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Beth Moore Joining Jemar Tisby For Conference about ‘Racism in the WHITE Church’

CRT advocate Jemar Tisby is joining forces with Beth Moore and Beth Allison Barr for a conference at George W. Truett Theological Seminary on February 16-18, where they will speak on how to ‘confront racism in the white church’ and ‘seek God’s justice.’ Other speakers will include Vann Newkirk, II, the Senior Editor of The Atlantic, and Mia Moody-Ramirez, Department Chair & Professor of Journalism, Public Relations, and New Media, Baylor University. 

Sadly, there is no possible world in which this conference will illuminate a single soul or do anything other than chum the waters of racial intolerance by throwing a few fish heads to the progressive faithful.

To recap two of the keynote speakers and their troubling history on race and commitment to justice:

Jemar Tisby

Jemar Tisby Hired by Ibram X. Kendi to be His New ‘Assistant Director of Narrative and Advocacy’
Jemar Tisby Asserts Orgy-Loving, Jesus-Denying, Serial-Adulturer is a ‘Very Strong Christian’
Jemar Tisby’s VP says that Black Women Should Not Date or Marry White Men
Jemar Tisby’s Black Christian Collective Promotes Pro-Choice Ally Henny to Vice-President

Beth Moore:

Beth Moore Says all the Southern Baptists who were ‘Sexist’ Towards her Were Also Racist
Beth Moore Claims ‘White Supremacy’ is Running Rampant in ‘Much of the Church’
Beth Moore Scolds 6 SBC Seminary Presidents for Signing Anti-CRT Statement
Beth Moore Claims the SBC is Racist and Doesn’t Want Black People in ‘Powerful Positions’

The event is sponsored by a few progressive organizations, such as The Absalom Jones Episcopal Center for Racial Healing, but one name we hadn’t heard before is Mia Moody-Ramirez. She’s a Black Lives Matter-loving, personal-pronoun packing she/her whose pro-choice beliefs and support for abortion is a clear sign that she doesn’t care about justice at all.

Stir this up with Jemar Tisby’s own tolerance for baby murder and Beth Moore making her best Kyle J. Howard impression and you have a hot cauldron of inanity and irrelevance where anyone who cares about racism in the church should not imbibe, lest they find themselves theologically roofied by these troublers of the brethren.

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TobyMac New Song Reunites DC Talk Despite Kevin Max Renouncing Christianity

Toby Mac has released a new album, Life after Death, his first since his 21-year-old son Truett, who for years battled substance abuse, passed away from an accidental drug overdose of fentanyl and amphetamines in early 2020.

TobyMac once said of the opportunity to attract secular fans and have his music appeal to larger, mainstream audiences, “If I ever cross over, I’m taking the cross over,” and this album is no different, with most songs having a call out or references to his faith and trust in God. 

The album, written as a cathartic release for the pain he experienced at his son’s passing, has multiple tracks lamenting his loss and his belief that his son is in heaven now. In Rest he sings, “Rest, take a breath/ Push aside the noise and feel the air inside your chest/ Blessed, my child, you’re blessed/ Fall into the arms of God and rest your weary head.” In The Goodness he likewise enjoins, “Everywhere that I go/ You keep showin’ up/ Lord, You make me wanna shout it, oh/ You’re the goodness in my life.” In Faithfully, he shares, “I may never be the same man/ But I’m a man who still believes/ When I cried out to You, JesusYou were there faithfully.”

Typically viewed as a Contemporary Christian Musician who produces ‘Christian albums, some fans are up in arms over the singer and record producer reuniting with his old DC Talk bandmates for the song Space, on account that the song features former bandmate Kevin Max, who has completely abandoned the faith and is now a pro-choice, pro-LGBTQ atheist.

The song reads:

Space.
Tony Mac Ft. Michael Tait, Kevin Max

I’ve replayed it like a thousand times, I rewind it in my head
I can tell you that I lost my mind, or what I should’ve done instead
‘Cause the way that I felt when we parted ways
Got me all in my head, got me countin’ the days
Got me hopin’, got me prayin’
You are in my heart

But what do we do with this space
What do we do with this space between us
How can we start to erase
How can we start to erase this space between us

Would you step across a party line?
Would you walk into my cold cell?
Can you see me in a different light?
Would you meet me at the well?

‘Cause the way that I feel when you look my way
Got me all in my head, got me starting to think
Is it too far? Are we too scarred?
Yeah the heart is there, but what do we do with this space

CHORUS

I got nothing but love for you
(Nothing but my love for you)
And I know you feel the same way too
But this space, what do we do with this space between us

What do we do with this space
This space

It keeps no record, it keeps no record of wrong
It keeps no record, record, record

Love keeps no record
Love keeps no record
Love keeps no record of wrong
Love keeps no record
We’re never too far gone

About the inclusion of Max, he told Billboard:

“The second I wrote the first lines [of ‘Space,’] it was definitely something I wanted to do with DC Talk. It feels very personal because it is. I wrote it about friends that struggle and friends that feel warm toward each other, but don’t know what to do with the space that’s come between them. I climbed a mountain with those two brothers. Those are my dear friends, and they always will be. We experienced things together that I’ll never experience with another person — so I wanted to honor that. I was so glad that they both agreed to be on it, and so grateful that they would honor what we did, and the friendships that remain.”