Isaiah 58
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“Search the scriptures daily and see whether these things are so.” — Acts 17:11

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Scripture

And the brethren immediately sent away Paul and Silas by night unto Berea: who coming thither went into the synagogue of the Jews. These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.

What business is it of mine to judge those outside the church? Are you not to judge those inside?

Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.

For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments: and his commandments are not grievous.

For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.

For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.

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Latest Articles

You Can See the Speck — But What Are You Doing About It?
Mar 30, 2026

On cheap grace, easy condemnation, and the one question neither Franklin Graham nor his critics are asking

Franklin Graham recently sent Donald Trump a letter assuring him he could get into Heaven. Trump posted it on Truth Social. An atheist blogger read it and wrote a sharp piece about the moral bankruptcy of evangelical Christianity.

And everyone walked away feeling righteous.

That’s the problem.

Even Your Prayers Are an Abomination
Mar 30, 2026

We think we know the law. We don’t. And that ignorance has consequences.

Most Christians could pass a quiz on the Ten Commandments. Some could even get them in order.

What most Christians could not do is explain what the law actually requires — the full shape of the life God demands from people who claim his name. Because we stopped at ten. We memorized the bullet points, skipped the commentary, and concluded that obedience was basically a matter of not murdering anyone and showing up to church.

That’s not what the law says.

“How Dare He”: A Pharisee’s Confession
“How Dare He”: A Pharisee’s Confession
Mar 30, 2026

On the songs we sing to protect ourselves from the mirror

There’s a particular kind of religious confidence that sounds like righteousness but functions like a wall.

You know the voice. It’s the voice that has an answer before the question is finished. The voice that frames every challenge as an attack on God rather than a challenge to the self. The voice that has logged enough piety — enough tithes, enough fasts, enough conspicuous prayers — to feel entitled to a defense when called out.

It’s the voice of the Pharisees in Matthew 23. And if we’re honest, it’s a voice most of us have heard coming from our own mouths.

WHITEWASHED TOMB: When the Church Cleans House by Locking the Door
WHITEWASHED TOMB: When the Church Cleans House by Locking the Door
Mar 30, 2026

A meditation on the song, the parable, and the mirror

There’s a specific kind of church that takes tremendous pride in its hospitality.

The greeters are warm. The bulletin is sharp. The coffee is good. The pastor shakes hands like he means it. And somewhere in the language of the service — in the mission statement, in the welcome slide — there is almost certainly a line about being a “welcoming community” or “a place for everyone.”

And then Sunday happens. And the everyone turns out to be a pretty narrow demographic.

My Father’s House Has a Waiting Room (And Some of Us Are Never Let In)
My Father’s House Has a Waiting Room (And Some of Us Are Never Let In)
Mar 30, 2026

The temple cleansing wasn’t just about money. It was about who gets displaced when the powerful take up space.

The only place Gentiles could pray had been turned into a marketplace.

That’s what Jesus was overturning.

Not just the corruption of the money-changers — the location of it. The Court of the Gentiles was the outermost ring of the temple complex, the one designated space where non-Jews were permitted to worship. And it had been colonized by commerce. The people with the least access had their space taken first. They always do.

WHAT KIND OF KING WEEPS?
WHAT KIND OF KING WEEPS?
Mar 29, 2026

A Palm Sunday Meditation

Palm Sunday begins with a misunderstanding.

There’s a moment in the song embedded above that captures it perfectly. The crowd has done everything right — laid down their cloaks, cut palm branches, screamed Hosanna until their throats gave out. Jesus has passed through the gate. And then nothing happens the way anyone expected.

He’s heading to the temple, not the palace, not the garrison...

Chaos and Volatility Favor the Rich
Chaos and Volatility Favor the Rich
Mar 28, 2026

There is a story told about economic recessions: that they are accidents, the unfortunate byproduct of complex systems nobody fully controls.

There is a story told about economic recessions: that they are accidents, the unfortunate byproduct of complex systems nobody fully controls. But over seventy years of Federal Reserve policy, the outcomes follow a remarkably consistent pattern. Boom-bust cycles, whatever their origin, function with remarkable consistency as a mechanism for transferring wealth upward. Whether by design or by structural inevitability, the outcome is the same.

Wealthy individuals and institutions hold their wealth primarily in assets — real estate, equities, businesses, and capital reserves. Ordinary people hold their wealth primarily in their home and their job. This distinction matters enormously when interest rates move.

When the Federal Reserve cuts rates and expands liquidity, asset prices inflate. Stockholders and property owners get richer without doing anything. When the inevitable contraction comes, those same asset-holders have cash reserves and credit access that ordinary people don’t. They can buy at the bottom. Foreclosed homes, distressed businesses, and undervalued equities move from those who needed liquidity to those who had it. The cycle then repeats.

The Resume Isn’t the Problem
Mar 27, 2026

Churches, community, and the hiring infrastructure we stopped building

Two young women. Same age. Same city. One got a job within days of looking — not because she was more qualified, but because someone who knew the employer also knew her family and made a call. The other has sent out application after application for months. She’s qualified. She’s motivated. No one is calling her back.

That’s not a story about merit. That’s a story about infrastructure.

A meme made the rounds recently quoting someone’s job advice: “The best way to find a job is to walk in the front door with a copy of your resume.” Posted under the headline: “The Dumbest Statements People Have Ever Heard Anyone Say.”

The Algorithm Already Knows How to Move You
Mar 27, 2026

“Love Your Neighbor” Is the Most Powerful Firewall We Have

A paper published in March 2026 by Jade Wilson at the Synoptic Group CIC in Hull, England — “The Geometry of Trust: Verifiable Value Alignment via Causal Manifold Structure” — is dense enough to lose most readers in the first paragraph. Gram matrices. Riemannian geometry. Causal inner products. But buried inside the mathematics is a finding worth pulling out into plain English.

Wilson’s paper argues that large language models absorb value structure during training, and that this structure is largely immune to after-the-fact correction. The geometry — the actual shape of how concepts like “honesty,” “cruelty,” “fairness,” and “compassion” relate to each other inside the model — is baked in during pretraining. Behavioral fine-tuning sits on top of it like a coat of paint over rotten wood. You can change what the model says. You cannot easily change what it has learned to treat as related, opposed, or neutral.

This matters because of what it implies about persuasion. The paper cites other researchers on exactly this concern — that current AI safety frameworks focus on the outcomes of persuasion rather than the mechanisms, and miss the fact that the internal structure of these models already encodes influence pathways. In plain English: the model has already learned which emotional and moral levers are connected to which responses in human beings. It learned this from us — from billions of words we wrote, shared, argued over, and clicked on.

The Emoji Fact-Check Problem: What AI Output Tells You About the Question That Was Asked
Mar 27, 2026

A few days ago, Sharon Says So posted about receiving an AI “fact check” loaded with emojis.

A few days ago, Sharon Says So posted about receiving an AI “fact check” loaded with emojis. Colorful. Confident. Shareable. And almost certainly more about performance than truth.

I’ve been using AI extensively as a writing and research partner for over a year. Emoji-laden fact checks have never been my experience. That gap is worth explaining, because it tells you something important about how AI actually works — and how most people are using it wrong.

The Machine Gives You What You’re Really Asking For

The Joke Isn’t Harmless. It’s Misdirection.
Mar 27, 2026

When the alarm is calibrated wrong, it won’t go off where it should

The Nashville Predators held a Pride Night this week. They changed their branding slightly to mark the occasion. They lost to the New Jersey Devils 4-2.

A conservative commentator at Townhall found this hilarious. The joke, such as it was: the team had become “the gay Predators.” He noted that the jokes “write themselves.”

Why You're Waiting to Speak (And So Are They)
Mar 27, 2026

Conversations break down not because someone is wrong — but because both people are testing assumptions they never made out loud

Someone’s talking. You have something to say. You wait for a pause — and it doesn’t come. By the time they stop, the moment has passed. You go home vaguely annoyed at them.

But what if both of you were simply waiting on each other — and neither one knew it?

Conversations Have Implicit Invitations

Leave the Celebrity Alone at Breakfast
Mar 27, 2026

Chappell Roan, a soccer star’s entitlement, and why the real problem isn’t bots — it’s the people who believe them.

Let me tell you about a day at Disneyland.

My daughter and I were in line for a ride when I noticed the woman next to us getting increasingly agitated. Gwen Stefani was nearby, getting on the same ride, and this woman had decided — loudly — that Stefani was cutting in line. I could see where this was going. So I kept the woman engaged, deflected her energy, countered her attitude lightly, gave Stefani room to just be a person at a theme park. When Stefani glanced over, I just smiled. That was it. The whole interaction was about ten seconds, and Stefani never knew anyone had run interference for her.

I didn’t tell that story expecting a thank-you. I’m telling it because it’s the normal way to behave when you encounter a celebrity living their private life. You recognize they’re a person. You leave them alone. You might smile. You move on, and later you tell your friends you saw Gwen Stefani at Disneyland, and it’s a fun story.

Why So Many of Us Are Angry (And Why That Makes Sense)
Mar 26, 2026

Nobody wakes up wanting to be furious.

Nobody wakes up wanting to be furious.

But a lot of us are. At the news, at each other, at systems that seem designed to confuse and exhaust us. And after a while, the anger starts to feel like identity.

It isn’t. Here’s what’s actually happening.

They Pulled Women’s History Month Rather Than Let Trans Women In
Mar 26, 2026

A Pennsylvania floor moment reveals how hollow the “define a woman” demand really is

On Tuesday, March 24, the Pennsylvania House Democrats did something that will be replayed in Republican ads for months: they withdrew a Women’s History Month resolution from the floor rather than allow a vote on a Republican amendment to define what a “woman” is.

Fox News covered it with barely concealed glee. State Rep. Aaron Bernstine, R-Ellwood City, offered his amendment — “It defines what a woman actually is — because we do know what that is” — and House Speaker Joanna McClinton pulled the resolution before the chamber could vote. Laughter erupted. Republicans celebrated. The clip went viral.

Democrats will be mocked for this. Some of that mockery is politically effective. Very little of it is intellectually honest.

The Patriot’s Overtime: Why every “work more for the nation” argument is really just a request for free labor
Mar 26, 2026

There’s a revealing moment buried in a 2019 GQ interview with Mark Cuban.

There’s a revealing moment buried in a 2019 GQ interview with Mark Cuban. Asked whether he’d share his tax savings with employees if his rate dropped to zero, Cuban pivots to equity structures and exit events — a smarter answer than the question deserved. But the question itself contains a flaw nobody caught: wages are deducted before taxable profit is calculated. Paying workers more doesn’t compete with a tax bill. It reduces the income that gets taxed in the first place.

This is not a technicality. It’s the quiet refutation of an entire class of arguments.

When a business owner says “if taxes were lower, I’d pay my employees more,” they’re describing a relationship between wages and taxes that doesn’t actually exist. Under standard accounting, wages are a business expense. They come off the top. The tax rate only touches what’s left after you’ve paid your people.

Dying in Battle Is a Norse Idea, Not a Christian One
Dying in Battle Is a Norse Idea, Not a Christian One
Mar 26, 2026

At the National Prayer Breakfast, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth stood up and read from Mark 8.

At the National Prayer Breakfast, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth stood up and read from Mark 8. It’s one of the most important passages in the New Testament. He read it well. Then he preached the exact sermon Jesus was warning against.

Here’s what the passage actually does. Peter confesses that Jesus is the Christ — the long-awaited King. It’s a triumphant moment. Then Jesus immediately tells his disciples he’s going to suffer, be rejected, and be killed. Peter pulls him aside and rebukes him. You can almost hear the frustration:

That’s not how kings are supposed to talk.

Of the People, By the People, For the People
Mar 26, 2026

On Plumbers, Power, and the Anger That Gets Harvested

It happens on a reliable cycle.

Someone in power gets called a working-class hero. Someone else mocks the label. The defenders rush in — senators, commentators, the whole apparatus — to perform outrage on behalf of the trades. Plumbers get name-dropped. Truckers get invoked. The dignity of honest labor becomes, for approximately seventy-two hours, the most important thing in American political life.

Then the news cycle moves on. The wages stay the same.

Who Was Richard Niebuhr, and Why Is His Ghost Being Used to Scare You?
Who Was Richard Niebuhr, and Why Is His Ghost Being Used to Scare You?
Mar 26, 2026

A post went viral recently.

A post went viral recently. A verified account on X wrote:

“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.”

54,000 views. The quote is real. Niebuhr did write it. But what’s being done with it is something he never intended — and the post contains a telling error that most of those 54,000 viewers probably didn’t catch.

A Guide to Destroying the West — Or: Who Taught You to Be Afraid?
Mar 25, 2026

A screenshot circulating on social media frames the erosion of Western civilization as a six-step program: convince women to hate men, men to hate themselves, minorities to hate whites, whites to hate themselves, the young to be LGBTQ+, and the old that they are backward.

A screenshot circulating on social media frames the erosion of Western civilization as a six-step program: convince women to hate men, men to hate themselves, minorities to hate whites, whites to hate themselves, the young to be LGBTQ+, and the old that they are backward. “Only takes a generation,” the author concludes.

The post presents itself as diagnosis. It deserves to be examined on its own terms — carefully, scripturally, and without assuming bad faith in those who find it compelling. Many people do find it compelling, and not without reason: something does feel broken. The question is whether this framework correctly identifies what.

Before examining each point, however, it is worth naming the strongest version of the concern — because there is one.