Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey - Ep 1268 | Islamification Update, Christian Music Dominates & Why Women Aren’t Well
Episode Date: November 17, 2025Allie exposes Texas’ rebranded Islamic enclave “The Meadow” — formerly EPIC City — warning of Sharia’s creeping dominance in America. She contrasts Islam’s conquest ideology with Christi...anity’s gospel of peace, urging bold resistance without fear. Allie also brings attention to the 10-year anniversary of the Bataclan Massacre in France. And amid darkness, Christian music surges, reshaping culture with musicians like Forrest Frank and Brandon Lake. And we also take a look at the shift in priorities between conservatives and progressive men and women when it comes to getting married and raising a family. Even Kelsea Ballerini knows what's going on, as her new single "I Sit in Parks" strikes a chord with women who fell for feminism. Join us to reject toxic empathy, stand for biblical truth, and celebrate God’s unstoppable redemption plan. Buy Allie's book "Toxic Empathy: How Progressives Exploit Christian Compassion": https://www.toxicempathy.com --- Timecodes: (00:00) Introduction (04:30) The Texas Muslim-Only Compound Rebrands (32:30) A Biblical Response to Islam (40:00) Bataclan Massacre (49:30) The Rise of Christian Music (53:45) Kelsea Ballerini's New Song (01:00:30) Priorities of Young Men & Women --- Today's Sponsors: A’del — Try A'del's hand-crafted, artisan, small-batch cosmetics and use promo code ALLIE 25% off your first time purchase at AdelNaturalCosmetics.com Good Ranchers — Go to GoodRanchers.com and subscribe to any of their boxes (but preferably the Allie Beth Stuckey Box) to get free Waygu burgers, hot dogs, bacon, or chicken wings in every box for life. Plus, you’ll get $40 off when you use code ALLIE at checkout. Hillsdale College — Hillsdale College is offering more than 40 free online courses they offer on History, Economics, Politics, Philosophy, and more, all available for FREE. Go to Hillsdale.edu/Relatable to enroll. Seven Weeks Coffee — Save up to 25% with promo code 'ALLIE' & get up to four FREE gifts this Christmas season: SevenWeeksCoffee.com Pre-Born — Will you help rescue babies' lives? Donate by calling #250 & say keyword 'BABY' or go to PreBorn.com/ALLIE. Keksi Cookies — Send a taste of home this holiday season with Keksi: soft, thick, handcrafted cookies made with the best ingredients. Keksi ships nationwide! Order yours at Keksi.com with code ALLIE15 for 15% off. --- Episodes you might like: Ep 1255 | Jihad vs. Jesus: Islam’s Plan to Conquer Christian America | Raymond Ibrahim https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/relatable-with-allie-beth-stuckey/id1359249098?i=1000732327165 Ep 1223 | The Forrest Frank Formula: Why Christian Music is Trending | Dr. Raymond Lynch https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep-1223-the-forrest-frank-formula-why-christian-music/id1359249098?i=1000719536332 Ep 1115 | Islam Taught Her to Hate Christians — Then She Became One | Guest: Lily Meschi https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep-1115-islam-taught-her-to-hate-christians-then-she/id1359249098?i=1000680609640 --- Buy Allie's book "You're Not Enough (& That's Okay): Escaping the Toxic Culture of Self-Love": https://www.alliebethstuckey.com Relatable merchandise – use promo code 'ALLIE10' for a discount: https://shop.blazemedia.com/collections/allie-stuckey
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Epic City, the Islamic city in the state of Texas that was set to be built hasn't actually
stopped its plans. It's just rebranded as the meadow. What is going on there? And is there
anything that Texas politicians can do about that? Also, this month marks the 10-year anniversary
of an Islamic attack in France that strangely not very many people know about. But there's also some good
news on today's episode. Christian music is taking over and it is changing maybe how people think
about God and marriage and children. We've got all of that and so much more on today's episode
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Happy Monday. Hope everyone had a wonderful weekends. Well, you know what I'm going to say. God's
eternal plan of redemption is going off without a hitch. No matter what is happening personally in your
life, no matter what's happening politically or professionally, nothing surprises God. He's never looking down at your
life or America or the world saying, oh my gosh, I did not see this coming. I don't know what to do
to fix this. He's not waiting on us to figure it out. He is sovereign over all of it and his
eternal plan of redemption, him calling his people to himself, him gathering his flock of sheep,
all of that is proceeding forth completely and totally unhindered. Job 42-2 reminds us that
nothing can thwart the will of God. We can violate his moral.
will. Of course, we sin. That is not something that God wants of us. That is not something that God
makes us do, but God's sovereign will. His desire for things to go a certain way in history cannot
be thwarted by anything we think, say, or do, because he has all of the power. And that is
very good news. That means that the only thing that we are responsible to do in any given moment is
not to control the outcomes of our own lives, of our children's lives, of the political election,
whatever it is, it's to do the next right thing in faith with excellence and for the glory of God.
That means stewarding our responsibility as a citizen well, as a mom well, as a wife, well,
as an employee well, as a student well, as a friend well, as a church member, well, as a pastor
well, whatever it is, as a Christian well, that means stewarding every moment for the glory of God
with the best Holy Spirit empowered excellence that we possibly can, having the faith that God is going
to take care of us and that the outcomes, the conclusions of all of this are totally in his hands.
And that brings a lot of peace. It is a start of a new week. And we read in the Book of Lamentations
that God's mercies are new every morning. How great is that? He's not holding grudges against us,
but his mercy through Christ is new every single day.
So no matter how you send yesterday, no matter how you failed yesterday, the shortcomings,
that you just can't seem to get over, the obstacles that you seem to never be able to
overcome.
God's mercy for today is brand new.
His mercy for you to be a patient mom and a loving wife and an excellent student or
employee or obedient in whatever realm you're in, that mercy for you is abundant.
and it is ready for you today.
Open up your Bible, pray, seek forgiveness if you need to seek forgiveness,
offer forgiveness where you need to seek, offer forgiveness.
God's mercies are new for you.
And you are never too far off and you're never too far gone.
So let us start today thinking of these things because as we get into the subjects for today,
some of them are not troubling.
Some of them are encouraging actually.
but we're going to start with one that is troubling.
And the reason that we talk about some troubling things is not because we want to be paranoid.
It's not because we want to be stuck down in the mud of, you know, distress or anxiety.
But we need to understand what's happening in our world.
The world and the country and the culture that our children are going to inherit, we have to care about that.
And we have to know what's going on.
And we have to think about how do we engage in a responsible Christian way,
to raise a respectful ruckus for the things that matter, to push back against the darkness,
to be salt and light in a world that is dark, and that includes in the realm of culture and
politics. That's not too difficult or divisive for a Christian. That is exactly one of the
places where Christians need to be. Because when Christians retreat from any space or any sphere,
it just gets darker and more chaotic and innocent people pay the price. That is certainly true
when it comes to the Islamification of the United States,
which is something that is happening.
Like there's so much debate on, you know,
what really matters, like on the right right now.
You have some people that will say,
no, all of our problems are actually coming from Israel.
All of our problems are coming from one group of people.
And that's not to say we can't criticize any other country.
Of course we can or that we shouldn't put American priorities first
because, of course, we should.
But that seems to be a distraction from the real problem
that is happening right now, and that is the increasing dominance and pervasiveness of
Islam in all of our communities. You'll remember when we talked about Epic City. This was the
Muslim-centered neighborhood that was planned around the East Plano area. And if you're not
familiar, I grew up in Dallas, and so I can tell you that Plano is very pretty affluent. It
depends on which part of Plano you're talking about. It's huge, but it's a suburb of Dallas,
of North Dallas and Plano like Frisco and Louisville and a lot of these North Dallas suburbs
didn't have become extremely ethnically diverse. They are hubs for a lot of new commerce,
a lot of new businesses that are kind of importing a lot of H-1B workers and simply a lot of
immigrants into Texas to work these jobs. So the demographics have changed a lot. So Epic City,
as I said, this was a Muslim-centered neighborhood that was planned, actually in Josephine, Texas,
but based on kind of coming out of something called East Plano Islamic Center.
So that's where you get the acronym Epic.
And it faced a lot of scrutiny.
We talked about it at the time back in April amid a federal DOJ probe that was sparked by
Governor Greg Abbott and Senator John Cornyn, other Texas leaders that were concerned that
a Muslim exclusive neighborhood would discriminate against Christians and Jewish people or push Sharia,
and we'll talk about what Sharia actually is. However, that shut down. Okay, so there was a lot of
concern, and because of the controversy, they said, okay, we're not going to do this, even though
the people who said they were going to start Epic City, that they would be welcoming to everyone,
but we know how that goes. So that same project is pushing Ford again. So it's no longer Epic City.
decided that's causing a PR problem. Now we are going to rename this. We're not going to stop.
We're just going to rename it something very seemingly innocuous and inviting called the Meadow.
So this is not supposed to be a separate city, but it's supposed to just be a neighborhood
that happens to be extremely friendly to Muslims. But the same concerns exist. This would be a
402 acre community that includes over a thousand homes, a K through 12 Islamic school, a
mosque, senior and assisted living, apartments, clinics, shops, a community college, and
sports fields.
And we will play you.
We will show you.
You should be able to see on screen like what the layout is actually supposed to look
like there.
You can see it.
So that's obviously computer generated.
You've got the big mosque in the middle there.
you've got all of these homes.
And I mean, it looks very state of the art.
It looks very beautiful.
But it is centered on wanting to create a neighborhood,
wanting to create a large community just for Muslims.
Legally, they wouldn't be able to tell someone who is Jewish or who is Christian,
hey, get out of here.
You can't move here.
But that is essentially what it is for.
A community capital partners is the name of the company behind the project.
that's formed by members of Epic.
Colling County, Judge Chris Hill,
informed residents via Facebook post on November 8th
that community capital partners is preparing
to submit their plans to the county for review.
Now, no plat that's a detailed map
of what the neighborhood would be
has actually been filed with Collin County yet,
but reports suggest CCP,
not to be confused with the Chinese Communist Party.
Again, that's community capital partners
who's planning to build this neighborhood has either filed plans or plans to file soon with the Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality to establish a municipal utility district that handles water sewer
drainage for the meadow.
Okay, so it does seem like the plans are moving forward, but we don't know exactly when or
what it's going to look like.
And look, you could say one argument is that, look, people are allowed to do what they want
to do.
if Jewish people wanted to do this, if Christians wanted to do this, they could, which I'm sure
is not actually true. I think it would be much more controversial in the mainstream. If Christians said,
hey, we are going to establish this community and we're going to name it after a church.
And this is where Christians are going to live. It's going to be centered around this particular church.
There's going to be a Christian school, Christian bank, all that. I think that sounds amazing, by the way.
but there would be a lot of controversy if any other religion besides Islam or besides one of those
Eastern religions was doing this. And the reason why people are upset about it, at least people
on the right, Christian conservatives, is simply because of the cultural change that it causes.
Simply because when you have a high concentration of Islamists in one area, there is a
a concern about how that changes the culture and the safety of your city. We don't believe in
moral relativism. We don't believe that all faiths and all worldviews are the same. It is extremely
fair for people who have lived in a predominantly Christian country that was founded by Christians.
That was first, when it was founded primarily for Christians to say, how is this going to change
my country. How is this going to change my community? When you have a people who believe entirely
in Sharia, who have an entirely different view of women and human worth and rights and right
and wrong, it is totally fair to ask, is that congruent with the Constitution? Is that congruent
with the American community that we have created? The problem, Charlie Kirk talked about this a lot,
is not individual Muslims. It's Islam as an ideology. Islam as a collective belief system. And when you
look throughout the world, at the fruit of Islamic collectivism, the result has been chaos and
violence and the degradation of the human person and human dignity. That is just true. When you
look at migrant crime trends throughout the world, especially in Europe, you see that migrants from
Muslim majority countries are disproportionately responsible for crimes, including and especially
sexually violent crimes. So I don't want to hear anything, well, this is just like a Christian
community or this is just like a Jewish community or this is just like any other community.
It's not because not all belief systems are the same. Not all worldviews have the same fruit.
So totally justified for people to be concerned about this. And we'll talk about some of the
legality behind like, okay, what can you actually do when it comes to something like this?
But I just want to say, if you're concerned and you don't know how to put words to why you're
concerned, you are justified. It is justified. When you know that about 99% of all worldwide
designated terrorist groups are Islamic, you have good reason to say, huh, do we want a high
concentration of people who buy into that ideology to have their own basically independent
system here in the United States or in the state of Texas, completely justified. By the way,
this is not just a trend that's happening in Texas. In the red state of Texas, it's happening
elsewhere too. And we'll talk about that in just a second. Let me pause and tell you about our next
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Okay, let's talk a little bit more about the Islamification specifically of Texas.
Texas actually has one of the largest Muslim populations in the United States, estimated about
420,000. I would guess that it's probably more than that. Texas had 224 mosques in 2020, and over the past
five years, that's just grown. But that is up quite a lot from 166 in 2010. As of October 15th,
2025, so here's that exact number. There were 330 mosques listed in Texas. So continued growth there,
of course, that's still smaller than the, that's still small. That's still small.
smaller than the number of churches, of course, a lot smaller, but anytime you see this kind of
significant growth, it is worth, it's worth looking at. At a Josephine city council meeting, remember,
this is where that epic city was going to be. And Armenian-American resident of Collin County took the
microphone to share a chilling personal warning drawn from his family's persecution at the hands of the
Ottomans who practiced Sharia. He warned the Muslims will be civil until they become the majority. That
should sound familiar to you if you watched my episode with Raymond Ibrahim. Here's top three.
Once they get to a certain point in a culture, they start to ravage it from within.
Understanding what their whole intent is, it's not the typical Muslim that you come across.
They're all good people. They love one another. They love you. They'll tell you they love you.
But when they get to a certain point where they have to do a certain thing, they're going to be forced into,
it, whether they like it or not. And the problem that we see in society is they don't speak up against
it. That is true. Of course, you can see that in Muslim majority countries and you can see that
in places in Europe, which have become Muslim majority. And again, go listen to my episode or watch
my episode with Raymond Ibrahim. He is a scholar and historian who has wrote several books on the
history of Islam and what the Quran actually says. And this is the difference between Medina and Mecca.
When Muslims are in the minority, they will take on many of the values and the kind of disposition of the majority culture at the time until they become the majority.
And again, this isn't necessarily about individual people. This is about the political ideology.
Remember, Islam means submission. And that is what they are sending out to do.
If we ask ourselves, well, if they like Sharia, which is Islamic law, which is totally incongruent with American law.
and if they want this kind of culture,
if they want an entire city and community
where there's a majority of Muslims
and everything is basically run by Sharia,
then why here?
Why not just stay there?
Well, because it is about conquest.
It is about submission.
It is not about, you know,
it's not necessarily about evangelism like Christianity is,
and it's not even about having their own enclaves
for their own enjoyment and protection.
it is about infiltration. It is about domination. And this is true at the roots of Islam. That's not just a
particular iteration of Islam. It is true fundamentally. So what actually is Sharia? It is Islamic law.
And Sharia law. So Sharia law is kind of like saying law, law, but I think it's fine to say Sharia law because it helps us
understand what it is. It's a legal and ethical framework that is derived from Islamic teachings,
primarily the Quran, very harsh punishments, hand amputation for theft, stoning for adultery, death, or leaving Islam, amputation or crucifixion for robbery, insulting Islam leads to death. This is, of course, why you've seen in places like England and France, people who have insulted their prophet Muhammad have been murdered by Muslims who feel like it is their religious duty to do so. The gender rules and roles, women,
need to be fully covered. Of course, in some countries, this is stricter. Women can't even show
their eyes. They're completely covered head to toe starting from a very young age. And then in
other countries, it's just that the hair and the head and most of the body needs to be covered.
Women need a male guardian in their permission to travel or to drive in many Muslim majority
countries, education for young girls stops at sixth grade, even if it's allowed at all.
Women's court testimony counts as half of a man's.
Men can have up to four wives in their marriage rules in Tariah.
Women cannot have multiple husbands.
Child marriage in Muslim majority countries is not morally questionable at all.
It is completely permitted, and that is, of course, because the Prophet Muhammad married Aisha,
when she was six years old and supposedly they did not consummate the marriage until she was nine.
And of course, they revered the prophet Muhammad is basically perfect.
And so they wouldn't be able to denounce pedophilia or denounce child marriage without denouncing their own profit, which of course is punishable by death.
And so that alone should give people pause when they say, oh, you know, we're just a mosaic in America.
the more the merrier, the more diverse we are, the more we can learn.
Well, again, not every worldview is the same.
Not every religion teaches the same thing.
And it is actually because of our Christian ethical framework here in America
that we have a natural and righteous revulsion to something like child marriage or pedophilia.
Because fundamental in the Christian belief is that marriage is for procreation.
What do we read in the very first chapters of Genesis?
that God made man and woman, not boy and girl, not man and girl, but man and woman, and told
them immediately to be fruitful and multiply. So while we don't have the exact ages of Adam and Eve,
we see from the very beginning that God created marriage, not only to reflect the marriage
between Christ and His bride the church, but also to procreate, and that is only possible
between a man and a woman, again, not a man and a child.
So fundamental in Christianity is the idea that sexual relations are exclusive to marriage between one man and one woman.
This is not true of many other religions.
It's certainly not true of Islam.
Here is Yassir Qadi, the Imam behind Epic City, explaining some crimes in their respective punishments under Sharia.
This is a part of our relationship.
chop the head off of the so many sorcerer and so many other you know things and to kill by the way the homosexual this is also our religion the fik rule in because he may be killed okay
huh i don't know about this one but uh i have heard this but i haven't studied this in a detail but i know that his punishment is death okay this is all the part of our religion
this doesn't mean we go do this in america no we're not allowed to do this in america you know but i'm saying if we had an
if I'm not saying we would do this episode.
That's interesting that he just says that.
Now, I will say some of those things were also punishable by death in the Old Testament.
However, we are not abiding by in America today, nor are we responsible to abide by Israeli law.
Ancient Israel, God's chosen people, abided by the laws that were passed down to them by God through Moses.
And while the moral laws, Christians are still bound to keep.
keep today because Jesus not only fulfills them but doubles down on those moral laws.
The cleansing laws, the legal laws, the procedural laws, we are not bound to today, nor are Christians
called to create that kind of theocracy by imposing Israeli law on America today or on any
country today. We believe in making disciples. We believe in infusing light and goodness and
truth in God's ways into every sphere of society peacefully and persuasively that is very different
than what you just heard there from that imam. The truth is that Sharia courts are already
operating in Texas. America's First Islamic Tribunal was founded in Irving, Texas in 2015,
according to CBS. According to its official website, this institution will serve an important
niche in our society because we as Muslims in the United States need to unite on our common belief
and creed. I mean, you have to give it to them. They're just, they're asking forgiveness,
not permission. They're just proceeding with creating their Islamic state and community and laws
and procedures here in the United States. And they are basically bidding people to stop them.
And they're very cohesive as a people in a way that Christians simply aren't. Now, I'm not even
saying that positively because, of course, their punishment,
for blasphemy or for disagreeing with each other is very harsh in a way that it's not for Christianity.
But, I mean, you got to hand it to their persistence and just the audacity to do something like this.
And I think they understand that the fear of coming across as Islamophobic is so great.
And the toxic empathy is so high toward a purported victim that most people aren't going to say anything.
Also, people are scared for their lives.
So that helps them too.
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That's Adele Natural Cosmetics.com code Alley. A 2011 report by the Center for Security Policy
claimed that 146 U.S. court cases referenced Sharia, with 20% fully deferring to it over American law,
often harming Muslim women and children seeking U.S. protections. I don't even know how that's,
I don't even know how that's possible. We don't have time to dive into the details of that
particular report. I mean, that was 15 years ago almost. And so I can imagine that it's only gotten
worse since then. Now, Greg Abbott, he knows that this is an issue that a lot of people are
concerned about. And he signed a law a few weeks ago. I actually don't have the date on this.
He signed a lot a few weeks ago on the outlaws compounds like Epic City, so Muslim compounds. It
prevents no-go zones. So, you know, a Muslim community can't say, hey,
you can't come in here if you're a Christian or a Jewish person. It prevents selling land to only
Muslims requires disputes to be brought under Texas laws and Texas courts not Sharia. I mean,
it's just sad that this is necessary. Cudos to the Texas legislature and to Greg Abbott for taking
this seriously. He said this. One of the issues at stake is the freedom of religion. Another issue at
stake is what's called the right to contract. The fact is religious freedom is a central part of
the Texas Constitution. Bad actors like Epic City tried to use religion as a form of segregation.
obligation. HB. 4211 targets the unusual setup the Meadow planned where buyers wouldn't own the
land or home directly, but would buy a share in a company that owns everything and grants them the right
to live there. Not everyone is content with this move, though. There are people in Texas who
think that more needs to happen. Here's a lot six. Governor Abbott signed HB 4711 a couple months ago,
which only prevents the forcing of somebody to sell their property back to the mosque.
It doesn't stop them from doing it voluntarily.
And as we know, in Islamic culture, it's okay to lie if it advances their cause.
This bill did not address that Sharia law and our Constitution are not compatible,
and it did not ban Sharia law despite suggestions otherwise.
Yeah, so people want more than this.
They want even more action by the state of Texas.
you know, I agree.
Like, I concur. I share that same sentiment.
But we need people to come to the table with real solutions.
And obviously, we are under the Texas Constitution for a good reason.
There is a freedom of religion.
So what actually can be done?
And I think it's up to the people down in Austin to make sure that they are coming up with
good solutions.
So what else is being done?
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton believes that individuals behind the meadow have
broken the law. He has promised to prosecute any violations. For example, he said after a thorough
investigation, it has become clear that the developers behind Epic City flagrantly and undeniably violated
the law. This is an illegal scheme. It must be held accountable for ignoring state and federal
regulations. He says, in order to sue and hold the parties behind Epic City accountable, the office of
the Attorney General must receive a referral from the Texas State Securities Board. They've invited the
Commissioner Chairman E. Wally Kinney to examine the initial findings and corresponding evidence
that demonstrates the Epic City Development Project violated the law and subsequently refer the matter
back to the Attorney General's Office for further legal action if the TSSB agrees with the office's
findings. State rep Brent Money, he is a Republican from Greenville, Texas. He said stopping the
Islamization of Texas is the top priority, but this is the general sentiment for a lot of people.
I don't know what to do about that.
He said, you need to look and see what the Muslim radicals in Texas are saying that their plan is.
And you need to start believing them.
He added it is not compatible with the Christian nation, which we are.
So what is the biblical perspective on this?
It seems like we're kind of in limbo figuring out, like what is the political solution for this?
Because again, for all of the reasons that we listed, constitutional reasons, cultural reasons, moral reasons, like people have a good justification for feeling on.
easy about this. And by the way, like, you are just allowed to care about the culture and the
feeling of the neighborhood that you live in. Okay. You're allowed to notice that the demographics
have changed. You're allowed to notice how that impacts your kids, how that impacts your safety,
how that impacts your community. You're allowed to notice that you're allowed to care about
that. You're allowed to want most of your neighbors to celebrate Christmas.
Like you're allowed to want those kind of shared values with your neighborhood because the more
different you are, the more difficult it is to have the commonalities that are needed for a social
contract. We have to actually trust our neighbors and share some kind of basic understanding
of morality and decency with our neighbors in order for us to live in a cohesive society.
And there's this book by Robert Putnam called Bowling Alone where he talks about the actually
the increased diversity in all of our neighborhoods has contributed to a lack of trust that has
contributed to isolation and loneliness and kids playing outside less. And I'm not even laying that
at the feet of any one type of people. It's just true. This is just human nature. And you can
call that bigotry if you want to, but this has been true for all of human history. And actually,
the Muslims realize that. That's why they are creating neighborhoods that are based on their
ideology so that they can be surrounded by people who look like them and think like them and talk
like them. But when people who are not Muslims say, well, I kind of want that myself, well, then
that's supposedly some kind of supremacy or racism or bigotry. You're allowed to want Christian
culture to be preserved in a nation who can attribute all of the good things that we have to
Christian ideology and to the Christian worldview. So what is the biblical perspective?
on Islam. Let's just talk about Islam a little bit, theologically. Islam explicitly denies the
Trinity, the deity of Christ, the sonship of Christ, and salvation by the cross. You hear people say,
oh, well, Jews, Christians and Muslims, we all worship the same God. And I even hear people say,
well, Islam at least honors Jesus as a prophet. I've even heard people say that Muslims love Jesus.
No, they don't believe in the Jesus that we believe in. They deny his deity. And of course,
Jewish people don't believe that Jesus is God either. So I think it's wrong. Yes, we are all in
Abrahamic religions, you could say, but we don't worship the same God because Christians and Christians
alone believe in the triune God. We believe that Jesus is God, that the Holy Spirit is God.
1 John 222 through 23. Who is the liar? But he who denies that Jesus is the Christ. This is the
Antichrist. He who denies the Father and the Son, whoever denies the Son does not have the Father either.
he who confesses the son has the father also.
John 523,
that all may honor the son
just as they honor the father.
Whoever does not honor the son
does not honor the father who sent him.
And I also just want to say,
and this is very different,
but this is why Christianity is distinct.
This is the definition of Christianity.
If there is anyone who denies that Jesus is God,
that person is not a Christian.
Okay, it's not enough to say Jesus was a prophet
or Jesus was a teacher,
or Jesus was rabbi, Jesus was a son of God or a child of God.
Jesus is God according to Christianity.
Islam teaches Jesus was not crucified.
This is in the Quran.
This directly contradicts the central message of salvation in Christianity,
1 Corinthians 153 through 4,
for I delivered to you as a first importance,
what I also received, that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the scriptures,
that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the scriptures.
Western civilization was built on
biblical ethics, honest courts, due process, covenant marriage between one man and one woman,
monotheism, equal dignity, the rule of law, religious systems denying the true God,
fundamentally oppose this salvation.
2 Corinthians 614 through 16, do not be unequally yoked with unbelievers.
For what partnership has righteousness with lawlessness, or what fellowship is light with darkness,
what accord has Christ with Belial, or what portion does a believer share with an unbeliever?
dream as the temple of God with idols, for we are the temple of the living God.
Whenever God's people, this is the fourth point, whenever God's people embraced or tolerated
false religion's destruction followed, chaos followed. Psalm 917, the wicked shall return to
shield all the nations that forget God. Now, we do have a First Amendment in this country
that allows freedom of religious expression, and it should. But we should be.
we should be concerned about the insidious nature of an ideology that is based upon the submission
of every individual, every infidel, and every culture, and every country but its own.
Because that doesn't allow us to have the freedom of religion that is guaranteed to us in
the First Amendment.
Number five, Islam claims that Muhammad is the final prophet, but Christianity cannot accept
another prophet after Christ, not a prophet like that. The Bible warns against false prophets. Hebrews
1, 1 through 2, long ago at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets,
but in these last days, he has spoken to us by his son, whom he appointed the heir of all
things. Matthew 2424, for false Christ and false prophets will arise and perform great signs
of wonders so as to lead astray, if possible, even the elect. Western civilization's moral
structure, law, justice, dignity came from scripture. Islamic law Sharia derives from a different
God, a different moral code, and a different foundation. Society built on another God's law is not
compatible with biblical justice. Isaiah 3322, for the Lord is our judge, the Lord is our lawgiver,
the Lord is our king, He will save us. Romans 13. For he, the government official, is God's servant
for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid for he does not.
bear the sword in vain, for he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God's wrath on the wrongdoer.
So when a servant of God in the government is not following God, and therefore he does not define right and wrong,
the way that God defines right and wrong, you get a lot of trouble, you get a lot of chaos,
you get a lot of moral subversion. We've seen that over and over again in the United States and elsewhere.
The Jewish people and the Christian people share one half of scripture. And so there's a lot of
commonality there, a lot of shared foundation there. That's why it tends to work. But when you have
someone that denies that, that denies the fundamentals of that biblical worldview, that is going to be
incompatible, especially when it's taken to a large scale. Biblical peace is grounded in reconciliation
with God through Christ. Islam explicitly rejects this reconciliation and historically spreads by coercion.
Matthew 715, beware of false prophets who come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly are ravenous
wolves. I would also read Psalm 37 and just a reminder of God's promise to us in Christ as his people
versus those who are enemies of God. It's also, I'm just going to, I've just got one more short
thing to say about Islam and then we're going to move on to our next subjects. Let me pause and
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So this is just a warning.
I did not remember this at all, but this is what tends to happen when Islam starts to
dominate and they get the political power and the power in numbers.
November 13th, so just the other day marked.
the 10th year anniversary of the Bataclan. I'm sorry if I'm mispronouncing that massacre in which
Islamic State jihadist gunmen and suicide bombers killed 132 people and injured more than 600 people
at six locations in Paris, France, including the Bataklan Theater in the country's deadliest peacetime
attack. Do you remember this? Like, does this ring a bell? It doesn't ring a bell to me.
And it's only 10 years ago. So I would have.
have been paying attention to what was going on in the world 10 years ago. And I mean, maybe I did know
about it and I just and I just forgot. George Fennec, the lawmaker leading a parliamentary
investigation into the attacks back in 2016, expressed frustration to the commission that
information about the victim mutilations was withheld from both families and the media. This is very
gruesome. Testimony said that some of the eyes of certain people in these attacks have been
removed. Victims endured eyes gouged out, rape genital mutilation beyond the initial gunfire.
A police witness explained that bodies had not been shown to the families because they were a
decapitated, swollen, and disemboweled. Amy Mack of the Rare Foundation is among the voices that
argue that the level of violence was not suppressed to protect the privacy of the victims,
but to protect the country from some kind of revolt against.
the French government or against the policies that have allowed these migrants from Muslim
majority countries to come here and to create this kind of violence. I mean, hundreds of
French people were disemboweled and raped and tortured and murdered in attacks in Paris
by all Muslim men and you might not even know about it just 10 years ago.
The attackers were young men primarily of North African or
origin, recruited in Belgium and France, trained in Islamic State territory in the Middle East,
and then returned to Europe concealed among large migrant flows. So again, open borders is evil.
Remember this. When you hear all of the stories about people being deported and ice raids,
and they're trying to evoke that empathy that makes you only focus on those purported victims
and forget about the victims in places like France and elsewhere, even here in the United States.
You're only focusing on the people that the media wants you to think is the victim and you forget about the people on the other side of the moral equation.
That is when your empathy has become toxic and it gets you to support policies that are destructive that are really bad for everyone, that are really bad for innocent people.
So through toxic empathy, all of these European countries opened up their borders and they allowed the infiltration of people like this who killed and raped and tortured innocent women, men, and children.
Middle East expert
Jill Capelle
explains that intelligence services
have become highly effective
at monitoring online
radicalization, but obviously
this wasn't enough to stop this.
The danger is particularly concerning
because it involves younger individuals
and is easily influenced
by global events, such as the conflict
in Gaza and Israel,
and then agitators exploit this
to fuel anger and radicalization.
In 2025, French authorities
thwarted six planned Islamic extremists,
attacks involving suspects between the ages of 17 and 22, huh? I think like at some point,
like maybe we made, maybe we made a bad choice. And, you know, as a Raymond Ibrahim explained,
when people talk about, you know, the wars between Christians and Muslims and they paint
Christians as these agitators and these aggressors who victimized all of these innocent Muslims.
That's not really what was going on. It was through Agape,
love for their own innocent people, for their wives, for their children, that these Christian men
laid down their lives to try to push back against the darkness of Islam. It was for not only
their own sake, but the sake of innocent victims that they tried to push back against the
cemeter with the sword. I mean, one of the first wars in the United States was against
Islamists, the first Barbary War.
and this is a way to love your neighbor.
It is a way to love your neighbor to push back against through a peaceful and legal means
the Islamification of the United States.
We can look at a place like France.
We can look at an event like that to see why this is so incredibly necessary.
Nehemiah 217 through 18.
Then I said to them, you see the trouble we are in, how Jerusalem lies and ruins.
with its gates burned. Come, let us build the wall of Jerusalem that we may no longer suffer derision.
And they said, let us rise up and build. So they strengthened their hands for the good work.
The book of Nehemiah speaks to the importance of a barrier around a city or a barrier around a
country. I'm not saying that the book of Nehemiah tells us that we have to do this, that we have to
have walls. But God does not condemn strong borders. In fact, we see through outskirts,
scripture that strong borders are a symbol of control and protection and provision and wisdom.
In fact, we read in Proverbs 25, 28 that a man without self-control is like a city broken into
and left without walls. And so the comparison there is that a man without self-control,
he's going to bring himself and other people to ruin, just like a city that doesn't have any
walls, that doesn't have any protections. It is the height of foolishness and irresponsibility.
a total abdication of the responsibility to protect your neighbors and to protect your own citizens
to allow the basically unhindered migration of military aged men from these war-torn countries,
from these Muslim majority countries. It is the opposite of loving your neighbor. It is
hatred of your neighbor. It is a way to selfishly virtue signal to make yourself seem compassionate
when really you're just outsourcing your compassion to the government and hoping that
that the bad products of those policies and the bad outcomes of those policies don't affect you.
It is so incredibly selfish and it might be well-intentioned, but you know what they say about the road to hell.
It's paved with those.
So I think one of the best things we can do is not only restrict illegal immigration, but legal immigration.
Like we should restrict the immigration from certain countries.
I wouldn't be mad about an entire moratorium on immigration for.
the time being until we get our act together and until we figure out how to root out these
terror cells. That's most important. And also to make sure that the collective power in Sharia
is not subverting our rights in our safety as American citizens. And we got to get serious about
that. That is something that people loved about Donald Trump when he first ran. Legal immigration
is a really big problem, both in Europe and in the United States.
States. And it's hard for people who are moral relativists to see that. But again, what have we said
about three or four times? Not every worldview is the same. Some create chaos. Some create good
fruit. And we have to be very discerning about which one is which. And we got to love our neighbors and
our families enough to be very, very clear and bold on that. Remember, you have walls, you have a fence,
you have a lock on your door. It's not because you hate the people around you.
It's not because you hate your neighbors.
It's because you love the people inside.
Nations are like families.
It is our government's responsibility to lock our doors to protect us to keep us safe.
All right.
We're going to switch gears in just a second, talk about something a little bit happier and more optimistic and exciting for Christians because, gosh, the dichotomy between light and darkness is so stark.
But let me tell you about our next sponsor.
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Okay, so in the midst of all of that kind of scariness, what did we say at the beginning,
God's eternal plan of redemption is going off without a hitch. And I loved this Wall Street Journal
headline. Christian music is everywhere, whether you realize it or not. And this article,
this is actually from November 8th, highlighted the growing popularity of Christian music this year,
thanks to artists like Forrest Frank and Brannett Lake, who have marketed their God-honoring music
on social media. And we've talked about Forrest Frank quite a few times over the last few months.
And I just want to say that Charlie Kirk and I were ahead on talking about this because we did a segment on Fox and Friends when Charlie was co-hosting Fox and Friends a few months ago.
I believe it was in August where we talked about this rise in Christian music.
And I talked about Forrest Frank and how he is doing such a good job of creating like pop music that is really catchy that a lot of people want to listen to that regularly goes viral.
But that is totally glorifying to the Lord.
The article says,
is Christian artists embrace a wider variety of sounds and market songs and market songs
Savily on social media.
They're rapidly widening their reach.
Faith-based music can go viral just like rapper pop songs and it gains an additional boost
from its close relationship with country, which currently dominates the charts.
Okay, that's so true.
I was just thinking about this, that country music is also having a moment right now.
And this is good.
Like, if I want genres of music to have a moment, it's definitely Christian and country music
and not rap music.
You can say what you want about that, but it's better.
I'm not saying all country music is glorifying to God because that's not true,
but it's not as degenerate as rap music.
Can we just be honest about that?
It's just true.
Brandon Lake has amassed 2.5 billion streams across the platforms.
He sang at Charlie's Memorial.
It was amazing.
Dusty Bibles singer Josiah Queen.
That's one of his songs.
I love that song.
He's only 22.
He has racked up 515 million career streams.
of course, Forrest Frank, millions and millions as well. In the first half of 2025, Christian releases
outpaced new tracks from every genre, except country and streaming growth. That is incredible.
Even though Christian music still holds a small slice of the total U.S. listening pie,
its portion has grown from 1.7% at the close of 2023 to a solid 2% by mid-20205. That might seem
smaller. That might seem small, but it's actually not. This is, uh,
edging close to dance in electronic 3.3% share when artists who most people see as secular
come and do these Christian songs, they reach such a larger audience. I've seen so many
videos on TikTok where it's like, I'm not religious, but low-key Christian music slaps now,
which is true. So I'm excited about that. And obviously, I think a lot of people have a healthy
skepticism when anything that was not mainstream becomes mainstream, you worry about an artist
selling out or compromising. I certainly haven't seen.
that from someone like Forrest Frank. So I think we need to pray for them because we know Satan hates
this. Satan hates the gospel going out. Satan hates the name of Christ being glorified in a mainstream
way. And he wants these singers to compromise. He wants these singers to love money and fame more than
they love glorifying God. And that's not something that's exclusive or special to these people.
That is true of every single one of us. Like he will give us, like, Satan is content to give us
our pride in our theology or our belief that God's favor is tied to money or success as long as we are not giving the Lord our full heart.
So pray for those that have platforms, whether it's a podcast or whether it's a singer, pray for protection over them that God would keep their hearts humble and keep their minds focused on them.
But we should be a part of this.
Like even if you listen to any of these artists and you're like, that's not my cup of tea, we should be excited about this.
and we should be spreading the word because like we want more people listening to edifying music.
It's good for their heart. It's good for their mind. It's good for their lives.
And God's word doesn't return void. When they hear God's word, when it seeps into their heart,
God uses that as a seed planted that he will give growth to at some point how he sees fit.
And all of us just play a part in that. And so these people are giving the Lord the praise they deserve
and people are listening to that. And that is really exciting. Now, speaking of music,
I wanted to talk about this song from Kelsey Ballerini, who is a country music artist, but like a lot of country music music, it's like hard to tell between country and pop these days.
And she's got this song that is very relevant and relatable to a lot of people right now.
And I've listened to it a few times.
It's really good.
It doesn't relate to me.
But I can see how this vulnerability is speaking to what a lot of people feel.
This is certainly not Christian, but it's kind of reflecting this trend that we're seeing among a lot of young people, especially young men actually, and wanting to go back to tradition, wanting to go back to church, wanting to go back to marriage, wanting to actually have children. This is a positive trend that we're seeing among young men, a negative trend among young women. We are seeing a lot of young women say they don't want to get married. In fact, there was this Pew Research study that I
just saw circulating. I think this is full screen 31. It says girls are now less likely than boys to
say they want to get married. This is the percent of 12th graders saying they're most likely to
choose to get married in the long run. Only 61% of girls say that. 74% of boys say that. That's
actually not that different from 1993. So this is from 1993 to 2003. And 1983, 83% of girls said,
yeah, I'm probably going to get married one day. 76% of boys said that.
2023, 30 years later, 61%.
That's a 22% drop among girls, whereas it's only a 2% drop among boys.
And this kind of correlates with the trend that we've seen of young men, boys going back
to church, and girls just becoming increasingly progressive, increasingly secular.
Anyway, back to Kelsey Ballerini.
She wrote this song called I Sit in Parks.
And she's a woman in her 30s and she's reflecting, hang on, I'm sitting in parks and I'm watching these adults, this couple, this married couple, the same age as me with kids and they seem happy.
Did I miss it?
Here's not seven.
So she's talking about how she's watching this couple and their kids and she does the tour.
She became successful.
It's what she wanted.
But did she make the right choice?
This is a really sad verse.
And good for her for being this vulnerable.
but it's, I mean, it's bleak. It just is. So I sit in parks, sunglasses dark, and I hit the
vape, hallucinate a nursery with Noah's Ark. They lay on a blanket, and I can't say that word,
he loves her. I wonder if she wants my freedom like I want to be a mother. But Rolling Stone says
I'm on the right road. So I refill my Lexapro. And Lexapro is, of course, a medication for depression.
And then the last line, she says,
so I sit in parks, check in benchmarks.
Taryn's due in June.
The album's due in March.
And Taryn is probably a friend.
And I just wonder, we see all these statistics of these women saying,
you know, I don't need no man.
I don't want to get married.
I don't know if I want to have kids.
I'm going to just, you know, my, I'm just going to look to the government to take care of me
and to take care of other people.
that's how I'm going to channel my motherhood instincts.
We've talked a lot about this misplaced mothering,
how this motherhood instinct that we all have,
when we're little girls that doesn't go away.
We take care of our pets,
we take care of our dolls,
we take care of our flowers,
because that is the instinct that God has given us in general as women,
and that's supposed to be channeled towards children,
whether or not you get married.
If you don't get married,
then that is channeled towards children
in some kind of ministry or volunteer capacity,
or teaching capacity. And if you do get married and you do have children, it's supposed to be
channeled towards children. But that motherhood instinct is supposed to be channeled towards people,
not your profession, not your pet, not your plant, and not politics. I read a line last night.
I'm reading A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. This is one of these books that I've been reading
off and on for months now. And I wish I had the line in front of me. It was such a good line
that described the teachers in the early 1900s. This is a fictional book.
but it was talking, it basically, I'm going to butcher it, but it was basically like they had been
starved of their motherhood instincts so they had become neurotic in trying to find a different
channel for those instincts. And I'm not saying this is true of all women who aren't mothers.
I'm not saying that. I'm just talking in principle and in general. And statistically,
I do think that the starvation of those natural motherhood instincts does lead to a neuroticism and a
sadness that we actually see manifest through progressive values in democratic politics and
toxic empathy. We've got more on this in just a second. Let me tell you about our last sponsor
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That's www.org.org. Okay. So if we, if we look at some of the priorities that young women do have,
if we're looking at NBC News, for example.
If we see male voted for Trump, number one,
one of the top priorities that they have is having children,
the number one priority they have.
Female voted for Trump, achieving financial independence.
So already, like we see such a difference there.
A male voted for Harris having a job or a career you find fulfilling.
Female voted for Harris having a job or career you find fulfilling.
but the men that voted for Trump, they are prioritizing having children, being married.
Yes, they want to achieve financial independence.
I think it's very telling that one of the highest priorities for the females that voted for Trump,
for everyone else, this is like low, but having emotional stability.
That's what they want.
And that means that they don't really have it because they're refilling their vape and their lexapro.
and I think they're sad about how their life is.
And again, I'm not denigrating all groups of people.
This is just statistically like what is going on.
And there is a huge gender gap.
But it's not just a gender gap and it's not just a political gap.
It really is a marriage gap.
Like when you break it down even further,
the priorities of women who are married versus unmarried are very, very different.
The politics of women who are married versus unmarried
are very, very different. I know that we as women, we don't like to talk about this, but the truth is
is that women are very influenced by our husbands. That's a good thing. As a good thing, by the way,
like God made us that way. I don't care. Like, you can talk to whatever girl boss,
feminist that you want. Girls want to be, women want to be led. Like, we want to be led by someone
who is strong, by someone who is decisive, by someone who is smart. It's not about wanting to be
micromanaged or being incapable or being, you know, like intellectually weak. It's not about
that, but women want to be led by a strong man, by a husband. And that is why some of the
strongest women I know, their politics and their ideas have changed after getting married because
they love and respect to their husband. And their husband, yeah, might have been like,
babe, we can't vote for Joe Biden. Like, did you think about this? And it might take that for them to be like,
oh, yeah. Again, not speaking about all single women. I know single women who are very conservative,
strong Christians, all of that. But I also know a lot of women who would probably be liberal if they
didn't get married. And I just wonder if progressives know that. And that's why they try to subvert marriage
so much. But marriage is such a stabilizing force. It's a stabilizing force for
men and men's nature. It's a stabilizing force for women and women's nature. Men who want to seek
conquest that has to be channeled in their right and moral way. And women who are typically driven
very often by our emotions that has to be harnessed for good children who need that physical
and emotional protection and nurturing. All of that is found in the family, the marriage between a man and a woman
who bring two very good things to the table that is necessary not only in the lives of children,
but in the life of a community and of a country.
And when we miss that, we're missing a lot.
And you just see a lot of misguided women and I'm sure a lot of disappointed men because of that.
So those of us who have little kids, like, let's raise up our children in the way they should go
to make sure that they desire not only to follow the Lord,
although that's first and foremost, but also healthy marriages, and to have children and to raise
children and the Lord, that we're raising girls who value that, that we're raising men who know how
to cherish and seek a godly woman. And I would feel really good if I knew, which I do know that
there are many parents who are doing that for their children. But if all of us can just commit
together, those of us who have these, are they Jin Alpha? I don't even know what generation
our kids are, if we are committing to raising them in that way and protecting them from the
predation of technology and progressive politics and entertainment and all of that, then that would be a good
thing. All right, that's all we have time for today. Remember, the Lord is in all of this,
and he is using us to infuse light in every single sphere that we occupy. All right, we'll be back here on
Wednesday.
