Outrage is easy. Raising calm, thoughtful kids in a world of viral tragedy is the hard, holy work we unpack today. We start where the internet rarely does—by mourning a human life—and then walk through how to guide teens and tweens when graphic clips and hot takes hit their feeds. Our aim is to lower the temperature at home, foster healthy communication, and teach practical skills for truth-seeking in an algorithmic age.
Outrage is easy. Raising calm, thoughtful kids in a world of viral tragedy is the hard, holy work we unpack today. We start where the internet rarely does—by mourning a human life—and then walk through how to guide teens and tweens when graphic clips and hot takes hit their feeds. Our aim is to lower the temperature at home, foster healthy communication, and teach practical skills for truth-seeking in an algorithmic age.


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Transcription is done by an AI software. While technology is an incredible tool to automate this process, there will be misspellings and typos that might accompany it. Please keep that in mind as you work through it.
Welcome to the Next Talk Podcast. We are a nonprofit passionate about keeping kids safe online. We’re learning together how to navigate tech, culture, and faith with our kids. I watched the video once. I couldn’t watch it again. I’m talking about the shooting of Alex Predi on January 14th, 2026 in Minnesota. The first thing I want to say is I’m praying for his family and friends. I cannot imagine seeing a loved one shot and killed and the video going viral. And then so many hot takes after that. I just can’t imagine it. I’m not here to debate politics or argue for one side. My heart behind this show is how do we talk to our kids about this? Obviously, I will have to discuss some of the political issues at hand and recognize that I may have my own political bias, as we all do. But our podcast and my calling is to focus on the intersection of tech, culture, and faith. This is a moment where all three of those intersect. And our work at Next Talk is to help parents navigate these conversations. My disclaimer to you is that I’m not an immigration, law enforcement, or theologian expert. No, I am not. I’m a Christian mom trying to navigate these conversations with my own kids about the chaotic world we live in. What I do bring to the table is years of having tough conversations where all of all three of these intersect with my own children. And I’ve learned a few things about what to do and what not to do. And I want to share that with you. That’s the reason I feel called to even speak into this topic. I’ve already heard from some of you that your child and you do not agree and have had some very tense moments in your home. I pray this show can decrease the temperature and help you have some productive dialogue with your children. Some of my first few talking points, they do bring my faith into the picture, but I honestly believe a lot of these talking points can apply to any parent of any faith background. And I hope they help any person have great conversation with their kids. Towards the end of this show, of course, I’ll dive into a little more personal beliefs to discussing this from my own Christian perspective because I believe I need to be transparent. I believe I need to be real about how I would, how I have handled some of these conversations. First of all, we should all be mourning that a human life was taken. I mean, that’s just my first point. I don’t know if he was interfering with law enforcement or not. New information is coming out every day. No matter what, it is a human life. And we should stop and mourn and grieve and pay respects. A day before this man lost his life, tens of thousands of people gathered annually for the March of Life in DC. A lot of mainstream media outlets didn’t cover it. And I would generally say a lot of Christians attended for this pro-life movement. It was a peaceful protest. And I believe in this movement. I believe every life matters. I believe God knit us together in our mother’s womb for a purpose. As Christians, we must always be consistent that human lives matter. We cannot go callous because of the culture. I say this because our kids need to see that we care, regardless of the political narrative. God created and cares for every human life, and we should too. This helps our kids see the character of God across any political or cultural narratives, right? Lives matter. I didn’t see anyone celebrating Mr. Paretti’s death like when Charlie Kirk was killed. So I feel like that’s a positive. But you guys, I saw so much rush to judgment. On the right, I saw complete justification of the ice agents and blaming Mr. Paretti within hours. On the left, I saw complete justification of Mr. Pretti and blaming the ICE agents within hours. I’m just going to be honest. I think the proper response should have been: we have a man who has lost his life. We grieve and mourn, pray for his family. A full investigation will happen so justice prevails and we can prevent this from happening again. I didn’t see this. I didn’t see much of this. What I saw was almost like a gleeful post of using his death as, like an I told you so, to put his death through a political narrative to prove a point. And that made me sick to my stomach. I saw it from both sides. A rush to either defund ice or defend ice. We saw this with the other human life taken of Renee Good, people jumping to a political side before we had all the facts. Not every viral video should be used to score a point for your cultural war side. Politics has become a body count competition. We throw these deaths around. We shouldn’t use people’s deaths to one up each other. These are real people with real families. It is a human life lost, and we should grieve and mourn. I envision Jesus up in heaven looking at all the posts from both sides, you know, looking down on Instagram like we’re toddlers fighting. That’s what it looks like when you scroll through Instagram. And Jesus just says, enough. It is so important to stop the knee jerk reaction and instant rush to judgment. Proverbs 29, 11 says, Fools vent their anger, but the wise quietly hold it back. This does not mean we brush it under the rug or not fight for justice. It means we stop together the facts before we post and strategically figure out how to fix a problem. That’s wise. These knee-jerk reactions driven on emotion are not helpful. James 1.19 says we need to be slow to speak, slow to get angry, and quick to listen. I’m just gonna be real honest with you. Like if I constantly see you posting within hours of a tragedy with your narrative, I tune you out because you jump to a narrative and you’re not waiting to gather the facts. You’re doing exactly what Proverbs 29:11 says. Fools vent their anger, but the wise quietly hold it back. You lose credibility when you post so quickly and you don’t know the facts. I had a counselor tell me once, don’t try to have a tough conversation when you’re at a 10, you know, at an anger level. She said, wait until both parties are at a two or three to discuss it calmly and logically. I mean, that’s such great advice, right? I would also say, don’t ever post when you’re at a 10. Like I teach this to my kids. I know some of you are grieved and overwhelmed and scared. And it’s why you went to social media to post, post, post. No matter what political side you are on, I hate all the division in our country. And I want to remind you of this. Our God is a God of justice. He is. But we have to be so careful that social justice warrior doesn’t become our God or our identity. We don’t have full control. We are not God. God is the one who will make all things right. Now, this doesn’t mean we can’t advocate peacefully for better laws. We can’t take steps to fix injustice when things are broken. And we are we need to do that. But but this is like the march of life that I was talking about, you know, fighting for the rights and justice of the unborn who cannot speak for themselves. Whether the laws of our country make us face our sins or not, we each have to answer to our Maker one day. This altercation that happened in Minnesota, the Lord knows the heart of every person involved. He knows if it was murder, he knows if it was self-defense. Here’s what I want to reassure you: Proverbs 29, 26 says, Justice comes from the Lord. Even if we never get to the bottom of it, even if something isn’t solved, even if we can’t find the predator targeting the kids online. God knows who did it. God knows the heart. God will seek justice for us. He is a God of justice. Also, the fear-mongering. It’s a lot, you guys. It’s causing mass paranoia, which is escalating the situation. The Bible tells us in Proverbs 29, 25, fearing people is a dangerous trap. Trusting the Lord means safety. We have to move out of being afraid of everybody and everything and every culture war. We have to trust the Lord for our safety. We have to trust the Lord for justice. You know, Luke, Luke 12, 4, it says, this is Jesus talking. He says, don’t be afraid of people. Yeah, they can kill the body, but after that, they can do nothing more to hurt you. I will show you the one to fear. You should fear God, who has the power to kill you and also to throw you into hell. Yes, he is the one you should fear. I honestly know it’s not popular to talk about fearing God. But I think the less we talk about fearing God, the more chaotic our society becomes. Because none of us are accountable. We don’t fear what God is gonna say when we act a certain way, when we post a certain way. And I think we need to start talking about that more. The Lord knows your heart, the Lord knows why you post. Also, the Lord knows your anger, the Lord knows your sorrow, right? He is the only one. You can’t hide your heart, your sin from God. And so we gotta get right with him. He’s the only one to give us peace and keep us grounded. It really brings up a lot of questions for me about life and death. Am I ready to meet my Maker? Am I holding myself accountable to God? When I look in the mirror and I question what I say on a podcast or what I say at a presentation, am I fearing God or am I fearing man? The fear, the fear of man, we gotta let go of. The culture, it’s just gonna keep whipping you up into a frenzy. It’s gonna cause you to fight with your social media post, and the justice you’re fighting for changes weekly. You chase this, then let’s fix that. It’s like a whack-a-mole. It’s not sustainable for good mental health. Step out of the chaos. When you choose Jesus for your truth, you you accept him into your heart, you live for him, you surrender your life to him, you look in the Bible for right and wrong. And I want to tell you something. As you seek to deepen your relationship with Jesus, you will find your purpose. He has a plan for your life. It may be fighting a certain injustice, right? For me, when I saw the injustice to the kids happening online, over a period of time, God welled up in me a calling I couldn’t shut down. But our purpose and and how we’re supposed to speak out, it is a result of a deep relationship with Jesus. It’s not a result of scrolling on social media and chasing down the problem of the day. Also, I addressed this when Charlie Kirk was assassinated, and I want to say it again. We are too desensitize. Technology has changed how we process tragedies. And you guys, this is going to be a section that I apply, I think will apply to every person, no matter their faith background. But but here’s what I want to say to you: we are not meant to see people taking their last breath. Now we have people taking it frame by frame and posting it like a police detective is doing their work. Our kids are seeing this. Like I can’t even process it. It’s not normal for our brain to see a human life taken and then scroll a second later and see a funny animal video. The desensitization that our human minds are undergoing will be studied for decades to come. We have to be aware. The goal of social media, it’s to keep you on social media. I mean, when in a when a social media account gets monetized, people earn money for clicks, comments, engagement. It doesn’t have to be true. It just has to bring out an emotion in you to get you engaged in that post and they get paid for it. We got to think about that. People out here posting the video over and over and over and over, they will get paid for that engagement. I share all this with you because we have to understand what social media is doing as we share and process tragedy after tragedy. So here are some talking points that I want to get into about how to talk with your kids. And the first piece of advice is this is just start off asking your kid, have you seen this video or heard about it? Do you know what’s going on with the whole Minnesota situation? What are your thoughts? Gather the context first for how your child is hearing and processing this information. What do they know? By listening, you will start to gather info. You will figure out if they saw the actual video and are completely desensitized because it didn’t affect them at all. Or if their algorithm or friends are giving them a one-sided perspective, you will start to see if they’re being sucked into some sort of radicalization. But you need to ask this question. What are your thoughts on it? If your child presents a different view than you, please do not go ballistic. And Christian parents, like we are the worst at this. All this does is shut down the communication in your home. So please listen to what your kids are saying before you respond. It may take a whole day to go back and say, huh, I never thought of that perspective before. You know, I’m kind of hearing some different things. Let me think about that. Let me look into that perspective. Maybe we can talk about it tomorrow, right? Whatever you need to do to be able to have a calm and logical conversation with your child. Couple things I’ve done over the years. I follow people on social media who have a different political spectrum than me. And this is just to gain a well-rounded cultural view. I would say this: do not get sucked into the lies. Make sure you are reading scripture more than you’re scrolling. You may grab a political post, read it to your kids, and then put it through the lens of scripture and debunk the cultural lies as a family. What we cannot do is act like another viewpoint doesn’t even exist on this. Because the kids are hearing all different sorts of opinions. And what we want to do is engage with that. If your child is getting a certain one-sided narrative, ask where they heard it from. Follow those accounts. Or you know what? Just a general rule of thumb that we had in our home for all these years is that whoever my kids are following, we follow. So for example, my son follows a whole bunch of sports accounts. My husband follows those accounts too. Try to see what your kids are seeing. A lot of times in family, when I see conflict over beliefs, the parent and the child have a completely different algorithm. And so there’s no communication happening about that. And there’s this big clash. That’s what I’m trying to avoid. When you’re in their world and you see what they see, you may see a lie that is not true that then you can talk through and debunk for them. This is a big one that applies to all of us. Watch for misinformation. I mean, we all get duped by the wrong info now. AI has made this worse. It’s always been a problem, but AI has just taken it to a new level. People post old stories that fit a certain narrative and then are disproved after they’ve been seen and liked by millions. Look, I cannot stress this enough. Check your sources across multiple platforms, multiple, not just one-sided political news outlets. AI videos look so real now. They look so real. So we have to make sure we’re we’re telling our kids that this is an issue, issue. What you may be seeing may not be truth. It may not be accurate. When you do see a fake news story, and I’ve seen some over the past week, um, show your kids, hey, this is the story. I believed it, and then I did a little bit of research, and that’s actually not even true. Like this happened three years ago. Everyone should be trusting and processing with real people they know in real life who have earned their respect, people they trust, especially children. Children should not be going to online influencers who are getting paid for clickbait narratives. That’s not a healthy way to get the truth. When talking it over with your kid, I mean, find where you agree, even if you’re there’s some tension with the political beliefs, right? I mean, for example, surely we can all agree a life was lost, we should grieve. It’s really sad. That’s that’s something that I feel like everybody should agree on. When you talk about the politics of the day, and then you get into maybe some disagreements. So maybe it’s immigration policies. Talk in a logical, calm manner. Remember, I said don’t talk when you’re at a 10. Both parties need to be at a two and a three. And acknowledge you’re not an immigration expert and you don’t have firsthand knowledge, but this is how you see it, right? We just cannot let our political beliefs tear our families apart. We are all struggling to get the right information and we all have beliefs about it. We can talk about it calmly, but we all need to acknowledge none of us knows it all. We’re not experts. When you come at your child with the heart of humility of, I’m not an expert, but like this is how I see it. What do you think? It does something to decrease the tension in your home, just because you’re not acting like a know it all. You’re not sold out to one side where your savior is a political ideology, right? It says to the kid, okay, let’s dissect this together. If you’re a parent of a younger child, you may not have to get into all of this, right? It’s easier when your kids are listening. Because even if they get exposed to something, sometimes you can just share your opinion, read a Bible verse, they’ll agree and you move on, right? Younger kids, but as kids get older and they get different points of view and different opinions, it’s not so simple. And you know, so many times I just want to keep these shows simple, but but I feel like we need to dive into some things here. So for older kids, you are definitely probably gonna have to get into some detail here. And it’s complicated. These conversations, there’s no easy answer to an immigration problem, to how a country runs this, right? I want to say this before I dive into kind of more of a detailed section for you parents of older kids. I’ve given you some practical ideas to kind of help with the conversations, you know. More than anything, and this is really step one: pray about how to talk to your kids. I know that sounds like a flippant thing. Prayer is powerful. When you pray for wisdom, God will give it to you. You know, I think about like God created you, God created your child. He knows how both of your minds work. He knows the conversations that need to happen for the truth to click in each of your brains. So pray before you tackle any hot button topic or emotionally charge conversation with your kids. I want to speak more to Christian parents now. And um, I hope some of you who don’t have the same beliefs as me will hang on here and listen as we navigate this. What I see happening a lot, you know, conservative Christian homes, what I see happening a lot is we value life. We believe in the sanctity of life, we believe that God created every human. And oftentimes when there’s a tragedy like this, and we jump to a narrative that doesn’t acknowledge that a human life has lost. What I’m seeing in Christian homes is divisiveness and we don’t model the character of God well for our kids. It’s so important for us as Christian parents behind closed doors when nobody’s watching in these conversations that are happening at 2 a.m. when we’re talking about a heated topic. It is so important to represent Jesus well in this moment. Oftentimes, though, we go to the political narrative of the day, to debunking something. And we miss, I think, the special time of pointing them to Jesus, right? Every life matters. I said this on the Charlie Kirk show, and I’m gonna say it again. Your kid is more important than your candidate. Your candidate’s gonna be wrong sometimes. Your candidate is a person on both sides, they are flawed. Your kid’s spiritual faith is way more important. Just don’t over-respond with your political bias and shut your kid down and not represent Jesus well. As I get into this kind of section of where we’re talking about politics more, here is the point that I really, really want to make for you. Multiple things can be true at once. Social media has forced us to pick a side or check a box. It’s all or nothing. We’re on this side or that, you’re on the right side of history or not. It forces us into a label and identity. So if we posted about this tragedy with sympathy, social media labels us as liberal and hate law enforcement. If you don’t post about it, you’re a Nazi. Parents, do you hear that? So, like, if your response to your child is all your political talking points in your kid’s head, if they’re on a different algorithm from your conservative Christian algorithm, they are hearing in your in their head, my parent is a Nazi, because that’s what the algorithm is feeding them. We have to step back from that. We have to be able to debunk the cultural lies in a way that is productive and points them to Jesus. So when I say multiple things can be true at once, what I’m talking about is this secure borders make sense to me. Like we lock our homes at night in the same way, right? It doesn’t mean I don’t want to help the poor and oppressed because I lock my home. But I lock our home to keep us safe, right? I can lock our home and also help the poor. I can help the oppressed. And at the same time, I can believe in secure borders, and I can also not agree with an abuse of power in enforcing those borders. Social media is pushing us into a narrative where we have to pick a side. And what I want you to do in your home is go through these and help your kids think critically and logically. Multiple things can be true at once. We lose this opportunity, though, so many times because as conservative Christians, we just want to drive our point home. Listen to your child, hear what they’re hearing, and then systematically debunk the lies that are not accurate or or that are not scriptural. This pitting each other and checking a box, it is the divisive work of Satan. It’s labels, it’s all or nothing. I’m in this, I’m in this group or not. Let’s step out of even the immigration issue, right? Let’s talk about another practical example that we’ve covered before on the show. You know, in scripture, the Bible tells us that a marriage is between one man and one woman. The Bible also tells us that every person is loved by God, created by God for a purpose. That we should love God and love others. Both of those things can be true at once. Both of those things are biblical, right? As a Christian parent, I, in my heart to God, my fear of the Lord, I have to model this well in our home. Because the world, the world tells our kids on an algorithm, if we believe marriages between a man and a woman, that we are hateful and phobic. My my question to Christian parents are behind closed doors, when you’re talking about this with your kids, are you hateful and phobic? Are you are you using slurs? Because if you are, you’re not modeling well that multiple things can be true at once. We are called to live in a broken world where we uphold scripture and love people well, meeting people where they are, but not joining in their sin. Loving people who are different than we are. And you know what? When your kids hear the lies on social media that you are phobic and hateful, if you are living this, if you are living this out according to scripture in your life for your kids to see in your homes, something’s gonna change in their mind to be like, wait a minute. Well, I mean, yeah, my mom does believe marriage is between a man and a woman, but my mom loves that person. But that person came to dinner. Like my my mom is friends with that person. Do you we have to debunk the lies by the way we live our lives for Jesus in our homes, behind our closed doors? I’m not talking about what you post on social media. I’m talking about the everyday grit of getting to know Jesus and bringing his character into your home. The same thing is true about immigration. I can believe in helping the migrant, caring for the neighbor. Obviously, every human is loved and made by God, but I can also believe in securing the borders, entering legally. You know, one of the things that I’ve seen posted is I don’t know how Christians can support borders that, you know, immigration policies that don’t care for our neighbor. And I kind of want to address that because, you know, I’ve had to look in the mirror and say, what do I believe in? Why do I believe it? I’ve done some research, right? And here’s the thing. I think that when we allow people to cross the border illegally without a systematic way to care for them, I actually think we do more damage than good. We saw this under the previous administration. Kids were lost, kids were sex trafficked, crossing the border illegally. Like, what if we have a legal and systematic way to care for our neighbors, to care for people who need it? Again, it’s two things can be can be true at once. We can’t pit each other against each other all the time. Also, you know, I think of this just logically from a parent perspective, when I think of immigration, right? Illegal immigration, particularly, because I’m all for immigration. I love the diversity in our country, right? But it’s like the legal part for me is the distinction. You know, when I first gave my son a phone, there were some rules. Rule number one was you’re not taking that phone in your bedroom. If my son had taken the phone in his bedroom that very night, the first night I gave it to him, and I didn’t address it, there were no consequences for that. What would happen? It would spiral. My word wouldn’t matter anymore. So any guideline I laid out, he wouldn’t listen to because I didn’t enforce the first one. In my logical mind, that’s just how I think of it. That doesn’t mean I don’t want people here. That doesn’t mean I’m phobic in any way. It means I just want a legal systematic way for people to achieve this. Should we talk about immigration reform? Yes. Should we talk about is it the duty of the government or is it the duty of individuals and churches and organizations to support the oppressed and the poor? Yes, that’s all a conversation, right? That’s what I mean by this is not just a yes or no type thing. These are complicated matters. And with your older kids, they have these questions. And what a beautiful moment if you don’t shut down their perspective where you can kind of talk about these things in a logical, calm manner. And then you guys go to scripture. Dig into scripture. What does it say, you know, about submitting to the laws of the land? What does it say about caring for people? What does it say about God being a God of justice, right? Like point your kids to the truth of the word so they can start to put this all this cultural viewpoint through the lens of scripture. This is where, this is where truth and God prevails. So many times we get caught up in our political talking points. Zoom out from that. I’m not saying you can’t share your opinions. I’m not saying you can’t have conversations like this about multiple things can be true at once and talk through some of these policies that are in place. I’m not saying that at all with your older kids. But what I’m saying is zoom out from that. You should be talking about it from a scriptural and spiritual perspective way more than the politics of the day. And I think we’re missing that, especially Christian parents. We get zoned in on being right in the politics, and we’re missing the spiritual warfare that is happening with our kids. And it’s happening in more areas than just the political area because our kids are getting so much information, and they are not debunking the lies. We are not helping them debunk the lies, and they’re getting super, super confused. You know, I had a police officer last year on my show. Oh my gosh, an amazing man served in law enforcement for 15 years. We talked a little on the show about like abuse of power, de-escalating situations. I loved how he talked about like de-escalating police situations and how that actually helps him parent his teenagers too. It was such a good little segment. You know, when I was doing that show with him, I’ve always had great respect for our first responders and our police officers. But I God really used that show to speak into me about these are human beings. Like he has to have the conversation with his family that he may not come home. When he gets a call in the middle of the night and his wife is at work, he said he had, you know, like neighbors and friends that he had to call to take his friends to so he could serve in this way. I mean, we got to be careful. We got people now coordinating efforts against officers and telling people actively not to follow the laws of the land. This is, we got to check our heart. This is not good. It’s gonna get more people killed. You know, I’m gonna be honest, my default is to stand with law enforcement. It’s biblical to submit to the laws of the land. I tell my kids when you are pulled over by a police officer, you keep your arms, you know, present. You don’t reach. You tell the officer if you’re reaching for something, you abide by what they say so you don’t get hurt, right? Because they get attacked all the time and they have to use force. I don’t want them to feel like in any way you are making any movements to put their lives in danger. So you have to handle this situation with care. It’s a conversation that we’ve had, especially when they started driving, right? And just because I default to follow the laws of the land, it also doesn’t mean that I believe every officer and every ICE agent is perfect. Both can be true at once. And when somebody crosses a line, justice should prevail. It should. An investigation should happen and making sure that everybody did protocol. But here’s the zoom out perspective of that. If justice doesn’t happen on earth, God knows the intention of every heart. And God is a God of justice, they will be held accountable. I think often about online predators because I see it every day. I see young kids taking their lives, losing their lives because of online predator manipulation. Lies that need to be debunked. And some of these predators are not caught. I don’t know if they were ever be caught. And man, in the initial days of dealing with the first couple cases, there was so much anger in my heart that I just couldn’t get past it. Still, I’m angry. You know, there’s that righteous anger of this is not right. But I know God will hold those people accountable because he is a God of justice and I’m not in control. This whole fight doesn’t fall on my hands. This whole fight of online safety, of immigration, none of it falls all on our shoulders. Yes, we get a voice. Yes, God may call us to a little sliver of purpose and calling to help in this area. Yes, yes, God uses us and wants us to join in his work, but we are not in control. Only God. Only God is in control, and only God has justice. When I talk about, you know, you should be talking about more things that are spiritual than political. I want to end with this. Political parties are wrong. Political parties change. God does not. This is just the most important part of the entire show. Don’t die on a political hill. Don’t lose the relationship with your kids because of a political narrative. Can you share your opinion with them? Absolutely. I encourage you to do so. I’m giving you practical talking points on how to do that, right? But zoom out of politics. We all have political bias. I don’t agree a hundred percent with what anyone says, not either party. Only Jesus is a hundred percent correct. Only Jesus is who I surrender my life to. Only Jesus is the hill I’m going to die on in my home with my kids. That’s the one thing I won’t ever waver on. That Jesus is the answer. I will always be pointing my kids back to Jesus. I won’t always be pointing my kids back to a president or a party because they’re all flawed, because we’re human, because we’re not in control. You can’t go wrong with turning off the news and opening your Bible. Don’t let the culture war cloud your judgment. Stay focused on loving your kid unconditionally, meeting them where they are, talking through the issues calmly, and pointing them to Jesus. Dig into scripture together. Figure out what God says about certain things. He’s Alpha, He’s Omega, His ways are not our ways. He sees the whole span of eternity from beginning to end. Our minds don’t. We can’t comprehend it. We are just in the chaos of the day trying to whack-a-mole the thing that’s happening in culture. Stop. Stop. Dig into the word. Find your peace in Jesus. And then he is going to lay out the plan for your life where you’re probably going to be called to fight for some sort of injustice. In the meantime, remember fools vent their anger, but the wise quietly hold it in.
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