Marc

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Marc

Marc

@servantmarcus

Married to my lovely wife for 22 years! 4 beautiful granddaughters! Beekeeper, Backyard eggs, loving God and loving people!

Beigetreten Ekim 2011
311 Folgt782 Follower
Marc
Marc@servantmarcus·
@BenZeisloft Isn't the church supposed to be the hands and feet of Jesus christ?
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Ben Zeisloft
Ben Zeisloft@BenZeisloft·
Scripture is full of political leaders who elevated themselves over God in prideful blasphemy. Nebuchadnezzar was given the mind of a beast. Herod was struck down for refusing to glorify God as he was praised by the people. American Christians should be praying that God would mercifully humble our President, for the good of his soul and the good of our nation.
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Wendell
Wendell@wendelltalks·
The culture doesn’t actually want “tolerance.” It wants silence. Just look at what happened to Paige Rogers, a 19-year-old Christian college student in Louisville, Kentucky. She was working at Heine Brothers Coffee. Two co-workers asked her questions about her faith. Questions specifically about marriage and sexuality. She didn’t start the conversation. She didn’t preach. She simply answered honestly and respectfully, sharing what Scripture says. Twelve days later she was fired by text message. No warning. No conversation. Just terminated for voicing biblical truth when she was invited to do so. Events like this is why so many Christians fear speaking about their faith at work. The culture is fine with a watered-down Christianity that does not challenge the idols of the day. It preaches “tolerance” while demanding total silence from anyone who dares to speak biblical truth, even when they’re asked. Paige’s story is a warning, but it’s also a witness. In a world that rewards compromise and punishes conviction, true faith doesn’t fold. It stands. And that kind of courage is exactly what our culture fears most.
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Marc
Marc@servantmarcus·
@GabeGwoolley Yes! Government should NOT be supporting the ideas of Sexual immorality, Eugenics, Pseudoscience and Confusion. If government entities are to support any ideas, it should be the ideas of Jesus Christ.
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Marc@servantmarcus·
@TheCalvinCooli1 I would like some more information on Robert Franklin, please. 📝
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The Calvin Coolidge Project
The Calvin Coolidge Project@TheCalvinCooli1·
Let’s talk about the Oklahoma Superintendent Race. This is a race I have no idea who to support I want to hear your folks' feedback I will give you a brief review of the 5 major candidates running Toni Hasenback is a State Representative. She has a decent voting record. Remember when I put Tedford on blast for that stupid vote to block communism from being taught in the schoolrooms? Well, she was one of three Republicans who voted in favor of the bill. That is a positive in my book. She should have decent name ID and fundraising. Adam Pugh is a State Senator. He isn’t that great on the issues. He is the type who would have been primary out in the future. He is making his background in the military a part of the campaign. No for what sure what does that have to do with education? He should have decent name ID and fundraising. James Taylor ran for Congress in 2022 against Tom Cole. He got 27.0% of the vote. So he may have some name ID. No idea about fundraising. John Cox was the Democratic nominee for 2014 and 2018 for this seat. Then he ran on the Republican side in 2022 and came in third. So he has name ID due to running so many times. No idea about fundraising. Robert Franklin is a retired school administrator and a member of the Oklahoma Educators Hall of Fame. No idea about name ID or fundraising. We have to fix our education here folks. I would guess it would be a Pugh vs Hasenback runoff. I would support Hasenback. But in all honesty, it would be any of these candidates who make the runoff Who are you folks supporting and why?
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Marc@servantmarcus·
@zundamotisuki @Fayevalentino2 For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world. And the world is passing away, and also its lusts, but the one who does the will of God abides forever. 1 John 2:16,17
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Jesse Kelly
Jesse Kelly@JesseKellyDC·
Every single elected Democrat has made clear what they intend to do with power should we ever allow them back into power. They’re not hiding who they are anymore. We should probably focus REALLY hard on not letting that happen.
Breitbart News@BreitbartNews

Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) says Trump's impeachment "has to be the Democratic agenda.” "We must proceed towards the goal of removing Donald Trump from office, and we must do this now."

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Marc@servantmarcus·
@RevJimPierce @SwordMasterPub @rickbrennanjr A Pelagian also believed that salvation is achievable through human effort rather than solely by divine grace. This doctrine or teachings were condemned by the Council of Carthage (418), Council of Ephesus (431), and the Council of Orange (529). Source: AI
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Marc@servantmarcus·
@RevJimPierce @SwordMasterPub @rickbrennanjr Thank you for your patience with and working diligently for our LORD and Savior. Your love for God shows. A Pelagian is a follower of the 5th-century monk Pelagius, who argued that humans possess complete free will, denied the doctrine of original sin.
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Marc@servantmarcus·
Roman Catholic accepts justification as the work of Christ.
Pastor Rick Brennan@rickbrennanjr

I am often asked why I left the Catholic faith at the age of nineteen. The answer unfolds over many years. What follows is only one part of that story. As a child, I experienced many of the classic symptoms often described as “Catholic guilt.” I was deeply aware of my sinful nature and of the sobering reality that I could never be holy enough to stand before a just God (Rom 3:10, 23). That awareness was not misplaced: it was real, and in many ways biblically grounded. But what I lacked was a clear understanding of how that problem is actually resolved in Christ. Then, in my late teens, I began to read Scripture more carefully. In Ephesians 2:8–10, I saw with clarity that salvation is by grace through faith, not as a result of works, so that no one may boast. Good works were not the basis of my acceptance before God, but the fruit of a salvation already secured in Christ. In Romans 3:21–28, I encountered Paul’s argument that a righteousness from God has been manifested apart from the law: received through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe. Justification was not something gradually achieved; it was something declared by God. And in 1 John 1:7–9, I read that “the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin,” and that if we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. Forgiveness was not mediated through an ongoing sacramental system in order to maintain a state of grace, it was grounded in the finished work of Christ and received by faith. As I continued reading, I began to see a contrast that I could not ignore. The sacramental system as I had experienced it seemed to keep me in a cycle. I was always returning, always uncertain, always wondering if I had done enough. Yet the Apostle Paul spoke of something different: freedom. “For freedom Christ has set us free” (Gal 5:1). He spoke of peace with God (Rom 5:1), of no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus (Rom 8:1), and of the love of God from which we can never be separated (Rom 8:38–39). The book of Hebrews deepened this even further. There I encountered the language of completion and rest. Christ offered himself “once for all” (Heb 10:10), and by a single offering he has perfected for all time those who are being sanctified (Heb 10:14). Because of this, believers are invited to “draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith” (Heb 10:22). And in Hebrews 4:9–10, I saw that there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God: a true rest that could not be achieved through striving, but one that is entered into through faith in the finished work of Christ. The more I immersed myself in Scripture, the more I began to see that the issue was not my awareness of sin because that was accurate. But the problem was the the solution within the sacramental system I had been given. What I had known was a system that continually reminded me of sin but never fully grounded me in the sufficiency of Christ’s atonement as a completed and final work (Heb 10:1–4). Over time, the guilt and uncertainty that marked my youth gave way to something profoundly different: peace with God (Rom 5:1), assurance of salvation (1 John 5:13), and a growing confidence in the love of Christ. This was not a careless freedom that allowed me to live in sin, but a settled freedom: the kind that produces gratitude, obedience, growth and joy. Today, as a Baptist shaped by Evangelical Reformed theology, I do not rest in my performance, but in Christ’s finished work. The burden of trying to become acceptable to God has been replaced by the assurance that, in Christ, I already am accepted (Eph 1:6). And from that place of grace, I now seek to live in faithful obedience, not to earn salvation, but because I have received it.

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Marc@servantmarcus·
@lanebrown_3 ... and I thought Claremore was an innocent town to live in?!
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Lane Brown
Lane Brown@lanebrown_3·
Introducing to you: Claremore Pride Claremore Pride held an event at the lake last year, where strippers danced in front of literal children. Now—they are hosting an event at the Claremore Community Center on June 27th. This center is ran by the City of Claremore. Your tax dollars at work. Call the Community Center and let them know how you feel about kids being groomed by gay pedophiles: 918-341-7289
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KFOR
KFOR@kfor·
Lawmakers are taking steps towards potentially banning state involvement in Pride and LGBTQ+ advocacy. kfor.com/news/oklahoma-…
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Marc@servantmarcus·
@SwordMasterPub @MrsHoule0906 @rickbrennanjr In context, Jesus makes it plain in verse 6: 5. Jesus answered, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God. 6. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit
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Siaxares 🇮🇷 سیاکسارِس
As an Iranian who stayed connected through Starlink during the total internet blackout, I want to wholeheartedly confirm what President Trump just said: "The Iranian people want to be free. They have lived in a world that you know NOTHING about." For 47 years, my people have endured systematic torture, rape, murder, humiliation, anxiety, suppression, and grief under the Islamic Republic. It’s been a long, grinding suffering — punctuated by brutal spikes like the January protests, mass executions, and now war. The world has no idea of the scale or depth of these horrors. Only when this evil regime finally falls will the full truth pour out — in quality and quantity that will shock humanity. We have now reached a point where almost no cost is too great if it rids us of this regime. Because the cost of it staying in power is infinitely higher. If you’re reading this and you can’t understand how any Iranian could feel relief at their own country losing a war and getting bombed… I envy you. You have never lived what we have lived. You have never watched your people, friends, family, and loved ones get tortured, raped, or killed almost daily and over half a century. You have never seen an entire nation slowly but brutally suffocated like this. We tried every alternative imaginable: massive protests, dissent, peaceful reform, negotiations — everything. None of it worked. The regime’s answer has always been bullets, gallows, and more terror. Now, less than 24 hours before Trump’s deadline, I write this with a heavy heart from inside Iran: Whatever happens next — if there is still an Iran left to save and this regime is gone — the Iranian people will be happy with the result. No matter the cost. Because the cost of the regime remaining is higher, and for many of us, death itself is preferable to another day under this nightmare. This is the true sentiment of the majority of Iranians — the voice of a people who often have no internet, no platform, and no way to be heard. The world will soon understand why we say: Anything to be free. Anything to end this evil. #IranMassacre#IranRevolution2026
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Justin Humphrey
Justin Humphrey@jjhump3030·
JJ calls out the non-sense afoot at the Oklahoma supreme court, and what his plan is to fix it.
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