Live Free with Josh Howerton - Debunking (Progressive) Lies About the Bible and Slavery | Live Free with Josh Howerton

Episode Date: November 17, 2025

In the 50th episode of LIVE FREE, Pastor Josh & Jana Howerton with Paul Cunningham tackle one of Satan's greatest strategies: spiritual procrastination. Learn why responding to God with urgency is vit...al and how to avoid delaying your relationship with Jesus. They also address common misconceptions about slavery in the Bible and examine the rise of toxic empathy in modern culture. From Felix’s delayed obedience in Acts 24 to the dangers of compassion untethered from truth, this episode challenges Christians to think biblically, engage culture courageously, and live faithfully today. 👍 Like, Comment, & Subscribe for more life-changing podcasts! 🔔 Turn on notifications so you never miss an update! 📝 SHOW NOTES Subscribe now to receive the show notes directly in your inbox with each new episode. These notes are filled with key insights and scripture to help you reflect and grow deeper in your faith – https://lakepointe.church/shownotes 👇 DON’T MISS OUT! God can use your 'YES" to make a difference in someone's life! Click the link to learn more about our Annual Missions Offering and how you can be a part of life-change!: lp.social/amo ⛪ ABOUT LAKEPOINTE CHURCH: We believe that Lakepointe is a movement for all people to Know God, Find Freedom, Discover their Calling, and Make a Difference. With 7 DFW locations and programs for all ages, there's something for everyone. 🤝 Support this ministry and help us reach more people with the Gospel: https://lakepointe.church/give STAY CONNECTED: 🌐 Website: https://lakepointe.church/ 👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lpconnect/ 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lpconnect 🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LakepointeChurch FOLLOW PASTOR JOSH: 👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HowertonJosh/ 📸 Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/josh_howerton/?hl=en 🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@howertonjosh GUEST PASTORS: 📸 Nolan Tjaden: https://www.instagram.com/nolantjaden/ 📸 Darren Tyler: https://www.instagram.com/darrentyler/ 🎧 LISTEN ON THE GO! ▶️ Live Free on Spotify / https://open.spotify.com/show/353ryGdZNlebaiqkCcy3Yc ▶️ Live Free on Apple Podcasts / https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/live-free-with-josh-howerton/id1669321198

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Live Free with Pastor Josh Howardton. We're so glad you're here. Lake Point Church is a movement for all people to know Jesus, live free, and make a difference with their lives. And this weekly podcast is all about helping you do just that. Each episode is a deep dive into the Word of God, tackling life, culture, and faith with truth and clarity so you can be equipped to live free in Christ.
Starting point is 00:00:24 Thanks for tuning in. And be sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode and follow us on all our social platforms to stay connected to everything happening with Live Free. Now, let's dive into today's episode. Hey, ladies, you know, welcome to, whoa, wait, drum roll, please. Episode 50 of Live Free. Carlos has resigned. Oh, excuse me.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Where is Carlos again? Colorado? Yeah, Colorado. Colorado, yeah, he's in Colorado. Carlos. Or Ernesto? Ooh. Eteros.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Wow. Which again, as we were talking about before, it just sounds so much cool. Oh, yeah, I'm Paul. Josh and Paul. Yeah. And there's carlos. Carderlos. But, hey, live free is 50, ladies and gentlemen.
Starting point is 00:01:09 That's awesome. I know, man. This is pretty cool. And obviously, for the 50th episode, we had to bring Jana. Oh, I'm excited to be back. 50. I'm excited to be back. So good to have here.
Starting point is 00:01:21 You're not 50. No, I'm not. Good clarification. Good case. I will say, I'm going to point this out. Will you toss up the screenshot of the... So when Janet comes on, I mean, it's the view counts. Look at this.
Starting point is 00:01:35 Our most downloaded episode ever was when Janet came on. Obviously not surprising it was the sex episode. Well, it was the topic. Yeah. That's what I got it. Yeah. The preacher joke is anytime... There's two things when you preach about them.
Starting point is 00:01:49 A tennis goes through the roof. Sex and the end times. And so the joke is, someday I'll preach about sex in the end times and we'll break all the records. That's right. There you go. That's great. But there it is, man. It's almost 260,000.
Starting point is 00:02:01 That's crazy. We just got to have Jana more often all the time. I didn't know that. I didn't know that. But it's the topic. It was the topic. I mean, I'm differential with Jana. I will say, no, we can't bring them on camera, but Jan and I got our rooted.
Starting point is 00:02:16 We do. Oh, it's so fun. We got, no, I will say these, we got some rooted group members in here. They inform me that, so they were telling me that live podcast or recordings are a thing and I said this sounded really boring and dumb and they were like essentially they said that's just because you're old that you think that it might be I mean is that right that's right because we're geriatric millennials no Marla no maybe I'm wrong okay I will say Callista over here she can I tell them what you did at our house all right you're
Starting point is 00:02:47 allowed to talk so so at our this is a true story actually I wish I could pull up the picture do you want to tell them tell people what they did well wait let me do this real quick so that everybody's like, this podcast is getting long and boring. So here's what we're going to talk about and then we'll tell how these people messed with our living room. So here's what we're going to talk about. We're going to talk about, we're going to talk about, we're going to talk about because of what's in Acts 24, we're going to talk, doesn't the Bible condone slavery? And this is, that's a super interesting discussion. So we're going to hit that. And then Jan, after we kicked a bit of a hornets nest last week talking about men and women and voting patterns. And then Jana at home
Starting point is 00:03:31 had thoughts. And so Janice was like, get me on that. I did not do that. She did not do that. So we're going to talk more. We're going to talk feminism. Why women vote left, men vote right. And that divide keeps getting wider and wider. What are the ideological reasons for that? And what are the biblical reasons for that? It was really interesting. But before we do that, Jana, how did these people desecrate our living room. Over here, Callista and Marlon. Well, I don't think I would say desecrate, but it actually kind of segues into what we'll talk about a little bit, like procrastination.
Starting point is 00:04:03 So I have, I have had, I redid one of our bookcases. And so I added some new picture frames, and they've been sitting there for months without pictures because I want to order from a specific place, and I just haven't placed the order. And so they have seen for months. that I have no pictures in these picture frames. So they lovingly brought pictures of themselves. And so now they are on our big face. It's so sweet. Actually, we're going to put one up right now. So Trinity, I'm dropping this in the, uh, so we, that's one of them. So they covertly stuck pictures of themselves in our, that's awesome. So here's Calista. We just turn around. There's a glamour shot of
Starting point is 00:04:51 Alyista. And the funny thing is they did, because it's been empty for so long, they didn't think I'd notice. And I'm like, well, guys, every time I walk by it, I'm like, oh, I've got to put pictures in these picture frames. But I just don't do anything about it because I'm procrastinating. Callista, you can tell me later if we have, if we need to censor that on the podcast. She says we're fine.
Starting point is 00:05:12 That's great. So we're going to talk a bunch of things. Yeah. Also saw on social this week that y'all decorated for Christmas. Oh, yeah. We do. It's officially Christmas season in the Howardson House. It is.
Starting point is 00:05:23 We are always early decorators, but we've gotten later over the years. It used to be earlier. We used to decorate Halloween night. Okay. Yeah. And then the kids always wanted early. I will say this is a 20-year streak was broken this year. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:41 So he promised me when we were first married, we will never have Christmas lights. I did say that. And we're getting Christmas lights tomorrow. It took her 20 years to break me down. That's a big thing. Well, we got engaged. This is a true story. I didn't negotiate for much.
Starting point is 00:05:56 The only thing I negotiated before we got engaged is I was like, hey, here's the thing. I will never, ever do Christmas lights. But you were really mean for you to put them up, correct? Or are you meaning you didn't want anyone to do them? Put them up or pay for them. Ah, well. I put them up for the first time a couple years ago, and I almost did Clark Griswold and died. And I was like, I haven't really done it since then.
Starting point is 00:06:18 But zero judgment. We were done the opposite. We used to be later. I grew up in a strict after Thanksgiving family. And then it's kind of slowly crept back. This year, my kids were like, well, hey, we could put up the Christmas tree and then put a sheet over it in October and pretendants a ghost. And I was like, well played, but no, not doing that. So we took it down on Halloween and then put it up the next day.
Starting point is 00:06:39 It was good strategy for sure. Steady. Definitely. Speaking of Christmas, we got Christmas at the movies coming up, everybody. We do, man. That's a weekend after Thanksgiving, November 29. and 30th. Here's the hint.
Starting point is 00:06:53 Like you don't want to miss, like you would hate to be left behind at home and not see it. That's right. Of course, I could be joking about that. It might be a false clue and I'm sitting on a throne of lies right now. You know, a little bit of an allusion
Starting point is 00:07:06 to another Christmas movie as well. I see. But last week we did a giveaway where people had to put out their guests and we had a lot of guesses when we picked a random winner from last week's giveaway. I don't know how to that.
Starting point is 00:07:19 they're going to go wrong on this. I mean, I think this one's easy. You gave it really, yeah. Yeah, yeah. But our winner of last week was EFAN 0224, so we'll be getting you a free half. How do we know those are not bots? Oh, that's great. That's a great question that I don't have a great answer to. It could be. I had a picture, but now bots probably have pictures. So anyway, yeah, so let's get into it. So, yeah, comment on the YouTube video, just hit a comment right there. We're going to pick a winner that is not a bot. hopefully and then we'll send it out it's working it's working yeah we'll send
Starting point is 00:07:53 this to you comment your favorite Christmas movie comment your favorite Christmas movie and then last thing and let's get into Acts 24 and talk about Jesus in the Bible I did somebody left this in the pod studio this is literally peanut M&M's from Air Force One no way
Starting point is 00:08:10 yes dude so Lake Point dude hang on yeah Mike Anderson Lake point dude Mike Anderson works Some like supply, let me get this good is right. He works for, it's a military deal in Roy City. And he get, I guess they help supply concessions for Air Force One. I guess President Trump likes peanut M&Ms.
Starting point is 00:08:33 I don't know. And these are Air Force One peanut Eminemps. That's cool. That's pretty special. I'm going to have one right now. Please do it. I know. I wonder if they taste better.
Starting point is 00:08:39 Paul, you want to set up X-24. Let's start talking. We're going to talk X-24. We're going to talk dozen the Bible condone slavery. Then we're going to talk feminism and voting gender divides. Setting up a little bit while you're getting a presidential M&M. Yeah. So in Acts 24, the Apostle, Paul is on trial. But this time when he's on trial, it's not before Jewish leaders, not before Jewish tribunal. This is before like the actual governor, Roman governor of Judea. And he's really on trial for his life in a sense because he's being charged formerly now with sedition and inciting riots. And the job of a Roman governor, his name is Felix, is to put that down. So if Paul is feeling guilty. Not the cat and not Hernandez. That's exactly. Not Felix, Cat, not Felix.
Starting point is 00:09:18 This is Felix, so we can talk more about it just here in a bit because he is going to It's hard to open. Go ahead. Sorry. Now, you're good. And so, yeah, so he is on trial. And if he's found guilty, likely that Paul is going to lose his life because that's what they did to people that incited riot.
Starting point is 00:09:31 So, yeah, that was where our sermon was this weekend. Anything that was left out of the sermon or any go-to-nugnugnugnugnug. A bunch. So there's a lot under the hood on this one. And then let's get in. So a few things. So just like a previously in the book of Acts, like previously on 24, you know, what it is. So obviously, X-23, there's the 40 dudes that the Jewish people essentially view Paul
Starting point is 00:09:54 as a heretic. So 40 dudes, we hit this on a pod when I was in Gulf Shores and the window cleaner was on the, I was really glad I was dressed when that happened, by the way. Forty of the Jewish guys, they essentially form a conspiratorial plot in Acts 23 to try to kill Paul. Interesting, a little side note. Some historians and biblical scholars think those were the Sicario, which is where that old movie, wait, wait, they were called the
Starting point is 00:10:23 Sicari, which is where the old movie Sicario that you should not watch with your kids that came from. They were like Jewish dagger assassins. So then interesting little fun fact
Starting point is 00:10:39 is of all people, it just so happens that Paul's niece right? Is it niece or nephew? Nephew? Nephew. Paul's nephew, here's about it. Tells Paul, Roman government, loads him up, essentially sticks him in the witness protection program, surrounds him with 470 soldiers, takes him to Cessaria. All right. So that gets us in Acts 24. Now, there's a few things that are under the hood here. You already hit this. This is with Felix. We're talking about Felix here in a second because there's a lot of really interesting stuff about Felix that we'll get into here. Governor Judea, if I understand this correctly, He's occupying the exact same governing position as Pontch's pilot. So literally the exact same position Pontch's pilot was in. This guy is in. If I'm understanding this correctly, governor of Judea.
Starting point is 00:11:28 This is why we're going to talk, doesn't the Bible condone slavery? Because Felix, very interestingly, is the only person in all of Roman history was a former slave. Yes. So former Roman slave, becomes governor of this enormous region, which, by the way, highlights some of the differences between American Chattel slavery and historical Roman slavery during biblical era times,
Starting point is 00:11:56 which will, as you will see in a few minutes, help us answer the question, doesn't the Bible condone slavery? So we'll get that in a second. A couple of other things here. Married to a chick named Drusilla. This is a little side note. Kind of fun fact.
Starting point is 00:12:09 Felix was married twice, both times to women named Drusilla. I didn't know that one. Yes. He had a type. Okay. He had a type. He liked a name.
Starting point is 00:12:19 Huh? He liked a name. He was into Drusillus. Couldn't have been many, I feel like. I don't know. I don't know if that's a common name. So you got that. All right.
Starting point is 00:12:29 Let me speed this up because they're, dude, they're so, like this, this is the type of passage why this podcast is this. Because there's so much you can't put in a sermon. So a few things here. Number one, if you, dude, I should have screenshot of this and put it up. If you're reading your Bible and you're paying really close attention, I'm going to look at it right now.
Starting point is 00:12:50 You'll be reading? Yeah, yeah. So it's in my translation. It's literally right in front of me. Tell me if this is in your translations. So you're looking at the page. You got Acts 246. You see it?
Starting point is 00:13:01 Yes. What is the next verse in your Bible? Acts 24 what? Eight. Eight. Eight, eight. So all three of our Bibles as printed go from Acts 246 to Acts 248. Now, the reason for this is you'll always see a little footnote because it says this.
Starting point is 00:13:18 Acts 24-7 is omitted for most modern Bible translations, such as the NIV, N-R-S-V, and ESV, because it does not appear in the earliest Greek manuscript, such as the Codex Sinaticus and Vaticanus from the 4th century. It says it was likely a later edition from the third. But here's what I want to point out is. when you see stuff like that, some people will see stuff like that and they'll read biblical critics that are like,
Starting point is 00:13:50 your Bible is just a photocopy of a photocopy of a photocopy of a photocopy of a photocopy and so you can't trust it. And actually, man, here's what I'll point out. That should make you trust your Bible a whole lot. Yeah, definitely. Because every single Bible you're going to read, it's so rare for there to be a textual variant like that
Starting point is 00:14:08 that it literally pulls the verse out down to the bottom to note for the reader, hey man, this was likely a scribal edition. And I just think that's very interesting. Yeah, it shouldn't feel you with doubt. It should feel with confidence. And that we have nothing to hide. And part of this is what people need to keep in mind is when you have little things like these, it's never going to alter major doctrines. So anytime there is any kind of a debate or, hey, we don't have the earliest manuscript that says this versus that. It's never over, oh, Jesus was God, oh, no, he wasn't. It was over details and things like that. So to your point, it should feel people with
Starting point is 00:14:41 confidence that we actually have enough of the early manuscripts. By the way, far more than any other ancient manuscripts. Now that's a podcast. Far more so that we can literally be 99.9% confident that what we have is in the original place. Yeah, yeah, it's done. The, the manuscript, yeah, we got Lee Stroble coming to Lake Point in a couple weeks. Like, that's Lee's fastball. The manuscript evidence for the reliability of the New Testament. I seriously, I think if I remember, right, it's something like there are 300 times more manuscripts from within a lifetime of, I'm going to get this wrong. There's a whole lot. In a little bit, we'll actually do a quote by guy named Tacitus. We have manuscripts.
Starting point is 00:15:21 I got that next. And if I don't, and if I don't trust the Bible, I literally can trust no other ancient resource. And really, I would say pretty much nothing else from history. Fact. Yeah. All right. So you got that. That's pretty cool. Now, you got the, yeah. So the Felix guy, he's mentioned. So two things that are here that are like, hey, man, a Bible really happened. So number one, this Felix dude, full name is, I'm going to do my best here, Tiberius, Claudius, Antonius Felix. He is, the reality of him and the era of his reign is attested to by a first century
Starting point is 00:15:59 Roman historian named Tacitus. He was a Roman historian. There is a Josephus, who's also a first century historian that also confirms it as well and talks about him as well. Is your quote the tacitist quote or just the tacitist quote? Okay, I got the tacit quote too. You want to read it? Read this tacit's quote about this guy. Felix practiced every kind of cruelty and lust wielding the power of a king with all the instincts of a slave.
Starting point is 00:16:21 Yeah. So you got tacit. By the way, if you're in first century Rome that was like my, I had a Bible professor in seminary that described Rome as like basically a thousand year debauched orgy. So it's like if a Roman historian is saying about this guy, guy was pretty debased. Yeah. Like, it's bad. Rough.
Starting point is 00:16:46 Like this guy literally to give people, originally more context, he actually had the high priest assassinated by the Sakari in the temple. Drusilla was already married at age 16, which was not so uncommon in those days to be married at that early age. But she was already married and Felix went to her and basically seduced her away with the help of a magician. And, yeah,
Starting point is 00:17:05 and basically promised her felicit. kind of a play on name of his name of Felix. And so that's pretty good. So she was already married. He comes and entices her away. And so, yeah, just a really immoral, cruel man. Bad dude. Bad dude.
Starting point is 00:17:18 Yeah. So, and here's what's interesting. So again, this is like a magic blows your mind. Like the Bible really happened. All right. So number one, on Drusilla. So you think about Paul's here giving testimony to Jesus. Drusilla.
Starting point is 00:17:32 Do you know her little family tree thing? Oh, yeah, for her dad was King of Grippa? All right, so this is, dude, this is, I love so like this. He just ties a whole Bible together. So his second marriage is to this Drusilla. She's Jewish. She's the daughter of Herod Agrippa the first, okay? Herod Agrippa the first, there's a whole stinking bunch of Herods in the New Testament.
Starting point is 00:17:55 Herod Agrippa the first was the grandson of Herod Agrippa the Great. He's the Herod that the wise man in Luke chapter, is it Luke one? to yeah yeah it's either the Luke or the Matthew account he's the one that the wise men come to and they hey birth of the king that's the Herod that kills all the Jewish boys under the age of two trying to exterminate Jesus so you think about it like the great grandson of the Herod who tried to kill Jesus she's staring right at Paul going Jesus was raised from the dead and then you're going to see in this passage and you need to understand the reality of three things. He says righteousness, self-control, and the coming judgment. So you just think about
Starting point is 00:18:42 like the heart of steel and love in the apostle Paul to stand in front of the great granddaughter of the guy that tried to kill Jesus and go ahead, man, judgment is coming. Be prepared. And with that, this is actually the only unambiguous place when Paul is on trial that he refers to the resurrection of the unjust or the unrighteous. It's the only specific place where he mentions them. and it's because whenever he mentions both the resurrection of the just and the unjust is referring to the common judgment. And so Paul's here on trial for his life. Yeah, I didn't know that. He's on trial for his life.
Starting point is 00:19:17 And basically it's like, hey, I'm on trial before you for my life. You're one day going to be on trial before Jesus for eternity. And your eternity is going to be at stake. Thank you. Now, Jana, I alluded to this for the pod. Did you know that we have been where Acts 24 happened? Yes. And I am trying to visually.
Starting point is 00:19:36 Okay, you're going to get it immediately. So let me read it, and then we're going to toss the pictures up. So leading into Acts 24, Acts 23, it starts in 31. It says, so the soldiers, according to their instructions, took Paul and brought him by the night to Antipatris, I think you're pronouncing. Blah, verse 33. When they had come to Cessaria, yeah, yeah, when they had come to Cessaria and delivered the letter to the governor, so that's Felix. They presented Paul also before him. Now I'm going to skip down to 35.
Starting point is 00:20:09 He said, I will give you a hearing when your accusers arrive. And then it says, and he commanded him to be guarded in Herod's Pretorium. So it notes Herod's Pretorium. Now, that's where we've been. It's one of the first stops when we go to Israel. So go ahead and toss that the picture up. It's like on the seaside. So do you remember this spot?
Starting point is 00:20:26 Yes, yeah. Yeah. I do. This is one of the first, there's cats everywhere. You remember that? On that wall? Yeah, on the outside. Yeah, on the outside.
Starting point is 00:20:35 And then when you get in, I didn't, I don't remember as many. Never like cats, I thought. So Herod builds this big, so what you're seeing right here, if you're watching this, and we're going to zoom in and show you like where Paul was in a second. So if you, we're going to, we're going to do a flash forward here. If you look up at the top right of that picture, you're going to see a little amphitheater. In two chapters, that's where Paul is going to stand and give a defense before. Is that a grip?
Starting point is 00:21:05 Who is that in two chapters? Yeah, before Agrippa. So we'll save that. It's really stinking cool because you, the exact amphitheater from Acts 26 is still in existence and the exact seat where Agrippa sat. He had like a VIP little box seat. It's still there. And that's a number one site.
Starting point is 00:21:27 You know exactly that's where Paul was. So that's the amphitheater in Acts 26. you'll see on the left side, you see that big, it's like like a little horse track. They would do chariot races there. There's like a little entertainment for the super wealthy governors. If you look on this little peninsula that comes out,
Starting point is 00:21:44 so this is where it gets kind of interesting, go to that next pick. So what this is, is that is where they are nearly certain. That is where when Paul in Acts 24 is actually standing in front of Felix, that's where the little hall was in the Herod's Pretorium that he would have been. So, like, I mean, like the Apostle Paul stood right there and did, like, Acts 24, like happened, like, right there. And then this is actually, from what I understand, fairly recent.
Starting point is 00:22:20 Don't toss up yet, Trinity. The next picture is their best guess, there's only one place from what I understand, that looks, that looks. like some kind of jail cell. So go to the next picture. That right there is almost certainly, when it says they commanded him to be guarded in Herod's Pretorium, that right there is almost certain like,
Starting point is 00:22:44 that's where Paul is in Acts 2335. So man, I just want to keep going back to the thing. Like, hey man, this is not a story. Like the Bible really happened. The real Jesus died for the real you, and if you give your life to him, he can really change it forever. This stuff really, really, really happened.
Starting point is 00:23:04 All right, that's what I got. Only little thing, and this is insignificant, but I almost forgot to say it. So Drusilla and Felix have a kid, and that kid later grows up and dies at Mount Vesuvius. Oh, that's right. And so, again, it just goes back to what you're saying is like, these aren't like bedtime stories. That's right. And these are real people that are attributed not just by Christian sources, but by Roman sources, early Jewish sources, that these are real people that lived in real places and these things really did happen yeah this stuff happened man yeah it's good so let me
Starting point is 00:23:34 ask you guys this um this like a major part of the message this week so here uh felix basically so here's a story in x 24 paul is with him for two years um from what we understand right here so felix essentially and drusilla are like intrigued by paul um we also know from the passage um they were super just debased and they were honestly hoping he would bribe them. The Old Testament explicitly forbids bribery. And so Paul's like, no man, I'm out. So he never bribes them. He talks him about three things. Righteousness, self-control in the coming judgment. We talked about why that was in a sermon a little bit. Righteousness, you know, essentially you can't be righteous on your own. You need an alien righteousness given you by Jesus. Self-control because both he
Starting point is 00:24:29 and Drusilla were just very base and given to their desires. Like, ah, I can't help it. And he's like, no, actually you can. And you're accountable for your actions. And then the coming judgment. That's obvious. Now, where we landed it is what Felix ends up saying is one of the most tragic verses in the Bible. So Felix hears the gospel from one of the most anointed preachers in history for two years.
Starting point is 00:24:55 and he ends by saying this. He ends by saying, go away for the present. When I get an opportunity, most Bible translations say something like, when it is convenient for me, I will summon you. So think about this, he hears the gospel for two years,
Starting point is 00:25:17 listens and is intrigued, but every single day he thinks, maybe tomorrow. And because he always, delays the decision from what we understand he dies in his sins. And just to put it very frankly, Felix and Drusilla are in hell right now because every day for two years, they delayed a decision to give their lives to Christ. Let me ask y'all. Thoughts? Well, it's one of those things. It's like procrastination. You believe you always have tomorrow. Like tomorrow is going to be there.
Starting point is 00:25:52 So even though he was alarmed at what Paul was telling him, so there was a lot. So there was something internally going on with him. Like he must have had a lot of questions and like, oh, need to think about this. But it didn't, I guess it just wasn't a big enough deal for him to like see the urgency of the matter. And so it's, yeah. So I just, I think that we do the same things in our lives. I think that the tyranny of the urgent.
Starting point is 00:26:21 So things that, oh, that has to be done now. like sometimes we let that get in a way of doing the most important things in our life yeah i think it's really important like can we just like as disciples because i just want to keep leaning into this the title of podcast is live free not listen free so that the the whole purpose of this is for us to hasten and not delay to obey his commands yes how do we live how do we live free so like let me just ask a question like when you guys look at your lives and when when people that are listening are looking at their lives, what do you guys think are the major things that cause people to put off the life and eternity changing decision of just obeying the Lord, doing the next
Starting point is 00:27:06 right thing that God's put in front of them? That's a good question. I mean, I think one thing is sometimes the illusions, oh, it's not convenient for me now. It'll be easier or later kind of thing and even just the concept of all do that one day and I you know I heard this long ago I wish I could say it was mine but I'm not going to take credit for us saving Satan's favorite day is one day God's favorite day is two day oh girl and and and so I think there's this concept even in ecclesiases has hit this idea of like obey God in the days of your youth like I'm always thinking oh I can get around to that later I've got other things to do now you even see this sometimes when Jesus is calling people to follow him and he tells parables around this
Starting point is 00:27:47 like, oh, well, I need to go bury this person. I need to go take care of this thing with the thought of, oh, I'm always going to have time to get around it. And that's one of Satan's favorite tactics is, hey, you can take care of that one day, where God is like, today is the day that you need to step into that. So some of it is just the idea that, hey, I can get around to that later. I have something else that's consuming me now. That's something I think is my mind.
Starting point is 00:28:07 And then even, like, one thing is interesting that he's afraid here. Yes, that is interesting. It says that he, quote, became alarmed. Alarmed. as Paul testified to the gospel. In the original language, it is like emphatically afraid. So there's like Fawboss, and this is M. Fawbos. He is alarmed.
Starting point is 00:28:24 He is scared. And so it's interesting that that actually makes him for them procrastinate kind of a thing. And so I think along the same lines of, I think sometimes the reason we procrastinate is because whatever is step God is sometimes is calling us to take, there's fear. It's like here, I don't know if maybe the fear was, oh, wait, I'm a public official and this could lose me some stuff. I may actually fall out of favor with Rome and get removed from my position. Whatever it was, there's fear that kept him from that, and it is the same with us,
Starting point is 00:28:50 that whatever step God is taking us to take. It's the same thing as Peter walking on water when Jesus calls him out to it. He looks at the wind and the waves, he gets afraid, takes his eyes off Jesus, and he can't then take his next step. Amen. So, yeah, those are a few thoughts.
Starting point is 00:29:03 Jana, when beforehand, we were talking about, like, because there is, like, men and women are created differently. They've been given different curses of the fall, and that's why there are gender-specific commands throughout the Bible. And so it's like Satan will attack men and women differently. So you might be asking like, for women, what do you think sometimes can be the thing for women that it's like, hey, man, that'll catch a woman and put her into spiritual procrastination? I do think there are multiple things.
Starting point is 00:29:34 But I think one thing, sometimes it's like wanting to do like the right thing or do it the right way. or the perfect way, rather than just taking a step, like just follow in a simple obedience. Well, I can't do it perfectly, or I can't do all these things. So it's just like a delay of like just doing the right next thing. Just do something. And so I always have a friend,
Starting point is 00:30:04 I have a friend named Lynette that says, God works with a person who is in motion. So just take a step. And then he's going to just keep, showing you the next step and just follow in obedience. So you don't have to have the whole vision laid out before you. You just take one step and then just keep following. Yeah, I like that because it is sometimes I think one of the fear,
Starting point is 00:30:23 it could be tied to fear others is some people want the whole picture. And the idea of God's word is a lamp to our feet, but that means that I can only see the next few steps in front of me. I'm not going to be able to see everything at one time. And I think that's like the most important step that I can take is my next step that God is asking me to take, not the ones you might be asking me to take 100 steps from now. But what is that next thing?
Starting point is 00:30:45 I think that might be another thing. I'm like, oh, I don't see how this is all going to turn out. And you don't, and you probably never will because that's why it takes faith. God is actually taking a step of faith. And so you can't see the whole picture. Yeah. Now, Jan, do you want to, is that a problem? Can I do that?
Starting point is 00:31:02 Is that okay if my. All right. Do you want to get to, because at home you were a little more vulnerable. How about how that's played out in your life? life, like about the bridge versus Lake Point and what kind of resulted in delaying spiritual decisions. I think, like, if you get a little raw, I think it would be helpful for most ladies. Well, I think, you know, back when we were still in Tennessee, so at our church plant, it was kind of after I came off staff, it was kind of like, I don't know what to do.
Starting point is 00:31:35 I don't know where to serve. I could just, nothing felt really comfortable in the moment. And so I just I was kind of paralysis by analysis. I just couldn't, I just couldn't get out of it. And then sometimes here, a lake point is just like there are so many opportunities. And there are so many things that I can do. I can get stuck that I'm like, I just don't know what is the best thing. And, you know, I can, you know, at times struggle with that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:08 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think, you know, we've seen that. Just like, hey man, just like, and even, well, because what we were talking about, I'm trying to fish it out of you. Oh, well, okay. Yeah, I mean, like I said, there are multiple areas where I think.
Starting point is 00:32:22 You keep going. But I think, too, like sometimes with women, because there are so many things you can be doing. But it's kind of like, oh, I need to be really focused on my career. I need to climb the corporate ladder. Like, I need to do this while I'm young. And then you think that, oh, you're always going to have time for your family. You're always going to have time to build the family that, you know, that you want to create. And you don't realize how fast the years fly.
Starting point is 00:32:56 And so you procrastinate. Like, we'll get family dinner next week. Or it's going to slow down in a month or two. And so you just procrastinate on focusing on what's most important because, you have other things in your life that are kind of drawing you away from God's best for you. Yeah. It's that it's like some of the things that are the most important are never the most urgent. And it's like the tyranny, the urgent will actually force you to procrastinate and delay the thing
Starting point is 00:33:24 that actually is the most spiritually signet. So it's like for me and Jana, you know, for both of us, but especially for Janica's her primary orientation is the home. And so it's like, you know, you know, four family dinners a week never feels urgent but it's the most important. It is.
Starting point is 00:33:46 And so it's a little stuff like that. Yeah. And we see the fruit of that and then compared to whenever you go through seasons where it's busy and you have to put it off and then you see the outcome of that too. So it's just,
Starting point is 00:33:58 it's important to focus on what matters most in that season. Yeah. It's like maintaining maintaining God's priorities. If you get those out, out of whack, it becomes really difficult to quickly lean into the obedience in front of you.
Starting point is 00:34:13 Yeah. And just you saying that, maintaining God's priorities. And just to remember, they are not burdensome to us. Just keeping that in your heart, it is not burdensome to do what God asks you to do. That's great. How about you, Pastor, Josh? Anything that you've seen consistently take people, like keep them from taking the action God has called them to take? Well, man, the biggest thing I'll say is not what I see in people is what I see in me.
Starting point is 00:34:36 So what I see in me, because man, I always want to lean into this is, man, I'm, grounds level of the foot of the cross. I'm in need of grace as much as every person here. Thank you, Jesus, you know. So I'm in it with you. The things that I see in me are, I think, fear. I do not think it as an accident. The passage literally highlights he was afraid.
Starting point is 00:35:03 We don't know why he was afraid. man, hey, what am I going to risk if I take this action of responding to what God's doing in my heart? What relationship am I going to compromise? Man, could I, man, might I actually lose like all this wealth and the position that I have as a governor of Cesarea? And, you know, honestly, this dude knew, I mean, Roman politics was Game of Thrones. So, I mean, like, he literally would have been like, dude, this could cost me more. my life. And, you know, I think there's that thing of like, um, uh, the one of the great misconceptions for Christians. I hate, it's like a pet peeve of my, having gone through, I'm not
Starting point is 00:35:45 going to go into it here because I've hit it on other podcasts, but haven't gone through that season of like very aggressive, the eight months of anxiety attacks and everything. You develop these little pet peeves where Christians say well-meaning but dumb things that are not biblical. And one of those things that became one of those things for me was, you know, faith and fear cannot coexist. It's like, that's like, that's really dumb. That's a dumb thing to say. It's like, if I don't have any fear, I don't need faith. Fing go. Faith is actually, it's the ability, man I get emotional thinking about the time. Faith is the ability to go, I'm really scared, but I have a God, the Lord of Host is greater than my fears. And so I'm going to step out in the middle of them and
Starting point is 00:36:30 step out onto some, you know, stormy waves, and I'm going to trust him in the middle of it. And so I do think fear is one of those things. You know, it's like Joshua chapter one is like a life verse for me. Joshua is stepping into the Moses role. And God tells him three times, be strong and courageous, be strong and courageous, be strong and courageous. And why? It's because Joshua felt weak and afraid, week and afraid, weak and afraid. And so I think fear, I will say Jan already hit it. I think thoughtlessness. Like there is a spiritual foolishness that is satanic and demonic that we live all of our days assuming that we're promised tomorrow. And listen, I've been a pastor long enough.
Starting point is 00:37:11 We got people that our rooted groups praying for. I've been a pastor long enough to know that it doesn't matter if you're 24 or 84, one rogue cell in your body and you are not promised tomorrow. I am not promised tomorrow. I'm one bad driver on the way home away from my kids. not having a dad, my wife not having a husband, and me not having any more ministry. And so it's that thing that Satan wants to do in your life of Genesis chapter two and three.
Starting point is 00:37:39 The lie he wants to sow into your heart is, you will not surely die. And so there's a thoughtlessness that makes people go, man, it's good, I got tomorrow, I got tomorrow. It's really interesting, I tried to look it up. There are no historical records of how Felix died. We know he did. Yes.
Starting point is 00:37:56 So there came a day where Felix probably thought, man, that thing that Paul said, I'm gonna get around to that someday. And then someday, that next day never came. And he woke up and he faced exactly what Paul said, the judgment to come. And it was too late. So I think thoughtlessness,
Starting point is 00:38:17 let me do one, this a little, actually let me do one more and then one this a little awkward. Honestly, dude, I think a big one for Christians or people who've grown up around Christianity. is condemnation. And here's why I mean, man. One of the greatest lies that enemy wants you to believe is that God is a really angry dad that if you try to come back to him after a season of sin and a prodigal foolishness, that he's going to be real mad and he's going to be like,
Starting point is 00:38:50 get out there in the doghouse. And if you try to come back to him, that it's going to be just castigation and condemnation. But the Bible says that actually that God is a loving father and that, you know, the story of the prodigal son is a day, you know, it doesn't really matter. Like how long you walk away from him and how bad what you did was. What the Bible says is draw near to God and he'll draw near to you. And so it's kind of that thing of like he's so loving and he's so super abundantly full of grace that he's going, man, if you'll just like wiggle a little pinky toe in my direction,
Starting point is 00:39:30 I'll cover the rest of the distance. So it's like you can walk away from him for years and decades. And in one day be back home with a father, but Satan wants you to think he's an angry, condemning judge instead of a loving dad. And it makes people go like, oh, man, I don't, I don't even want to try. Are you thinking something, Jan? Yeah, I'm actually thinking the opposite of that, though. And I don't know if this is what happens to Felix.
Starting point is 00:39:57 I think the hardness of heart because you hear something so many times and you become desensitized to it. And it just makes me think of Hebrews where it says, today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion. And so it's like, is it a matter, it could be a matter of condemnation, but also it could be hardness of heart. Well, and then there's that. Where is it in the book? It's Romans. I can't remember. It's early in Romans.
Starting point is 00:40:24 where it's like, do not presume on the riches of his grace. And essentially, it's what you're saying. Like, because some people will. It's not condemnation. They're like, oh, man, I'm good. Yep. I'm good. He's okay if I, if I never come home, if I never just, it's like,
Starting point is 00:40:40 don't presume on the riches of his grace. No, no, no, no, no. This is a thing, man. I think, you know, with that a few thousand, but you both have just said, I mean, yeah, one of Satan's favorite tactics is in the moment, whether it's active disobedience or one thing we haven't idea, but it's so matters. We usually use this idea phrase with kids, but it applies to us to
Starting point is 00:40:58 in a relationship with God is delayed obedience is disobedience. That's right. Yeah. So we usually think of... Do you hear that, Howard team? I've said that before. My kids as well. Delayed obedience is disobedience is disobedience. Because usually we think of, oh, disobedience. I'm actively living in a sin and a bad sin. But man, delayed obedience is disobedience. And so, but one of Satan's favorite tactics is when you're sinning either by actively doing something wrong or in this case delaying your obedience, you know, Satan's tactic on the front
Starting point is 00:41:27 and it's like, oh, it's no big deal. God to forgive you. And the second you do it or later, it's like, oh, man, that was a really big deal. That's right. God'll never forgive you. That's exactly right, man. And that is just, he loves that tactic. And I think to your point, man, now is the time. Don't, like, if you're filling the tug, step in now. And if you're, like, people might be listening or watching this and thinking, oh, but it's too late from like, if you're still breathing, it's not too late. There's a, there's a, There's this proverb that basically says, not from the Bible, I think it's like a Chinese proverb. The best time to plant a tree was 30 years ago.
Starting point is 00:41:59 Yeah. The second best time is today. Oh, man. And so the idea is, if God is tugging at your heart, do it now because then back to your end, if you don't, you may become hardened in heart and not do it. And the way I think about this, I heard one time basically that there's more symphonies and incredible works of art and incredible speeches in the gray than that were actually done ever. Because people had stuff that God had put into them, but they didn't get out of them.
Starting point is 00:42:22 And so I don't want to get to heaven and realize that there were things that had my name on them that I didn't step into. And when we're talking about this, our minds can go to these really big steps of faith. Like, oh, God's calling us all to go to Mozambique or whatever. By the way, God's calling to do that, go for it. But also to put this on the ground level, it's also things like I remember in the early days of my marriage where I felt like, oh, I need to pray with Amy, but I was afraid that I would sound dumb or that I wouldn't do it right. and I would delay it and now I'll look back and again and I eventually started doing that but it's like I'm like all the times that I could have prayed with her that's right all that's and so it doesn't have to be these big grandiose things it can also be procrastinating on simple small little steps of faith of praying with your kids of you doing a Bible say with them or any any number of things that as long as if you're filming that's talking to heart now step into it right now so that you don't get a hardened heart yeah so let let me let me do one last reason that is a little weird but I'm I don't often say this. I felt like the spirit highlighted this to me today.
Starting point is 00:43:30 To say on the podcast. And so there's probably somebody that is listening that I think when you hear this, you're going to be like, oh, oh, he did that for me. So I will say this man. So in this passage, you got Felix and then you got Drusilla. Drusilla, again, Jewish great-granddaughter of the guy that tried to kill Jesus. Probably of the two of them, I'm going to guess, Felix was more open to the gospel than Drusilla.
Starting point is 00:44:04 Because Drusilla, because of a religious and her family background, would have been gone, dude, if this is true, my great-grandpa is in, this ain't good. All right, so I'll say this, man, and as a pastor, I've seen this, there's a family dynamic that I think maybe it played in Acts 24 that gets played out especially in men's lives. I do not see it happen as much from women to men. I see it from men to women. And here's what you'll have. You'll have a dude that was in a dark place in his life.
Starting point is 00:44:37 He gets into an addiction or he was just a bad guy. Then there's like almost like a savior figure girl that he's. starts dating or they're married and she sticks with them through a really dark time or she's the one that helps pull him out of the pit. Okay. Well, when that happens, because that's a reversal of the family order that should have taken place, he should have been leading. There's actually a weird guilt that settles in like hard concrete in the guy's heart. So then here's what happened. if that girl is an unbelieving woman. What will happen, I see that happen very often.
Starting point is 00:45:19 We have talked about a couple we were with recently is she almost becomes like, honestly, like a demonic high priestess of the family and where what the dude's doing internally is he's going, I need to get right with the Lord. But then he's going, but my wife is not, a believer and she's against this stuff for me to become a Christian would be to betray my wife who maybe is of another religion or is of no religion or as opposed to religion you'd be like man
Starting point is 00:45:54 for me to become a Christian would be to betray my wife and she's the one that pulled me out of the pit and so there's this it's almost like a demonic hidden inner vow where she's the high priestess of the family and he can't do what he knows the Lord is asking him to do because he won't betray the woman that pulled him out of the pit. That may be a little bit of what's the relational dynamics that are at play in Acts 24. And I'll just say this, man, if somebody's listening and there's a call to an action of obedience to take a step of obedience as a man or a woman, to it's things like to share the gospel with somebody, to step into a calling that God's given you,
Starting point is 00:46:42 to forgive somebody that you've been withholding forgiveness for for years or decades. Whatever the thing is, if when you think about that, the first thing that pops into your head is someone that's not Jesus. And you're starting to reverse engineer your decision from the emotional reaction of a person that's not Jesus,
Starting point is 00:47:06 that person is fun. functioning, like whether they are believing or unbelieving. I'm talking about how they're functioning, how Satan's using them. Satan's using that person as like a satanic or demonic high priest or priestess in your life to keep you from following Jesus. So that's a little under the hood, but that is a very frequent reason that people, they hold off on doing what they know God's called them to do. Agree, disagree, additional comments.
Starting point is 00:47:35 You're not going to hurt my feelings. No, I agree. We've seen that in multiple people's lives, so yes. Yeah, I've seen it too. And I think it's the reality of God calls us to love, in this case, like, for example, a family. It calls us to love our spouses. But Jesus also says, basically, if you're not willing to hate. And he doesn't literally mean hate. He basically means if you're not willing to prefer me to others, you're not worthy to follow me. And so there is this idea that, yeah, of course we're called to love our spouses and others, but I'm called God of Jesus more and order him first in my life. I'll keep names redacted to protect the guilty. Let me. Obscure details. So like, honestly, man, I was at a, I heard about a pastor's conference one time where a pastor one of the most prominent churches at one time in America that, honestly, has gone off the rails a little bit.
Starting point is 00:48:30 And he said publicly in front of a group of pastors, they were talking about the whole deconstruction. instruction trend that happened for a little while. And he said publicly in front of a group of a group of pastors, Matt, I'm gonna tell you this. If my daughter deconstructs her faith, I'm going with her. And I was like, bro, we literally have Bible verses for this. If you will not hate your father, mother, wife, children, even your own family, you cannot be my disciple.
Starting point is 00:48:59 And so honestly, bro, let's finish this, and let's move on and talk about slavery. It's a hard emotional gear shift. But honestly, man, like, every Christian, this has happened to me more times than I wish it had. Every Christian has to decide, am I willing to lose friendships and relationships over fidelity to Jesus? And you better decide that beforehand because when you are in that moment, the emotions will be too high sometimes for you to make the right decision, Jana. Yeah, and I just want to like let you know, hey, it's going to happen to you. There is going to be not just once, probably multiple times in your lives,
Starting point is 00:49:38 you're going to have to make that decision. And it's a test. So be faithful with a test that God gives you. Amen. Let me put a bow on it. Every listener should be asking themselves the question, what am I afraid to do that I am uncomfortable having not yet done for the glory of God? That's good.
Starting point is 00:49:56 You get an answer to that question. You're probably going to know what the spirit's asking you to do. What am I uncomfortable? What am I afraid to do that I am uncomfortable having not yet done for the glory of God? Well, hey, before we jump back in, I want to take a quick moment to tell you about something close to our heart here at Lake Point. It is something we call our annual missions offering. Every fall, we set aside a season of radical generosity where 100% of what's given goes straight to missions. And this goes to help plant churches in some of America's hardest-to-reach cities, strengthening local churches around the world,
Starting point is 00:50:30 meeting needs in our own communities, and even sending students to camp to encounter Jesus. And so here's what you need to know. Your giving fuels real stories of life change. And so to be a part of spreading God's love farther and faster than ever, text the word give to 20411, or visit lakepoint.org slash give AMO. Well, hey, live free family, together,
Starting point is 00:50:56 let's make this a season where our generosity moves the mission of Christ forward. Okay, Paul, Chad G. Paul C. So we have an example here. Emotional gear shift. We have an example here of this guy Felix.
Starting point is 00:51:13 He is the only known person that originally was a slave in Rome and became a governor here. Now, there are passages scattered throughout both the old
Starting point is 00:51:29 Testament and the New Testament, Ephesians chapter 6, others, about slavery. And in some of your translations, depending on how the English translates it, there are even commands for house, quote unquote, slave owners. Yes. Masters should treat their slaves. Paul Cunningham, let's talk. Paul Cunningham, doesn't the Bible therefore condone slavery? No. Oh, Paul. All right, man. That's all. Let's talk about this one. I think it is. I will say that this, and people are going to get this. Anytime slavery comes up, you're talking to an atheist, recognition. Wait, real quick, for you and farther. I will slightly disagree with you. I will say it depends what you mean by slavery. You beat me too. I was literally about to. That was going to be one of my first big points.
Starting point is 00:52:27 Sorry, sorry. I go. get the ball to, yeah, anyways, got the ball there before I got there. Oh, my bad. Anyways, what was I saying? Oh, yeah. So, yeah, so one of the biggest things, that's one of the top three in addition to what about the problem of evil? Like, this is one that's used all the time is, hey, the Bible condone slavery.
Starting point is 00:52:45 How do you get around this kind of a deal? Because the language is there. But a key first step that we have to take is say, hey, when the Bible uses the term slave or slavery, does it mean the same thing that we think it means when we're looking from a modern context. So we may use the same word, but mean different things as a really important distinction. So even knowing that in the first century, man, slavery was still bad. There were conditions of slavery were not great always, although it really depended house to house and what the nature of it was. But it was truly more like indentured servanthood or being
Starting point is 00:53:18 a bond servant. That's why even some translations now will use the word servant instead of slave. Yeah, you'll even see it. Because they're not meaning the same thing as American slavery or modern slavery. That's right. So I'm just going to read it. Ephesians, here's an example. Like, Bill Mar, we're going to look at a clip. Oh, actually, hang on. Dang. Play that Bill Mar clip, please. Yeah, not too late. All right, here we go. Bill Mar. So this is a perfect example. By the way, I'm going to, sorry, that's my bad. I'm going to have you stop this a couple times. Okay, so here we go. Bill Maher. Version of that. Did Columbus commit atrocities? Of course.
Starting point is 00:53:53 I will say. We need to do this around Thanksgiving. The, quote, Columbus committed atrocities thing is radically, radically exaggerate. Like, some of the things that you hear him accused of doing are just outright lies. So we'll go back. It's a revisionist history. We'll go back to that. Later. Of course.
Starting point is 00:54:13 But people back then were generally atrocious. I hate that. Actually, we paused. So let me just keep going on this. People back then were generally atrocious. So this is what C.S. Lewis calls chronological snobbery. where what every age tends to do is every age tends to look backwards and judge people in the past by the morality of the present. I would just like to point out a lot of people from back then would look at our era and go, they are atrocious.
Starting point is 00:54:42 Yes. They would look at the families. They would look at killing a million children a year in abortive child sacrifice. They would look at, dang, I'm, I was, Look at drag queen story hours and the things that like are depicted in modern TV shows that are watching like the wallpaper of our whole society is pornography like so first of all it's hilarious to me that when people say that so c s lewis chronological snobbery but let's keep you on trinity everybody who could afford one had a slave including people of color okay pause the way people talk about Okay, so I'll point this out. I'm reading, I've mentioned like three times in the podcast now.
Starting point is 00:55:29 I'm reading a book by Thomas Sol. He's a brilliant black economist philosopher. The book I'm reading right now, actually, never mind. I'm not going there. It would open a whole different thing. So Thomas Soul, one of his things is he's like, hey man, the amount of revisionist history on how American slavery in particular gets portrayed, he's like, the history of it is revived with the express purpose of advancing a specific political ideology. So Thomas Sol likes blowing that up. And by the way, the quote I'm getting ready to toss on the screen from Thomas Soul that dovetails what Bill Marge said. Hey, man, like there were white slaves in now obviously radically disproportionate.
Starting point is 00:56:15 I'm going to talk about that in a second. I toss that quote from Thomas Soul. more whites were brought as slaves to North Africa than blacks brought as slaves to the United States or the 13 colonies from which it was formed. White slaves were still being bought and sold in the Ottoman Empire decades after blacks were freed in the United States. So it's like what kind of the history you'll hear is in fact I asked our kids in the kitchen one time. I was like, I wonder how they'll answer this. I asked our kids in the kitchen one time
Starting point is 00:56:50 who invented slavery. Were you there when I asked them? I don't know for that conversation, but similar ones, yes. And by the way, we obviously talk about race a lot in our family. It's like, I'm totally desensitized to any weirdness around that because of our, we talk about all the time in our family, and it's very, very free and zero awkwardness. But we asked our kids, and they go to, like, a great school.
Starting point is 00:57:15 Like a great school. It's just so they picked it up. they were like white people. And they literally thought white people invented slavery, which is obviously... I didn't hear them say that. We'll get to... That's crazy.
Starting point is 00:57:27 We'll get to that here in a second. Anyway, let's keep going. We'll talk about slavery these days. You'd think it was a uniquely American thing that we invented in 1619. But slavery throughout history has been the rule, not the exception. The Samarians, the Egyptians, the Greeks,
Starting point is 00:57:44 Romans, the Arabs, British, the early Americans, Americans all the way up through R. Kelly. I believe I can fly. You can never listen to it the same way. I don't know if we're at a, this is with free. I don't know if we joke about it. No.
Starting point is 00:58:03 The Holy Bible is practically an owner's manual for slaveholders. Whoops, a daisy. Okay, Foss. Nope, nope, nope. Okay. So let's talk about this real quick. Does the Bible condone slavery? Is the Bible, Paul?
Starting point is 00:58:18 I'm going to ask you, then I'm going to answer. Is the Bible practically an owner's manual for slaves? So let me, again, here's where this starts. It depends what you mean by the word slavery. That word has such a wide range of usage throughout human history that it's honestly really hard to even talk about. So let me say a few things. There's a difference between what we as modern Americans think when we hear the word slavery. We think American Chattel slavery, midway passage, you know, that kind of thing. So a few things. Slavery meant something radically different in ancient Rome than Antebellum America.
Starting point is 00:58:54 So think about this. American slavery was number one, race-based. Number two, lifelong. And number three, it was based on kidnapping. The biblical word, I'm actually going to read it here in a second, is a word we don't use in the English very much anymore, the word man-stealing. So here you go, race-based, lifelong, kidnapping. Okay.
Starting point is 00:59:15 Now, the New Testament is written in the Roman Empire. When in the Roman Empire, they use the word slavery, what we are not saying is that every way that they practiced, quote, unquote, slavery was morally good. That's not what we're saying. What we're saying is it absolutely was radically different in a few very important ways than American Chattel slavery. Number one, it was not race-based. That's really important. Obviously, anything race-based, we have biblical commands against that. we're not allowed to do favoritism or prejudice.
Starting point is 00:59:46 Okay, so anything there is a sin. So number one, not race-based. Number two, it was seldom lifelong. I'm going to come back to that in a second. Very seldom lifelong. In fact, this dude Felix is the example. He starts as a slave and ends as a governor, okay? And then number three, there were in ancient Rome,
Starting point is 01:00:02 there were different types of slaveries, many of which were voluntary. Yes. Okay, so you're talking about things like indentured serventhood. Yes. Instead of being man-stealing. based, okay? So let me list real quick. In ancient Rome, this is what historians understand, there were basically five different ways that somebody could become a slave in ancient Rome.
Starting point is 01:00:24 And Paul, you can interrupt me and talk about whatever you want to here, okay, five different ways. Number one, sometimes people, this was very, very common. This is what you're referring to when it says indentured servanthood. Now, that was under the category of the word, it's the words due loss. So the Greek word that gets translated slave is due loss. indentured servanthood fit under the category. It was of due loss. Okay. So this was a temporary indentured servanthood to pay off debt.
Starting point is 01:00:51 So they didn't have bankruptcy in Rome. No such thing is like Michael Scott. I took a clear. They didn't do that in any trouble. Great reference. 40% of people will get it. I was willing to pay that price. It works.
Starting point is 01:01:04 That works. That's great. Yeah, they didn't have bankruptcy. So if you had a debt you couldn't pay off, it was like, well, bro, you're an indentured servant for the next 18 months. and that was called quote unquote slavery. Number two, it was also very frequently a poverty solution. So sometimes an impoverished family,
Starting point is 01:01:21 they would ask to become part of a person's estate and become an indentured servanthood to a wealthy family. In exchange, it was a barter. They would be like, hey, you give us a home, protection, and provision, and we would like to become part of your estate as indentured servants. That was under the category of, quote, unquote, do like. and that person will be called a Roman slave.
Starting point is 01:01:44 Number three, there were men that could be sentenced to galley slavery for crimes. So like some crimes that we would think of as death sentence crimes, they would sometimes go, hey, I'd like to actually make a judicial appeal to be a galley slave. So it's like, hey, man, instead of getting hung, I'm going to, you know, I'm going to do my thing as a slave. Number four, prisoners of war were often forcing to slavery. Very common. Very common age of Rome. And the number five, sometimes abandoned infants were taken to slaves.
Starting point is 01:02:16 Now, this is, bro, this is a tangent, and this is a little Bible trivia. Isn't there a guy, oh, yeah, it's Cordes. In one of the, and I won't remember which one, in one of the conclusions of one of the epistles, he's like, and tell Cordes, you remember that? You remember that? I'm going to have to look up there. It's gorgeous. It's gorgeous. I'm pretty sure it's Cordes.
Starting point is 01:02:36 He's like, tell Cordes that I said, hey, that's really cool because, bro, this would make me a little emotional. That's really cool. Don't, don't sleep on the cool conclusions of the epistles, all the names. So, Cordes, that was a slave name. Cortus comes four, fourth. Literally, sometimes they would just name these children that were slaves. They were like, you're not even worth naming. One, two, three, four. And so that dude's name was Cordes. Because as a child, he had been a slave. And here is the apostle freaking Paul. naming this dude is like, hey, make sure you tell Cordes. I love that guy so much.
Starting point is 01:03:18 He is loved by God. And he had just been a child slave, Cordes. Isn't that cool? Yeah, that's great. That's cool. Okay. So here's the implication if you start boiling it down. So some forms, so here's the question we're asking.
Starting point is 01:03:32 Why in places like Ephesians chapter six is it giving instructions to quote-unquote masters if slavery. if slavery is always unjust. Well, here's the answer. Here's one of the answers. Because not all forms of ancient Roman slavery were necessarily unjust. Exactly right.
Starting point is 01:03:52 Well, and even to kind of contrast what the Bible says, two masters and of how to treat their people versus what ancient Greek and Roman philosopher said. Here's some things that Roman and Greek philosophers would have said. Aristotle said a slave is a living tool, basically a human piece of equipment. Vero divided tools into three categories,
Starting point is 01:04:12 silent tools like carts, and articulate tools like animals, and vocal tools, which were slaves. Cato, the elder, told farmers to work slaves hard and sell them off when they are old or sick, just like worn out livestock. And then all of a sudden, you get Colossians 4-1 where it says to tell masters to treat their servants just and fairly
Starting point is 01:04:30 because they have a master in heaven. Who is going to hold them accountable. It says in Ephesians 6-9, not to threaten them, because that was a common practice, is that if they didn't get in line, like it was legal for you to kill your slave if they did not get in line. And so even places where it was legal, not the kind of slavery we're talking about, but legal slavery. More like, again, indentured servitude, the command was nothing like in their culture. It was to treat them with honor, respect, and dignity.
Starting point is 01:04:53 And I could even make the argument that in Phileman, Paul is basically hinting to Philemon that you need to free oneness. Yeah, I'm going to get there. There is an argument that you can make where like all of the ingredients to end slavery are actually in the new. Testament. Yeah, so here's what a lot of New Testament scholars will say is that, okay, so Jesus said that the gospel would work its way through the world like Levin through a lump. So essentially, yeah, and that's what a lot of New Testament scholars will say is that, man, all of the logical and convictional beliefs to erode and eradicate the institution of slavery, they're implicit in the scriptures and in the gospel. And it was like Christianity planted that leaven in,
Starting point is 01:05:37 the lump of the world and God knew this thing eventually it's going to just do away with the institution. And I'm only going to jump out of the Bible for a second and then we're going to jump back in so you can keep on your row here. But it's no, so like we have to remember that when everything was written in the first century, Christians did not have political power. So they couldn't have overturned the system if they wanted to. But then it's not a coincidence that all of a sudden when they began to ascend imperial power or have influence in the empire in the fourth century, that everything immediately is overturned. Like, for example, Gregory of Nissa in the fourth century says that since God made him in his own image,
Starting point is 01:06:14 how can you buy a man and sell him? When you make him subject to another Lord, do you not become responsible for introducing a new master other than God? God said, let us make man in our own image. If he's in the likeness of God and rules the whole earth, who is his buyer? So he's making an argument around that time when Christians begin to empower that we need to do away with this thing. In 315 AD, Constantine outlaws braining slaves in the face. Why? Because they're in the image of God. Constantine did that? I've never heard that.
Starting point is 01:06:38 Yeah, 319, killing a slave equals homicide now, which again was unheard of in pagan Rome. In 4th century, Christian Imperge began making freedom easier to get. Fifth century, they're restricting the slave trade. So my thing is, it's no coincidence that when Christians actually had the ability to change the system, the system change. And by the way, it's the first time in history of human civilization that it happened. Okay, that's what I want to get to you. Sorry, I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
Starting point is 01:07:04 Bro, that's really important. So here's the question that you should, when somebody throws that in your face if you're a Christian, you know, Christianity can don't slavery, the Bible can own slavery. One of the things you just need to point out is, hey bro, who were all the people
Starting point is 01:07:17 that were the first people to abolish it? They were Christians. We're going to get to that in a second. So one little fun fact, again, I want to dovetail this on Roman slavery is many forms of early Roman slavery, again, voluntary. They live normal lives.
Starting point is 01:07:34 lives, they were paid going wages. Yes. This is really important. They were paid. Indentured servitude, hourly wages, all those things. Some of them were actually like in societally elevated positions. This historian lists these. Doctors, professors, administrators, and civil servants were often slaves.
Starting point is 01:07:56 And this is what this historian says, were in quote unquote slavery on an average of 10 years. So again, it's not lifelong. Okay. So a couple of other things I want to point out here is, and this is like, bro, this could be its own whole podcast, is this is what Thomas Sewell points out in that little quote where he's like, hey man, there were actually more white people that were taken as slaves to Arab countries than black people that were enslaved by the Americas. First of all, let me just say, all of it's bad. No one's saying, no one's arguing that on is not that bad. No, no, all of it's bad. That's not we're saying.
Starting point is 01:08:28 but what people will do to advance like particular ideologies and goals is that like zoom in on only white to African American American chattel slavery as like that's the only thing that's ever happened when honestly dude that's just like not a thing so here's how you need to think about this no no well here so here's what people say that will object to Christianity they'll say man white American Christians were the ones that had an unjust slave problem but that's that's literally ridiculous that's insane no the entire world had an unjust slave problem literally every nation in the entire world including every African nation had practiced slavery from the beginning of time further so what would it happened is that some of the world
Starting point is 01:09:21 had gotten into the church now that is we must absolutely acknowledge is in uh the people that defended it from a Christian perspective, some of the world had gotten into the church. Further, here's what I want to point out, it was Christians that led the abolitionist movements because of their biblical convictions. And Trinney, I'm going to toss that up. The first seven nations to move for the abolition of slavery
Starting point is 01:09:47 were all, go to the next thing I was going to show, they were all majority Christian nations. For the listener, pause and let this sink in. I don't want this to get to just, slip past you to quick. All seven of the first seven nations in world history to abolish slavery were majority Christian nations. That's not a coincidence. So here they are. This is from Rooters. This is not like, I didn't pull this from like a evangelical, you know, Bible commentary. So you got, you got 1787. I'm getting old, bro. You got Britain. Then you got
Starting point is 01:10:27 Denmark. Then you got Britain again right there. United States passes legislation. You got Spain, Sweden, Netherlands, France. In that time, all seven nations are majority Christian nations. Now, if you want to have fun, you can grok this. And the reason I'm not going to toss this up is because I never toss something grok up without double checking it. But if you want to have fun, it's actually even better than that when it comes to the track record of Christians abolishing slavery. So have a little fun. Take 60 seconds and pause this podcast and ask Grock or whatever AI. Ask it the question, if you treat all of the early American colonies as their own nations, what were the first 10 nations to abolish slavery? Bro, I don't got time
Starting point is 01:11:19 to talk about this. The revisionist history, around the early American colonies, they were just a bunch of white racists. Honestly, it's just a satanic lie. Literally, the pilgrims in the Plymouth colony, bro, this is like, this is the kind of thing you're like, what you're like, when I say this, you'd be like, whoa, whoa, there's no way that's true.
Starting point is 01:11:44 Yes, it is true, go Google it. This kind of thing that you're never gonna hear in history class because it doesn't fit a narrative that is prescribed. Literally in the Puritan settlers of the Plymouth Colony, there was a man-stealing ship that was full of stolen slaves that birthed, that landed. That's a fancy way to say landed. That landed at Plymouth.
Starting point is 01:12:12 The Puritan Christians in the Plymouth colony realized that this was a man-stolen group of slaves. They arrested the guys. that was the captain of the ship, they freed all of the slaves, then they sent him back where he came from to commission him to the Christian courts where he came from to be tried for his crimes. Wow. So, bro, it's like Christians honestly don't have a perfect track record. No. But compared to the rest of the world, I say this with complete integrity, the best track record. So I'm going to read this and then you talk. Yeah, go. So if you ask, again, do not take this as fact because you need to double
Starting point is 01:12:57 check anything Grok says, but I've done this like 10 different times and it spits out almost the same thing every time. So if you treat all the early American colonies as their own nations, a lot of the constitutions of the original 13 American colonies, they had already forbidden slavery in their colonial constitutions. So Pennsylvania, so this is how it lists them. If you treat it, all the early American colleges in their own nations. What were the first ten nations to abolish slavery? Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Haiti. So then you get to your first nation, and there's a whole interesting story behind that.
Starting point is 01:13:35 Chile, Uruguay. So, bro, it's like, there's just a lot different that you would think. Yeah, and where did the pilgrims people at Plymouth, what were they basing that off of? First on the law, but then also part because they knew First Timothy 1, 1 8 through 10. Now, we know that the law is good if one uses it. it lawfully. So that is a key thing. Because to your point, Christians throughout scripture have twisted the scriptures, I mean, Christians throughout history have twisted the scriptures and they have used them for their own ends. And we would say to that, they are disobeying God's
Starting point is 01:14:03 word. But it goes on to say this. Understanding this, the law was not laid down for the just, but for lawless and disobedient, for the ungodly and sinners, unholy and profane, but then it glist this list of sins. For those who strike their mothers and fathers, for murderers, the sexually immoral, men who practice homosexuality, enslavers. That's the wires and purgers. PJV would get translated man stealers. And so literally they're basing off of scripture basis. You cannot do that. And if you're a thinking Christian,
Starting point is 01:14:30 not only can you not steal someone. You also say, if I were to buy someone that was stolen, I'm contributing to it. So I'm complicit in that sense. It goes back to when this is giving instructions to masters. It's not talking about this version of slavery. This is talking more about what we talked about before,
Starting point is 01:14:45 indentured servitude, and then it gives instructions for that. The other thing I would say is, if you just follow me for a second, is going back to the original objection, a lot of times people will say this to you. And really what they're trying to do is say, oh, Christians are really bad people or your God is a really, or your God is a really, or your God is a really bad God. And so this is similar to even when people ask me, especially if they're coming from an atheistic or agnostic
Starting point is 01:15:04 or agnostic background about, oh, and then that question again, just follow me. I'm going through it with this. When people ask me the question of like, oh, like an atheist is like, how can there be an good and all powerful God and their evil exist? And now if they're more of an atheist, what I say is, okay, how about this? I will answer that question if you will also agree. to answer the question of the problem of evil. And I'm like, well, what do you mean?
Starting point is 01:15:24 I see what she's going to ask. And I'm like, well, here's the thing is I have to explain how there can be an all-powerful and all-good God and there be evil in the world. You have to explain to me how you believe there can't be a God and you have a problem with evil. I have the problem of evil. You have a problem with evil. And here's what's going to happen is we're both going to get to a place where there is
Starting point is 01:15:44 going to be an element of mystery. But then in that mystery, here's what I know is you will never be able to do anything about the problem of evil. I had a God who has done is doing and will do something about evil. In the words of Eliana, clock it. So now you're like, what does that have to do with this other thing? Is I say this, it's like, to Bill Maher's point, I'm going to trust that was a cool and good thing. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:16:06 I'm not. We've heard it's good. The Rudy girls say it's fine. How olden this connects to this is like Bill Maher said, slavery has been existent throughout all cultures and civilizations. And yes, there have been Christians who. have done awful things and for that, man, we should feel sorry and repent. They should specifically. But then what we also have to say is, hey, and can you explain how throughout this river of the world and all over the world that Christians were the first who opposed slavery and were the
Starting point is 01:16:33 primary ones who have dealt the death knell to it throughout the history of the world as well, whereas pagans and people who do not believe in Jesus were the last ones to get on the train. Yeah, bro. That's the thing I'll say. Yeah, bro. And I'm done. Yes. Well, hang on. Trinney, I'm going to throw this to you, because this kind of thing like it encourages the faith of Christians. Trini, I'm going to toss this to you. So what you usually get is a guy like Bill Marr that's like, hey, man, I'm an agnostic guy. And man, you Christians have a bad track record on slavery.
Starting point is 01:17:04 What I want to say is like, well, hey, Bill, let's ask the question how you're atheism and agnosticism. Let's see what the track record of that is in human history. What we got right here is we got a chart with all the people who have killed the most people in human history and like the first six of them are all atheistic socialist communist dictators so it's like hey man let's ask the question which worldview tends to result in care compassion and human flourishing uh hey bill it's not yours uh it's it's not yours bill so this is what i'm point out let me do one last thing um just to make sure that christians understand this and then
Starting point is 01:17:47 can we go to move on? Yeah. And, yeah, and then we can talk women in voting patterns. Jam is going to have a blast here. So I just want to point out, you can't read the Bible and think that, like, for instance, American Chattel slavery was permissible. One, these are little Bible references for people who are super nerds and want to go look this up.
Starting point is 01:18:10 Phileiman 15 and 16, Paul's, he's returning a slave back to. the slave's master and he tells it's onesimus is the name of the slave and he's returning him back to philemon that's why it's called philemon and he literally tells him listen i'm going to read it he tells the master in rome perhaps the reason he was separated from you for a little while was that you might have him back forever no longer as a slave but better than a slave as a dear brother okay then you got galatians 328 these are the verses that Christian abolitionists used to abolish the slave trade, William Wilberforce. Galatians 328, there is neither Jew nor Gentile.
Starting point is 01:18:53 There is neither slave nor free, nor is there male nor female for you all one in Christ Jesus. 1 Corinthians 721. The New Testament is urging slaves to get out of the institution. And if somebody is not enslaved, the Bible is urging them. Don't participate in that institution. 1 Corinthians 721. Were you a slave when you were called? Don't let it trouble you.
Starting point is 01:19:19 In other words, essentially, it's kind of like, especially for people who had gone into debt and they were indentured servants and like, ah, did I do something bad? Should I not have done that? He's saying, hey, don't let it trouble you. Although, if you can gain your freedom, do so. So the Bible is like, liberty, liberty, liberty.
Starting point is 01:19:35 And then I'll point this out. Last thing, man stealing that all of American Chattel slavery was based on is literally a death sentence. The Bible makes that a death sentence. Exodus 216. Anyone who kidnap someone is to be put to death whether the victim has been sold or is still in the kidnapper's possession. Deuteronomy 24-7, if someone is caught kidnapping a fellow Israelite and treating or selling them as a slave, the kidnapper must die. You must purge the evil from among you.
Starting point is 01:20:06 So fact-checking Bill Maher, the Bible is practically an owner's manual for slaves. wrong wrong do not pass go do not collect $200 all right so now's let time to let jana cook over here I mean in terms of just like time to let her just do her thing when it comes to women voting and left leaning and all that stuff so we're just going to hand it over to you now and just let you go all right hang on hang on so we kicked a hornet nets last time we're going to make this short because jan and are gone date tonight are the kids already with mom and dad they are all right so here's what we did last week go ahead and toss a let's toss the those the charts up. So it was after the Mom Doni election. And what everybody was noticing is there were two things, where I talked about immigration, the two things that made that election happen were, number one, it was immigrants that primarily voted in Mamdani. And that's a whole very complex discussion. But then it was really interesting. Go to the others first before that one, Trinity. Go to the ones that were like Mom Donnie election specific. We did the, there's the Jay Jones and then the Jay Jones chart and then the Mom Donnie chart.
Starting point is 01:21:12 yeah there you go okay so this is the mom donnie chart uh women age 18 to 29 voted for mom donnie at an 84% clip so i'm going to go ahead and ask the question that we're going to answer in a second okay no i'm not all right so women women uh 18 29 84% clip that's probably what janet would don't no no no no i'm teasing okay let's go to the uh go to the jones chart Okay, Jay Jones, you got it again. The highest, the highest corollary in voting for, Jay Jones was the guy that threatened, like, actually said in text messages that he,
Starting point is 01:21:54 and he wasn't joking, like, wanted to assassinate his kids, conservative politicians because they were fascists and their children. And he still got elected in Virginia. And it was women that voted for him, same age range, 1829, 76. 76% clip.
Starting point is 01:22:12 And then Abigail Spanberger, that was the same, it was a girl in Virginia, 81% clip. So then we did that, then we showed, and we're going to have, we're going to ask to revisit this because it kicked a little bit of a Hortense nest. So then we showed this one. We showed this one if, this is presidential elections. If only women voted in America, you would get the left chart, which would be an absolute landslide for progressive candidate. 461 electoral votes to 71. If only men voted, it'll be an absolute landslide for conservative candidates. 350 to 158 electoral votes.
Starting point is 01:22:51 So it's like what people are noticing is like radically diverging gender divide on this thing. And then we go to that tweet. So this like kind of went, I'm going to have you black out the name of the guy that tweeted it because I don't know what kind of content that guy does. But this went like pretty viral. And this guy asked the question, I can't for the life of me understand why liberal women have become sympathetic to Islam but despised Christianity.
Starting point is 01:23:21 Now, honestly, the data just shows like that's actually a thing. Like that is, in fact, highest corollary among all demographics. That's a thing. So the intelligent question this guy's asking is like, hey, bro, like, in like fundamentalist Islam, like, Women that aren't wearing burkas are going to get beat in public. Fundamentals, Islam is like it's not wives submit to your husbands. It's all women submit to all men.
Starting point is 01:23:48 Death penalties for certain things that women do. So he's asking a very intelligent question. What in the world, bro? You know, what's going on here? So, Jan, what's going on here? You don't know. We thought you were going to tell us to you. I just, I don't identify it with that math.
Starting point is 01:24:12 I just, I don't know. It's kind of, I do you have thoughts. I do have thoughts. It's a little hard to get my mind around that, but I do have some thoughts. So I have three thoughts. So first I want to start with worldview because I think everything starts with, where's your worldview? So generally, whatever you believe is true about God, the truth of scripture, it's going to be how you. you live your life and it's going to influence everything you do.
Starting point is 01:24:38 So Christians have a biblical worldview. So we're going to see and interpret every area of our life through the lens of scripture and how God defines it, not through the lens of culture, not through the lens of personal opinion. So one thing about that map, I'd like, I wish it was broken down into, there's a way to know Christians as opposed to someone who wasn't a Christian. but if a person doesn't have a biblical worldview or they've allowed themselves to be persuaded to believe let me just pause i've seen that broken down dead i wish i had it uh christian women
Starting point is 01:25:18 is very significant now i think they evangelical christian women then you got to get down into white versus african-american white versus people of color but among white evangelicals uh is still women vote conservative in general, but if I remember, it's actually not by much, and it's considerably less than dudes. Okay. Okay. So you keep going. Okay. Yeah. So if someone doesn't have a biblical worldview or persuasion, because there's just a lot of persuasion with media and everything going on and your relationship. So if somebody's been persuaded to believe unbiblical thoughts, I'm going there. I have a reason I'm saying that. So I'm heading there. It's a rejection of God's authority. His authority is getting replaced with whatever feels right or whatever culture tells them.
Starting point is 01:26:13 And so the reason, like I think this is happening is that people get into the place of rejecting God's authority on a topic, even if they would normally like believe what the Bible says. it's because they have allowed toxic empathy to change their thought patterns and change. So empathy in general is just the ability to understand and share the feelings of someone else. But empathy, it becomes toxic whenever it's manipulated. And so, I mean, you see it all the time. You see it in media. You see it with like how.
Starting point is 01:26:55 I'll give an example in a minute. but just how a topic like abortion or LGBT stuff comes up, you're going to see how they use that to manipulate emotions. And so you really have to... Are you saying that that works more on women than men? I do think that it works more on women because women are not all women. So I don't want every woman to be like, well, I'm really rational because I'd like to say like I agree with you. I think I try to really think rationally about that too.
Starting point is 01:27:31 But I do think that emotions really come into play here, especially if it has to do with somebody you love. So someone who is going to normally, I believe the Bible, I believe what the word says, if they have someone in their life that they love, okay, let's just use the example of like LGBT. So someone in their life, comes comes out, then they are, they start to like hear everything that said, well, if you are really loving, if you are really loving, if you are really kind, then you're going to be someone who affirms all love, all forms of love. And so then empathy gets hijacked, becomes toxic, because then, well, I wouldn't be loving. I want to be kind. Like I...
Starting point is 01:28:24 Women, they don't want to hurt somebody's feelings. Right. And by the way, that's a good thing. Yeah, and this isn't stereotyping by the, like, really? Yeah, I think it is, isn't it? Well, it is, well, but it's backed by research. Oh, yeah, okay. It's not irrational stereotype. It's not irrational stereotype.
Starting point is 01:28:38 This is backed by research that women tend to form moral judgments, more around care, inclusion, protection of vulnerable groups, avoiding harm, so many things you've been saying. So then if it's like LGBTQ, oh, we've got to protect these kids, and if we don't affirm them, then they're, they'll commit suicide. And the thing. And so, like you said, it's actually, it's using a God-wired, incident. instinct and females, but then hijacking it in the service of something that's not good. Sorry, keep going.
Starting point is 01:29:02 Yeah, I mean, yeah, definitely with just everything you said there. And so it's kind of like what you start to see is that the mindset will shift. And it becomes like, I'm not going to just support them. I'm going to agree. I'm going to affirm. And then you just, you see that change. And so I also think like take the topic of abortion. So we saw it all election cycle.
Starting point is 01:29:34 Media is going to take a horrific story of something that is truly atrocious that happened to somebody. Maybe they were raped or maybe they almost died in childbirth. And they're going to manipulate your emotions and make you empathize to try to get you to believe that abortion is good and it's health care. And if you really care about women's rights, you're going to support them in the right to choose what they need to do. And so it's just, it's toxic empathy creeping in. I see that. And real quick, notice what they do in those situations of abortions is usually they take
Starting point is 01:30:11 one of the most difficult stories of a really, really rare, unique case, but that's the only story they tell acting like that's the norm, whereas statistics tell us that it is not the norm whatsoever. So even again, they play on the emotion of it and really try to use that to me. It's called Centering the Fringe. That's what they got. It's called Centering the fringe. Let me take a fringe edge case and then center that as the thing from which we should reverse
Starting point is 01:30:33 engineer all your thoughts about the whole thing. It's called Centering the fringe. So what you're talking about, Jana, is we've had Allie Best Stucky on the podcast before. And she wrote the, it's Toxic Em. Yeah, Toxic Em, and I don't remember the subtitle. But yeah, great book. I would, yeah. Strongly recommend.
Starting point is 01:30:48 Yeah, definitely. And by the way, so let me say something real quick. Like, here's what we believe some people may be going, man, it sounds like they're saying that women are worse than men. No, no. Here's what we believe, that men and women are both created equally in the image of God, are equally image bearers. But we do believe that they are equals, but they are not equivalents. So this is why what you get is they're given different functions in the book of Genesis. You'll notice that in Genesis chapter 2, 3, 4, that they are given unique and distinct curses from the fall. So this is different, which is why in the New Testament there are gender-specific commands. Paul will go, hey, wives, do this, ladies do this. men do this, husbands do this. Because like I hope we can all just be rational and go, men and women are different. Yes.
Starting point is 01:31:32 And which means they tend to sin different. I will just point that out. Now this is a whole different podcast and I'm like, you talk. I know you got something. You're ready. But what I will say is they sin different. As a pastor, I will just gently point this out. If you go really hard at the sins of men, bro, you're going to get, bro, people love you.
Starting point is 01:31:54 I mean, listen, bro, it's. It's viral. Like, dude, this is, you know, that stuff just chases. If a pastor even gently moves towards sins of women, you better just buckle up, brother. In fact, go look. It was like two years ago on back-to-back weeks, we had Instagram reels where I first went, like, let me address something with men. And then the next week, it was like the exact same thing, but with women.
Starting point is 01:32:22 And if you go look at the comments, the comments, the comments, on the first one were like, clap, clap, clap, clap emoji, get him, pastor, it's like all that. The comments, the other one are like, dumpster fire. Yes. Like dumpster fire. And you were gentle. I was super, which by the way, that drives Jana nuts.
Starting point is 01:32:42 Yes, it does. That drives, godly women, godly women want to be pastored. Yes. Amen, I got, godly women want to be pastor. Like, don't rob me of the discipleship. needed for me to become a mature follower of Jesus. Absolutely. Now what were you going to say there?
Starting point is 01:32:59 Well, as you were talking, it was making me think about, I wish I remember the exact sentence you were saying, but it's like, women were created to be nurtures. And so, and I'm getting ready to hit it with my last topic on this, which is feminism. I want to hit that. But so women were made to be nurturers. And so kind of within feminism, we'll talk about that in a second. But rather than using their nurturing abilities that God put in you, that is innate, that's God-given gift on what is holy and righteous, which is you're focusing on your family,
Starting point is 01:33:41 your husband, your kids, it's kind of been hijacked. And the nurturing is you see it how women will nurture these causes. There'll be activists for LGBTQ, abortion. And I didn't even know about the Islam stuff now. But it's like they're using that in the wrong area. So this is a bigger thing than people realize. All right. So we toss that tweet back up one more time, Trinity.
Starting point is 01:34:14 So I was feeling sporty the day that I saw this tweet. And I quote tweeted it. and I responded to this dude and so here there are two again I can't for the life may understand why liberal women have become sympathetic to Islam
Starting point is 01:34:30 but despise Christianity so I think there's two things going on here number one and this is sensitive but it's like you know truth is truth here's a big part of the problem
Starting point is 01:34:44 I should have grabbed a graph on this progressive women especially white aggressive women. They don't have kids. They have cats. Oh, dang. Oh, my gosh.
Starting point is 01:35:00 Oh, my gosh. Notice that was not Pastor Josh, who said that. I just for the record, want to say that out loud. It's so true. You see, I mean, I'm not online a whole lot, but it's like all the pictures. Like, it's true. It's true. All right.
Starting point is 01:35:16 Hang on. Okay. So let me keep going. Whoa. That was amazing. That was amazing. Listen, all right, here's the thing. This podcast is so great because people will hear me talking and they'll be like, man, you are really, man, Josh, you're really conservative sometimes.
Starting point is 01:35:32 Like, bro, if you could hear Jan at home, you would think I was tame. Yeah. And now they have. But he hears the wrong. All right, now hang on. Oh, that was amazing. All right, let me answer this. So, number one, especially white, progressive women, they don't have kids.
Starting point is 01:35:49 they don't have kids, but check this out. But they were still created as women. So check this out. They can't turn off their hardwired maternal instincts. You can't turn that off. That's biological. It's hardwired into creation. So check to say, here's what happens.
Starting point is 01:36:04 This is what Jan was alluded to. In the absence of children, when you zoom out, I'm not, we're not saying every woman has to have children. Paul literally addresses that in 1st Corinthians 7. That's not what we're saying. We're talking about zoomed out in general. what women were created for and men were created for. In the absence of children, you can't turn those maternal instincts off.
Starting point is 01:36:26 So what happens is when maternal instincts can't get aimed at a internally at a family, those instincts get aimed externally at us into society. And what they end up doing is they aim the maternal instincts at quote unquote, ostensibly oppressed groups that need like mama bears to advocate for them. kind of like a vulnerable child would. So this is a big part, in my opinion, this is a big part of if you watch like, hey man, if there's a pride parade
Starting point is 01:36:57 or if there's an advocacy group for LGBT kids or if there's a, I almost pulled one up, this guy's asking, why is it that liberal women are the ones that are like fighting for Islam? Well, here's, that's why. It's because those maternal instincts, they're seeing someone that is ostensibly oppressed like a picked on child, the maternal instincts kick in,
Starting point is 01:37:17 and their mama bear instinct kicks in. And it's like, well, I'm going to get out there and fight for the person that's being picked on. And honestly, what's happening is Muslims, for now, have successfully branded themselves as an oppressed group in America. So if you're trying to ask the question, like, bro, why is it white liberal women,
Starting point is 01:37:35 and the values seem opposed each other? That's part of why. Now, the other thing that I will just, and this is a different podcast, we'll just say this to move on, dude there is a there's a weird unholy alliance between progressivism and Islam as ideologies because what people point out is dude it makes no sense look in American cultural landscape progressivism in Islam it's like hand-in-glove it's all it's always like lockstep and people
Starting point is 01:38:03 look at it and they're like bro this makes no sense like why are we doing you know queers for Palestine like that's like saying chickens for KFC it's like it's like it's like it's like it's literally queers in Palestine get executed. Yeah, get killed. So, like, people are like, why is this thing of, like, progressivism and Islam or, like, you know, the group that's supposed to be for women's rights is for the same people who force women to wear burqas and physically abuse them if they want.
Starting point is 01:38:32 Like, why is, well, here's what's going on. It's an enemy of my enemy is my friend alliance. So if you're asking, why would, like, a radically feminist pro-LGBQ progressivism align with women subjectating LGBT executing Islam, here's the unifying principle. Anything but Christianity and anyone but Christ. Anything but Christianity and anyone but Christ.
Starting point is 01:38:54 There's a spirit underneath the movements that's like, Jesus is the threat. We will align in opposition of Jesus. Enemy of my enemy is my friend alliance. Thoughts or want to keep moving on. That's a great. I'm sorry. I want to refer to Jana because, again,
Starting point is 01:39:11 I'm just like, I want to hear more. What I'd love if you don't mind me asking, sorry, I didn't mean the co-opter's thing, is, you know, one of the things you said is like inherently women do have more, God has designed women to have that more empathetic kind of bent towards them. Let me just say, by the way, that's a good thing. And that's a good thing. That's a good thing. Any people who don't hear that is not a bad thing. Maybe come back around that as we're not up here. Praise Jesus. Jana has the empathy she has when she's at home with family all day. But earlier you said when you saw some of his grass, like, well, that's not me and you don't share that. I know incredible woman, like empathetic, caring.
Starting point is 01:39:46 My wife loves you. Like, just incredible. So you have that empathetic bent in you. So what is it, though, that when you see LGBTQ stuff or pro-Islam stuff that you're like, you don't come to the same conclusions as other women. So some of it obviously is the worldview stuff. But is it that you don't care for them as people? And they're like, oh, I actually don't care for them.
Starting point is 01:40:04 Like, what is it that allows you to go in a different direction? I love them as individuals. And I, like, honestly, I want to see. see them come to saving faith in Christ because I know it's like that is not your identity. That is not who God made you to be. Like you are made in God's image. He wants a relationship with you. And so it's like I think it's like it's hard to see people who want, they want people to
Starting point is 01:40:34 stay stuck in their sin when Jesus wants to set them pretty. Come on, yeah. You know? And so, like, yeah. It's like you're affirming them all the way to hell. Yeah. Yes. And it's like I don't empathize with that.
Starting point is 01:40:50 Like, you know, I want you to come to saving faith in Christ. And so how can I applaud you as you're doing something that is stealing your soul? Yeah, almost even reminds me going back to what we were talking about earlier. I mean, with Paul and you got Felix, you got someone who is completely different worldview, very immoral. And I'm sure Paul's heart went out to him. And yet he still was willing to talk about righteousness, self-control and coming judgment. Because to your point, I think it's saying in a different way is it is not loving to affirm the thing that is keeping someone from Jesus. There you go.
Starting point is 01:41:22 Let's look at the one last thing. And then I want to finalize our thoughts on why, because this is very enlightening. I want to finalize some thoughts on why there's a widening gender gap in. in voting patterns. So this is of all places NBC. I'll be honest, dude, when I first saw this, my heart broke. You got that? All right, Gen Z. These are adults under 30 years old. We thought we would ask a big picture question. What they think is most important to their personal definition of success. So we gave a whole bunch of different options here. And we asked folks in this poll, pick the three that you think are most important, the most commonly cited for Gen Z for success
Starting point is 01:42:06 in life, to have a fulfilling job or career, to have the money to do the things. things you want to do. What was most surprising about this poll, though, was there were massive differences between how men and women in Gen Z answered. There were huge differences politically. When you combine those two things, gender and politics in Gen Z, and you ask about what's important to success, they are worlds apart. Look at this. Men, Gen Z, men under 30, who voted for Donald Trump, what were they most likely to say makes for a successful life having children? Pause. So first stop and think about this. because this is going to make what comes next even more shocking.
Starting point is 01:42:44 The dudes under 30, the dudes, said number one most important thing for me to have happy life, having children. Bookmark that in your head. Let's keep going. Stop. Last. Last. Now, before we go any farther, because I want to watch rest this clip, Trinity, will you please pull up that New York Times headline? like what I want to say to young women,
Starting point is 01:43:18 this podcast, like I think our listeners like 70% dudes, but there's more and more women. When Jan is honest, it's gonna be more women. I just want to like gently say to women listening, especially if you're a young woman, you are being lied to and propagandized
Starting point is 01:43:34 by Satan who is the god of this world because he is a father of lies. Because you're seeing crap like this all the time. New York Times headline, married heterosexual motherhood in America is a game no one wins now let me just say what she's saying is what now I'm going to go to a bunch of the data before I go back to the video what she's saying is literally what you were created biologically designed by God to do she's saying that will result in you losing in life great job Satan that's literally who that now
Starting point is 01:44:13 let me just say it's a lie. Bro, and it's not just a lie from the Bible, like data shows this a lie. All right, just rifle through this data real quick. So you got this guy, when you go to actual data, guess whose lives are less lonely, more meaningful, and happier
Starting point is 01:44:31 across every single age range? Moms, okay? Go to the next one. This is Brad Wilcox. Unmarried, childless women are the least happy. younger and older women, married mothers are the happiest, married mothers are the happiest middle-aged and older women. Go to the next one. You see the same thing from the family studies. Guess who are the
Starting point is 01:44:58 happiest women in America? Married women with children. Happiest women in America. So I just want to point this out, not just from scripture, theology, but from sociology. You are being lied to and that's part of what's driving like why are women saying literally the last most important thing to me is having children because you've been successfully propagandized by Satan who is the father of lies now let's keep going on the video clip all the way down here at the bottom couldn't be more opposite second to last for women who voted for Harris was being married being married to the last for the list for men who voted for Donald Trump another huge difference a very common answer for Gen Z women who voted for Harris was having emotional stability for Gen Z men who voted for Donald Trump,
Starting point is 01:45:48 you've got to go all the way to the bottom to find that one. These are some core basis. Will you pause real quick? So this is, dang, dude, I should have brought this up. We'll do this on a future podcast. Bro, have you guys seen the data on mental health between people who identify as progressive and people identify as conservative? It's insane. It's stupid. Yeah. So like obviously, in general, women self-report more mental health problems than men by like a massive factor. But there is such a stark difference between people identify as conservative and people identify as progressive and mental health that young female people who identify as conservative report having less mental health problems than men.
Starting point is 01:46:42 who identify as progressive. So like the church look like this. And there are reasons for that. They're ideological. Yeah. Well, it's because life is best when you live in line with God's design.
Starting point is 01:46:53 Yeah. And that's like, again, I always want to say this. What we are not saying is that modern American political conservatism equals the kingdom of God. We are Christians first. And if that maps as conservative
Starting point is 01:47:07 in a certain political moment, okay, fine, but I'm a Christian. I'm a Christian. But what you have right now is really one way of looking at the world that kind of more generally is built on Christian theology. And you have one way of looking at the world that kind of more generally is built on top of critical theory. And that's what you got going on there. Finish the clip. Let's see if there's anything left there before we just close the pod.
Starting point is 01:47:30 How people think about life. And you can see here this rising generation in this country very far apart. Okay. Okay. Jana, do you have thoughts here? You might go right at it. Thoughts on the video? So we're really going to the question.
Starting point is 01:47:46 What they're really pointing out is massive difference between men are voting conservative, women voting progressive, and there's a value, considerable value differences. Yeah, I really think it is, I think, I mean, I don't even know what wave feminism we're in at this point. There's so many. They say we're in fourth wave feminism right now. And I really think it's a network. of feminism on our culture. And so, like, feminism is not your friend.
Starting point is 01:48:19 It's really the outworking of the fall. So Genesis 3. So I think that... Wait, can I... You said something really significant there that needs to be. Yeah. So feminism, Jan and I talk, these are conversations we have at home with our kids, too. Feminism is the ideological outworking of the curse of the fall to women in Genesis
Starting point is 01:48:40 in Genesis 3. So when God curses the woman in Genesis 316, he says to the woman, he said, I will surely multiply your pain and childbearing. In pain, you shall bring forth children. Your desire shall be contrary.
Starting point is 01:48:58 Some Bibles will translate it against. Your desire shall be contrary to your husband. So this is what it says. Okay. So what feminism comes along and does is like, you know what, man, somebody telling you that you need a man to be happy, that like you should focus on your home, that you should like actually aspire to and celebrate wanting to have children,
Starting point is 01:49:24 how oppressive. For you. For you. Yeah. That's the ideological outworking of the curse of the fall on women. That is what feminism largely is. Right. So feminism tries to get women to care about anything.
Starting point is 01:49:40 and everything but what God has created. So he's created you for your home, your family, and progressives will frame gender roles as women's rights issues. And so I think that's a lot of the reason we're seeing women trend that way. And they want women to feel oppressed by the patriarchy in that. So like I won't go through like each wave of the feminism. But pre-industrial revolution, so prior to like mid-18, 1800s. Families functioned as a unit. So they lived together, they worked together. Daily life was
Starting point is 01:50:16 together. And they were a team, you know, just kind of like we call ourselves the Howard team. So it was built on clear, biblical, and social order. Husbands, he was the head, wife is the helper. And then we start to see a change in the mid-1800s to like the early 1900s. So feminism begins. and like I would say creep in because it just it wasn't like bam all of a sudden there it just starts to have a creep so you know it kind of started small like women's rights to vote and you know like we have um you know just different different things that women were involved in during that time but um but that starts to creep in and it started to question the order by framing male headship as potentially unjust against women so you begin to see the shift from God's design of what God says is good into, you know, that could be unjust. That could be bad for us. And in order for them to battle for individual rights. And so that's kind of where we're landed now.
Starting point is 01:51:22 So women, it's about women's rights. And I think that's why I do think that's why women are starting to trend more progressive because we've just kind of, lost the family's shared mission whenever all that happened when feminism crept in it was no longer about the family doing things together it was about each person having their own i don't know i well career you could say calling whatever um but once the home was the economic spiritual and educational hub and now it's like a secondary place for most people so husband and wife live more parallel and side by side by side rather than integrated and together. So other, I mean,
Starting point is 01:52:10 there are a few other things. But mothers and wives' roles, they were once honored in the past, and they were seen as a sacred calling, and now they're seen as limitations. So I need to find myself, and it has to be outside my family. Yeah, and then one last thing. By detaching womanhood from divine design. Feminisms open the door for the redefinement of, and we've seen it, gender, sexuality, and family.
Starting point is 01:52:39 That's good, Janice. Yeah, I'll just say a couple things and we'll shut her down. Just while you talk to the ladies, I'll talk to the men, a lot of what drives that as bad men. Yes. Because, you know, one of the curses of the fall was,
Starting point is 01:52:56 and he shall leave over you. So instead of becoming a loving head that lays his life down for the good of his family, yes, he leads. Yeah, he does. Yep, yep. And yes, there is an authority structure. But, man, he loves, he blesses, he upbuilds. Bad men will use their strength to hurt, oppress, abuse women. And yeah, bro, that'll drive you running. Yeah, sure will. Man, I'll say a few things on that little divide we just saw. And then you can agree disagree additional comments
Starting point is 01:53:31 when you shut her down I do think more and more you got to think about this if you look at the values of the two parties it's kind of like
Starting point is 01:53:38 what's happened is the Democrats the Democratic Party is kind of mom and the Republican Party is kind of dad so if you think about the values
Starting point is 01:53:45 of the parties right now Democrats is like it's an empathy compassion let me feed you let me take care of you that's kind of
Starting point is 01:53:52 the progressive kind of a spree and then the more conservative side of things think about what that party tends to be about It's like law and order, obedience, strong borders, strong military, personal responsibility, pull yourself up by your boost.
Starting point is 01:54:06 Get out there and grind and build something. I mean, that's like conservative vibe. Well, one of those sounds like mom and one of those sounds like dad. And so, hey, man, when that happens, you're going to have, the women are kind of going to be drawn a little bit more to the mom vibe. And the dudes are going to be drawn a little bit more to the dad vibe. I'll say this. And by the way, I'm not commenting on every policy that he's ever proposed. I'm not definitely not commenting on all of his moral actions in his life.
Starting point is 01:54:33 People say a lot of things about Donald Trump. What nobody has ever said about him is that he's feminine. I guarantee you that. Nobody's ever said that. And so, you know, men just in general, it's the old line from Braveheart is true. Men don't follow titles. They follow courage. If men look at somebody and they're like, respect, that guy can take a punch and keep moving.
Starting point is 01:54:54 Like, just men are hardwired to be like, respect. So I think you see that a little bit. I think Jana hit it too, to help understand that divide a little bit, is a little bit of Christian theology versus critical theory. And it really does, it gets down, whereas Christian theology views the world through a sin, righteousness lens and goes, was that action right or wrong?
Starting point is 01:55:15 Sin, righteousness lens. Critical theory doesn't have a lens for right and wrong. It just views the world through the categories of oppressed and oppressor. And it does that through every sort of strata, demographic strata, race, gender. So you apply critical theory to gender, and it's like the oppressive patriarchy, you live in a world that was built by men for men,
Starting point is 01:55:35 and that's why you can't get ahead. And so then the answer to the questions of, man, why are like 80% of CEOs are men, and why are, da, da, da, da, and they say, well, it's because of an oppressive system that was built by men for men. And honestly, this is super politically incorrect. The Christian answer to that is, no man, that's creational design. It's just creation, you can fight that all you want.
Starting point is 01:55:57 It's creational design. Men were created to do a thing, and men and women in general were created for different things. And so that's gonna play itself out a little bit differently. And then the last thing that Jana hit is, man, if you really watch, man, what progressives tend to do is they are amazing at weaponized empathy. And again, what we're talking about there
Starting point is 01:56:21 is just kind of playing on emotion and getting emotion to override your logic and your convictions. So think about every keystone issue, and then we're going to be done with this podcast. Think about every keystone issue, like that drive voting patterns. When you go to abortion, it's like what progressives do
Starting point is 01:56:38 is they tell a really compelling sad story about a 15-year-old girl that was taken advantage of, and man, if she can't terminate the pregnancy, then this is what her life is going to look like. And it's really emotional. An actual horrific evil precipitated that thing from a dude, precipitate that life. But what they'll do is what toxinate.
Starting point is 01:56:57 empathy does is it focuses the camera lens on only one person in the equation and get you to have empathy for that person. But then it's like, don't look over there, don't look over there, don't look over there, because we don't want you to have empathy for that. So in the situation, it's like, look at the 15-year-old girl, empathy, but don't look at the child they're about to kill. Who's also a victim. Who's also about to be a victim. So it's like, let's have empathy for this, but don't think about this. That's toxic empathy. Same with, honestly, same with immigration. It's like have empathy for the, you know, have empathy for the single mom, trying to get their family in a better place.
Starting point is 01:57:35 Let's have empathy over here, over here, over here. But then let's make sure the camera doesn't pan over to what happens when you flood a populace with 20 million mass migration. What happens to all the actual women, children, and families? Let's not have empathy. So empathy over here, but no empathy over there. You can do it at homelessness, LGBT. What you're always going to see is what toxic empathy does is it focuses the camera on the one person I want you to have empathy for that will drive your political decision.
Starting point is 01:58:07 But then it excludes the rest of the people from the equation so that you won't have empathy for them and drives it there. And, you know, women are just more empathetic. Can I hit a couple things? Please do. I know we've got to shut it down fast. I think from a practical thing, this may be a little too inter-sider baseball, but I think another reason why we're seeing that divide is, And did you mention like mom and dad? This is also the last 10 to 15 years studies and stats show it just based on how little
Starting point is 01:58:31 legislation they would be passed. We've never had a more inability for the two sides to work together. So in a good family, mom and dad worked together and there's some give and take. But literally in that last 10 to 15 years, it's one reason why executive actions and orders have gone up through the roof is that Congress and those passing laws are unable to work together. And so increasingly you get this divide. And so you don't have that little bit of give and take of both. I think, and it really just sum up
Starting point is 01:58:54 really what both of you said is that why is that widening? Because we are because of what people are formed by and who they are hated by. Oh, wow. Because in the one hand, feminism is forming our women for sure, in addition to our men, but definitely our women for sure.
Starting point is 01:59:10 But also, you kind of hit it this, is that also who are hated by. So in our own reason why men are going back to the right is because they've been told for the last few decades, you're toxic, you're evil, you're oppressive, and all this other stuff. But then convert. Firstly, women, unfortunately, have been told by, you talked about this earlier, men who don't represent Christ, but sometimes claim they do. They'll say Christ is king, but then they are racist and misogynistic. And Christ needs to get on the throne of their views of that. But then they'll be told the same thing, and so women go to the other side. So I think I will say we've got to be careful what we're being informed by, but then also we've got to be very careful not to hate and make enemies of those on the other side, because if anything, we'll just push them to the other side when we actually want to win them to Christ.
Starting point is 01:59:52 The final thing I would say is this, in terms of just our church's duty, we need to disciple women out of truthless compassion and then men out of graceless truth. Some of those dangerous truths and virtues, some of the most dangerous truths and virtues are those that have lost their counterpoint truth and virtue. So Jesus, it says, was full of grace and truth. And so it becomes really dangerous anytime we want to be really full of grace, but also not really full of truth or really full of. of truth and not full of grace. And so I think that's just one thing. But to your point, we have to disciple our people differently based on maybe the particular ditch that they're going to go into. Amen. Jana, will you pray that we would be able to do that? I'd love to. Father, you are so good. You are loving and kind and merciful. And I just pray
Starting point is 02:00:42 that you will just place in us just a desire to do your will to be formed by your word, above all, not by culture, not by personal opinions or all the things swirling on around us, but that we are formed, formed by you, Father. So I just pray that you will just give us more of your spirit, fill us with more of him, help us to know your word and to do it and to not procrastinate, but to just hasten and not delay to obey your commands, Father. So I just pray that you'll give us wisdom and that you'll give us hearts of obedience and that we will just do what you say in Jesus' name. Amen. Amen. Episode 50.
Starting point is 02:01:29 Thanks for tuning in to Live Free with Pastor Josh Howardton. We pray today's episode helped you take a step forward in life, culture, and faith as you live free in Christ. If it encouraged you, be sure to rate, review, and share the podcast. And don't forget to subscribe so you'll never miss an episode. Join us for Lake Point Church online every weekend and find more resources at lakepoint.church slash live free. We'll see you next time.

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