that moment, the larger battle became visible.

If control wins, division follows. Men retreat or harden. Women grow more frustrated and press harder. Respect fades. Unity weakens. Homes strain. Ministries suffer. The war between control and trust leaves both sides wounded.

 

Proverbs 31 shows a better way. “Who can find a virtuous and capable wife? She is more precious than rubies.” This woman is strong, but she does not grasp for power. Her husband trusts her. She brings him good, not harm. She works with diligence and wisdom. She is clothed with strength and dignity, not rivalry and insecurity. “Charm is deceptive, and beauty does not last; but a woman who fears the LORD will be greatly praised.” Her foundation is trust in God, not control over others.

 

When a woman chooses trust in God over control of man, and a man chooses responsibility under God instead of retreat from pressure, the war begins to end. Trust rebuilds what control tears down. Peace replaces tension. Partnership replaces suspicion. The world may continue to market distortion, but distortion cannot sustain legacy. Only trust anchored in God’s design can build something that lasts.

Resolve Before Regret

Right now, we are bombing Iran. That is not just another headline or a passing moment in the news cycle. It is a serious turning point. Moments like this force a nation to decide whether it will confront a growing threat while it is still manageable, or wait until that threat becomes far more dangerous and far more costly to stop.

 

History has already shown us what hesitation can produce. In the years leading up to World War II, Europe convinced itself that accommodating aggression would prevent a larger conflict. Germany rebuilt its military in direct violation of international agreements. It reoccupied the Rhineland. It annexed Austria. It demanded and received territory from Czechoslovakia. Each action was met with concern, but little resistance. Each concession was justified as preserving peace. When Neville Chamberlain returned from Munich in 1938 proclaiming “peace for our time,” many believed war had been avoided. Instead, the delay allowed Hitler to strengthen his military, solidify his position, and prepare for a war that would devastate nations and claim millions of lives. Appeasement did not stop the conflict. It ensured it would be larger and deadlier when it came.

 

Time is not neutral. It either strengthens those who value freedom or those who seek to destroy it. When a regime openly calls for America’s destruction, funds armed proxies, expands its military reach, and works steadily toward greater power, it is not unreasonable to take those signals seriously. Words repeated over decades, backed by weapons and action, are not empty rhetoric. History warns us what can happen when clear threats are dismissed or minimized.

 

None of this means war is something to celebrate. It is not. War is heavy. It is unpredictable. It carries consequences that extend beyond battlefields and into homes. But there are times when the greater danger lies in convincing ourselves that inaction equals peace. Sometimes delay does not prevent conflict; it multiplies the cost of it.

 

Leadership is defined in moments like this. In times of peace leaders are chosen; in times of conflict leaders are revealed. It is easy to speak confidently when there is no real threat pressing in. It is far harder to act when the stakes are high, criticism is loud, and the outcome is uncertain. True leadership does not bend with every opinion poll or media narrative. It weighs the long-term safety of its people above short-term approval.

 

While much of the nation debates motives and politics, there are men and women in uniform who understand what this action means in practical terms. They know modern conflict is not limited to traditional battle lines. It includes cyber warfare, proxy militias, terrorism, and retaliation that can take many forms. They understand that once action is taken, responses are likely. They may be asked to fight in ways that are complex and unfamiliar. Yet they stand ready, not because it is popular, but because it is their duty.

 

If nothing had been done and years from now a stronger, emboldened adversary inflicted catastrophic harm, history would not ask whether we were cautious enough to avoid criticism. It would ask whether we recognized the danger while it could still be confronted. The lesson from the past is not that conflict is desirable, but that unchecked aggression grows with time.

 

There are moments in history when resolve prevents regret. This may well be one of them.

The Night Pride Collapsed

In Isaiah 47, God speaks to Babylon and exposes the heart of a nation intoxicated with its own power. “You said, ‘I will reign forever.’” “You felt secure in your wickedness.” “You said, ‘I am the only one, and there is no other.’” These words reveal more than ancient history. They uncover a mindset—a belief that strength guarantees permanence, that knowledge replaces God, and that delayed judgment means no judgment at all.

 

Babylon was wealthy, educated, organized, and culturally advanced. It did not see itself as evil; it saw itself as enlightened. It reshaped morality around its desires. It honored pleasure. It trusted its scholars, its leaders, its systems. It believed it had moved beyond the need for divine authority. In its confidence, it assumed it would reign forever.

 

But while Babylon celebrated, judgment was already moving. On the very night its leaders feasted and indulged, the kingdom fell. In a single night, what seemed unshakable collapsed. In a single generation, what looked permanent disappeared. The silence of God had not been approval—it had been patience. And when that patience reached its limit, no wealth, no wisdom, and no power could stop the fall.

 

History repeats itself because pride repeats itself. When a nation begins to reject God’s authority, it slowly rewrites His design. What He calls truth becomes outdated. What He calls sin becomes progress. What He calls righteousness becomes oppression. Leaders trust human knowledge more than divine revelation. They build policies for applause today without considering the cost tomorrow. And when the consequences surface—fractured families, moral confusion, weakened institutions—the burden is left for others to carry.

 

Many believe parts of the modern liberal left are walking this same path. God is pushed out of public life. Biblical standards are dismissed as harmful or regressive. Human intellect is elevated as the highest authority. There is confidence that progress is inevitable and that cultural dominance will endure. Like Babylon, there is a quiet belief: we are advanced, we are secure, and we will not fall.

 

But the lesson of Isaiah stands unshaken. God still governs nations. Moral laws still carry consequences. “God’s patience is not His approval.” Babylon believed it would reign forever, yet it fell in a single night while it was celebrating. What looked unstoppable proved fragile. What seemed eternal proved temporary.

 

When Respect Sat Down

Tuesday night’s ‘State of the Union’ was not just a speech. It was a snapshot of a divided nation.

 

When the President of the United States stands before Congress to deliver the State of the Union, it is more than politics. The Constitution requires that the president report on the condition of the country. From the earliest days of our republic, that moment has carried weight. The format has changed over time, but the meaning has not. It remains one of the rare occasions when the branches of government gather in one room before the American people. It is meant to represent stability, continuity, and shared responsibility.

 

Sadly, as the president entered the chamber that night, unity was not what stood out. The divide was immediate and unmistakable. One side rose in applause while the other remained seated. Throughout the evening, that contrast continued with approval from one side, silence from the other. It was visible to every American watching.

 

If you watched closely, there were moments that spoke even louder. When ordinary Americans were recognized—men and women who had sacrificed, served, or overcome hardship—some Democrat members appeared as though they wanted to stand. A few shifted forward in their seats. Some half-rose and then paused. Several glanced down the row, as if waiting to see what the rest of their party would do. Then they settled back down. Even a simple act of acknowledgment seemed to require permission.

 

The divide became especially clear during the discussion of immigration. When border security and the protection of American citizens were emphasized, one side responded with strong approval while the other showed little reaction. When compassion and protection for those who entered the country illegally were highlighted, the applause shifted. For many Americans watching at home, it felt as though two different sets of priorities were on display. It raised a deeper question: who comes first? The citizens who live here legally and expect safety and lawful order, or those who crossed the border unlawfully? Whether intended or not, the contrast widened the sense of separation in that chamber.

 

Then came the moments that should have risen above party. Ordinary citizens were honored, individuals whose lives reflected courage, perseverance, and service. These were not political figures. They were Americans whose stories represented the best of the country. Yet some members would not stand and applause even for them. That silence carried weight. It was not a vote. It was not a debate. It was a decision about whether to publicly acknowledge what is honorable.

 

After the speech, much of the reaction centered on how it “felt.” Commentators and leaders spoke about tone and emotion more than substance. Empathy and compassion have their place, but leadership requires more than reaction. Feelings shift. They change with the moment. Governing requires steadiness, clarity, and principle.

 

Respect should not be conditional. It should not depend on party alignment or agreement with the speaker. Respect is given because institutions matter and because people matter. When leaders hesitate to stand for what is honorable because they are watching their political colleagues first, it reveals how deeply division has taken hold.

 

Leadership sets culture. What happens in that chamber does not stay there. The cameras magnify it. The media repeat it. The public absorbs it. If respect weakens at the highest levels, it weakens everywhere.

 

The State of the Union has survived war, economic collapse, and fierce political battles. It does not require agreement to endure. It requires wisdom and patriotism. Last Tuesday night revealed not just ‘policy differences,’ but rather a fracture in posture and priority.

 

A nation can survive disagreement. It cannot thrive when respect sits down.

When Hearts Become Hardened

Genesis 19:3–5 records a moment that exposes more than one city’s sin; it reveals the end result of moral drift. In this account the men of Sodom surround Lot’s house at night. They come from every part of the city—young and old. They are not secretive. They are not embarrassed. They are united and demanding. What should have been hidden in darkness is now paraded in the open. That scene did not happen suddenly. It was the harvest of years of tolerated corruption.

 

Moral collapse never begins with mobs in the street. It begins quietly, with compromise in the heart. Standards are not openly rejected at first; they are softened. Language changes. What was once clearly called sin is renamed as preference, freedom, or identity. Confusion replaces clarity. Then desensitization sets in. What once shocked begins to entertain. What once caused grief begins to draw applause. Over time conscience grows quieter, and what once required secrecy becomes normal conversation.

 

We are watching this pattern unfold in our own time. Today you can hardly turn on a television or stream a program without homosexuality being presented as a normal and celebrated family structure or relationship. What would have sparked serious moral debate a generation ago is now routine storytelling. Repetition reshapes perception. Constant exposure dulls conviction. A culture discipled by its screens will eventually mirror what it consumes.

 

Soon justification follows. Disagreement is labeled intolerance. Conviction is called hate. Instead of wrestling honestly with moral truth, society removes the tension by redefining it. Sin is no longer merely practiced; it is defended and institutionalized. At that point boldness replaces shame, and resistance becomes the minority voice.

 

History shows where this road leads. Rome did not collapse when it was strong in discipline and virtue. Its decline began when indulgence hollowed out its character. Brutal entertainment filled the arenas, sexual excess became common, and luxury replaced restraint. The empire still looked powerful, but its moral foundation was weakening. Greece followed a similar course. Though brilliant in thought and culture, internal corruption eroded its unity long before outside forces overcame it. Empires rarely fall first from invasion; they fall because internal compromise has already made them fragile.

 

The lesson is clear. When hearts grow hard, cultures follow. External pressure only exposes weakness that has been growing within for years.

 

Yet decline is not destiny. The same way decay spreads through quiet compromise, renewal begins through quiet repentance. Restoration does not start in government buildings but in living rooms. It begins when reverence for God is restored in the home, when parents teach truth clearly and model it consistently. Restoration grows when believers refuse to celebrate what God calls sin, and yet speak truth and love with courage and compassion. It strengthens when churches choose clarity over comfort and when individuals practice integrity in private, as well as in public.

 

Cultural madness is not reversed by outrage alone, rather by transformed hearts. A different future requires different seeds.

 

Perversion grows when it is normalized. Righteousness grows when it is practiced.