Trump and Vance Lectured by an Abomination

https://x.com/collinrugg/status/1881762803192607226?s=46&t=aWPfZNqmZ0bElZ1SV9tBGA

One day after being inaugurated, President Trump and Vice President Vance, along with members of their families, attended an “interfaith” service. As part of the service our newly inaugurated president and vice president were subjected to a lecture about gays, lesbians, transgender individuals, and illegal immigrants. Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde took her opportunity to proclaim a baseless message in grossly inappropriate setting. Certainly, this diatribe was a response to President Trump’s signing of executive orders affirming the existence of only two genders and to his stance on deporting criminals. By now, nothing from the woke ideology––formed in Hell itself––should surprise us.

As I watched a replay of this, the first words that came to mind were, “What an abomination!” When the Bible speaks of abominations, it describes God’s intense feelings about something. In addition to identifying God’s hatred towards certain sins, an abomination is a moral defilement. I cannot think of a greater abomination than using God’s name to justify something God explicitly opposes. While listening to this babbling, besides observing the apparent patience on the faces of the president and vice president, three things quickly came to mind:

The Wrong Messenger

Not only was the message not grounded in truth or common sense, but also the messenger has no scriptural or moral grounds to deliver the message. There is no such thing as a woman “bishop” in the Bible. This disqualifies Budde from giving any kind of lecture to the crowd.

The Wrong Message

If this “bishop” had actually read the Bible, then she would know that everything she just said was wrong. It is obvious she has no clue what the Bible says, or she would not have placed herself in a position to say it. This is a good reminder to go straight to the source––Scripture––for our beliefs. What Scripture has established is not a political position.

The Wrong Platform

An “interfaith” meeting is, in my opinion, actually a no-faith meeting. While I am thankful for the freedom of religion in the United States, that does not mean all faiths are equal. The Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ cannot and will not coexist with the false, works-based faiths. In fact, the Gospel confronts and condemns those false faiths. A social gospel, as these “faiths” embrace, can never be accepted by the Gospel of Jesus Christ, no matter how many times they invoke His name. This was not an “interfaith” service; this was a false faith rally.

This event serves as a good reminder that, while we are a Christian nation in many respects, we are still far from a Scriptural one. We must pray for our elected leaders to honor God with their decisions.

We must not fall prey to the message of “unity” when truth stands alone.

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