Szdfan wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 6:14 pm The Black Church and their allies were following and trusting God during the Civil Rights movement.
as you might guess, i’m interested and respectful of all “minorities” when it comes to Christianity, no matter location on earth.
there is a universal quality when authentic faith is present that transcends race. it’s a beautiful thing where ever its found.
unfortunately, these churches are not exempt from becoming politicized, as so many have been.
temptations challenge all, that’s for sure. it would be marvelous if some had special traits to true faith. i was hoping for that with Mennonites. i soon learned, Mennos are fully human. there’s no special formula. (some churches make it harder than others.)
No shortcuts. Salvation is one by one. Pray for the holy spirit.
Bootstrap wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 8:37 pm
temporal1 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 5:40 pm
“What if?” .. Christians trusted God?
I agree—trusting God is essential, especially when times are hard.
But trusting God doesn’t mean staying silent in the face of suffering. Jesus trusted the Father completely, yet he still wept with those who mourned, spoke up for the voiceless, and confronted hypocrisy. The early church did the same.
Sometimes, though, it feels like we ask others to quietly endure hardship while we speak from a place of constant grievance. If we’re always positioning ourselves as victims, how can we bear witness to the hope and healing we’ve found in Christ?
We’re not called to join every movement, but we are called to compassion—especially for those who suffer the most.
Trusting God should move us away from self-pity and toward mercy, justice, and solidarity with the hurting.
And maybe that's essential if we want to fight the decline of Christianity.
i’m not sure how you get any of that from the challenge of trusting God? you repeat it often.
there should be no confusion that trusting God requires action.
not coercing gov to act, not to force others to pay; results today reflect how imperfect gov actions and policies are.
traditional families devastated, normalized immorality, dependency on gov - from welfare moms to big business.
Not God’s plan. His plan is better. Not many are fully trusting.
Many of us are like Apostle Thomas, Didymus. He’s probably my fav apostle, so human! i wish it were not so.
i’m pretty sure it is.