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Christian leader says enough with ‘my truth’: Society must return to ‘THE truth’

Source image: https://www.foxnews.com/lifestyle/christian-leader-enough-my-truth-society-return-truth

At a time when individual perspectives and social justice are emphasized in society, one faith leader is stressing the importance not of each person’s own truth — but of the truth.  

Jeff Myers, PhD, of Manitou Springs, Colorado, is president of Summit Ministries, which offers resources to “see generations of Christians mobilized to transform a broken world,” its website states.

Myers is also the author of the new book, “Truth Changes Everything,” in which he takes on this issue.

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At the time he received the contract for his book, he also received a diagnosis of cancer, he told Fox News Digital by phone.

“With aggressive treatment, doctors thought we could beat it,” he said. “But it also occurred to me that this [could be] the last book I might ever write.”

Dr. Jeff Myers is president of Summit Ministries in Manitou Springs, Colorado, and the author of the new book, "Truth Changes Everything," which addresses objective truth. Myers told Fox News Digital in an interview, "In every area of life, pursuing reality, even when it’s hard, is a better course."

Dr. Jeff Myers is president of Summit Ministries in Manitou Springs, Colorado, and the author of the new book, “Truth Changes Everything,” which addresses objective truth. Myers told Fox News Digital in an interview, “In every area of life, pursuing reality, even when it’s hard, is a better course.”
(Dr. Jeff Myers)

He focused on truth in his book — biblical truths, that is, that have built democracies and sustained believers throughout the centuries and continue to withstand the test of time, he said.

‘Most important thing’

“A mentor I had said, ‘Always stand for truth. It is the most important thing to stand for,'” said Myers. 

“In every area of life, pursuing reality, even when it’s hard, is a better course.”

“In order to secure the blessings of liberty, the government doesn’t give us our rights; they are given by God.”

People are “ultimately happier” if they can “grapple with reality,” Myers said. He said the tendency today to seek and speak “my truth” is a “symptom of the times in which we live.”

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He continued, “Our own sense of personal independence, which is important, has now turned against us and made us very sad and unhealthy.”

History offers valuable lessons about the importance of biblical truth, said Myers.

Biblical truths have built democracies, sustained believers throughout the centuries and continue to withstand the test of time, Dr. Jeff Myers said. These issues are covered in his new book, "Truth Changes Everything."

Biblical truths have built democracies, sustained believers throughout the centuries and continue to withstand the test of time, Dr. Jeff Myers said. These issues are covered in his new book, “Truth Changes Everything.”
(2022 Summit Ministries, Katie Potter)

“In the worst of times, during the bubonic plague in the Middle Ages known as The Black Death, one-third to one-half of the people died in European cities,” Myers said. 

“What happened after that? Those who survived didn’t abandon God. They drew closer to him and became more religiously observant, focusing more on the sick and needy,” he continued.

From biblical truths, “modern science and art developed, justice developed, the Renaissance and the Reformation occurred — you can trace all of this back to people who believe that Jesus is the truth,” he said.

America’s founding was influenced

The Founding Fathers of this country incorporated biblical truths into the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, said Myers.

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“In order to secure the blessings of liberty, the government doesn’t give us our rights,” he said. “They are given by God.”

“Fifty-one and possibly up to 53 of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were known to be believing Christians.”

“At best, the government can secure those rights,” he said. “That’s a mindset that has led to freedom all over the world and is essentially an innovation put together by very brave Christians who risked persecution to do it.”

Shown here, "Declaration of Independence": Detail of the painting by John Trumbell. In America, the Founding Fathers incorporated biblical truths into the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

Shown here, “Declaration of Independence”: Detail of the painting by John Trumbell. In America, the Founding Fathers incorporated biblical truths into the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
(“Declaration of Independence”: painting by John Trumbell/Getty Images)

“Fifty-one and possibly up to 53 of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were known to be believing Christians,” said Myers. 

(There were 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence.)

“It wasn’t just taking little Bible verses here and there to justify a course of action — they [the Founders] were literally looking back to the law of Moses, which was so tremendously advanced over what other civilizations had, and asking, ‘Is that a good model for a republic?’”

“For many, social justice is just their signifier that they want to be the sort of people who care about others.”

Myers continued, “And they decided, ‘yes.’ The Hebrews actually had a republic — the idea of the separation of powers came from them.”

Best way to share biblical truths

Myers said that when people want to share the truth of the Bible with others, they should “ask, don’t tell.”

Instead of preaching at people, Dr. Jeff Myers encouraged believers to ask thoughtful questions of others.

Instead of preaching at people, Dr. Jeff Myers encouraged believers to ask thoughtful questions of others. “Ask, don’t tell,” he said.
(iStock)

He said, “Use opportunities to ask questions. Say, ‘Tell me more about that. Expand on that. How do you know that is true? How did you arrive at that conclusion?’”

When you ask questions, said Myers, “people see you as someone worth talking to.” 

He called this a “winning strategy” for sharing the Bible’s truth. 

The question of why Jesus came to Earth doesn’t end with “to feel sorry for me,” said Myers.

“When you ask questions, people feel a sense that they also ought to listen to what you say.”

Why social justice initiatives impede truth

Myers said that for many, “social justice is just their signifier that they want to be the sort of people who care about others.”

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Social justice “plays into a political agenda” that essentially says problems are solved by “redistributing wealth and all other resources of value,” noted Myers, “so that everyone has an equal outcome.” 

He said pointedly, “That is not biblical.”

"Re-read the gospels. It doesn’t take that long," said Dr. Jeff Myers. "Allow yourself the permission to take off that social justice filter and look at what Jesus actually said and did."

“Re-read the gospels. It doesn’t take that long,” said Dr. Jeff Myers. “Allow yourself the permission to take off that social justice filter and look at what Jesus actually said and did.”
(iStock)

Noting that scripture “definitely talks about justice,” he said, “God cares a great deal about justice.”

“God’s perspective on justice throughout scripture is that you don’t give any preference to the rich or the poor — that you protect private property and you protect the vulnerable, especially women and children.”

He added, “Social justice doesn’t cover any of this.”

Jesus is the truth

“Re-read the gospels. It doesn’t take that long,” Myers said. 

“Allow yourself the permission to take off that social justice filter and look at what Jesus actually said and did.”

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Myers said that the question of why Jesus came to Earth doesn’t end with “to feel sorry for me.” 

The end is “to bring salvation,” he said.

Myers said that his own mission is to work with the next generation so that young people “embrace the truth and champion a biblical worldview.”

Jeff Myers is pictured, along with a cross, the prominent symbol of the Christian faith. Myers said Jesus came to Earth to "bring salvation."

Jeff Myers is pictured, along with a cross, the prominent symbol of the Christian faith. Myers said Jesus came to Earth to “bring salvation.”
(Dr. Jeff Myers/iStock)

“What we have uncovered in our research is that about 19% of people who claim to be Christians and regularly go to church have a biblical worldview — that is one out of five at best,” he added.

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“Two out of 10 people at church are there to ask, ‘What does God say and what should I do in response?’ But the other eight are there to say, ‘What do I want to do, and how does the pastor’s story affirm my truth?’”

The faithful should ask “what God’s perspective is.” 

Myers said he believes that “the heart of prayer” is “not just us making our requests known to God.”

Rather, it’s about “asking him to show us what he sees and help us to hear what he hears, and help us do with our hands what he wants done.”

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A lot of the time, he said, prayer is “pouring out our hearts” — yet the faithful should also ask “what God’s perspective is.” 

“The deepest, most heartfelt prayers in scripture are of that nature,” he said.

Source: https://www.foxnews.com/lifestyle/christian-leader-enough-my-truth-society-return-truth

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Dave Portnoy blisters WaPo ‘hit piece’ with viral statement announcing the ‘death of honest’ journalism

Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy released a press release blasting a recent Washington Post “hit piece” against him.

Portnoy’s statement accusing the outlet of causing the “death of honest and fair journalism” in attacking him with “untrue narratives” went viral on X Friday, receiving millions of views in hours and prompting a social media pile on of the Washington Post.

In the statement he posted to X, Portnoy explained his side of a recent feud between him and the outlet over a story the Post published. The piece reported on criticism advertisers and pizzerias got for working with the mogul for his upcoming “One Bite Pizza Festival” in New York City.

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dave portnoy and the washington post

Bartstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy responded to a Washington Post hit piece on him with a press release he published to X Friday. ((Fox News/Getty Images))

The piece, published by Post reporters Tim Carmen and Emily Heil Friday, described Portnoy as someone who “has been no stranger to controversy.” It mentioned his history of “sexist” and other insensitive comments, as well as allegations of sexual impropriety. 

The statement from “Team Portnoy” opened, stating, “Today marks the official death of honest and fair journalism in America. Emily ‘Caught Red Handed’ Heil and Tim ‘Probably An Ugly Loser’ Carman of the Washington Post put the final nail in the coffin with their weak and dishonest hit piece against David S. Portnoy and his One Bite pizzafest.”

The letter continued, explaining how Portnoy “caught wind of this hit piece” before it was published. It claimed he noticed that “Heil started reaching out to advertisers and pizzerias to try and shame them for participating in what will be the greatest day in the history of pizza.”

Portnoy’s feud with the outlet went public when he called Heil and argued with her over her intentions in publishing it.

Taunting the reporters, Portnoy’s letter continued, “It had already been a rough week for Portnoy, who’s been having trouble finding his coffee in his colossal new Miami mansion. And now he had to deal with this.”

Mentioning the phone call, the statement added, “So he called up Heil to confront her and caught her red-handed in a lie where she denied saying anything negative about Portnoy in emails. (She would later clarify that she only tells negative lies about people as a reporting tactic. As if that was supposed to help her case somehow.)”

Returning to the piece itself, the statement read, “It was mostly the same old tired, reused, and untrue narratives about Portnoy. Although they did make the groundbreaking investigative discovery that he sometimes takes more than one bite in his pizza reviews.”

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The text added, “no pizzerias or advertisers decided to pull out of Pizzafest.” 

X users weighed in on Portnoy’s post, with many siding with the Barstool owner. 

The Federalist senior contributor Rich Cromwell read the post and declared, “This is art.”

Publicist and conservative Beth Baumann posted, “This is the best press release I’ve ever read and I’m a publicist. Lol.”

Neither The Washington Post nor the two reporters who wrote the piece about Portnoy immediately responded to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

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Strawberry Jell-O pie that’s simply delicious: Try the easy recipe

For the strawberry lovers who are on the hunt for an easy-to-make dessert, this simple strawberry pie is just the thing.

Besides simplicity, Cara Lanz of midwesternhomelife.com says this pie is a delicious dessert dish.

“The only hard part about making it is waiting for it to set up in the fridge,” said Lanz, Minnesota.

This recipe takes mere minutes of prep time and, to Lanz’s point, the fridge does the work.

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Grab that pint of strawberries and attempt this amazingly easy dessert.

No Bake Strawberry Jell-O Pie by Cara Lanz of midwesternhomelife.com

Makes 8 servings

Prep time: 10 minutes

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Chill/set time: 2 hours, 10 minutes

whole strawberry jello pie

Sink your teeth into this soft and delicious strawberry pie made with Jell-O. (Cara Lanz, midwesternhomelife.com)

Ingredients

  • 1 cup water
  • ¼ cup sugar
  • 2 tablespoons cornstarch
  • 3 oz. box strawberry Jell-O

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  • 4 cups sliced strawberries, plus more for serving, optional
  • 9″ graham cracker crust (store-bought or homemade)
  • Whipped cream for serving (optional)
Cara Lanz, midwesternhomelife.com

Plop a dollop of whipped cream on top of this sweet, strawberry after-dinner treat. (Cara Lanz, midwesternhomelife.com)

Directions

1. Mix water, sugar and cornstarch together in a saucepan. Heat to a boil over medium heat. Stir for one minute. Remove from the heat.

2. Add the strawberry gelatin and stir until it has dissolved, about 2 minutes.

3. Let the mixture cool at room temperature for about 10 minutes.

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4. Stir in the strawberries. Pour the mixture into the graham cracker crust.

5. Chill in the refrigerator until set, about 2 hours.

6. Serve with whipped cream and fresh strawberries.

This original recipe is owned by midwesternhomelife.com and was shared with Fox News Digital.

For more Lifestyle articles, visit www.foxnews.com/lifestyle.

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Pumpkin tiramisu, turkey pot pies and more: Here are delicious fall recipes to celebrate the season

Celebrity chef George Duran kicked off the first day of fall on “Fox & Friends Weekend” with some autumnal-themed recipes on Saturday, Sept. 23. 

Duran joined the “Fox & Friends Weekend” crew to reveal three recipes that feature fall ingredients. 

“Kids love sweets during the fall,” said Duran. 

He enlisted the help of special guest Rex Hegseth – son of co-host Pete Hegseth – to create the first dish, an “out of this world” variation on tiramisu. 

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Instead of using ladyfingers, as in a traditional tiramisu recipe, Duran substituted Nilla Wafers for a more kid-friendly option. 

For a fall twist, Duran mixed coffee with coffee creamers flavored with pumpkin spice and apple crumble.

Fox & Friends team, plus Rex Hegseth, an 8 year old boy, with George Duran

Chef George Duran joined “Fox & Friends Weekend” (including special guest, birthday boy Rex Hegseth) to show off some fall recipes. (Fox News)

“Because of the pumpkin purée or apple crumble flavor, it kind of adds more of a dimension to it, and kids can really help with that,” he said. 

Shifting to appetizers, Duran explained that “fall to me is about the taste of potatoes.” 

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Little Potato Company, he said, has pre-packaged small potatoes that are ready to eat after a quick trip to the microwave or air fryer.

“I like to spend more time with my family and less time cooking,” said Duran. 

“In five minutes, you take these bags, you can microwave them and you have cooked little potatoes.”

bags of Little Potato Co. potatoes

Little Potato Co. sells potatoes that are easy to prepare for a hearty fall meal, said Chef George Duran during a “Fox & Friends Weekend” appearance. (Fox News)

“You don’t have to peel them,” he said. 

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The Little Potato Company also sells pre-seasoned, microwaveable potatoes. 

“It’s the big thing — it’s a hardy fall thing.” 

“Instantly, you have these herbed potatoes you can actually serve to your family,” said Duran. 

George Duran and the Fox & Friends weekend hosts with pot pies

In addition to the first day of fall, Saturday, Sept. 23, is also “National Great American Pot Pie Day.”  (Fox News)

Turning to a main dish, Duran noted that in addition to the first day of fall, Sept. 23 is also “National Great American Pot Pie Day.” 

To mark the occasion, Duran made mini pot pies — with a fall twist, of course. 

“It’s the big thing — it’s a hardy fall thing,” he said. 

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Instead of using the oven, as is traditional, Duran cooked his pot pies in the air fryer using a puff pastry crust. 

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“Taste this fall vegetable pot pie,” he said.

“You don’t have to just use chicken. I’ve used turkey, because it’s the holiday.” 

For more Lifestyle articles, visit www.foxnews.com/lifestyle.

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