Posts tagged Endnotes
June Musings (6/03/2026)

Riddleblog and Blessed Hope Podcast Updates:

  • Season Five of the Blessed Hope Podcast, a deep dive Bible study in the Book of Romans is now underway. Give it a listen!

  • My series on James is coming to an end. Next up, the Epistles of John

Thinking Out Loud:

  • With the landslide victory of James Paxton in the Texas Senate primary, and the democratic defense of Graham Platner’s Nazi Tattoo and horn dog behavior, it is all too clear that the personal morality of political candidates no longer matters to voters. I remember Bill Clinton’s claim “I didn’t inhale,” or the last minute revelation of George Bush’s DUI, that nearly cost each of them the presidency. Now, all the political tribes care about is gaining political advantage even if their chosen candidate is a moral degenerate. That does not bode well for the future of our Republic, which depends upon the virtue and morality of its elected officials

  • Spencer Pratt’s campaign against Los Angeles mayor Karen Bass has been absolutely brilliant

  • I believe that Satan is currently bound to the Abyss by the preaching of the gospel. But he does retain limited power to deceive. One place where he has been successful is deceiving publishers into using endnotes, not footnotes

  • Churches ought to begin instructing their members about Islamic history and doctrine in conjunction with training to evangelize our Muslim neighbors. Islam will not be going away, and the mission field has come to us

  • Aaron MacLean (School of War Podcast) host, nails it. “If each day we travel half the distance to an Iran deal, and then the day after that travel half *the remaining distance*, and then so on the day after that… logically there can never be an Iran deal.” I do worry that somehow Trump will manage to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory

  • I would love to have the dollar amount spent on printing and mailing candidate advertisements to my home, which I throw away without even looking at them. What a waste

  • It doesn’t show up as a polling question, but like him or not, “Trump fatigue” is a thing. I hope our next president (I’m hoping for Rubio) stays off social media, limits interaction with the press to several times a week, and is not on the news or social media on a constant basis

  • My vote for the worst possible title for a book about Jan Hus is On Fire for God, by Victor Budgen and published by Evangelical Press in 2007. How did that get through editorial?

To read the Book Review and check out the recommended links and the video, follow the link below

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