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BCoop

@BCooP

Follower of King Jesus. Husband to @Cory_Marie. Dad to Campbell, Mary Bradford, Gains, & John Ryle. Pastor at @NewSpring. IG: @bradcooper Memento Mori 💀💀

Anderson, SC เข้าร่วม Kasım 2007
482 กำลังติดตาม18.7K ผู้ติดตาม
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BCoop
BCoop@BCooP·
“We want a church that moves the world, not a church that moves with the world.“ - GK Chesterton
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
I would like to offer to pay the salaries of TSA personnel during this funding impasse that is negatively affecting the lives of so many Americans at airports throughout the country
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John Dickson
John Dickson@johnpauldickson·
@AdrielTweets (a) Take the opportunity to give a "dummies guide" to textual criticism, (b) make clear it is not 'sacred Scripture' but a real historical remembrance (as many scholars agree), (c) expound the passage, (d) being sure to illustrate its key points from genuine biblical verses.
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Adriel Sanchez
Adriel Sanchez@AdrielTweets·
You're preaching through the Gospel of John, and you come to the notorious pericope adulterae (7:53-8:11). Do you:
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Wes Huff
Wes Huff@WesleyLHuff·
Today’s #manuscriptmonday is all about St. Patrick. With tomorrow being the feast day of Patrick let’s use some manuscripts to talk about who he is (a 🧵).
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Wes Huff
Wes Huff@WesleyLHuff·
The First Hymn doc hits theatres in North America March 24 & 26, find out more at thefirsthymnmovie.com
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Wes Huff
Wes Huff@WesleyLHuff·
I recently presented @undeceptions’s @johnpauldickson with a manuscript fascimile of P. Oxy. 1786 at this past week’s The Church in History AC conference. P. Oxy. 1786 is the focus document of John’s The First Hymn documentary.
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BCoop
BCoop@BCooP·
@TonyDungy @EWErickson Thankful for you Coach! Keep shining brother! Praying for this next season 💡💡💡
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Tony Dungy
Tony Dungy@TonyDungy·
I have been informed by NBC that I won’t be back with FNIA this fall and it has given me time to reflect and also to look ahead.    It’s disappointing  news but I want to thank my NBC family for making the last 17 years so special.  I’ll have lasting memories of my time there, especially with Rodney Harrison who has become a tremendous friend.   God has always directed me in these moments and while I’m not sure what the next step will be for me—whether it will be in football, in broadcasting, or getting more involved in church and community outreach —I know God has plans for my life and I can’t wait see them unfold. And I am reminded of one of my favorite verses in the Bible-Romans 8:28. “God works all things for His good for those who love the Lord.”
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John Dickson
John Dickson@johnpauldickson·
What @JusBrierley is doing is unique in the world. I can't tell you how much I admire him. Check out these two amazing episodes.
Justin Brierley@JusBrierley

Uncommon Ground is the new home for conversations that matter! Have you listened to our first 2 episodes with Richard Dawkins & Rowan Williams and Alex O’Connor & Glen Scrivener? Subscribe on podcast or video now 👉 justinbrierley.com/uncommon-groun… PS I’m loving being back in the moderator seat! So many more great shows to come in this first season 😄

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Wes Huff
Wes Huff@WesleyLHuff·
The term "theological liberalism" is thrown around a lot. When push comes to shove though, it still boils down to Richard Niebuhr's summation of what theological liberalism truly is: "A God without wrath brought men without sin into a kingdom without judgment through the ministrations of a Christ without a cross" (Kingdom of God in America, 193). Liberal/progressive Christianity is more than that but it is no less than that, and it will always come down to it. Niebuhr's words 89 years ago are just as applicable in 1937 as they are today.
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Tim Tebow
Tim Tebow@TimTebow·
Every day we wait, they suffer. Right now, there are kids praying for a rescue—for someone to step up, step in, and do something.  Are we actually going to protect these kids from further exploitation, or are we just going to keep talking about it?
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BCoop
BCoop@BCooP·
Lent = Spring
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Nancy Pearcey
Nancy Pearcey@NancyRPearcey·
William Wilberforce was a committed evangelical Christian who did more than anyone else to end the slave trade and then slavery itself throughout the British empire. Sociologist Rodney Stark points out that it was not Enlightenment philosophers who led the movement against slavery. It was mostly evangelical Christians, motivated by their firm conviction that all people are made in the image of God. 'A virtual Who’s Who of “Enlightenment” figures fully accepted slavery.... It was not philosophers or secular intellectuals who assembled the moral indictment of slavery, but the very people they held in such contempt: men and women having intense Christian faith, who opposed slavery because it was a sin.' Stark concludes: “All known societies above the very primitive level have been slave societies—even many of the Northwest American Indian tribes had slaves long before Columbus’s voyage. Amid this universal slavery, only one civilization ever rejected human bondage: Christendom.” "The excesses of political correctness have all but erased awareness that slavery was once nearly universal to all societies that could afford it, and that only in the West did significant moral opposition ever arise and lead to abolition.”
Proudofus.uk@ProudofusUK

He was DEFEATED ELEVEN TIMES. Attacked. Threatened with DEATH. Nearly blind. Addicted to opium just to function. They told him to stop. He spent forty-six years refusing. His name was William Wilberforce. Born in Hull, 1759. He could have lived a comfortable life. Wealthy family. Safe seat in Parliament. Instead he chose to destroy the most powerful economic system in the British Empire. The slave trade. He didn't fight alone. Thomas Clarkson rode 35,000 miles gathering evidence. Olaudah Equiano, man who had been enslaved himself, gave testimony that no politician could ignore. Wilberforce took their evidence to Parliament. They voted no. He came back. They voted no. He came back. Lost by eight votes. MPs deliberately stayed away so they wouldn't have to choose a side. He came back. Again. And again. And again. By now his eyesight was nearly gone. His body was breaking. He'd been on opium since he was 29. Twenty years after he started, they voted again. 283 to 16. The slave trade was abolished. But he wasn't finished. Slavery itself was still legal. He fought for another twenty-six years. In July 1833, lying in bed, barely able to move, he received word. Parliament had voted. Slavery was abolished across the entire British Empire. Three days later, William Wilberforce died. He held on just long enough. They buried him in Westminster Abbey. Help keep our stories alive. proudofus.co.uk/support Be part of us. Be Proud Of Us. 🇬🇧

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