Corn Chrisnell

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Corn Chrisnell

Corn Chrisnell

@RTR_ChopOn

The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of the fool to the left. Ecc. 10:2 - Christian / Conservative / Best Selling Author / 1A / 2A

Destin, FL Bergabung Haziran 2009
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Corn Chrisnell
Corn Chrisnell@RTR_ChopOn·
Some truth for those who like to try to mold and adjust Jesus to fit their worldview.
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Corn Chrisnell
Corn Chrisnell@RTR_ChopOn·
@Unapologx He’s the typical liberal. Thinks he’s smarter than everyone else in the room, and proves the opposite simply by speaking.
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Unapologetic
Unapologetic@Unapologx·
Allie had so much grace for this ❤️👏👏
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Blaine Stewart
Blaine Stewart@BlaineStewart16·
@B7frankH Well blacks usually attack in packs like hyenas so when it's one on one its a different story.
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Frankie™️🦅
Frankie™️🦅@B7frankH·
Never underestimate the potential of White girls who can fight are game changers. Black girl talked shit and didn't expected white girl could fight. So she #FAFO.
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Corn Chrisnell
Corn Chrisnell@RTR_ChopOn·
@izthisJudah Notice nobody joined in with cheap shots. They were simply left to work out their differences as 2 people. I wonder why?
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J.@izthisJudah·
A black guy tried to target the wrong white boy and got his shit rocked.
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₿en Wehrman
₿en Wehrman@benwehrman·
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Terri Green
Terri Green@TerriGreenUSA·
This is evergreen! When a young boy asks John MacArthur why didn’t Jesus just *Pow* in the garden when Eve ate the apple, He can stop it like that? Bible Questions and Answers, Part 70 — John MacArthur “I’m Joey Cusenza, and my question is, why didn’t Jesus stop Eve at the garden of Eden when she ate the fruit? *Like, I mean, pow,* He can just stop it like that. Why didn’t He?” JOHN: That is the most profound question of all questions: Why didn’t God stop Eve from eating the fruit? This theologians call the problem of theodicy: Why is there evil in the world? If God is absolutely holy, why is there evil in the world? That’s essentially that question: Why didn’t He stop it before it started? First of all, the broad answer is this: because God allowed her to eat that fruit, God allowed sin to come into the world, so that He could be glorified. Now God is a God of love, and He could express that love even in the perfection of the Trinity. And He expressed that love to Adam and Eve when He walked and talked with them before they sinned and before she ate. So God could express His love. But if there had never been a sin, there would never be forgiveness, there would never be mercy, there would never be grace, there would never be compassion, there would never be healing, there would never be restoration. And so, forever and ever, the angels would never be able to worship God for all those aspects of His nature. So God allows evil so that He can display grace and mercy and compassion because those also are attributes of God that can only be put on display through His response to sin. There’s another reason, and that is that God is holy and just and righteous. He would never be able to display ultimately what that means unless there were sinners to judge. So whether it is judgment on sin or whether it is salvation from sin, the fact that sin exists allows God to display eternally the glory of the full scope of His attributes. Okay? Great question. Thank you, bud.
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Corn Chrisnell
Corn Chrisnell@RTR_ChopOn·
@ksorbs The demons do not like it when you speak truth about the baby sacrifices that they so strongly desire.
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Kevin Sorbo
Kevin Sorbo@ksorbs·
Liberal assaults black man because they don't like the sign he's holding How tolerant
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Matt Smethurst
Matt Smethurst@MattSmethurst·
The Lord didn’t check who inside the house was worthy. He checked for blood on the doorposts. None of us is worthy. Only the blood of Jesus can cover us.
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pirate captain
pirate captain@piratecapt16·
Well you can always make up a text as your personal Bible and it can say whatever you wish. But if you read Genesis, then you cannot change what it says. Your interpretation is only valid to you, since most people tend to follow what it says. It says they ate of the fruit of the tree of knowledge. Making it mean something else serves no purpose.
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The Biblical Man
The Biblical Man@Biblicalman·
The tree of the knowledge of good and evil wasn't a tree. Ezekiel 31 tells you what it was. And it changes everything you think happened in the Garden of Eden... .
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Corn Chrisnell
Corn Chrisnell@RTR_ChopOn·
@piratecapt16 @Biblicalman Do you think eating fruit made them realize they were naked? They needed to cover their parts due to eating fruit? Kind of makes sense to believe that due to some kind of sexual act they were then aware of or ashamed of those parts and felt that covering them was necessary.
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pirate captain
pirate captain@piratecapt16·
This is what happens when an ignorant heathen reads a couple of verses, suddenly they are theologians. There wasn’t one forbidden tree in the Garden of Eden, there were two. Adam and Eve ate of the tree of knowledge and could understand good an evil. Everything that proceeded from God was good, and after satan’s rebellion he and 1/3rd of the angels were evil. The other tree was the tree of life. They were cast out of the Garden and the tree protected by angels to keep anyone from eating from it. Any serious reading of the Bible reveals that sex between Adam and Eve did not occur while they were in fellowship with God. They had sex after their eyes were opened. Cain wasn’t corrupted by being the offspring of Satan, he made his own choice to disobey God just as Able made the choice to honor God. Our condemnation came from Adam, but our salvation comes from Christ.
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NumbersUSA
NumbersUSA@NumbersUSA·
30 years ago, SNL legends Phil Hartman & Dennis Miller said you can't discuss immigration without being labeled racist. Hartman questioned birthright citizenship, chain migration, and why mass immigration is allowed to continue. 30 years later… same arguments, same reaction.
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Athenaeum Book Club
Athenaeum Book Club@athenaeumbc·
A powerful scene in the Odyssey happens when Odysseus finally returns to Ithaca after twenty years of war and wandering. You would expect the story to end with celebration, with the hero coming home, the family reunited, and order restored. Homer does something far stranger. Odysseus arrives disguised as a beggar, because Athena warns him that the palace has been taken over by more than a hundred suitors who have been living there for years, eating his food, drinking his wine, and pressuring his wife Penelope to marry one of them. They believe Odysseus is dead and in their minds the kingdom is already theirs. So the king of Ithaca walks through his own halls dressed in rags while the men stealing his house sit comfortably at his tables. They mock him, throw scraps at him, and one of them even strikes him, and Odysseus takes it. That is the remarkable part, because the same man who blinded the Cyclops and survived twenty years of disasters now stands quietly while strangers insult him in his own home. Homer tells us his heart burns inside his chest and that he wants to attack them immediately, yet he restrains himself and waits. Instead of striking, Odysseus studies the room carefully. He counts the men, watches their habits, and quietly observes which servants remain loyal and which have betrayed him. The hero of the Odyssey does something most people cannot do, which is delay revenge until the moment is right. Eventually Penelope announces a contest and brings out Odysseus’ great bow, declaring that she will marry the man who can string it and shoot an arrow through twelve axe heads lined up in a row. One by one the suitors try and fail, because none of them can even bend the bow. Then the beggar asks for a turn. The suitors laugh at first, but the bow is eventually handed to him. Odysseus takes it in his hands and strings it effortlessly. Homer says the sound of the bowstring tightening rings through the hall like the note of a swallow. Then he places an arrow on the string and sends it cleanly through all twelve axe heads. In that moment the beggar disappears. Odysseus turns the bow toward the suitors and reveals who he is. What follows is one of the most brutal scenes in Greek literature. The doors are sealed and the suitors realize too late that they are trapped inside the hall. Odysseus, his son Telemachus, and two loyal servants begin killing them one by one. There is no escape, no mercy, and no negotiation. The men who spent years consuming another man’s house die inside it. It is a violent ending, but Homer wants you to understand something important. The real danger to Odysseus was never just the monsters and storms on the long journey home. It was the possibility that someone else might take his place while he was gone. When Odysseus finally returns, he reminds everyone in Ithaca of a simple truth: a man’s home is not truly his unless he is willing to fight for it.
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