Couverture de Commission Six Eight

Commission Six Eight

Commission Six Eight

De : Randy Millet
Écouter gratuitement

3 mois pour 0,99 €/mois

Après 3 mois, 9.95 €/mois. Offre soumise à conditions.

À propos de ce contenu audio

Covering today's politics and current events through the lens of history and the Bible.

© 2026 Commission Six Eight
Christianisme Ministère et évangélisme Politique et gouvernement Sciences politiques Spiritualité
Les membres Amazon Prime bénéficient automatiquement de 2 livres audio offerts chez Audible.

Vous êtes membre Amazon Prime ?

Bénéficiez automatiquement de 2 livres audio offerts.
Bonne écoute !
    Épisodes
    • Church Under Siege
      Jan 23 2026

      Send us a text

      Doors swung open mid-sermon. Voices rose, kids cried, and a sanctuary turned into a battleground over conscience, law, and power. We take you inside the St. Paul church protest—what organizers say, how the church responded, and where federal protections like the FACE Act fit when a worship service is interrupted on purpose. This isn’t just a headline; it’s a stress test of whether our public square still leaves room for faith to be faith.

      We walk through the core claims: an alleged ICE tie to a pastor, calls for his resignation, and a “you could have left” defense that reframes worship as optional. Then we zoom out to the deeper fault line between individual liberty and collective pressure—how moral certainty can slip into coercion when dissenters are told their rights are no longer valid. Along the way, we talk about why churches became a target, how identity rooted in God resists state-approved morality, and what history and Scripture teach about standing firm when the crowd demands a bow.

      Drawing from Daniel 3, we reflect on a posture of resolve: God is able to deliver, but even if He doesn’t, fidelity comes first. That lens reframes recent memories of COVID closures, ongoing litigation, and the temptation to trade conscience for calm. Our goal isn’t rage; it’s clarity. Protect lawful worship, reject intimidation, and cultivate courage that refuses to mirror the tactics of the mob. If the fire comes, we look for presence in the flames and keep the doors open to anyone who seeks truth.

      If this conversation challenged or encouraged you, follow the show, share this episode with a friend, and leave a quick review. Your support helps more listeners find thoughtful, principled conversations about faith, freedom, and the courage to stand.

      https://freespoke.com/premium

      Promo Code com68 for 35% off

      https://a.co/d/8Ax0Ujg

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      23 min
    • Venezuela, Power, And The Monroe Doctrine
      Jan 8 2026

      Send us a text

      A midnight raid in Caracas shocks the world, but the real story starts decades earlier. We pull back the curtain on the capture of Nicolás Maduro, why U.S. officials say the operation was justified, and how a once-shelved doctrine from 1823 suddenly feels urgent and new. This is a fast, unvarnished tour through legality, deterrence, and the hard math of energy and influence in the Western Hemisphere.

      We walk through the charges that stacked up against Maduro—narco-terrorism, weapons offenses, and a cocaine pipeline tied to the Cartel of the Suns—and explain how escalating bounties and a changing security posture set the stage for a high-risk, high-precision mission. Then we trace the backlash: Moscow and Beijing decry the strike as an assault on sovereignty while quietly stressing over disrupted oil flows, stranded loans, and a shrinking space to project power near U.S. shores. The question isn’t only “Was this legal?” It’s “What strategic endgame does it serve—and can America sustain it?”

      To make sense of the playbook, we revive the Monroe Doctrine’s origin story and the 1895 Venezuela boundary showdown that signaled a new American posture. Today’s reboot—dubbed by some the “Donro Doctrine”—argues that peace and prosperity begin with regional security: curbing fentanyl pipelines, restoring seized oil contracts, and warning adversaries off the hemisphere. We outline five concrete outcomes the White House is betting on, from relief for Venezuelans to a tighter vise on Russia and China’s energy options, while naming the risks of overreach, mission creep, and fragile transitions.

      If you value clear, candid analysis without spin, hit follow, share this episode with a friend, and leave a short review telling us what you think America’s role in the hemisphere should be. Your take may shape our next conversation.

      https://freespoke.com/premium

      Promo Code com68 for 35% off

      https://a.co/d/8Ax0Ujg

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      24 min
    • O Holy Night, Unveiled
      Dec 10 2025

      Send us a text

      A single carol sparked devotion, defiance, and even moments of peace on the brink of war. We follow O Holy Night from a stained-glass celebration in 1847 France to a melody that crossed trenches, toppled barriers, and became the first song ever broadcast over radio waves. Along the way, we meet unlikely collaborators—Placide Cappeau, a poet and wine merchant; Adolphe Adam, a composer of Jewish heritage; and John Sullivan Dwight, an American minister and abolitionist—each adding layers of meaning that transformed a parish piece into a global anthem.

      We explore why the French church once banned the carol even as the people kept singing it at home, and how Dwight’s English translation carried a moral charge that echoed through the abolitionist movement: “Chains shall he break, for the slave is our brother.” That line didn’t just comfort; it confronted, turning worship into witness and inviting congregations to hear the gospel as a call to justice. Then, amid the Franco-Prussian War and later World War I, O Holy Night rose from No Man’s Land to midwinter skies, briefly turning enemies into a choir and proving that music can carve out peace even when politics cannot.

      The story culminates with Reginald Fessenden’s 1906 broadcast—scripture read aloud, then a violin performance of O Holy Night—marking the first time a human voice and a song traveled the airwaves to astonished listeners. We break down the carol’s musical lift, the lyrical arc from awe to action, and the reason it still rings true in cathedrals, living rooms, and headphones: it binds wonder to courage and devotion to dignity. Press play for a journey through music history, cultural change, and the enduring power of a song to bend hearts toward hope. If the episode moved you, share it with a friend, leave a rating, and tell us your favorite rendition.

      https://a.co/d/8Ax0Ujg

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      17 min
    Aucun commentaire pour le moment