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.

Prophecy: Proof Written Before History

I recently had a conversation with someone about prophecy in the Bible. He asked a question that many people have wondered about, even if they’ve never said it out loud. He said, “Is prophecy really God telling the future, or is it just people later on reading it and then trying to make it happen?” In other words, is prophecy truly supernatural, or is it something humans could manipulate after the fact?

 

That same morning, I had been reading Isaiah 44:28, and the timing of it felt almost too perfect. In that verse, Isaiah records God speaking about the rebuilding of Jerusalem. It wasn’t written as a hopeful idea or a vague prediction. It was written as a certainty. What makes this remarkable is that Isaiah wrote it around 200 years before it happened. At the time Isaiah wrote those words, Jerusalem had not yet been destroyed, and no one living in that moment would have been able to imagine the exact chain of events that would have to take place for that prophecy to be fulfilled.

 

Jerusalem would eventually be completely destroyed by the Babylonian Empire. The city would be devastated, the temple ruined, and the people taken into captivity. That alone would have seemed like the end of everything. But Isaiah’s prophecy didn’t stop at destruction. For Jerusalem to be rebuilt, Babylon would have to fall, and another empire would have to rise in its place. Persia would have to take control of the world stage. Then a king would have to be born, come to power, and issue a decree allowing Jerusalem to be rebuilt.

 

And Isaiah doesn’t just predict that a king will do it—he names him. Cyrus. The prophecy identifies Cyrus before Cyrus even existed. We can read it today and treat it as history because we already know how it turned out, but Isaiah wrote it before any of it happened. The destruction, the rise of Persia, and the reign of Cyrus were all future events at the time the prophecy was written. That is not something people could “act out” to make it come true, because it involved nations, empires, warfare, rulers, and the shifting of global power.

 

As our conversation continued, we moved from Jerusalem to Jesus. That is when the weight of prophecy becomes even clearer. Isaiah 53 describes the suffering of the Messiah in a way that aligns with the crucifixion of Christ. It speaks of rejection, suffering, being wounded for the sins of others, and dying as an innocent sacrifice. Isaiah wrote those words centuries before Jesus was born and long before Rome perfected crucifixion as an instrument of torture and execution.

 

That is what makes the argument that people “lived it out” so difficult to accept. The Roman soldiers who crucified Jesus were not trying to fulfill Hebrew prophecy. They were not studying Isaiah. Many of them likely could not even read. They were simply carrying out an execution. Yet their actions aligned with what Isaiah wrote long before they ever existed.

 

That is when I realized prophecy is not just information about the future. It is evidence of who God is. God gives prophecy to show that He is not limited by time. He sees what humans cannot see. He declares what will happen before it happens. And He sets a clear standard: if what He says does not come to pass, then His Word cannot be trusted. But if what He says happens exactly as written, then it becomes proof that His Word is true.

 

This reminds me of a well-known quote by C.S. Lewis: “You must make your choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God: or else a madman or something worse.” That quote fits because fulfilled prophecy forces a decision. If God truly spoke through Scripture, then the Bible cannot be treated as merely a collection of moral teachings. It is either divine truth, or it is not.

 

That is where Romans 8:29 connects directly into this discussion. The verse says, “For whom He foreknew, He also predestined…” It begins with foreknowledge. God does not say He forced people into salvation. He says He foreknew them. The same God who knew the future of nations also knows the hearts of individuals. He already knows who will accept His offer of salvation. He already knows who will respond to His grace.

 

This also ties into the fact that salvation is a gift. A gift is not earned. It is not worked for. It is received. Accepting a gift is not an act of achievement, but an act of trust. Scripture is clear that salvation is not of works. We do nothing to deserve it. We simply accept what Christ has done for us.

 

And that is where prophecy becomes deeply personal. If God was right about Jerusalem, and right about Cyrus, and right about the suffering of Christ, then He must also be right about salvation. If He has proven His truth through fulfilled prophecy, then what He says about forgiveness, eternal life, judgment, and the future must also be true.

 

The Bible also speaks clearly about future events that will unfold on the earth itself. Scripture warns that in the last days the world will not gradually improve, but will grow darker in many ways. Jesus spoke of wars and rumors of wars, of nations rising against nations, and of distress among the people. The Bible describes a world filled with fear, confusion, deception, and unrest. It speaks of moral decay, where what is evil will be called good and what is good will be called evil. It warns that many will fall away from truth, not because truth is unavailable, but because hearts will grow cold and people will prefer lies that satisfy them over truth that convicts them.

 

The Bible also speaks of Israel and Jerusalem continuing to be at the center of world attention. It describes a time when nations will gather against Israel, and the city of Jerusalem will become a burdensome stone to the world. For centuries people questioned how such a small nation could hold such prophetic significance, yet today the world’s eyes remain fixed on that region, just as Scripture foretold. The same city Isaiah spoke about rebuilding is still central in the story of prophecy, proving that God’s timeline has not ended.

 

Scripture also warns of a coming world system that will seek to unify politics, economics, and religion under one controlling power. It describes a time when buying and selling will be restricted, when global control will increase, and when deception will become so strong that many will be led astray. It speaks of false peace, false unity, and false promises that appear to solve the world’s problems but ultimately lead to oppression and judgment. The Bible does not describe the future as random chaos, but as a carefully unfolding plan, moving toward a climax that God has already declared.

 

The Bible also speaks of a great period of tribulation on the earth, a time of suffering unlike any the world has seen. It describes judgments that will affect nations, economies, and nature itself. It speaks of earthquakes, famine, and calamities that will shake humanity and reveal how fragile human power truly is. The world will attempt to solve these crises through human strength, but prophecy makes it clear that mankind will not be able to fix what is coming without God.

 

Yet even in these warnings, prophecy is not written to produce fear but to produce preparation. God does not reveal the future to terrify His people but to remind them that nothing is out of control. Even the darkest events are not outside His authority. The Bible shows that God’s purpose is not destruction, but redemption. He is calling people to Himself before the final events unfold.

 

And at the center of it all stands the return of Jesus Christ. The same Christ who came first as a suffering servant will return as King. Scripture describes Him coming not quietly, but visibly and powerfully. It describes the nations being humbled and the reign of Christ being established on earth. The Bible speaks of a coming kingdom where Christ will rule with justice, where righteousness will be restored, and where God’s authority will finally be acknowledged by all creation.

 

So prophecy is not simply about proving God’s Word is accurate. It is about showing us that God is moving history toward an appointed end. The same God who accurately spoke of Cyrus, Jerusalem, and the cross has also spoken of what is still coming. And if He has been right about everything behind us, then we should take seriously everything still ahead of us.

 

In the end, prophecy leaves us with one clear truth: God has not only written history—He has written the future. And if He is right about the future, then He is right about salvation. The greatest question is not whether prophecy is true, but whether we will accept His gift of grace while there is still time.

WHAT DOES IT TAKE TO STOP YOU?

If you want to understand what it takes to stop a man who is doing what God has called him to do, you need to read the book of Nehemiah. The story is not merely about building a wall. It is about how the enemy responds when something righteous begins to rise.

 

Nehemiah had barely begun the work when opposition appeared. The moment the walls of Jerusalem started going up, the enemies of Israel attacked him in four distinct ways, the same four strategies still used today.

 

First, they scoffed. They laughed at the work. They treated the vision as foolish and impossible. Scoffing is meant to plant doubt before the foundation is even complete. It whispers, “Who do you think you are? This will never succeed.” It aims at belief before anything solid has been built.

 

When scoffing did not stop the building, the second attack came: mocking. This was more than laughter; it was humiliation. They tried to shame the builders into quitting. They belittled their efforts, saying the wall was so weak that even a fox climbing on it would cause it to collapse.

Mockery is designed to make you care more about human opinion than divine assignment. It attempts to embarrass you out of obedience.

 

When ridicule failed, the third attack escalated into threats of physical harm. They plotted violence. They sought to intimidate the workers into fear. The people under Nehemiah’s leadership built with one hand while holding a weapon in the other. That is what fear does. It does not always destroy you directly. It distracts you, exhausts you, and tempts you to question whether the cost is worth continuing.

 

When threats did not succeed, the fourth attack came: slander. They spread lies. They accused Nehemiah of rebellion. They questioned his motives. They attempted to destroy his reputation because they could not stop his hands. Slander is the enemy’s final weapon. If he cannot stop the work, he will try to destroy the worker.

 

Scoffing. Mocking. Threats. Slander. This is the ancient pattern. It is the same strategy still used today. The lesson is clear: to stop someone who is building what God has assigned, you must break his faith, shake his focus, and pull him down from the wall. If you can get him arguing, constantly defending himself, reacting to every accusation, and chasing distractions, the work will stop even if no one ever touches a stone.

 

But Nehemiah refused to come down. When his enemies tried to lure him away with conversations and traps, he responded with one of the strongest declarations in Scripture: “I am doing a great work, and I cannot come down.” He understood something many forget. The greatest danger is not the attack itself, but allowing the attack to redirect you.

 

What Nehemiah may not have fully understood at the time is that he was rebuilding more than a defensive structure. He was participating in prophecy. The book of Daniel reveals that when the decree was issued to restore and rebuild Jerusalem, a prophetic timeline began that would lead to the coming of the Messiah. The restoration of the city, including its streets and walls, marked the beginning of that countdown. Nehemiah was not merely stacking stones; he was helping set in motion events that would culminate in the arrival of Jesus Christ.

 

That is why the resistance was so intense. The enemy often sees the significance of obedience before we do. Restoring Jerusalem meant restoring identity, order, boundaries, and covenant promise. The wall was not merely physical protection. It was a spiritual declaration that God was not finished, that His promises still stood, and that His redemptive plan was moving forward.

 

This truth applies to every person called to build something righteous. You may believe you are simply obeying. You may think you are only handling what is directly in front of you. But your obedience may carry consequences and blessings far beyond what you can see. The enemy fights hardest when the assignment affects more than the present moment.

 

So, what does it take to stop you? It takes more than opposition. It takes convincing you to come down. It takes persuading you to quit. It takes getting you to surrender before the work is complete. Scoffing will not stop you if you remain focused. Mocking will not stop you if you remain humble. Threats will not stop you if you remain courageous. Slander will not stop you if you remain anchored in Truth.

 

The only thing that truly stops a builder (like TRUMP) is when he decides the noise is more important than the calling.

The Greatest Is Love

“And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.” (1 Corinthians 13:13)

 

The greatest is love. Not power. Not knowledge. Not success. Love. That is how our walk with the Lord begins, and that is how it continues. Our relationship with God is not built on fear, performance, or ritual. It is built on love. A love that reaches for us when we are weak. A love that answers when we cry out. A love that never turns away.

 

Our walk with the Lord is a walk of love, for when we cry for help He is always there. When the weight of life presses down on us and our strength feels small, He draws near. He does not ignore our struggle. He does not grow tired of our prayers. He leads us gently. He steadies our steps. He carries us when we cannot carry ourselves.

 

He leads us to green pastures when our souls are dry and restless. He restores what the world has drained from us. He brings peace into anxious hearts. He gives courage when fear tries to take over. His presence is not distant or cold. It is personal. It is faithful. It is constant.

 

When we begin to understand that kind of love, our response cannot be anything but praise. Praise is not just singing. It is gratitude. It is trust. It is surrender. It is the quiet confidence that no matter what comes, we are not walking alone.

 

And when our walk is right with the Lord, people notice. The world may not understand theology, but it understands peace. It understands patience in suffering. It understands strength without bitterness. When others see a life anchored in love and trust, they see something different. They see a relationship, not religion. They see a faith that is alive.

 

The greatest is love. And when we walk in that love, the world cannot help but see it….and be drawn to it. Some will hate it only because it convicts them, but no matter what – it is felt.

Hope that Cannot Be Touched

There are few things in this life that can shake a person to the core. Sickness is one of them. Especially when it is serious. Especially when it is terminal. It does not just attack the body, it attacks the mind. It steals sleep. It steals strength. It steals appetite. It steals joy. And if a person does not have something greater than this world to hold onto, sickness can steal the most important thing of all: hope.

 

Hope is not a small thing. Hope is what keeps a man moving forward when everything is falling apart. Hope is what allows you to see tomorrow when today feels unbearable. Hope is what gives you the strength to endure pain, uncertainty, and fear. When hope is alive, a person can suffer and still stand. But when hope dies, the body may still breathe, yet the soul begins to collapse.

 

This is why knowing the Creator matters. Without God, sickness feels like a dark hallway that leads to nothing. Death feels final. The grave feels like the end of the story. People try to comfort themselves with words, but deep down they know the truth: without God, there is no promise beyond the grave. Without Christ, life becomes a countdown, and suffering becomes meaningless.

 

But the Gospel says something different. The Gospel says life is not the end. The Gospel says death is not the finish line. The Gospel says the grave is not victory. Through Jesus Christ, we have a promise of eternity. We have a promise of a new body. We have a promise of a kingdom that does not decay. We have a promise that this world is temporary, but what God has prepared is eternal.

 

Scripture says, “For we know that if the earthly tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building from God, an eternal house in heaven, not built by human hands.” (2 Corinthians 5:1) That is not a wish. That is not a theory. That is a guarantee purchased by the blood of Jesus Christ. The older a man becomes, the more precious that promise becomes. Because this body wears out. But God’s promises do not.

 

That is why hope in Christ is different from every other kind of hope. It does not depend on a diagnosis. It does not depend on medicine. It does not depend on circumstances. Hope in Christ stands even when the doctor says there is nothing left to do. Because the believer knows this truth: even if the body fails, the soul is secure. Even if the heart stops, eternity begins.

 

The world sees death as the end. But for the believer, death is the doorway into what was promised. The grave is not the end of the road. It is the end of suffering. It is the end of weakness. It is the end of fear. It is the moment faith becomes sight.

 

As C. S. Lewis said, “Aim at Heaven and you will get earth thrown in. Aim at earth and you will get neither.” That is the difference between a life built on this world and a life built on Christ. One ends in emptiness. The other ends in glory.

 

So, when sickness comes, and fear tries to take over, remember this: the Christian does not grieve like someone without hope. We do not deny pain, but we do not surrender to despair. We endure because we know what is coming. We endure because we know who holds our future. And we endure because Jesus Christ has already conquered the grave.

 

They Had Been with Jesus (Acts 4:13)

Acts 4:13 is more than a verse to me. It is the banner over my life. It is the kind of testimony I want written over my name when my time here is finished. The verse says that when the leaders saw the boldness of Peter and John, they realized they were uneducated and ordinary men. That description alone could have dismissed them. But it did not. Something in their lives spoke louder than their lack of formal training.

 

I think about where I came from, and I understand why this verse grips me the way it does. I come from a family of twelve children, and I am number eleven. There is nearly thirty years between my oldest brother and my youngest sister. That detail matters because my parents were not young when they had my sister and me. They came from a different era, a time when a man’s word meant something and character was not optional. A handshake still carried weight. Standards were not rewritten every decade. Integrity was expected. I grew up in that atmosphere, and it shaped me long before I realized it.

 

Yet if you measured me by academics alone, you would not have predicted much. I do not have college degrees. I struggled in high school. By the world’s system of evaluation, my future should have been limited. I was supposed to rely on physical strength, not intellectual depth. I was not the obvious candidate for influence or wisdom

.

But something happened to me that no transcript could measure. I met my Savior.

 

When I came to know Jesus Christ personally, my education truly began. I learned that the deepest wisdom is not always taught in classrooms. It is learned in the quiet presence of the One who created life itself. In the early hours of the morning, I would bring Him my rejection, my anger, my disappointments, and my wounds. And He began to teach me. He taught me how to endure pain without becoming bitter. He taught me how to respond to criticism without losing my identity. He taught me how to forgive when pride wanted to fight back. That kind of learning does not come from books. It comes from walking closely with Him.

 

I will not pretend I have mastered every lesson. I still struggle. I still grow. But I know where to go for answers, and that knowledge has anchored my life more securely than any degree ever could.

 

Because of that, I have also experienced something else. There will always be people who measure worth by credentials. They look at degrees, titles, and accomplishments and decide who has value. It can hurt when those closest to you speak in ways that diminish your thoughts or question your depth. It can sting when someone implies that because you did not pass through their system, your voice carries less weight.

That tension is exactly what Acts 4:13 reveals. The leaders of that day tried to reduce Peter and John. They tried to label them. They tried to dismiss them. They saw uneducated and ordinary men and assumed that was the end of the story. But it was not.

 

The verse delivers the most powerful conclusion of all: they recognized that these men had been with Jesus. That is the difference.

 

The world may look at someone and say, “He is not educated.” But heaven looks and says, “He has been with Jesus.”

 

The world may say, “He does not have credentials.” But God says, “He has My Spirit.”

 

The world may measure wisdom by scholars and training, but it is difficult to argue with the kind of depth that comes from sitting at the feet of Christ. There is a strength that comes from prayer. There is a steadiness that comes from suffering with Him. There is a clarity that comes from obedience and truth. And that is the real point of my life.

 

I am not writing this to complain about being underestimated. I am writing this because there is no greater title a man could ever carry than this:

“He has been with Jesus.”

When the Body Weakens, the Eyes See

This morning I felt the weight of this earthly body in a way that cannot be ignored. Age has a quiet way of speaking. The strength that once felt permanent now comes and goes. The body reminds a man that he was never designed to live here forever. And with that reminder comes a deeper longing, not for youth, but for eternity.

 

Scripture says, “For we know that if the earthly tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building from God, an eternal house in heaven, not built by human hands.” (2 Corinthians 5:1) That promise grows sweeter with the years. The older a man becomes, the more he understands that this life is temporary. The aches and limits of the body are not curses; they are reminders that something better has been prepared.

 

But as my body grows weaker, my eyes grow sharper. Age strips away illusion. It removes distraction. And what I see happening in this nation is not just troubling, it is sobering. I feel like I am watching the foundations crack in real time. Peace feels thinner. Justice feels uneven. Truth feels negotiable. Division runs deeper than politics. The ground feels unstable, as though the pillars that once held this country steady are being deliberately shaken.

 

I see leaders on the liberal left pushing far beyond policy debates. It feels like an effort to reshape the moral framework of the nation itself. Long-held truths about family, gender, faith, and national identity are being dismantled. Borders are treated as optional. Law is treated as flexible. Crime is excused in the name of compassion. Hard work is penalized while dependency grows. Truth is no longer discovered; it is declared. Faith is mocked. Morality is labeled intolerance. What once anchored this nation is now treated as a threat.

 

Scripture warned that such days would come: “Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness.” (Isaiah 5:20) Those words no longer feel distant. They feel present. What was once shameful is celebrated. What was once honored is attacked. And those who refuse to bend are treated like the problem.

 

History teaches a pattern that cannot be ignored. When a people drift from God, confusion follows. When truth is traded for convenience, disorder takes its place. A nation cannot reject moral authority and expect lasting stability. It cannot silence conscience and expect peace. The consequences are not mysterious. They unfold slowly, then suddenly.

 

President John Adams warned, “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” That was not a sermon. It was a sober understanding of human nature. Freedom only works when people govern themselves with virtue. When self-restraint disappears, external control eventually replaces it.

 

That is what concerns me most. Not elections alone. Not headlines alone. But the erosion of character. A nation does not collapse overnight. It weakens when truth becomes flexible, when responsibility becomes optional, and when citizens forget that liberty demands discipline.

 

Yet even in this reality, there remains hope. Throughout history, whenever people humbled themselves and returned to God sincerely, mercy followed. Judgment is not God’s desire; it is the result of persistent rebellion. Repentance has always opened the door to restoration.

 

As an older man, I do not fear what is coming as much as I grieve what is being lost. My confidence is not in political systems or cultural movements. Nations rise and fall. Bodies age and fade. But the kingdom of God stands untouched.

 

This earthly body may grow weaker, and this nation may tremble, but the promises of God do not age. They do not weaken. They do not expire.

 

And perhaps that is what age is meant to teach us. When the body weakens, the eyes see more clearly what truly lasts.

 

The Strength of a Father’s Presence

I had this thought running through my head all day yesterday: a father’s role is not to stop his child from going through hardship, but to help them while they go through it.

 

That idea challenges how we often define love. We tend to believe love means protection from pain. But a good father understands that hardship is not always the enemy. Valleys shape character. Struggle builds strength. Pain, when faced with guidance, produces maturity. A father who removes every obstacle may preserve comfort, but he robs his child of growth.

 

Psalm 23:4 captures this truth with stunning clarity: “Even when I walk through the darkest valley, I will not be afraid, for you are close beside me.” The Scripture does not say the valley disappears. It does not say the danger is removed. It says you walk through it. The darkness is real. The fear is real. But fear loses its power because the Father is present. His nearness becomes the protection. His presence becomes the strength.

 

This is the heart of true fatherhood. A father cannot always stop the storm, but he can stand steady inside it. He cannot remove every wound, but he can teach his child how to endure without breaking. He cannot fight every battle for them, but he can walk beside them so they never face the battle alone.

 

There is a well-known truth that fits this perfectly: “Smooth seas do not make skillful sailors.” Strength is forged in resistance. Courage is learned under pressure. The valley is where a child discovers who they are and who they can trust.

 

God fathers us the same way. He does not promise a life without valleys, but He promises His presence in them. He does not always take us out of the fire, but He stands with us in it. He does not always quiet the storm, but He gives peace that holds steady while the storm rages.

A father’s greatest gift is not a pain-free life. It is the assurance that no matter how dark the valley becomes, someone strong, faithful, and unshakable is walking right beside you.

 

That is the strength of a father’s presence.

Citizenship Must Mean Something

In America, the most powerful weapon a citizen has is not money, not influence, not fame, and not a platform. It is the vote. The ballot is the one tool that gives the average man equal power with the rich, the famous, and the elite. That is why our Founding Fathers treated voting as sacred. They understood that a nation rises or falls on whether its people can truly choose their leaders.

 

Thomas Jefferson stated it plainly: “The will of the people is the only legitimate foundation of any government.” That statement only works if the people choosing the government are truly the people of the nation. If the vote is corrupted, diluted, or disconnected from citizenship, then the foundation Jefferson spoke of collapses.

 

From the beginning, voting was tied to responsibility and belonging. Over time, the right to vote expanded, and rightly so. Property requirements were removed. Former slaves were given the right to vote. Women were given the right to vote. Discriminatory barriers were outlawed. The voting age was lowered. But through every generation, one principle never changed: the vote belonged to citizens. Not to the world. Not to outsiders. Not to anyone who simply happened to live inside the borders. Voting was always connected to citizenship because citizenship means ownership. It means loyalty. It means being bound to the nation’s future.

 

That is why the issue today is so serious. Many Americans believe leaders on the liberal left are weakening the vote by weakening the meaning of citizenship itself. They speak constantly about inclusion, but in doing so they blur the lines that define a nation. They promote policies that weaken border enforcement and resist basic election safeguards. When borders lose meaning, citizenship loses meaning. And when citizenship loses meaning, the vote loses its power.

 

This is why voter identification matters. Voter identification is not complicated. It is not oppression. It is verification. It is the simplest way to protect the integrity of elections. If identification is required to board a plane, cash a check, or open a bank account, then it should be required to choose the leaders of the most powerful nation on earth. Even many liberals agree with this. Poll after poll shows that most Americans, including many Democrats, support voter identification laws. People understand something basic: if the vote cannot be trusted, nothing else can be trusted.

 

So the question cannot be avoided. If the American people want election security, why do so many liberal leaders resist it? Power is not gained only through persuasion. It can also be gained by changing the rules of the system itself. When citizenship is blurred and safeguards are removed, elections become easier to influence, easier to manipulate, and easier to control. The vote slowly stops being the voice of the people and becomes a tool of the system.

 

This is the real danger. A nation does not have to be conquered by an enemy army to fall. It can be dismantled quietly, from within. All it takes is for citizens to lose confidence that their vote matters. When trust in elections disappears, self-government collapses.

 

Because when the will of WE THE PEOPLE is no longer protected, freedom is no longer real.

 

The Speaking Image

It is strange how our culture works today. The world is determined to live without God, even though man was never created to live without Him. The human heart will always worship something. If people reject the true God, they will replace Him with a man-made god. And right now, we are watching that replacement happen through artificial intelligence.

 

Artificial intelligence is not coming into existence by accident. It is being built intentionally by the most powerful forces on earth: technology corporations, global investors, military contractors, and governments. These are not harmless inventions or small experiments. These are massive systems being created with enormous money, enormous influence, and long-term control in mind.

 

They tell us it is for progress, efficiency, convenience, and safety. Some of that may be true. But beneath the surface is something deeper: control. Because the one who controls information controls thought, and the one who controls thought controls society. People have been trained to believe what they see, and to trust what they are told, without testing whether it is true. That is why people no longer research. They no longer study. They no longer ask, “Is this real?” They simply ask artificial intelligence and accept the answer. The mind becomes lazy, and a lazy mind is easy to lead.

 

My generation grew up learning how things worked. Today, many people no longer care how, they only want to know. That is the dumbing-down of society. If you do not know how something works, how will you know when you are being lied to? A person who cannot reason is easily manipulated. And a person who cannot discern truth is easily controlled. When people stop thinking for themselves, they become dependent. And dependence always leads to submission. You do not need chains to enslave a population. You only need to control what they depend on.

 

Artificial intelligence is not only changing how we get knowledge, but also human relationships. Families sit together but live distracted. Husbands and wives share the same home but lose connection. Children grow up staring at screens instead of building real bonds. Conversations shrink. Attention spans weaken. Society becomes connected digitally but separated emotionally. And isolated people are easier to control, because when relationships collapse, the system becomes the only place left to turn.

 

This is how control begins. Not through force, but through convenience. Artificial intelligence becomes a guide, a helper, a counselor, and a voice people trust. And once people trust it, they obey it. When artificial intelligence becomes the source of answers, comfort, and direction, it quietly becomes a god in people’s lives. Not because it is divine, but because it is depended on. Whatever people trust most becomes what they worship.

 

There is an old saying that fits our time perfectly: “The chains of the future will not be made of iron, but of comfort.” People will not be enslaved through brutality at first, but through dependence. When the world cannot live without the system, the system becomes the master.

 

This is why Revelation 13 suddenly makes sense. Scripture describes an image that is given power to speak, and a system that controls buying and selling. For centuries people wondered how that could happen. But today we can see the path clearly. Digital currency, digital identification, surveillance, facial recognition, and artificial intelligence decision-making can create a world where a person’s ability to work, travel, buy, or sell can be turned on or off instantly. Not with soldiers on every corner, but with systems behind a screen. A system controlled by evil people is one thing, because even wicked men still have limits, weaknesses, and human restraint. But a system controlled by artificial intelligence under the influence of pure evil is something far more terrifying. Pure evil does not compromise. Pure evil does not repent. Pure evil does not show mercy. And when pure evil controls artificial intelligence, the result is a machine-driven system of judgment that can punish, silence, and destroy without hesitation.

 

And the most frightening part is this: artificial intelligence does not need emotions to carry out judgment. It does not need hatred. It does not need mercy. It only needs authority. It only needs a command. Once artificial intelligence is tied into government power, financial systems, and enforcement technology, it could judge and punish without hesitation. It could silence voices. Remove access. Cut off livelihoods. Even exterminate, if the system demanded it.

 

If God does not intervene, the end result would be a world ruled by darkness. Truth would be treated like a crime. Obedience would be demanded. Worship would be forced. And those who refused would be eliminated. That is exactly what Satan wants, because Satan has always wanted control and worship. He cannot take God’s throne, so he builds a counterfeit one, a world where people reject the Creator and bow to the creation.

So how do we move forward? We move forward by returning to what God already told us. Jesus warned that deception would increase, and technology will make deception faster and global. That is why believers must stay grounded in Scripture, because Jesus said, “Thy Word is truth.” (John 17:17) If we lose the Word, we lose discernment.

 

We must also refuse to be shaped by the system of this world. Scripture says, “Be not conformed to this world.” (Romans 12:2) The pressure to bow will grow stronger, but we are not called to blend in. We are called to stand. That means protecting our homes and reclaiming our families from screens, distractions, and spiritual numbness.

 

And, we must guard ourselves from idolatry. Artificial intelligence may be a tool, but it must never replace God. Anything we depend on more than God becomes an idol, even if it looks modern and harmless. And finally, we remember how this ends. Jesus said, “Behold, I come quickly.” (Revelation 22:12) So we do not move forward in fear. We move forward in truth. We stay faithful, we stay ready, and we refuse to bow. Because in the end, no invention will matter. No system will matter. No crowd will matter. The only question that will remain is the one every soul must answer: what did you do with Jesus Christ?

The Lie of Utopia

When I listen to voices on the liberal left shout that President Donald Trump and the Make America Great Again movement are “just like Hitler,” I cannot help but shake my head. Not because history should never be referenced, but because the irony is staggering. The very principles many progressive leaders are pushing for America have already been tested in human history, and the results were catastrophic. Some of the most destructive leaders the world has ever known, including Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler, and Mao Zedong, rose to power by promising sweeping social change, national renewal, and economic relief. They did not rise by openly threatening genocide in the beginning. They rose by selling hope, fairness, and the illusion of a better future.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and much of the modern liberal left promote similar promises: equality enforced through government control, economic redistribution, and the belief that the state can repair society if only the “right people” are placed in charge. The danger is not simply in the promises themselves, but in the historical pattern those promises often follow. Over and over again, history has shown that utopian promises, no matter how compassionate they sound, can become a gateway to dictatorship, oppression, mass murder, and even genocide.
At its core, this is not simply about political parties. It is about human nature and the repeating cycle of history. Tyrants rarely gain power by declaring evil openly. They gain power by promising rescue. They promise to punish corrupt elites. They promise to redistribute wealth. They promise to eliminate injustice. They present themselves as the only ones capable of restoring order, justice, and national pride. People who have not studied history often embrace those promises, willingly trading liberty for security and freedom for comfort.
Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong, and Adolf Hitler did not merely advocate government programs or redistribution. They built entire systems of brutal political repression, including secret police, forced labor camps, mass purges, censorship, propaganda, and one-party rule. That is the chilling truth: the path to tyranny is rarely sudden. It is gradual. Power expands in the name of compassion, justice, and protection, but it does not stop expanding once it is obtained. Promises are made that can never truly be kept, and when those promises fail, the leaders do not surrender power. Instead, they tighten their grip.
Once government becomes too large, too centralized, and too powerful, opposition is no longer treated as disagreement. It is treated as danger. Political enemies are labeled immoral, hateful, or “enemies of the people.” Liberty does not collapse all at once. It erodes slowly, piece by piece, until people wake up one day and realize they no longer recognize their own country. That is why the warning often attributed to Thomas Jefferson still echoes as a message every generation must remember: “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.” Freedom is never permanently secured. It must be defended, protected, and guarded, or it will be stolen under the disguise of progress.
The Bible gives an even clearer truth, one that history has proven again and again. Proverbs 29:2 (KJV) declares: “When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice: but when the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn.” This is not merely a spiritual statement. It is a reality written across nations and centuries. When leaders honor righteousness, justice, and truth, a nation flourishes. When wickedness takes the throne, people suffer, families weaken, and freedom fades.
That is why we must be cautious of leaders who promise sweeping solutions and radical transformation. History teaches a painful lesson: the road to oppression is often paved with promises that sounded compassionate, fair, and hopeful at the beginning. The solution is not blind loyalty to any politician. The solution is a people who know history, value liberty, defend truth, and refuse to surrender their God-given rights in exchange for temporary comfort. A nation that forgets these lessons will repeat them, and a people who refuse vigilance will eventually inherit mourning.