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For centuries, church steeples dotted the skylines of the West, symbolizing faith, tradition, and spiritual authority. Today, in growing numbers of cities across Europe and North America, minarets are rising where crosses once stood. The shift is more than architectural--it represents a deep spiritual transformation.
Iran is no longer playing defense. It's threatening U.S. bases across the Gulf region, vowing to strike if the Trump administration fails to cave in to their demands. Military families have already begun leaving American bases. Embassy staff are pulling out. What's coming next isn't business as usual--it's the kind of high-stakes brinkmanship that can turn a standoff into a firestorm.
On June 10, the United Church of Canada (UCC) turned 100 years old. The Herald reports that, "statistically, the UCC closes a church a week and some predict it may be extinct within 15 years.
If the protests in Los Angeles are supposed to be peaceful, why is brand new riot gear being trucked in and given to the protesters? It is becoming clear that someone purchased large quantities of riot gear in advance. So who funded those purchases, and who knew that riots would erupt in Los Angeles at this specific time?
By all appearances, the Presbyterian Church (USA) has now crossed a line that many hoped it never would. With the formal adoption of Amendment 24-C, which mandates screening clergy candidates based on their views of sexual orientation and gender identity, the denomination has effectively declared that holding a biblical worldview disqualifies a person from spiritual leadership.
By all accounts, Brandon Lake's music has played a role in stirring hearts toward God. But his recent comments about tailoring worship services to be more accessible to unchurched visitors--like the hypothetical "Bubba" dragged to church by his wife--raise a question far larger than Lake's own platform: Are we compromising the sacred to make it more palatable?
In the shadow of its battlefield humiliation and organizational collapse, Hezbollah has quietly pivoted. Once famed and feared for its sophisticated missile stockpiles, the Lebanese terror group is now looking to the skies with a new strategy: mass-produced drones.
In a stunning escalation of government overreach, the state of Colorado is now attempting to dictate not just what licensed counselors can say--but what they must say. At the center of this growing legal storm is Kaley Chiles, a Christian counselor who, because of her faith, dares to believe that repentance is real, transformation is possible, and that human beings are more than the sum of their feelings.
The West still fails to grasp this regime's worldview. It is not just authoritarian, it is theological. It sees the world in binary terms: believers and infidels, Shiites and non-Shiites. It also believes that history is heading toward a final confrontation, in which Iran will be prepared militarily and spiritually to lead. That is why the Iranian nuclear program is not negotiable. It is holy, sacred.
Something is deeply wrong when a public middle school-funded by taxpayer dollars and entrusted with the care of minors-decides to celebrate "Drag Day" without even the courtesy of notifying parents beforehand. Yet that's exactly what happened in Eugene, Oregon, where one school staged an entire week of Pride-themed activities, including encouraging children to cross-dress, all under the thin veil of "inclusion."
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