Empty Empathy & the Faith We’re Diluting


I’m glad you’re here.
This is not an easy time to speak honestly in America. We are living in a moment where barging into churches shocks people, yet not enough voices are willing to say plainly that this is not protected under free speech. Sacred spaces are not protest zones. Worship is not a political interruption.
Coming from India, this hits close to home. In many parts of India, radical groups barge into churches, drag men, women, and children out during worship, burn church buildings, and physically attack Christians. That isn’t shocking to me—it’s familiar. And yet, the Church in India presses on. Quietly. Faithfully. Courageously. Knowing the cost, but choosing Christ anyway.


What unsettles me is watching similar hostility take root in America—not always through violence, but through ideology. Politically charged agendas have seeped into churches, schools, universities, and families. “Land of the free, home of the brave” has slowly been redefined to mean no order, no limits, no consequences. That confusion is often labeled compassion—but confusion is not compassion. It is the doorway to chaos.


And that brings us to the deeper issue.
When Empathy Loses Its Backbone
Over time, I’ve noticed how the word empathy has quietly changed its meaning. It used to mean understanding pain without abandoning truth. Now, more often than not, it means something else entirely.


Today’s version of empathy leaves no room for consequences. Every decision is explained away. Accountability is treated as cruelty. Boundaries are framed as oppression. Responsibility disappears, and truth becomes negotiable.
This is what I mean by empty—or toxic—empathy.
It sounds loving at first. Who doesn’t want to be compassionate? But sit with it long enough, and you begin to see what’s missing. Growth disappears. Wisdom is sidelined. And eventually, compassion stops helping people move forward—it simply excuses whatever keeps them stuck.
Biblical compassion has never worked this way. It warns. It corrects. It protects. And sometimes, it lovingly confronts.


The deeper problem here isn’t immigration.
It isn’t Trump.
It isn’t policy.


The deeper problem is authority.


God Is Sovereign — Above Nations, Culture, and Time
Before anything else is said, this must be clear: God is sovereign.
Not America.
Not democracy.
Not governments, empires, or civilizations.
God’s Word does not bend to culture. It transcends time, borders, and political systems. Kingdoms rise and fall. Empires collapse. Democracies change. But God’s authority does not shift with public opinion.
What God called sin thousands of years ago does not become righteous because culture evolves. Truth does not expire.


This is where progressive Christianity goes wrong. Instead of allowing Scripture to judge culture, culture is allowed to judge Scripture. God’s Word is filtered, softened, and rewritten to fit the spirit of the age.
God is not progressive.
God is not conservative.
God is eternal.
And nations—every nation—are accountable to Him.


The Foundation We Pretend Never Existed
Many deny that America was shaped by Christian values and biblical principles. Faith is treated as an afterthought, or worse, an inconvenience. But history tells a different story.
Most people don’t know that The Star-Spangled Banner has more stanzas than what is sung today. In the final stanza, the words give thanks to God and heaven and declare, “And this be our motto: In God is our trust.”
America was not founded as a theocracy—but its moral framework was deeply influenced by Scripture. Our founding fathers were imperfect men, but many believed rights came not from government, but were endowed by a Creator.
Remove God, and families weaken.
Remove families, and societies fracture.
That’s not nationalism. It’s reality.


Learning From History Without Living in Victimhood
My country of birth is India, and as a Christian, I do not deny that India’s foundation is deeply rooted in Hinduism. That is simply historical truth. Every nation has cultural and religious roots that shaped it.
India also ranks among the top countries for Christian persecution. Though its constitution promises freedom of religion, Christians remain a small minority and are often targeted by radical groups. Churches are attacked. Believers are threatened. Faith is treated as foreign.


India also carries deep resentment tied to British colonial rule. Much of that criticism is valid. But what is rarely discussed is the whole picture.
Railroads. Schools. Hospitals. Modern medicine. Orphanages. Legal reforms. One of the most brutal practices—sati, the burning of widows alive—was challenged and outlawed through Christian missionary influence and law.


Choosing Progress Over Permanent Victimhood
Many Indians refuse to live trapped in the past. They study hard. Work hard. Build careers. Become engineers, scientists, doctors, teachers, professors, and entrepreneurs. They travel abroad, contribute to society, and move forward—without demanding reparations or living in resentment.
Every nation has a broken past.
But nations move forward when people choose responsibility over resentment.


Slavery did not begin with Europeans. It existed across civilizations long before. Muslim nations practiced slavery centuries earlier. African kingdoms enslaved other Africans. Slavery is not a skin-color problem—it is a human sin problem.
Christianity does not deny history. It confronts sin—and offers redemption.


When Culture Replaces Scripture
We are now living in a culture where disagreement is labeled hate, truth is called violence, and boundaries are framed as oppression. History is selectively told. Responsibility is erased. Lawlessness is excused.
And this confusion has entered the church—because Scripture is no longer central.


Critical Race Theory and Performative Compassion
Critical Race Theory has found a home in progressive Christianity. It reframes everything through power and identity—and then reads Scripture through that lens.
The result is performative compassion.
Black squares filled social media feeds, yet foundational questions were avoided. Where is the concern for the absence of fathers? Where is the outrage over abortion, which has devastated Black communities for decades?
And then the contradictions deepen.
Basic questions no longer have clear answers.
What defines a woman?
How many genders are there?
Truth becomes negotiable. Anyone who questions the ideology risks being cast out.


Scripture, however, is not confused.
God created male and female.
God designed family as foundational.
God values life in the womb.
As Christians, Scripture must remain our highest authority—not ideology, not fear, not social pressure.


Selective Compassion and Silent Atrocities
Many progressive Christians speak loudly about certain global conflicts, like Palestine… yet remain silent about real persecution happening across Africa, India, the Middle East, North Korea, and Iran.
And selective compassion doesn’t stop there.
Where are the voices when Muslims are killed by other Muslims along tribal and sectarian lines? Where is the outrage when Afghan Muslims are slaughtered, silenced, or forced to flee under extremist regimes?
These realities don’t trend. They complicate narratives. So they’re ignored.
Biblical compassion grieves all innocent blood—because every human life bears God’s image.
Silence is not empathy.
It’s inconsistency.


When We Stop Opening Our Bibles
I’ve walked into churches and noticed something—not with judgment, but concern. Hands were full. Coffee cups. Snacks. Conversation. But what I didn’t see were Bibles.
Just phones.
And it made me pause.
Because how do we discern what’s being taught from the pulpit if we never open Scripture ourselves? How do we know what sounds encouraging is actually biblical?
Yes, Bible apps are convenient. But let’s be honest—how long does it take to swipe from Scripture to a notification? To social media?
Seconds.


The enemy doesn’t need to remove the Bible. He just needs to keep us distracted.


That’s why Scripture calls us to be Bereans. In Acts, the Bereans were praised not for blind agreement, but because they searched the Scriptures daily to see if what they were hearing was true. They listened—and they verified.
Being a Berean requires intention.
Scripture also tells us to put on the whole armor of God. Armor isn’t decorative. It’s worn for battle. And battles require discipline.


Christian empathy and compassion must flow from our love for God, rooted in His Word, and expressed through good works that grow from truth—not emotion alone.
Grace, Obedience, and How Christians Vote


Many evangelical Christians live this way. Not perfectly—but faithfully.
We don’t vote based on personality. We vote from theology. We pray, go to Scripture, vote, and then go about our lives trusting God’s sovereignty.
When politics becomes the authority, disappointment leads to outrage. Laws are broken. Lawlessness is excused. Chaos is called justice.
Biblical faith doesn’t respond that way. It submits—even when outcomes are uncomfortable.


Truth, Courage, and Being Willing to Offend
When confronted on issues like gender or abortion, Christians face a choice: cowardice or conviction.
God’s truth offends the flesh—not to harm us, but to make us more Christlike. Love without truth deceives. Truth without love wounds. Biblical Christianity holds both.
Christ Before Labels
I am not Republican.
I am not Democrat.
I am not left, right, independent, or conservative.
I am a Christian first.
I believe the whole Word of God—not selective Scripture, not comfortable verses, not truths that earn applause.
Holding the Line


Many evangelical Christians live this way—Christ above all.
Until He returns, we hold the line.
Not with hatred.
Not with fear.
But with conviction, prayer, and obedience.
The goal has never been power.
The goal has always been faithfulness.


Final Word
The hostility toward biblical Christianity is real—but we will press on in the name of Jesus and pray for those who oppose us.
This is not about politics first.
It is about worship.
It is about authority.
It is about truth.
And until He returns, we hold the line.

Joyce Adams

“No One Is Illegal on Stolen Land” — Why This Slogan Falls Apart


The phrase “No one is illegal on stolen land” is used frequently today, but it does not hold up historically or legally. It is a slogan meant to provoke emotion, not to explain truth.
From the beginning of time, nations have risen and fallen. Land has been conquered, traded, purchased, and defended. This is not unique to America. Every civilization in history has done this.
Native American tribes also conquered and displaced other tribes long before Europeans arrived. This is recorded history. Settlers did not simply arrive and “steal” land without context. There were treaties, purchases, alliances, wars, and yes—wrong decisions. That does not make America uniquely evil; it makes America human.


America was built by immigrants from many nations who fought together, worked together, and built this country together. The Constitution and laws were established to protect its sovereignty. Saying America is “stolen land” ignores real history and replaces it with modern political talking points.
Our children deserve to be taught the full story—the good, the bad, the failures, and the hope—not slogans designed to create resentment.


Borders Are About Order, Not Hate:
Borders are not racist. Borders are not unloving. Borders exist because sovereignty matters.
Every country on earth has borders. The same people demanding open borders would never allow strangers to walk into their homes, use their kitchens, or take whatever they want. They would call 911 without hesitation.
Celebrities who live behind walls, gates, and private security are often the loudest voices pushing open borders. That is not compassion. That is hypocrisy.


Immigration Is Not the Problem — Lawlessness Is
No one on the conservative side is saying immigration is wrong. We love immigrants. America is a nation of immigrants.
We are asking for people to come legally, respecting the laws of the country they want to live in.
I say this as a legal immigrant from India. I came to America to marry my fiancé and start a new life. We waited for paperwork. We applied for visas. We gathered documents. We went through immunizations, interviews, background checks, customs, and immigration lines. I received a temporary green card like millions of others have.
It was not instant. It was not easy. But it was lawful.


And this is where it becomes unfair.
Millions of people stand in line, do everything right, pay expensive fees, spend years in paperwork, attend interviews, and still have their visas denied. They follow the rules, respect the law, and accept the outcome—even when the answer is no.
It is not fair to those people to turn around and reward those who broke the law by cutting the line. Compassion should not erase justice. Mercy should not punish obedience.


Asylum Has Rules for a Reason
America already has asylum laws for people fleeing persecution. Compassion is already built into the system. But asylum is not a free-for-all.
International law generally requires asylum seekers to seek refuge in the nearest safe country, not travel through multiple nations to reach the United States.
What happened under the previous administration was not compassion—it was negligence. Open borders without proper checks allowed criminals, traffickers, drugs, and cartel activity to flood in. American citizens were killed. Children went missing. Human and sex trafficking increased.
That is not love. That is foolishness.


Misusing the Bible to Push Open Borders
Many people misuse Bible verses to attack Christians who support border enforcement. Verses are taken out of context, ignoring the full message of Scripture.
The Bible never encourages breaking the laws of a nation. Scripture tells us to pray for those in authority. God is a God of order, not chaos.
Jesus was not an “illegal immigrant.” That claim is false and misleading.
Even heaven has gates.
Citizenship in heaven comes only through Jesus Christ.


How Christians Vote
In today’s culture, white evangelical Christians are often labeled a “threat to democracy.” Why? Not because we hate people, but because we refuse to follow a diluted Jesus or a diluted version of Scripture that bends to culture.


Our faith influences how we vote. We do not separate our beliefs from our morals or our understanding of right and wrong. We believe in helping the poor, feeding the hungry, welcoming the stranger, and caring for the vulnerable—while still being wise enough to protect our families, our homes, and our country.
Loving your neighbor does not mean abandoning discernment. Mercy does not mean lawlessness.
It so happens that Donald Trump was campaigning and aligned more closely with biblical principles on life, borders, law, and religious freedom. That does not mean Christians worship him or give Jesus second place. God remains the center of our lives. A political leader is only an instrument—never our savior.


ICE, Protests, and Reality
No one should die when law enforcement is doing their job. But many protests against ICE are not peaceful.
Agents are shoved, spit on, cursed at, followed, blocked, and attacked. Objects are thrown. Vehicles are used as weapons. Agents are doxxed, exposing their families to danger.
This is why ICE agents wear masks. This is why force is sometimes used to push back agitators.
Peaceful assembly is protected. Violence is not.


The Truth People Avoid
Many people flee badly run countries for freedom, then come to America and complain about it, while trying to turn this country into the same ideology they escaped.
If America is so horrible, why stay?
Deep down, they know this is an incredible country. They enjoy the freedom, opportunity, and stability—but want to lecture America while benefiting from it.


Compassion With Law
We can love immigrants and still uphold the law.
We can show mercy without destroying order.
We can be Christian without being naive.


America is not stolen land.
Borders are not evil.
Law is not oppression.
Truth still matters.

Where Were Your Voices?
Where were your voices, progressive pastors and Christians, when our borders were wide open under the Biden administration?
Where were your sermons, your outrage, your constant social-media megaphones when children went missing, when human and sex trafficking surged, when American citizens were raped and murdered by criminals who should never have been here?


Where were your voices when our own citizens struggled—veterans, single mothers, the elderly—while illegal migrants were handed debit cards, housed in hotels, and protected in sanctuary cities?
Where were your voices when men were allowed into women’s sports, stripping girls of fairness, safety, and dignity—forcing them into locker rooms and spaces that should have been protected?


Where were your voices when children were told they could be a boy, a girl, a unicorn, or a dinosaur—when confused and vulnerable kids were pushed toward puberty blockers, hormones, and irreversible surgeries, all sold under the lie of “compassion,” while doctors mutilated bodies God Himself designed?


Where were your voices when wars erupted under Biden’s watch, when Putin advanced unchecked, and America projected weakness on the global stage?


Where were your voices on October 7th, when Jews were slaughtered, raped, and taken hostage—when the world witnessed a modern massacre and antisemitism exploded across campuses, streets, and even churches?


Where were your voices when race was weaponized, when cities burned, businesses were destroyed, law enforcement was demonized, and lawlessness was excused as justice?


Where were your voices when young women were encouraged to abort their babies, told abortion is empowering, casual—even something to celebrate—while the most innocent lives were erased for convenience?
Where were you then?
Silent.


Salt, Light, and Selective Outrage
Christians are called to be salt and light—not silent, not confused, not swept along by cultural pressure.
Salt preserves.
Light exposes.
That means voting biblically, standing for law and order, not chaos dressed up as compassion.
People voted the way they did because the Democratic Party failed to provide strong leadership—leadership that spoke to the real concerns of families. Instead, Americans were offered confusion, weakness, and moral relativism.


Kamala Harris launched her campaign sitting between transgender activists, making priorities unmistakably clear.
Let me be clear: Christians do not hate gay, lesbian, or transgender individuals. Every human being is made in the image of God. Every life has dignity.
But we will not allow ideology to be pushed onto our children.
Where were your voices when transgender activists were placed in schools and libraries, pushing adult agendas onto little ones?


Where were your sermons then?
Where were your viral posts?
Where was your moral outrage?
Silent.


Now suddenly, you find your voice—only when Christians vote to protect their children, their homes, and their nation.
Now it’s convenient to unleash emotionally driven rhetoric—stripped of facts, stripped of statistics, stripped of wisdom—to attack evangelical Christians: white, brown, black, yellow.


This is not biblical courage.
This is selective outrage.
This is political activism wearing a clerical collar.
And Christians see through it.

The Church was never called to be a political echo chamber or a cultural appeaser.
We were called to be salt and light—to preserve what is good and expose what is false.
We will not bow to fear.
We will not dilute Scripture to fit the moment.


We will not apologize for protecting children, honoring life, respecting borders, and upholding God’s design for family and society.
Voting biblically is not hatred.
Law and order is not oppression.
Truth is not violence.
If standing for God’s Word makes us unpopular—so be it.
If obedience costs us approval—so be it.


The prophets were never applauded.
The apostles were never affirmed by culture.
And Jesus Himself was rejected by the religious elites of His day.
So no—we did not vote out of fear.
We voted out of conviction.
And we will continue to stand—not with chaos, not with confusion, not with selective outrage—
but with truth, courage, and Christ at the center.

Joyce Adams

The Holocaust Is Not a Political Prop

I came across this photo today and something provoked me, in the current atmosphere of American politics we here Hitler, Holocaust, Anne Frank, Gestapo thrown around like a piece of candy. Also, looking at this photo in history, the bond of America & Israel! 🇺🇲🇮🇱❤️
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The Holocaust did happen. It was documented, photographed, witnessed, and recorded by the very soldiers who liberated the camps. That is why Dwight D. Eisenhower insisted the world see the evidence—because he knew a day would come when people would try to deny it. That day is now.
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Holocaust denial and minimization are not harmless opinions; they are a rewriting of evil to justify hatred in the present. And this is exactly why Israel exists. This is why Israel fights to survive. This is why pre-emptive defense is not aggression—it is survival.
When a people have learned, through history, what happens when the world looks away, they do not wait politely for destruction. They defend themselves.
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The same voices that deny history now chant for the end of Israel, burn the American flag, and echo regimes that openly call for death to both America and Israel in abroad and within our country. This is not about justice or peace—it is an ideological and spiritual war against Judeo-Christian values, against truth, against life itself.
Evil always starts by erasing memory.
Truth resists that erasure.
Remembering history is not hatred.
Defending life is not oppression.
And survival is not something anyone needs permission for.
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Now, the atmosphere in America…
It’s honestly disturbing how casually some Democrats invoke Hitler and the Holocaust as political weapons simply because it suits their hatred toward Trump and the people who voted for him.
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The Holocaust is not a metaphor to be passed around like candy. It carries a weight that should never be trivialized.
What happened to the Jews—including Anne Frank—was systematic genocide, planned atrocities. Rascism played a big role. Jews were hunted, stripped of rights, forced into ghettos, packed into cattle cars, cornered in rooms, and murdered in gas chambers. They were not breaking laws. They had nowhere to go. There was no “home country” waiting for them.
That is not the same as America enforcing its immigration laws. Rascism here is used to shut the other side down because they DO NOT WANT TO HAVE A MATURE DIALOGUE. America has come so far from segregation physically & mentally. Trump is not rascist and neither are the people who voted for him. We come from all colors of skin tones, backgrounds, cultures and ethnicities.
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Asking people who entered illegally to self-deport or be lawfully removed and put on a plane back to their country is not genocide. Asking these same people once they’re in their country, apply for visas to legally come here into the US is no where even near to what happened to the jews. Asking people to respect our laws, come here legally IS NOT ETHNIC CLEANSING. It is not the Holocaust. Legal immigration, borders, and sovereignty are normal functions of a nation-state—practiced by nearly every country in the world.
Comparing immigration enforcement to the Holocaust doesn’t honor Jewish suffering—it cheapens it. It distorts history, insults survivors, and turns real evil into a political prop.
Words matter. History matters.
And some lines should never be crossed.
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I write this, to bring awareness to stand strong in fighting for America when the other side tries to fear monger you, confuse you with their tactics, mk good seem like evil and evil seem like good, mk lawlessness seem like they are on a path to a revolution than simply breaking the law.
Don’t jump to emotions when you see something on the news…LOOK FOR FACTS, RESEARCH BEFORE GETTING YOURSELF WRAPPED UP EMOTIONALLY TO A LIE. 🇺🇲

Joyce Adams

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