Bdash

3.8K posts

Bdash

Bdash

@HebronC777

Love Christ.

Katılım Ocak 2021
97 Takip Edilen11 Takipçiler
Bdash
Bdash@HebronC777·
@lukedsimmons Female pastors worship the devil. You want people to be kind?
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Luke Simmons
Luke Simmons@lukedsimmons·
I’m a complementarian. So I believe that the pastoral office is reserved for men. But the vitriol in the comments against any female pastor is sickening. Ungodliness in the name of defending truth. Puke.
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Dahlia
Dahlia@Fulfilled70·
The curse was about covenantal access. Prior to the fall they were in the garden which represents perfect unfettered communion with God. After they were exiled (kicked out) and blocked. Jesus Christ restores permanent access. "Be fruitful and multiply" was pre-fall, so reproduction itself cannot be the curse. The curse was sorrow multiplied in conception and childbearing, bound to the fallen seed-line until the promised Seed came (Jesus). Animals would have lived, died and had babies prior as well. Physical death was not the curse. The death that happened "that day" was Spiritual. Likewise, Adam’s curse was toil, sweat, and striving from the ground of death (self righteous works) fulfilled in Christ, who ended man’s labor to establish righteousness by his own works. Christ did not abolish creation fruitfulness; He fulfilled the redemptive burden of physical lineage. Now the children of God are born not of blood, but of God. That's why there is no marriage in the new covenant (we share the gospel to bring in new believers and that's how new members are born -by faith not a physical seed line). It's a Spiritual Kingdom with a Spiritual king. It came not with observation as Jesus told you. The old order has been completely done away with.
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Sharon Hodde Miller
Sharon Hodde Miller@SHoddeMiller·
I rarely weigh into the women in ministry conversation anymore, but I have to say: As I watch people come up with rule after rule after rule about what women can or cannot do, it’s not hard to understand how the Pharisees totally lost the plot.
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Brian
Brian@_no_name_found_·
@briankeepsworth I’ve never seen adulterers make adultery their personality & demand everyone approve of adultery. I’ve never seen the White House proclaim adultery awareness day. I’ve never seen kids programming aimed at normalizing Timmy’s adulterer parents.
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Dahlia
Dahlia@Fulfilled70·
Yes once you understand all has been fulfilled, and the curse of the law is over because Jesus became a curse for us, you know that all that pointing back to the law comes from a heart who has no understanding of who Jesus truly is and what he's done. They can have their domination. I have true love.
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Bdash
Bdash@HebronC777·
@88888sAccount Good Australians voted labour like fools. You deserve to get taxed more.
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Bdash
Bdash@HebronC777·
@WilliamWolfe He is transgender. He is the wife and mom and his marriage Why sre you surprised.
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Lane Scott
Lane Scott@LaneSmithScott·
@CivicNatalist @thebauhausfrau Health care is v. regulated by the federal government since Obamacare, yes. But I don't think I've ever seen a study indicating that lots of men are eager to get into health care, hospice care, elderly care, etc. Women are not being subsidized into those jobs. That's crazy.
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Brocadams45
Brocadams45@BrocA96·
I love this. Nothing wrong with this at all!!!
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints@Ch_JesusChrist

“I grew up in Arizona, served a mission in Mexico, and went to college thinking I had a pretty clear path for my life. Then I met my now wife Victoria, and everything changed in the best way. “She always knew she wanted to be a doctor. Pediatric neurology isn’t an easy road, but it’s who she is, compassionate, steady, brilliant, and drawn to help kids and families through the hardest things life hands them. When she got into med school in California, we packed up and moved. “Stepping into her dream together was an easy choice. I wanted to support her the way she has always supported me. And honestly, watching her work and sacrifice and love people like she does has strengthened my faith more than anything else. “My path hasn’t been as clear. I’ve tried different directions, learned a lot, prayed a lot. Some days I still feel like I’m figuring it out. But I do know that God doesn’t measure timelines. He measures love, humility, and the way we show up for each other. “Supporting her doesn’t shrink my purpose—it expands it. Our callings from God can look different, and that’s beautiful. I’m building my future too, but I’m grateful that right now, part of my purpose is cheering for the person I love most as she steps into hers. “There’s not one 'right way' to build a family or a future. For us, this is ours. And it’s sacred.” — Nate

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Jim Bennett
Jim Bennett@StallionCornell·
It's a lovely story, which is why it's so sad to see people in the comments brandishing the Family Proclamation as a weapon against... *checks notes* ... the Church that issued the Family Proclamation. Folks who are doing that have completely lost the plot.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints@Ch_JesusChrist

“I grew up in Arizona, served a mission in Mexico, and went to college thinking I had a pretty clear path for my life. Then I met my now wife Victoria, and everything changed in the best way. “She always knew she wanted to be a doctor. Pediatric neurology isn’t an easy road, but it’s who she is, compassionate, steady, brilliant, and drawn to help kids and families through the hardest things life hands them. When she got into med school in California, we packed up and moved. “Stepping into her dream together was an easy choice. I wanted to support her the way she has always supported me. And honestly, watching her work and sacrifice and love people like she does has strengthened my faith more than anything else. “My path hasn’t been as clear. I’ve tried different directions, learned a lot, prayed a lot. Some days I still feel like I’m figuring it out. But I do know that God doesn’t measure timelines. He measures love, humility, and the way we show up for each other. “Supporting her doesn’t shrink my purpose—it expands it. Our callings from God can look different, and that’s beautiful. I’m building my future too, but I’m grateful that right now, part of my purpose is cheering for the person I love most as she steps into hers. “There’s not one 'right way' to build a family or a future. For us, this is ours. And it’s sacred.” — Nate

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Bdash
Bdash@HebronC777·
@TuskedUp You hate women by making them provide for men and wreck their bodies in childbirth.
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TuskedUp 🦣🏒
TuskedUp 🦣🏒@TuskedUp·
The comments to this post are so disgusting. It’s wild how much these men actually just hate women.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints@Ch_JesusChrist

“I grew up in Arizona, served a mission in Mexico, and went to college thinking I had a pretty clear path for my life. Then I met my now wife Victoria, and everything changed in the best way. “She always knew she wanted to be a doctor. Pediatric neurology isn’t an easy road, but it’s who she is, compassionate, steady, brilliant, and drawn to help kids and families through the hardest things life hands them. When she got into med school in California, we packed up and moved. “Stepping into her dream together was an easy choice. I wanted to support her the way she has always supported me. And honestly, watching her work and sacrifice and love people like she does has strengthened my faith more than anything else. “My path hasn’t been as clear. I’ve tried different directions, learned a lot, prayed a lot. Some days I still feel like I’m figuring it out. But I do know that God doesn’t measure timelines. He measures love, humility, and the way we show up for each other. “Supporting her doesn’t shrink my purpose—it expands it. Our callings from God can look different, and that’s beautiful. I’m building my future too, but I’m grateful that right now, part of my purpose is cheering for the person I love most as she steps into hers. “There’s not one 'right way' to build a family or a future. For us, this is ours. And it’s sacred.” — Nate

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Bdash
Bdash@HebronC777·
@sophron262 Making your wife provide for you cause you are lazy and have no goals is not masculine. Imagine Jesus telling his dad to send mary out to dig the fields and build houses so he can sit at home and not work. No different to sending your wife to war. Nothing Godly , satanic
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Porter Fishburn
Porter Fishburn@sophron262·
This story is a wonderful representation of what God thinks masculinity should look like. Most of the outrage comes from misunderstanding what the post is saying. Nate’s statement makes it very clear that he’s trying to figure his own side of it out, but in the meantime what he knows he can do is support his wife. That’s exactly what divine masculinity looks like. Finding a way to be useful and serve his family despite whatever circumstances prevent him from fitting the traditional mold. Hats off, the guy is a champ for rolling up his sleeves instead of giving up. And the ones hating on this are probably either way too caught up in the worldly view of traditional masculinity, or they are coping with their own inadequacies. Probably both.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints@Ch_JesusChrist

“I grew up in Arizona, served a mission in Mexico, and went to college thinking I had a pretty clear path for my life. Then I met my now wife Victoria, and everything changed in the best way. “She always knew she wanted to be a doctor. Pediatric neurology isn’t an easy road, but it’s who she is, compassionate, steady, brilliant, and drawn to help kids and families through the hardest things life hands them. When she got into med school in California, we packed up and moved. “Stepping into her dream together was an easy choice. I wanted to support her the way she has always supported me. And honestly, watching her work and sacrifice and love people like she does has strengthened my faith more than anything else. “My path hasn’t been as clear. I’ve tried different directions, learned a lot, prayed a lot. Some days I still feel like I’m figuring it out. But I do know that God doesn’t measure timelines. He measures love, humility, and the way we show up for each other. “Supporting her doesn’t shrink my purpose—it expands it. Our callings from God can look different, and that’s beautiful. I’m building my future too, but I’m grateful that right now, part of my purpose is cheering for the person I love most as she steps into hers. “There’s not one 'right way' to build a family or a future. For us, this is ours. And it’s sacred.” — Nate

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Bdash
Bdash@HebronC777·
@byuoveralls You and your wife are homosexuals.
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Dem Saints
Dem Saints@LDS_Dems·
@sewRight25 There is no PR Deep State. There is nothing less than ideal about a woman multiplying her talents with the support of her husband.
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Dem Saints
Dem Saints@LDS_Dems·
The world needs more pediatric neurologists. If you are upset that this family is serving their community so honorably because the neurologist happens to be the wife, please, stop. The Lord has blessed her with talents and we should all be proud she is mutliplying them
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints@Ch_JesusChrist

“I grew up in Arizona, served a mission in Mexico, and went to college thinking I had a pretty clear path for my life. Then I met my now wife Victoria, and everything changed in the best way. “She always knew she wanted to be a doctor. Pediatric neurology isn’t an easy road, but it’s who she is, compassionate, steady, brilliant, and drawn to help kids and families through the hardest things life hands them. When she got into med school in California, we packed up and moved. “Stepping into her dream together was an easy choice. I wanted to support her the way she has always supported me. And honestly, watching her work and sacrifice and love people like she does has strengthened my faith more than anything else. “My path hasn’t been as clear. I’ve tried different directions, learned a lot, prayed a lot. Some days I still feel like I’m figuring it out. But I do know that God doesn’t measure timelines. He measures love, humility, and the way we show up for each other. “Supporting her doesn’t shrink my purpose—it expands it. Our callings from God can look different, and that’s beautiful. I’m building my future too, but I’m grateful that right now, part of my purpose is cheering for the person I love most as she steps into hers. “There’s not one 'right way' to build a family or a future. For us, this is ours. And it’s sacred.” — Nate

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Bdash
Bdash@HebronC777·
@geoffjBYU A man that acts like a woman and does not provide is gay.
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Geoff Johnston
Geoff Johnston@geoffjBYU·
@HebronC777 Thanks for the input that has zero to do with this conversation, sport
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Geoff Johnston
Geoff Johnston@geoffjBYU·
Oh boy. The Church giving an example of a family who made the choice for the husband to stay home and the wife to work. This will definitely send some of the hard-righty anti-woke apostates-in-waiting right over that apostasy edge. Turns out God is more open minded than them.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints@Ch_JesusChrist

“I grew up in Arizona, served a mission in Mexico, and went to college thinking I had a pretty clear path for my life. Then I met my now wife Victoria, and everything changed in the best way. “She always knew she wanted to be a doctor. Pediatric neurology isn’t an easy road, but it’s who she is, compassionate, steady, brilliant, and drawn to help kids and families through the hardest things life hands them. When she got into med school in California, we packed up and moved. “Stepping into her dream together was an easy choice. I wanted to support her the way she has always supported me. And honestly, watching her work and sacrifice and love people like she does has strengthened my faith more than anything else. “My path hasn’t been as clear. I’ve tried different directions, learned a lot, prayed a lot. Some days I still feel like I’m figuring it out. But I do know that God doesn’t measure timelines. He measures love, humility, and the way we show up for each other. “Supporting her doesn’t shrink my purpose—it expands it. Our callings from God can look different, and that’s beautiful. I’m building my future too, but I’m grateful that right now, part of my purpose is cheering for the person I love most as she steps into hers. “There’s not one 'right way' to build a family or a future. For us, this is ours. And it’s sacred.” — Nate

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Michael Jolley
Michael Jolley@mjolley22·
Just a reminder that Brigham Young asked latter day saint women to study medicine. And it wasn't just single sisters. You can be a wife and mother and a doctor. It is fully compatible with the Family Proclamation and the Church.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints@Ch_JesusChrist

“I grew up in Arizona, served a mission in Mexico, and went to college thinking I had a pretty clear path for my life. Then I met my now wife Victoria, and everything changed in the best way. “She always knew she wanted to be a doctor. Pediatric neurology isn’t an easy road, but it’s who she is, compassionate, steady, brilliant, and drawn to help kids and families through the hardest things life hands them. When she got into med school in California, we packed up and moved. “Stepping into her dream together was an easy choice. I wanted to support her the way she has always supported me. And honestly, watching her work and sacrifice and love people like she does has strengthened my faith more than anything else. “My path hasn’t been as clear. I’ve tried different directions, learned a lot, prayed a lot. Some days I still feel like I’m figuring it out. But I do know that God doesn’t measure timelines. He measures love, humility, and the way we show up for each other. “Supporting her doesn’t shrink my purpose—it expands it. Our callings from God can look different, and that’s beautiful. I’m building my future too, but I’m grateful that right now, part of my purpose is cheering for the person I love most as she steps into hers. “There’s not one 'right way' to build a family or a future. For us, this is ours. And it’s sacred.” — Nate

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Bdash
Bdash@HebronC777·
@ASBaird So you and your wife are basically gay.
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Austin Baird
Austin Baird@ASBaird·
My wife and I met in law school and I’ve had the privilege of watching her build a successful career while we both build a family and prioritize the parenting of our 4 wild, smart, fun girls. I try really hard to follow the admonition to be a peacemaker on here but I’m going to ignore it and say that all the dudes throwing hissy fits in the comments and QTs here are the sort of insecure, embarrassing losers that I teach my girls to ignore. Have a career and a family? Great. Be a SAHM and not work? Equally great. Throw a tantrum that someone wants to be a pediatric neurologist and her husband wants to support her in that effort? Pathetic behavior.
Austin Baird tweet mediaAustin Baird tweet media
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints@Ch_JesusChrist

“I grew up in Arizona, served a mission in Mexico, and went to college thinking I had a pretty clear path for my life. Then I met my now wife Victoria, and everything changed in the best way. “She always knew she wanted to be a doctor. Pediatric neurology isn’t an easy road, but it’s who she is, compassionate, steady, brilliant, and drawn to help kids and families through the hardest things life hands them. When she got into med school in California, we packed up and moved. “Stepping into her dream together was an easy choice. I wanted to support her the way she has always supported me. And honestly, watching her work and sacrifice and love people like she does has strengthened my faith more than anything else. “My path hasn’t been as clear. I’ve tried different directions, learned a lot, prayed a lot. Some days I still feel like I’m figuring it out. But I do know that God doesn’t measure timelines. He measures love, humility, and the way we show up for each other. “Supporting her doesn’t shrink my purpose—it expands it. Our callings from God can look different, and that’s beautiful. I’m building my future too, but I’m grateful that right now, part of my purpose is cheering for the person I love most as she steps into hers. “There’s not one 'right way' to build a family or a future. For us, this is ours. And it’s sacred.” — Nate

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H. Pearl Davis
H. Pearl Davis@pearlythingz·
.@conservmillen is another born again hoe who made her husband wait for sex while giving it away for free to random college men The red pill is undefeated 😹😹 At least let your husband hit the first night or be prepared to die on the lie for life!!! Why do these women PUBLICLY HUMILIATE their men 😭
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Joel Lopez | Save Your Marriage
Joel Lopez | Save Your Marriage@TheeJoelLopez·
Like a lot of husbands I was obsessed with being a “good provider.” Lots of hours to make more money. Wife was drowning at home with the kids. Like a goofball I wondered why she pulled away.
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