Adam Saxton

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Adam Saxton

Adam Saxton

@awsaxton

Christ Follower, Principal PM @Microsoft working on #MicrosoftFabric including #PowerBI.

Spring, TX Katılım Kasım 2009
1.5K Takip Edilen8.3K Takipçiler
Live Free Podcast
Live Free Podcast@TheLiveFreePod·
"This, for real, I think might be the greatest 3 minutes of preaching that has ever occurred." – @howertonjosh 😭🙌🙏
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Josh Howerton
Josh Howerton@howertonjosh·
🚨 "The real story of Islam and... Christianity is not what we were told... People need to know this." – @RaymondIbrahim5 This discussion was a mind-melter for me. Highly recommend checking out this full episode of @TheLiveFreePod 🔥
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Scott Roberts
Scott Roberts@ScottRoberts·
Who is one preacher, pastor, theologian, or Christian author who has helped you love Christ more? I'm always interested in hearing who has shaped people's walk with the Lord.
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Microsoft MVP Communities
🎉 Congratulations to our 2026-2027 Microsoft MVPs! Today we're celebrating the technical leaders who continue to share their expertise, support their communities, and help others succeed with Microsoft technologies. Your contributions through mentoring, speaking, writing, and community engagement make a lasting impact around the world. To everyone awarded this year, thank you for your continued commitment and leadership. And to you whose MVP journey concludes this year, thank you for everything you've contributed to the community. Your impact will continue to be felt long after your award term ends. Here's to another year of learning, innovation, and community. 💙 #MVPBuzz
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I Play Rocky
I Play Rocky@iplayrockymovie·
His whole life was a million-to-one shot. I Play Rocky, based on the incredible true story, starring Anthony Ippolito - only in theaters this November.
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Shane Young Power Apps MVP
21 Years of being an MVP. Good thing I started when I was 10 or I would be old. 🤣🤣
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Live Free Podcast
Live Free Podcast@TheLiveFreePod·
🚨 Are we witnessing a biblical prophecy being fulfilled at the World Cup?!?! @CarlosErazoGTG tells Pastor @howertonjosh why Matthew 24:14 jumped off the page as he watched the Gospel catch fire in front of the entire world 🔥✝️
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Josh Howerton
Josh Howerton@howertonjosh·
Is it "un-Christian" to oppose USAID and support @elonmusk's cuts of the "humanitarian aid" program? What I found as I dug deeper actually blew my mind. As a Christian (and taxpayer), you are allowed to ask these questions.
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Scott Roberts
Scott Roberts@ScottRoberts·
Imagine standing before Christ one day and hearing: "You watched thousands of hours of entertainment. You read and watched endless news. You argued and bickered online. You scrolled for years. But you barely opened the Book I gave you." That thought convicts me. It reminds me to keep returning to Scripture, because no voice matters more than the voice of God speaking through His Word.
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Live Free Podcast
Live Free Podcast@TheLiveFreePod·
Very few Christians have an actual biblical understanding of what hell IS and what it IS NOT. Pastor @howertonjosh goes to the Bible for answers... Listen closely to the language 👇
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Josh Howerton
Josh Howerton@howertonjosh·
If you've never heard the incredible, true story of C.S. Lewis' conversion to Christianity, this is worth 5 minutes of your time. There's a story underneath every story... and every story whispers HIS name.
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Josh Howerton
Josh Howerton@howertonjosh·
For centuries, Bible critics have argued Exodus never happened. It was even argued that the Israelites were never even in Egypt. But the truth has a fascinating way of revealing itself over time. I'm just gonna keep saying it... the Bible really happened.
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Adam Saxton
Adam Saxton@awsaxton·
@DavidFischer For anyone, I just want them to read a bible. I personally read NKJV the most, but also read from ESV, NIV, NET, NASB and some others. Reading from multiple translations helps with understanding. I avoid some translations - TPT, TMB, TLB, ERV, JST and NWT.
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Mike Winger
Mike Winger@MikeWingerii·
Best movies to watch in July 4th?
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Insurrection Barbie
Insurrection Barbie@DefiyantlyFree·
In September of 1814, America was once again in trouble. The young republic was only thirty-eight years old. The War of 1812 had gone badly. British troops had marched into Washington, burned the Capitol, set the White House ablaze, and now turned their sights toward Baltimore. If Fort McHenry fell, the harbor would be open, the city would likely follow, and another devastating blow would be dealt to the fragile nation. Amid this uncertainty, a young American lawyer named Francis Scott Key sailed under a flag of truce to the British fleet. He had come to negotiate the release of a friend, a physician the British had captured. He succeeded. The British agreed to free the doctor. But there was a catch. Because Key and his companions had seen too much of the British fleet and learned too much about its plans, they were not allowed to return to shore. Instead, they were detained aboard a ship in the harbor and forced to watch the coming battle from behind enemy lines. On the morning of September 13, the bombardment began. For the next twenty-five hours, British warships unleashed somewhere between 1,500 and 1,800 bombs and rockets upon Fort McHenry. These were the “bombs bursting in air” and the “rockets’ red glare” of the song—not poetic embellishments, but terrible realities. Key stood on the deck through the endless day and the long, terrifying night. Every explosion lit the darkness for a fleeting instant before the smoke swallowed everything again. Somewhere beyond that wall of fire stood the fort. Somewhere beyond it flew an American flag if it still flew at all. He could not see. He could only listen. As long as the guns continued firing, there was reason to hope. The British would not waste ammunition on a fort that had already surrendered. Then, just before dawn… The guns fell silent. For the first time all night, there was only stillness. It was the most frightening sound of all. Had the fort finally fallen? Had the defenders surrendered? Had the flag been torn down in the darkness while no one could see? There was nothing to do but wait. As the first light of September 14 slowly pushed back the smoke, Francis Scott Key strained his eyes toward the distant fort. Then he saw it. Not a British flag. The American flag. Still there. Still flying. That flag was no ordinary banner. Months earlier, the fort’s commander had commissioned a Baltimore flagmaker, Mary Pickersgill, to sew a flag so enormous “that the British would have no difficulty seeing it from a distance.” It measured roughly thirty by forty-two feet, carried fifteen stars and fifteen stripes, and was so large it had to be assembled on the floor of a brewery because no ordinary room could contain it. That was the Star-Spangled Banner. The very flag Key saw through the morning mist. The very flag that still survives today in the Smithsonian. Overcome by what he had witnessed, Key reached into his pocket, pulled out an envelope, and began writing. The words came from a heart that had spent an entire night fearing his country might disappear with the dawn. He first titled the poem Defence of Fort M’Henry. Within days it was printed and circulating throughout the country. Before long, people began singing it to a melody they already knew—an old British tune called “To Anacreon in Heaven,” originally written for a London social club. There is something beautifully ironic in that: America’s most beloved patriotic song borrowed the melody of the very nation it had just survived. It also explains why the anthem is so notoriously difficult to sing. It was never written for ordinary voices gathered in stadiums or school assemblies. The song spread quickly and became one of America’s favorite patriotic hymns, but it would wait more than a century before receiving official recognition. Not until 1931 did Congress declare “The Star-Spangled Banner” the national anthem of the United States.
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Grace to You
Grace to You@gracetoyou·
Open Your Bible
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Benny Johnson
Benny Johnson@bennyjohnson·
Robin Williams’ emotional tribute to the American Flag leaves an entire stadium speechless — then in tears. Is there a single Hollywood star who would give this performance today? Total Patriot. RIP Legend 🇺🇸
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