Senator Cory Booker’s claim that this Iran conflict is one of the greatest presidential blunders of our time is not just wrong, it is dangerously misleading. Iran has been a hostile actor for nearly half a century, funding terrorism, threatening global stability, and openly calling for the destruction of the United States and its allies. Pretending that confronting that reality is a mistake ignores decades of aggression. This is not a sudden crisis created out of thin air. It is a long overdue response to a regime that has tested limits for years.
What we are seeing is not reckless leadership, but decisive action where others hesitated. President Trump is operating with strategic intent, not political theater, and it is no surprise he is not broadcasting every move to a Congress filled with people actively working against him. Meanwhile, the media continues to amplify fear and repeat talking points designed to undermine confidence rather than report results. Booker and his allies are not offering solutions. They are offering panic, and Americans are expected to believe it. — The Federalist Papers
As a frail 71-year-old preacher laid on the table behind the pulpit, he preached his last sermon. Too weak to stand, he was carried into the Methodist church in Richmond, Virginia. It was March 24, 1816. Though weakened in health, he spoke for an hour with an unmistakable quiet authority. The congregants were rapt with every word as they perceived the magnitude of the moment. The Prophet of the Long Road was nearing the end of a remarkable journey.
Fittingly, he preached on Romans 9:28, “For he will finish the work…”
For forty-five years he faithfully ministered in a country not his own. Yet this man sent by John Wesley left family and loved ones in England, never to return again to his homeland. His heart found its resting place in Him. A memorial erected near this Methodist church where the last sermon was preached denotes him as one “whose only home was his saddle, his parish the continent.” This inscription upon a memorial was clearly evident with every step along the long road this faithful circuit rider trekked.
This man was Francis Asbury.
His last journal entry on December 7, 1815 grants us a glimpse into the life of the Father of American Methodism:
“My consolations are great. I live in God from moment to moment.”
The saddle was his home and the continent was his parish simply because he found his greatest satisfaction and source of consolation in Christ during each passing moment. His longevity in God was sustained with a heart utterly dependent upon God’s grace. Though Asbury suffered much to advance God’s kingdom, he faithfully preached Christ until the very end.
Hakeem Jeffries proves it again every time he opens his mouth. The man speaks with a kind of smug certainty that collapses the second you actually think about what he’s saying.
Telling a president to “keep his reckless mouth shut” while defending a party that has spent years fanning chaos, division, and selective outrage is peak hypocrisy.
And here’s the part they hate hearing, Trump is right. When policies weaken the border, punish productivity, and elevate ideology over common sense, people notice.
Jeffries can throw out lines that sound tough on cable TV, but they don’t land in the real world where Americans are paying the price. The louder he talks, the clearer it becomes that he’s not offering solutions, just noise.
A Georgia pastor has gone viral after a sermon in which he urged Christians to pray for Donald Trump, saying he believes God is “using” the president in ways that may be difficult for people to understand.
Otha L Turnbough, pastor of Lionheart Church in Georgia, told congregants not to speak negatively about the president, but instead to pray for him, emphasizing that God often works through unexpected and controversial figures.
“God is using that man outside your understanding,” Turnbough said. He encouraged listeners to look to the Old Testament, where God used unlikely leaders and prophets to confront evil and carry out judgment, arguing that similar biblical patterns can be seen today.
Turnbough suggested that while some of Trump’s actions provoke strong reactions, they should be viewed through a spiritual lens rather than an emotional one. He told the congregation that when God moves to judge evil, the individuals He uses are often misunderstood or viewed as unconventional. #Trump #trumpadministration