Good morning ☀️🌞
I hear many Christians proclaim how much they love the Lord, but what does that look like in our daily lives? Let’s make sure we are grasping the deeper meaning of these words.
“And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ The second is this: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no other commandment greater than these.” Mark 12: 30-31 (ESV).
#love #Jesus #God #faith #Christian #Jewish #Muslim
Dear friends and followers,
Thank you for the flood of prayers and encouragement after I shared about the hateful emails I’ve been receiving. The latest one, arriving today, tells me the “best way to serve humanity” is to end my life.
These attacks are meant to intimidate and silence me. They won’t!
My strength comes from Jesus Christ.
Your support reminds me why truth-telling matters.
Please keep praying for protection over all who speak boldly. And let’s remember: words have power. Use them to build people up, and not to destroy.
“For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.” — 2 Timothy 1:7 ✝️
What gives you strength when facing darkness?
God bless you all.
#StandForTruth #CarolSwainSpeaks
After testifying before Congress to demand accountability from the SPLC, I was rewarded with a barrage of threatening, foul-mouthed emails from progressives — exactly the kind of intimidation their leaders encourage by distorting the truth.
“No weapon forged against you will prevail, and you will refute every tongue that accuses you. This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord, and this is their vindication from me,” declares the Lord. — Isaiah 54:17 (NIV)
Yesterday at the hearing on the SPLC’s role in manufacturing hate labels, Rep. Moskowitz pressed me hard on whether neo-Nazis are white supremacists.
Neo-Nazis generally fuse antisemitism with a belief in Aryan or white racial supremacy and dominance. That overlap is real. But antisemitism itself is older and broader. It shows up in Black nationalist circles, Islamist movements, far-left anti-Zionism, and other places that have nothing to do with white supremacy.
The SPLC once focused on actual extremists like the KKK and neo-Nazis. It has since drifted into labeling mainstream conservatives, Christians, and dissenting voices as hate groups. That expansion turns precise terms into blunt weapons. When “white supremacist” gets stretched to cover systems, statistics, or anyone who rejects the new orthodoxy, clarity dies and honest disagreement gets recast as extremism.
Words matter. Definitions should describe reality, not serve an agenda.