Jeffery Epstein is front and center in explanations for starting multiple wars without the military supplies to finish any of them. But below the surface for Christian Nationalists such as Mike Johnson and Mike Huckabee is the drive to realize dog whistles such as End Times and Armageddon.
The goal is simple: drive the United States and the world economy off a cliff. They believe the world must melt down. People everywhere must be decimated and desperate, because only then will humanity accept one man to rule the whole world.”
As you know from reading the article before you commented, this no suicide cult. They want you to suffer so you will convert. Once the world is converted, then things like that no longer matter because the rapture will happen.
But don’t most of them rely on the dollar and global stock market for their wealth? Wouldnt they lose all of it by driving the U.S. and world economy off a cliff?
Prior to the Reagan years, most evangelical Christians didn’t vote. They expected the rapture to happen any time because their pastors told them so.
At some point a political operative realized the lack of votes was hurting the party. And the theme was changed to “We have to save everyone” before the rapture will happen.
“ Christian Nationalists believe the End Times countdown began on May 14, 1948 with the reforming of the nation of Israel. They point to Jesus’ Parable of the Fig Tree from Matthew 24:32-34.
Because Jesus utters the words this generation shall not pass, and those born in 1948 will be seventy-eight this year, radicalized Christian Nationalists are becoming desperate for their Bibles come true.
They are willing to take an active role in making that happen. For many, End Times beliefs drove their vote in the November 2024 election. It fuels their nihilism as things unravel.”
Jesus said no one can know when he'll return, but if you start the End Times yourself, then he'll have no choice but to come back, is probably what they're thinking.
I know. All “old” people look alike when you’re 12, but Christianity has spread across all generations and demographics. You really need to get out more.
Obviously, Evangelicals don’t represent most Christians or most Americans, but that doesn’t matter once they seize power. We did not go to war with Iran by accident.
>From a theological point of view, these people are so incredibly pretentious, thinking they can tip "God's" hand.
It's extraordinarily reminiscent of rabbinic Judaism - to the point of prompting conspiracy theories about the origin of Christian Nationalism. There is only one global religion I'm aware of that treats God this way - as a being to be contested, argued with, fought with, opposed, forced, tricked, and technicalitied. Pretty much every other faith either rejects the existence of God, or goes out of its way to fear/respect/honor God because He is God and we're just mortals.
To be fair, they do spend a great deal more time reading Revelations, instead of the Gospels. And End Times is a very evangelical concept. From their point of view, they are merely following God’s will.🤷
This is literally exactly what they're thinking. MAGA CN mom literally told me a couple months ago that we don't need to be afraid because if things get "too bad" then Jesus will return.
You're in luck that Trump doesn't actually believe in religion. Now, the advisors he's listening to that do might be able to manipulate Trump into nuclear war just the same, but I don't for a second believe that Trump thinks there's any validity to the end-times mythology.
Remember the part when he told Christians this is the last time they would ever have to vote? It was a dog whistle. They knew what he meant and so did he. Religion has always been a good screen for grifters.
As to whether he believes it’s kind of irrelevant. He only believes in himself and money.
Jesus indeed told his disciples the deadline for his return and coming of his kingdom.
Matthew 16:28
“Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom.”
Matthew 10:23
“When they persecute you in one town, flee to the next, for truly, I say to you, you will not have gone through all the towns of Israel before the Son of Man comes.”
"But about that day or hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father" (Matthew 24:36, Mark 13:32)
Jesus didn't know when according to two separate people that recorded Jesus saying He doesn't know when. (He's speaking about himself as the Son of God in 3rd person there, as in not even the Son of God knows. The Son is saying only the Father knows.) And definitely not some religious nuts
Let’s assume that all of specifically premillennial end times prophecies are true and correctly interpreted
You could wipe out most of the population and that doesn’t guarantee that this iteration of human civilization is the one. You could rebuild Israel a dozen more times before God is like “yep, this one”
And killing a bunch of people to try to force this one to be the one pretty much guarantees you’re not among the elect
The thing is, it is very easy for people who do not believe that way, to rationalize it or dismiss it as crazies. We didn’t get into the war in Iran by accident.
Jesus said no one could possibly know when he’ll come back but his followers took that to mean there’s a specific math formula about shoving Jews in Israel that will 100% tell us when he’s coming.
They aren’t going to be upset you are because you will most likely be paying much higher prices, not being able to get enough food, being unable to fight off pandemics with exercise yada yada.
You’d think Christian’s and other religious people would be the least nihilistic. At least they think they’re going somewhere. But I guess because they think they’re going somewhere after death causing mass death on earth doesn’t really matter to them.
"32 Now learn a parable of the fig tree; When his branch is yet tender, and putteth forth leaves, ye know that summer is nigh:
33 So likewise ye, when ye shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the doors.
34 Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled."
Show me in that passage where there is a 78 year countdown timer. And don't try to tell me that a "generation" is 78 years because that's complete nonsense. A generation is the time between when a child is born and that child grows up enough to have their own children. While that is a fuzzy measurement, it is clearly much less than 78 years. Menopause puts a firm stop on the maximum length of a generation.
This kind of thinking would probably be most predominant in the Silent Generation, because that’s all they heard in evangelical churches. Up until the 1980s, Evangelical Christians did not vote. Why vote when the rapture is going to happen tomorrow?
A political operative figured out that if they convinced people that the rapture will only happen once everyone is converted - think “this is the last election you’ll ever have to vote in” - then it was a matter of convincing evangelicals to vote for people who appeared to be most in tune with the Evangelical mission of converting people so that the rupture could happen.
You are trying to rationalize something that is not rational. Rationalization makes something easy to dismiss. This should not be dismissed no matter how crazy it sounds to other people.
Islam has a similar eschatology, with Jesus slaying the "antichrist" with a righteous assist from al Mahdi and the Prophet himself. Then Jesus rules for 40 years, dies (again) and is buried next to the grave of Mohammed.
In Islam's version, everyone lives in peace thereafter. In WCN version, all are judged and either rewarded or sent to hell. The world ends. Game over.
Praying for Armageddon is a 2023 Norwegian documentary film exploring the influence of American Evangelicals on American foreign policy in the Middle East.
Evangelicals always have been like this. It's easy to adopt because Jesus was an apocalyptic teacher who thought the world would end during his generation. This is a fact amongst historic Bible academics. Check out Jesus Before The Gospels by Bart Ehrman, one of the most fascinating books I've read in a long while.
Apparently, you have not read the four Gospels. Jesus was not an apocalyptic teacher. (Sorry can’t stop laughing.) His actions were actually those of a liberal.
The rest of the New Testament, including Revelations and “End Times” was written a hundred to 200 years after the death of Jesus. Evangelicals, which are one branch of Christianity, are pretty much the only ones who focus on the Book of Revelations.
I don't think you have a good understanding of what apocalyptic means. Jesus was emphatic about heaven and earth passing away and being replaced by the kingdom of God. No one said he went into great detail about what the apocalypse would look like.
The problem we have now is that evangelical Christianity has become (actually has been for decades) an apocalyptic death cult. Trying to hasten the end times is a good example.
I recommend taking a look at “In Case of Rapture, the second episode of the fourth season of Six Feet Under. It’s a morbid yet amusing take on the deluded evangelicals.
I mean yeah. You can say a lot about Christian Nationalists adherence to the Bible, but they aren't exactly wrong on this. The Bible is obsessed with the apocalypse
They are wrong because Jesus spoke to his disciples as being the ones who would not pass away before his return, not future generations 2000+ years later.
Jesus indeed told his disciples the deadline for his return and coming of his kingdom.
Matthew 16:28
“Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom.”
Matthew 10:23
“When they persecute you in one town, flee to the next, for truly, I say to you, you will not have gone through all the towns of Israel before the Son of Man comes.”
First there is the Old Testament written prior to the birth of Jesus, followed by the New Testament, i.e. the Four Gospels which describe the life of Jesus from the viewpoint of his disciples.
And then there a whole bunch of guys some hundred to 200 years later obsessing about end times in one book (think chapter) of the entire Bible.
I was referring to the new testament. And the book of revelation is certainly not the only part of the new testament that obsesses over the end times. The letters of Paul, arguably the founder of Christianity talk about them constantly, and in the Synoptic Gospels there are clear reasons to believe that the authors thought that the end times were near (most notably telling of the destruction of the Jerusalem temple as a sign of these times, which had likely already occured by the time they were written, and Jesus telling his disciples that the end times would come before their deaths). It is highly likely that most early Christians thought that they would experience the apocalypse within their lifetime. I would even argue that that was the core of the religion, and early Christianity was an inherently apocalyptic religion
Most people are missing the point - this isn’t about religion. It’s about power, cloaked in religion. I’m sure that that reasons on the surface are religious, but in the end, making people so desperate that they will accept the “one true faith” and at theological regime. That’s not very Christian.
[OP] bananaslingrider | a day ago
Jeffery Epstein is front and center in explanations for starting multiple wars without the military supplies to finish any of them. But below the surface for Christian Nationalists such as Mike Johnson and Mike Huckabee is the drive to realize dog whistles such as End Times and Armageddon.
The goal is simple: drive the United States and the world economy off a cliff. They believe the world must melt down. People everywhere must be decimated and desperate, because only then will humanity accept one man to rule the whole world.”
eat_my_ass_n_balls | a day ago
I got laughed at for pointing out all the evidence of this.
It was over 15 years ago.
AmateurishExpertise | 9 hours ago
> I got laughed at for pointing out all the evidence of this. > It was over 15 years ago.
I was reporting this stuff to the FBI, state and local LE, and various other federal regulatory bodies at about the same time.
They knew. They were on board.
ours | 17 hours ago
It's crazy to have a suicide cult driving the most powerful nation on Earth.
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
As you know from reading the article before you commented, this no suicide cult. They want you to suffer so you will convert. Once the world is converted, then things like that no longer matter because the rapture will happen.
bad_situation1 | a day ago
[ Removed by Reddit ]
FrankRizzo319 | 20 hours ago
But don’t most of them rely on the dollar and global stock market for their wealth? Wouldnt they lose all of it by driving the U.S. and world economy off a cliff?
horseradishstalker | 7 hours ago
Prior to the Reagan years, most evangelical Christians didn’t vote. They expected the rapture to happen any time because their pastors told them so.
At some point a political operative realized the lack of votes was hurting the party. And the theme was changed to “We have to save everyone” before the rapture will happen.
Kool-Aid over money every time.
No-Tale6520 | a day ago
could you share more details on how this was verified
intronert | a day ago
Start with this Wikipedia Article.
horseradishstalker | 7 hours ago
https://dn720004.ca.archive.org/0/items/jesus-before-gospels-bart-d.-ehrman/Jesus%20Before%20Gospels%20%28Bart%20D.%20Ehrman%29.pdf
https://www.prayingforarmageddon.com/ This film got an 80 out of 100 on rotten tomatoes and is currently on Apple TV for six bucks.
The author of the article has written five best selling books on the CN. https://substack.com/@andrawatkins
km415 | 21 minutes ago
Yep. The Antichrist
horseradishstalker | a day ago
“ Christian Nationalists believe the End Times countdown began on May 14, 1948 with the reforming of the nation of Israel. They point to Jesus’ Parable of the Fig Tree from Matthew 24:32-34.
Because Jesus utters the words this generation shall not pass, and those born in 1948 will be seventy-eight this year, radicalized Christian Nationalists are becoming desperate for their Bibles come true.
They are willing to take an active role in making that happen. For many, End Times beliefs drove their vote in the November 2024 election. It fuels their nihilism as things unravel.”
PrimalSeptimus | a day ago
Jesus said no one can know when he'll return, but if you start the End Times yourself, then he'll have no choice but to come back, is probably what they're thinking.
New_Home_4519 | a day ago
"If you don't do it! We will make you!"
Said the tiny spec of dust
ours | 17 hours ago
From a theological point of view, these people are so incredibly pretentious, thinking they can tip "God's" hand.
Phosphorus444 | 15 hours ago
Boomers are called the "Me Generation" for a reason.
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
I know. All “old” people look alike when you’re 12, but Christianity has spread across all generations and demographics. You really need to get out more.
Phosphorus444 | 8 hours ago
I've noticed a regression in Zoomers as well. Higher rates of religiosity and lower IQ.
RektInTheHed | 8 hours ago
This bullshit is not Christianity.
horseradishstalker | 7 hours ago
Obviously, Evangelicals don’t represent most Christians or most Americans, but that doesn’t matter once they seize power. We did not go to war with Iran by accident.
AmateurishExpertise | 9 hours ago
>From a theological point of view, these people are so incredibly pretentious, thinking they can tip "God's" hand.
It's extraordinarily reminiscent of rabbinic Judaism - to the point of prompting conspiracy theories about the origin of Christian Nationalism. There is only one global religion I'm aware of that treats God this way - as a being to be contested, argued with, fought with, opposed, forced, tricked, and technicalitied. Pretty much every other faith either rejects the existence of God, or goes out of its way to fear/respect/honor God because He is God and we're just mortals.
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
To be fair, they do spend a great deal more time reading Revelations, instead of the Gospels. And End Times is a very evangelical concept. From their point of view, they are merely following God’s will.🤷
Klowner | 15 hours ago
This is literally exactly what they're thinking. MAGA CN mom literally told me a couple months ago that we don't need to be afraid because if things get "too bad" then Jesus will return.
Admirable_Ad8900 | 13 hours ago
That type of thinking is why im terrified. Im worried at the rate it's going Trump may start dropping nukes to divert from the epstein files.
ghanima | 13 hours ago
You're in luck that Trump doesn't actually believe in religion. Now, the advisors he's listening to that do might be able to manipulate Trump into nuclear war just the same, but I don't for a second believe that Trump thinks there's any validity to the end-times mythology.
TheCharalampos | 10 hours ago
He didn't but I fear his mind has unravelled so much that he's really drinking the koolaid. Helps that it basically says he's the choosen one.
horseradishstalker | 7 hours ago
Remember the part when he told Christians this is the last time they would ever have to vote? It was a dog whistle. They knew what he meant and so did he. Religion has always been a good screen for grifters.
As to whether he believes it’s kind of irrelevant. He only believes in himself and money.
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
And they will never have to vote again. Makes a lot more sense in context.
Uncertain__Path | a day ago
Jesus indeed told his disciples the deadline for his return and coming of his kingdom.
Matthew 16:28
“Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom.”
Matthew 10:23
“When they persecute you in one town, flee to the next, for truly, I say to you, you will not have gone through all the towns of Israel before the Son of Man comes.”
Ancient-Bake-9125 | an hour ago
"But about that day or hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father" (Matthew 24:36, Mark 13:32)
Jesus didn't know when according to two separate people that recorded Jesus saying He doesn't know when. (He's speaking about himself as the Son of God in 3rd person there, as in not even the Son of God knows. The Son is saying only the Father knows.) And definitely not some religious nuts
FrancisWolfgang | a day ago
Here’s the thing
Let’s assume that all of specifically premillennial end times prophecies are true and correctly interpreted
You could wipe out most of the population and that doesn’t guarantee that this iteration of human civilization is the one. You could rebuild Israel a dozen more times before God is like “yep, this one”
And killing a bunch of people to try to force this one to be the one pretty much guarantees you’re not among the elect
I know I’m largely preaching to the choir here
horseradishstalker | 7 hours ago
The thing is, it is very easy for people who do not believe that way, to rationalize it or dismiss it as crazies. We didn’t get into the war in Iran by accident.
OriginalLie9310 | 10 hours ago
Jesus said no one could possibly know when he’ll come back but his followers took that to mean there’s a specific math formula about shoving Jews in Israel that will 100% tell us when he’s coming.
beesandchurgers | 5 hours ago
Field of Dreams Jesus edition
vineyardmike | a day ago
Boy. They are going to be upset when the world doesn't end.
GrippingHand | 21 hours ago
Doomsday cults always just make up an excuse and push back the date. It's infuriating.
horseradishstalker | 7 hours ago
They aren’t going to be upset you are because you will most likely be paying much higher prices, not being able to get enough food, being unable to fight off pandemics with exercise yada yada.
EuenovAyabayya | 6 hours ago
> Boy. They are going to be upset when the world doesn't end.
If there are any of them or us left to be upset. World will keep spinning though.
OriginalLie9310 | 10 hours ago
You’d think Christian’s and other religious people would be the least nihilistic. At least they think they’re going somewhere. But I guess because they think they’re going somewhere after death causing mass death on earth doesn’t really matter to them.
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
Christianity is like many other world religions. There are multiple factions within one faith. This particular point of view is primarily evangelical.
jandrese | 12 hours ago
> Matthew 24:32-34
"32 Now learn a parable of the fig tree; When his branch is yet tender, and putteth forth leaves, ye know that summer is nigh:
33 So likewise ye, when ye shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the doors.
34 Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled."
Show me in that passage where there is a 78 year countdown timer. And don't try to tell me that a "generation" is 78 years because that's complete nonsense. A generation is the time between when a child is born and that child grows up enough to have their own children. While that is a fuzzy measurement, it is clearly much less than 78 years. Menopause puts a firm stop on the maximum length of a generation.
Desperate_Duty1336 | 10 hours ago
Especially given the average lifespans of people back when this was written.
jseego | 9 hours ago
also which generation?
horseradishstalker | 7 hours ago
This kind of thinking would probably be most predominant in the Silent Generation, because that’s all they heard in evangelical churches. Up until the 1980s, Evangelical Christians did not vote. Why vote when the rapture is going to happen tomorrow?
A political operative figured out that if they convinced people that the rapture will only happen once everyone is converted - think “this is the last election you’ll ever have to vote in” - then it was a matter of convincing evangelicals to vote for people who appeared to be most in tune with the Evangelical mission of converting people so that the rupture could happen.
horseradishstalker | 7 hours ago
You are trying to rationalize something that is not rational. Rationalization makes something easy to dismiss. This should not be dismissed no matter how crazy it sounds to other people.
agree-with-me | a day ago
Even trying to control the biblical end. Exactly what they're not supposed to do. They didn't read the book, they just pick out what they want.
horseradishstalker | 7 hours ago
That pretty much covers most human beings regardless of religious beliefs, or any other beliefs.
Major_Honey_4461 | a day ago
Islam has a similar eschatology, with Jesus slaying the "antichrist" with a righteous assist from al Mahdi and the Prophet himself. Then Jesus rules for 40 years, dies (again) and is buried next to the grave of Mohammed.
In Islam's version, everyone lives in peace thereafter. In WCN version, all are judged and either rewarded or sent to hell. The world ends. Game over.
Letitroll13 | a day ago
Christian Extremists
EuenovAyabayya | 6 hours ago
Calling themselves Christians while enabling the Anti-Crhrist.
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
Evangelicals do not represent all Christians any more than one political party represents the entire nation.
gravygizzard | a day ago
They should keep their apocalypse to themselves and leave the world out of it. Jesus wants his followers to have quiet personal apocalypses
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
They should, but they are not going to. Anyone notice a little old war against Iran.
Tormodb | 17 hours ago
There is a great documentary about this called praying for armageddon. Truly a depressing watch but it is really good
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
Praying for Armageddon is a 2023 Norwegian documentary film exploring the influence of American Evangelicals on American foreign policy in the Middle East.
https://www.prayingforarmageddon.com/
https://variety.com/2023/film/reviews/praying-for-armageddon-review-1235556393/
https://www.justwatch.com/us/movie/praying-for-armageddon
rividz | 22 hours ago
Evangelicals always have been like this. It's easy to adopt because Jesus was an apocalyptic teacher who thought the world would end during his generation. This is a fact amongst historic Bible academics. Check out Jesus Before The Gospels by Bart Ehrman, one of the most fascinating books I've read in a long while.
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
Apparently, you have not read the four Gospels. Jesus was not an apocalyptic teacher. (Sorry can’t stop laughing.) His actions were actually those of a liberal.
The rest of the New Testament, including Revelations and “End Times” was written a hundred to 200 years after the death of Jesus. Evangelicals, which are one branch of Christianity, are pretty much the only ones who focus on the Book of Revelations.
thereticent | 6 hours ago
I don't think you have a good understanding of what apocalyptic means. Jesus was emphatic about heaven and earth passing away and being replaced by the kingdom of God. No one said he went into great detail about what the apocalypse would look like.
The problem we have now is that evangelical Christianity has become (actually has been for decades) an apocalyptic death cult. Trying to hasten the end times is a good example.
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
https://dn720004.ca.archive.org/0/items/jesus-before-gospels-bart-d.-ehrman/Jesus%20Before%20Gospels%20%28Bart%20D.%20Ehrman%29.pdf
TheCharalampos | 10 hours ago
Always has been the case. Throughout history it's the faiths that desperately want to end things that have been the most dangerous.
Imagine if instead all these people just focused on making the world better.
dmoreity | 9 hours ago
Y'all should spend some time reading about Shia Twelvers and the Mahdi.
Bat-shit crazy American evangelical meet bat-shit crazy Iranian Imman.
Both believe the destruction of Israel is necessary for prophecy to unfold.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reappearance_of_Muhammad_al-Mahdi#:~:text=Shortly%20before%20the%20Day%20of,staff%20and%20arc%20of%20Moses.
Affectionate-Roof285 | 7 hours ago
I recommend taking a look at “In Case of Rapture, the second episode of the fourth season of Six Feet Under. It’s a morbid yet amusing take on the deluded evangelicals.
Here’s a good synopsis:
https://www.avclub.com/six-feet-under-in-case-of-rapture-1798180732
al2o3cr | 6 hours ago
If they think lots of people need to die to bring back their imaginary friend, they're welcome to go first
Butterscotch_Snatch | 6 hours ago
At this point I do too
well_shi | 5 hours ago
Christian Nationalists make nihilists look good.
Weirdingyeoman | 5 hours ago
They've been wanting this to happen for 2,000 years.
MickLittle | 3 hours ago
They are so terrified of dying. It must suck to go through life like that. 😂
thanagathos | an hour ago
An addiction to doom porn
km415 | 22 minutes ago
They are instruments of the antichrist
thejohns781 | a day ago
I mean yeah. You can say a lot about Christian Nationalists adherence to the Bible, but they aren't exactly wrong on this. The Bible is obsessed with the apocalypse
Uncertain__Path | a day ago
They are wrong because Jesus spoke to his disciples as being the ones who would not pass away before his return, not future generations 2000+ years later.
Jesus indeed told his disciples the deadline for his return and coming of his kingdom.
Matthew 16:28
“Truly I tell you, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom.”
Matthew 10:23
“When they persecute you in one town, flee to the next, for truly, I say to you, you will not have gone through all the towns of Israel before the Son of Man comes.”
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
Have you ever read the Bible?
First there is the Old Testament written prior to the birth of Jesus, followed by the New Testament, i.e. the Four Gospels which describe the life of Jesus from the viewpoint of his disciples.
And then there a whole bunch of guys some hundred to 200 years later obsessing about end times in one book (think chapter) of the entire Bible.
thejohns781 | 7 hours ago
I was referring to the new testament. And the book of revelation is certainly not the only part of the new testament that obsesses over the end times. The letters of Paul, arguably the founder of Christianity talk about them constantly, and in the Synoptic Gospels there are clear reasons to believe that the authors thought that the end times were near (most notably telling of the destruction of the Jerusalem temple as a sign of these times, which had likely already occured by the time they were written, and Jesus telling his disciples that the end times would come before their deaths). It is highly likely that most early Christians thought that they would experience the apocalypse within their lifetime. I would even argue that that was the core of the religion, and early Christianity was an inherently apocalyptic religion
tillandsia | 14 hours ago
Lots of us who are not Christian Nationalists also believe in the possibility of an apocalypse.
jxj24 | 13 hours ago
But we're not salivating at the thought of one.
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
Most people are missing the point - this isn’t about religion. It’s about power, cloaked in religion. I’m sure that that reasons on the surface are religious, but in the end, making people so desperate that they will accept the “one true faith” and at theological regime. That’s not very Christian.
Boring-Shoe4699 | 23 hours ago
what inspired you to write about this topic specifically
horseradishstalker | 8 hours ago
Who are you talking to? It’s an article written by a woman who was immersed in the evangelical life until she got out. She’s not on this sub.