James Hatt

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James Hatt

James Hatt

@JamesAHatt

Pastoral Counseling DMin | Trusting in God's Word for the care of souls | Common Grace informed | @ABC | Retired USAF

Louisiana, USA Katılım Nisan 2022
396 Takip Edilen554 Takipçiler
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
If you’re a pastor, biblical counselor, or ministry leader, and your public presence here is mostly argumentative and tribal… how will hurting people see you as safe? Shepherds are called to be gentle. Counselors are called to be patient. Leaders are called to be examples. If your tone is combative, sarcastic, or constantly “us vs. them,” don’t be surprised when the anxious, grieving, or struggling keep their distance. You may win arguments. But you might lose trust. And trust is the doorway to ministry.
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
Be careful not to turn other people’s past sins into a permanent identity. That’s not how Christ treats His people. Yes, sin has consequences. Yes, wisdom matters. But if someone is in Christ, they are not who they were. Don’t hold people hostage to a past that God has already forgiven.
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
If your theology leaves no room for real transformation, it might not be as biblical as you think. Christ doesn’t just forgive, He renews.
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Karl Vaters
Karl Vaters@KarlVaters·
Day 2600 Don’t have anything to do with foolish and stupid arguments, because you know they produce quarrels. (2 Timothy 2:23)
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
Some say a past can be forgiven but still permanently disqualifies someone from marriage. That’s not how Scripture speaks. “Such were some of you…” (1 Cor. 6:11) The Gospel doesn’t just pardon, it transforms. In Christ, sinners are new creations (2 Cor. 5:17), given new hearts (Ezek. 36:26), and called to walk in newness of life (Rom. 6:4). Wisdom in marriage matters, but creating a permanent second-tier status for redeemed people denies the power of grace. The question isn’t, “What were they?” It’s, “Who are they now in Christ?”
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Doug Wolter
Doug Wolter@DougWolter·
Our experience of God as our secure attachment is seen in the Garden: Seen - His loving pursuit asking, “Where are you?” Satisfied - His compassionate presence with you Safe - His making garments to clothe you Secure - His first promise to save you
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
As someone who does pre-marriage counseling, I would be more inclined to tell a young man it is OK to marry a redeemed woman with a sexual past than to tell a young lady it's OK to marry a man with an anonymous X account who calls sisters in Christ whores.
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
We had a Captain D's in my town and, same thing. I would drive by often and never see any cars and wonder how they stayed open. Started working at a church next door and noticed there was a steady stream of customers all day, every day, mostly in the drive through. Never ever packed like some other fast food places but constantly steady. I was surprised but did stop wondering how they kept the lights on.
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
I see this as a wonderful story of redemption. Kind of baffling it's so controversial.
Trevor Sheatz@TrevorSheatz

My wife was formerly promiscuous. I was a virgin. She was then radically born-again. Committed to church, evangelized constantly, Puritan books in her bedroom, prayer journals, grief over past sexual sin, etc. We got to know each other well for over a year, dated for four months, engaged for two and a half, and didn't sin sexually with one another. Our first kiss with each other was at the altar on our wedding day (reaction pic attached!). We've been married for over five years now, and she's been the most wonderful and godly wife, mother to our three children, and homemaker you could imagine. She's more pure than most virgins, as biblical purity has less to with past sins (though they certainly matter) and more to do with one's current posture of the heart and daily decisions to honor the Lord (Matt. 5:8). We're far too quick to forget the story of the woman labeled as a known "sinner" (likely a prostitute) in Luke 7:36-50 who was washing Jesus' feet with her tears while kissing them too. The Pharisees were shocked that Jesus let a public sinner do this. Jesus responded with a parable about debts being forgiven and ended with this powerful conclusion: "Her many sins have been forgiven; that’s why she loved much. But the one who is forgiven little, loves little" (Luke 7:47). Everyone seems to highlight the benefits of virginity, and it certainly is a blessing. But we forget to highlight the benefits of being forgiven much as well. My wife knows the depths of Jesus' forgiveness more than most people, enabling her to more easily live out a life of passionate love for her Savior. A woman or man's past sexual sin matters. But what matters far more when it comes to deciding who to marry is if the person is truly born again, if their repentance is real, if they truly have a heart for Christ, if they truly follow Jesus and obey his commands. "God has chosen what is foolish in the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen what is weak in the world to shame the strong. God has chosen what is insignificant and despised in the world ​— ​what is viewed as nothing ​— ​to bring to nothing what is viewed as something, so that no one may boast in his presence. It is from him that you are in Christ Jesus, who became wisdom from God for us ​— ​our righteousness, sanctification, and redemption, — in order that, as it is written: 'Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.'" (1 Cor. 1:27-31) "Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has passed away, and see, the new has come!" (2 Cor. 5:17)

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Karl Vaters
Karl Vaters@KarlVaters·
Day 2599 Don’t have anything to do with foolish and stupid arguments, because you know they produce quarrels. (2 Timothy 2:23)
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
@Camp4 Can't argue with this. If it were possible, I would go back to the 80s in a minute, such a great decade.
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Kevin Dahlstrom
Kevin Dahlstrom@Camp4·
One of my contrarian takes: Society peaked in the 80s, and it’s been in slow decline ever since. It was the last era of widespread optimism. You can feel it in the music and movies. “Excess meets innocence.” The 80s also mark the end of the analog world—local economies, in-person everything, and a certain forced simplicity. Malls, movie theaters, magazines, and BMX. Then, beginning in the 90s, came the tidal wave of tech: Mobile phones The internet Social media AI All incredible innovations, with lots of positives. But on the whole I think they’re *net negatives* for society. We replaced a finite, real-world experience with an infinite, digital one. Infinite information. Infinite comparison. Infinite distraction. Human’s aren’t wired for that, and you can see the consequences all around us.
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
@614clinton IT support. Most I've met don't seem to like people much.
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Clinton
Clinton@614clinton·
Anyone know of a good job for someone who hates people?
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Robert Lufkin MD
Robert Lufkin MD@robertlufkinmd·
Is it me or should a hospital have different food choices than a gas station? h/t @HalCranmer
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Dan Go
Dan Go@CoachDanGo·
One of the healthiest breads on the planet is sourdough. It's not just bread. It's a gut-boosting, blood sugar-regulating superfood disguised as a carb. Here are 6 reasons why you should be eating more sourdough bread:
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James Hatt
James Hatt@JamesAHatt·
@ReclaimingRest A lot of people need to hear this. But, then, what would they argue about?
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Justin Joseph
Justin Joseph@ReclaimingRest·
Brothers and sisters, don't obsess over the non-essentials of Christianity. Be obsessed with The Person and work of Jesus for us.
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