January 15, 2025
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The Phenomenal Surge of Faith on the Field |
by Chuck Donovan |
From every perspective, the college football season that culminates next Monday night in Atlanta has been a season of firsts. For the first time in the history of the sport, a 12-team playoff will determine the national championship in a game nearly three weeks after New Year's Day. Teams with 13 or 14 victories will find their records great but not good enough to claim the mantle of best in the land. But something else, something unexpected, looks to be another first on the field - a pervasive expression of faith in the Bible and God's love and provision for the teams and players, win or lose. |
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House Girls' Sports Vote Exposes Democrats as Unrepentant Extremists |
by Suzanne Bowdey |
The House bill to protect girls' sports wasn't remarkable for passing - it passed last year. What was remarkable is what the vote says about Democrats. In the first big test of whether Joe Biden's party had learned its election lessons, the answer was a shocking and resounding "no." |
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Poll: Federal Employees Plan to Resist Trump Administration from Within |
by Joshua Arnold |
The #Resistance is real and ready for action, according to a newly released poll conducted in December by Scott Rasmussen's Napolitan Institute. While Republican federal employees will "overwhelmingly" support the incoming Trump administration, most Democratic federal employees say they would oppose it. |
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As Hostage Deal Nears, Strength of Trump Admin Will Secure Middle East Peace, Say Experts |
by Dan Hart |
Reports surfaced Tuesday that Israel is on the cusp of reaching a deal with the terrorist group Hamas that would include terms for a ceasefire and the release of some of the Israeli hostages captured on October 7, 2023. Experts say the two sides wouldn't be this close to a resolution without the strong words and actions of President-elect Donald Trump and his incoming administration. |
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L.A. Fires Should Be a 'Wake-up Call of Where the Godless Policies of the Left Are Leading': Perkins |
by Sarah Holliday |
At least 24 victims have perished in the fires blazing across the Los Angeles area. Roughly 20 people are missing. Homes and belongings have been reduced to rubble as videos surface of owners being reunited with the pets they thought were gone forever. Grieving Americans want answers for their grave loss, and many public figures have used their platforms to address what they believe led, at least in part, to the catastrophic situation Californians find themselves in right now. |
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Andrew Tate Is Not the Answer to Feminism - Christian Heroes Are |
by S.A. McCarthy |
In a culture dominated by feminism, young men are starved for icons of masculinity. Young men crave heroes to imitate, but a neutered, castrated, effeminate society produces precious few, if any - and many of the heroes of history are hidden away and forgotten. Ever prescient, the author C.S. Lewis warned of the dangers of such a society - dangers which young men in particular now face. "Where men are forbidden to honor a king they honor millionaires, athletes, or film-stars instead: even famous prostitutes or gangsters. For spiritual nature, like bodily nature, will be served; deny it food and it will gobble poison," Lewis wrote. Young men of the 21st century have been denied the "food" they so crave and have thus begun to "gobble poison." |
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'The More Democrats Go to Church, the More They Look Like Republicans': Study |
by Ben Johnson |
The more often Americans attend virtually any Christian denomination, as well as Jewish services, the more likely they are to adopt conservative political views, according to a recent statistical analysis. "The more Democrats go to church, the more they look like Republicans," states the study. "Being politically liberal and being highly religious are just not compatible," wrote Ryan Burge, an associate professor of Political Science at Eastern Illinois University and research director for Faith Counts. |
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Trump Cabinet Nominees Line Up Senate Hearings before Inauguration Day |
by Joshua Arnold |
With less than a week until President-elect Donald Trump's second inauguration Monday, Senate committees are holding a flurry of confirmation hearings on Trump's Cabinet nominations. This Tuesday through Thursday, 11 Senate committees will hear from 13 Cabinet-level nominees. The Senate can then begin approving these nominations next week, in fulfillment of its constitutional duty to provide "advice and consent" on presidential appointments. |
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