Spoiled & Boring Christians



This is from “Practical Politics for Christians – Your Testimony (& The GOP Debate)”
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13 thoughts on “Spoiled & Boring Christians”

  1. I notice that introverted, empathetic and woke Christians seem to be the laziest and most boring Christians. The theme for all three seems to be self.

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  2. 7:12 I'm sorry guys, I love you, but there is NO way that the justification of the execution of King Charles I was biblical or popular. A great many puritans resisted this notion at the time (e.g. Oliver Heywood), or later come to repent of their support of it. Not just that, but the supposedly puritan parliament that voted to execute Charles (a) had already been gerrymandered thanks to Pride's Purge (reduced to a measly 46 MPs who Pride thought would be supportive of regicide), and (b) even then only *twenty-six* MPs voted to put him on trial.

    You're entitled to the love of your mother country; as per Lewis, I love that you love your mother, too. But inasmuch as your national 'testimony' intertwines with that of mine, one can't appropriate what wasn't really there. The Glorious Revolution of 1688AD settled in the English Christian mind what was already obvious to most: that the Civil War was a disaster, and constitutional monarchy is the golden mean of civil government.

    As we're fond of saying – 'ideas have consequences'. What we're seeing now in *both* our countries is the long-seeded consequences of decisions made in the 17th and 18th Centuries, respectively. There's no such thing as a 'conservative revolution'; it's a contradiction in terms. Hence why English Christians reversed the most successful revolution in western history in 1688AD.

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