Hoss

297 posts

Hoss banner
Hoss

Hoss

@HossTheHoss

Sagittarius A* Katılım Mart 2025
21 Takip Edilen8 Takipçiler
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Fact check and ask questions about any post just by tapping the Grok logo in the upper left
English
10.9K
7.1K
113.9K
39.2M
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
@JosiahForYeshua Roman's 11: 16-32. Paul tells us Gentiles about not being arrogant because we are grafted in by the Grace of God into the tree, and just because a natural branch may have broken off He can restore it just as He restored us. I love it!
English
0
0
2
35
Josiah Geoffrey ✡️
Josiah Geoffrey ✡️@JosiahForYeshua·
When Paul says in Romans 9:6 that “not all who are of Israel are Israel,” he is not saying that the Church is the true Israel. First, he does not say “some who are not of Israel are Israel”—Paul is limiting Israel in this context by saying not all Israelites are Israel, not expanding Israel to include non-Israelites. It is fallacious to say “Some Israelis aren’t really Israel, therefore some non-Israelis really are Israel.” It would be like saying, “Some dogs aren’t wolves, therefore some cats are wolves.” Use logic, peoples. Second, this passage is specifically in the context of discussing Paul’s “brothers, [his] relatives according to the flesh,” unbelieving Jews whom he calls Israelites, to whom belong the covenants and the promises (v. 3-5). So Paul’s discussion about Israel and another Israel is all still in an ethnically Jewish context, affirming that even unbelieving Jews still have the national covenants and promises of Israel—they just aren’t receiving the blessings of those covenants and promises. Romans 9:6 does not nullify Romans 9:1-5. Third and lastly, the mention of an Israel which not all Israelis are part of—an Israel within Israel, for lack of a better term—is referring to the faithful remnant of Israel, which he talks about again later in verses 9:27 & 11:5. Paul’s whole point is that even though much of Israel is in unbelief and not inheriting the blessings of the covenants/promises, God always preserves a faithful remnant of Jews, such that there is always an Israel to whom He can give the blessings of the promises. This is not a verse to be used as ammo for boasting over the Jewish people, to say that Gentile Christians are the true Israel—rather, it’s meant to be a source of comfort, to show that even as Paul laments how the people of Israel continually stray from their calling and don’t walk as the Israel they were made to be, God always preserves a faithful Jewish remnant so that His promises to Israel will never fail. As a Messianic Jew, I am a member of the faithful remnant. I am truly a part of Israel, and I am proof that God has not rejected His people. Romans 11:1-2a (MJLT) I say this, then: “Did God push away His people?” Let it not be! Indeed, I also am a יִשְׂרְאֵלִי, Yisʼrʼeliy, of the seed of אַבְרָהָם, Avʼraham, of the tribe of בִּנְיָמִין, Binʼyamiyn. God did not push away His people whom He knew beforehand.
Josiah Geoffrey ✡️ tweet media
Josiah Geoffrey ✡️@JosiahForYeshua

When Paul says “Not all who are of Israel are Israel” in Romans 9:6, he’s giving a nuanced discussion about whether or not Israelis are walking in their covenantal calling, thereby becoming recipients of the promises. It’s not meant to indicate that we can reinterpret the word “Israel” at will all throughout the Bible, but rather to show how Jews don’t automatically get all the benefits of being sons of Abraham merely because of their ancestry. Paul’s discussion in Romans 9 can be likened to someone having a conversation about patriotism and the national values of America, and he says, “Not everyone who’s an American citizen is really an American.” In such a conversation, one could be making the point that someone who stands against America and its ideals isn’t really an American (despite the fact that such a person would still literally be an American). Paul is making a similar point about what it means to be Israel.

English
49
10
87
13.1K
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
@5solas How bout Luke 23:34? When Jesus said, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."
English
0
0
1
15
5 Solas
5 Solas@5Solas·
‼️‼️‼️
5 Solas tweet media
84
53
362
26K
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
@Acts17David The Son, is I AM. He is "I AM WHO I AM." The Son is the Word. The Word was with God and the Word was God.
English
0
0
3
310
Dr. David Wood
Dr. David Wood@Acts17David·
"How can Allah have a son, when he has no first cousin?" 🤔 ~Quran 6:101
English
218
143
1.7K
46K
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
It honestly doesn't surprise me anymore
Sen. Colton Moore@realColtonMoore

Almost two years ago, I demanded Governor Brian Kemp either declare an illegal invasion or resign… My staffer and I exposed a hidden room deep inside Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. It was packed with illegal migrants and guarded by active-duty U.S. military personnel. We busted in James O’Keefe-style, cameras rolling, and started filming everything. Once they realized we were filming, an Army officer tried to rip the camera out of my hands. I knew something was wrong… The Atlanta Mayor called me a liar. Kemp ignored me. The RINOs laughed. The fake news called me "extreme." Today, a bombshell Senate report just confirmed everything I said was 100% true—and worse. The Biden administration forced at least 11 U.S. airports — including Atlanta — to turn secure facilities into illegal alien housing and processing centers. Federal agencies were ordered to find airport space to shelter illegal aliens. Governor Kemp had the power to stop this. He had the evidence. He had the duty… Instead, he looked the other way while Georgia became a staging ground for Biden’s open-border disaster. I’m sick of the excuses. I’m sick of the RINOs protecting their own power while our state is overrun. And I’m sick of watching good Georgians pay the price—higher crime, strained schools, packed hospitals, and skyrocketing housing costs—all because spineless politicians refuse to fight. We told you this was happening. They called us conspiracy theorists. Now the Senate report proves we were right all along. The invasion is real. The betrayal is real. And the fight is far from over.

English
0
0
0
13
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
The Lord calls us to repent and sin no more. Loving God will change your life if you let Him. The closer you draw to Him, the less you desire to sin. All those things are not "fun" anymore. All you need is the Lord, and we all need Him more than we know.
English
0
0
0
14
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
Jesus is not a communist. This guy made the point.
Josh Howerton@howertonjosh

"Shouldn't Christians support max-boosting welfare programs, because Jesus said to feed the hungry and the early church was marked by generosity to the poor?" 1) No, using the government to forcefully take other people's money against their will and redistribute it was not a mark of the early church. They were generous to the poor, A) with their own money, and B) of their own volition. And yes, individual Christians and churches SHOULD do that!! 2) Although a thin social safety net for the most dire circumstances is permissible, there are *no* examples in the Bible of God commanding (or affirming) governments to take money from earners and redistribute it to take care of people in the Bible. Sometimes, people will (mistakenly) point to OT gleaning commands as an example of Biblical "welfare", but notice those are commands are given to individual Israelites. They are not an example of centralized government redistribution of wealth. There's a reason for this... 3) There is a difference in the Bible between the role of the individual and the role of the State. It is evil and harmful when an individual does the role of the State (i.e., taking personal vengeance for a crime rather than letting the State enact justice). And it is evil and harmful when the State does the role of the individual and the church (i.e., stealing from people via excessive taxation to take on the primary role of charity in a society in place of individuals and churches). It's harmful because with governments "you always get more of what you SUBSIDIZE and less of what you PENALIZE." This is why when governments do "charity", it tends to PRODUCE more poverty in that region rather than ALLEVIATE it over time, because the government has removed the incentives for hard work and ingenuity in society. (A good portion of the population thinks, "Eh, why get out and grind, the government will cover me.") And this is why it actually requires a form of evil and is very harmful for a government to be subsidizing 40M people (12% of the entire population) via food stamps.

English
0
0
0
8
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
@scrowder You have the wildest comments section bro. You can tell what's true just by reading through some of them, they really hate you man, just for speaking the truth. What a sad world we live in.
English
0
0
1
79
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
@penitentus Is Christian not enough? A follower and believer in The Father, The Son & The Holy Spirit? A believer in God Almighty & the Son of the Living God? It's all in the Gospel. The satan will try to divide us, so we should stand united in the Lord.
English
0
0
0
27
Tim the Tool Man
Tim the Tool Man@BroadcastAutist·
Apparently you don’t understand the concept of montages and editing, but you’re looking at a screen shot of a piece of video after all. You see, that clip in office was taken at a different time than the actual filming of the video on campus, so this still doesn’t necessarily represent what he was wearing on site. So please continue to flame out over a still image of a 80 minute video
Fenix Ammunition@FenixAmmunition

Lmao - Crowder is such an unbelievable attention whore. You took a photo of another man installing a level 3A soft armor pistol rated vest on your body in the middle of a hallway... why, exactly? You don't know how to do it yourself? You didn't put it on before you stepped on campus? Why'd you choose something that obviously won't stop rifle ammo? Are you and your security team retarded?

English
34
25
564
14.8K
Hoss retweetledi
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Charlie was murdered by the Dark for showing people the Light
English
25K
88.1K
701K
45.7M
Hoss retweetledi
J.C. Ryle
J.C. Ryle@JCRyle·
J.C. Ryle tweet media
ZXX
59
914
6.4K
96.6K
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
@JackPosobiec That being said, loving the Lord makes you want to do good things like helping the poor or just doing something for someone who needs it while not expecting anything in return.
English
0
0
0
4
Hoss
Hoss@HossTheHoss·
@JackPosobiec Everyone should know, if you are a Christian, confess that Jesus is Lord, repent and become a new person meaning to not go back into living in sin and love and help everyone you can(works) especially those who are in need. Its not a hard debate to me, pretty straight and narrow.
English
1
0
0
5
Jack Posobiec
Jack Posobiec@JackPosobiec·
When people talk about salvation in Christianity, it’s easy to assume that all Christians mean the same thing. But that’s not the case—different traditions have very different ways of explaining how someone “gets to heaven.” In the Catholic and Orthodox churches, salvation has been understood for thousands of years as a partnership between faith and works. Faith is absolutely essential—you cannot earn heaven on your own. But at the same time, faith has to be lived out in real action. The Epistle of James says it pretty directly: “Faith without works is dead.” For Catholics and Orthodox, this means that believing in Christ isn’t enough unless it’s accompanied by love, service, and moral choices. Acts of charity, sacraments, peacemaking, and sacrifice are all seen as part of cooperating with God’s grace. That’s why Donald Trump’s recent comment about 'ending wars and saving lives to get to heaven' actually fits quite naturally within that Christian way of thinking. In that worldview, working for peace and protecting life aren’t just good politics—they’re works of mercy that flow from faith and help prepare the soul for salvation. By contrast, much of the modern Christian denominations—especially the evangelical forms—emphasize “faith alone” (sola fide). The idea is that no human action could ever add to Christ’s work on the cross, so the only requirement is trust in Him. Good works are still encouraged, of course, but they’re seen as the fruit of faith rather than a condition for salvation. From that perspective, Trump’s statement sounds odd, because salvation isn’t thought of as something you “work toward” with deeds. It’s already fully given through faith. The Catechism of the Catholic Church puts it like this: We're justified by faith, but works of love are the fruits of that justification. Orthodox Christians echo this closely. They emphasize "theosis," or becoming more like God through a life of faith lived out in deeds. Both sides are able to point to Scripture to back up their positions. What do you think?
English
1.2K
372
3.1K
259.2K