A New Beginning: Pastor Randy Fuller on Healing, Hope, and Holy Spirit Power
About this episode
Pastor Randy Fuller of New Beginnings Family Worship Church in Northport, Alabama joins Philip Cameron for a bold, unfiltered conversation about the church's mandate to engage culture — not retreat from it. Fuller argues that every New Testament passage about the last days, persecution, and the return of Christ is "always followed with therefore," a call to action, not silence. He and Philip unpack how the American church has ceded ground on prayer in schools, abortion, and gender ideology by staying quiet, and why that silence carries moral weight: "We are as culpable for these babies dying as the ones that are actually doing the job, because we didn't speak up about it."
The discussion takes a sharp turn into replacement theology and its real-world consequences for Israel. Fuller warns that any doctrine removing God's covenant with Israel undermines the church's own confidence in God's faithfulness — and points to Zechariah's prophecy that God will judge nations who divide His land. He draws a direct line between anti-Israel ideology and the spiritual and cultural decline visible across Western nations today.
This episode is a clarion call for believers to reclaim their voice in the public square, stand firm on biblical truth, and understand that the church shines brightest when the world grows darkest. Tune in for a conversation that will challenge you to move from the sidelines to the front lines of faith.
“When the world is growing darker, the church can shine the brightest. But we have to remember who we answer to. Our accountability is to the Lord. And we are going to face judgment for what we've done with our opportunities — or what we haven't done.”
“Jesus got so involved in the political times that he was involved in that they crucified him. He was before Pontius Pilate. Herod tried to kill him. They were all governors and state representatives trying to kill this guy called Jesus that was messing with their world. And unless the church is messing with the world we live in, we are not being the church.”
“If God was not faithful to his covenant with Israel, where is the confidence that the church has that he will be faithful to his covenant with the church? If that's the case, we are in trouble.”
What's Discussed
Pastor Randy Fuller of New Beginnings Family Worship Church in Northport, Alabama delivers a direct challenge to the modern church's tendency toward cultural silence. He argues that every New Testament passage about the last days carries a "therefore" — a call to active, faithful engagement. Fuller and Philip Cameron address the church's failure to speak on abortion, gender ideology, and transgender participation in women's sports. Fuller then pivots to replacement theology, contending that removing God's covenant with Israel destabilizes the church's own theological foundation, citing Zechariah's warning against dividing God's land. He critiques theologians including John Piper on this point and connects anti-Israel ideology to Western cultural and spiritual decline.
Church's Mandate to Engage Culture
Separation of Church and State Redefined
Abortion and Gender Ideology Silence
Transgender Athletes in Women's Sports
Replacement Theology and Israel's Covenant
John Piper and the Two-State Solution
Anti-Israel Ideology and Western Decline
God's Covenant Promise to Abraham
Episode Transcript
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Intro
Philip:What?
Philip:Hey, welcome to Daily Faith. Today my earpiece is falling out. I am so glad you're here with us. We've got a great program with a great guest. I've been traveling for 56 years in this country, preaching in churches, and the pastor today of the church that we minister in, Randy Fuller — if you're looking, if you're in the Tuscaloosa area and you're looking for a no-nonsense, straight up the middle church that loves God, this is the church you need to go to. It's called New Beginnings in Northport, which is part of the Tuscaloosa area.
Philip:And I just know that what he's gonna share with us today is gonna challenge us and stir us to good works. We are in a fight. I don't know if you understand this or not, but I've never seen — I came to America in 1969 — I've never seen such clearly defined battle lines as there are right now for the soul of America. The darkness has been unmasked. They don't care anymore. They're not trying to hide and get in, you know, like a Trojan horse.
Philip:They are straight up, flat out. We want boys in sport. We want to compete with girls. We want your daughters to have to have showers with an intact man. And they're not embarrassed anymore about it. We want the right to go into the most sacred place on earth, which is the womb. We've killed 60-odd million babies in this country. Hitler killed 6 million Jews, and he is the worst person in history. America — doctors with white coats and a stethoscope around their neck have killed over 60 million babies, 10 times more than Hitler. And we expect God to bless America.
Philip:And the church has been sitting on the sidelines with its hands folded. Don't get involved. Just pray. Just pray. Let me tell you something, faith without works is dead. The Bible says that plainly. And I'm watching things and I'm looking at my country where I came from. Great Britain is being overrun by Islam. The whole country. Ireland has started to fight, and the Irish know how to fight. They've spent decades with the IRA bombing stuff all the time.
Philip:And you're gonna find — watch the news and just keep an eye on it — and you'll discover that the Irish have a much shorter fuse than the English or the Scots. We just gotta move over and move over and give up and move over and make space. And our Irish friends are going to say, this is our country and you are in our country. Watch them.
Philip:So we've got a great pastor who's not afraid to speak up, and we're gonna have a great time with him today. So whatever you are, hit the share button. Call your pastor and say, watch this pastor today, because he's gonna speak truth to us. And if your church isn't speaking up on the social aspects of our society — it began in the church. The church houses were where the teachers were. The church houses were where medicine was. It was in the church. The first thing a community did was build a church in the middle of town. Go look at all your little towns and you'll see it.
Philip:And the government, one by one, took over all of these elements of our society, and then they imposed what they thought. And then godless men came in, and now your universities are teaching your kids hell. You are paying tens of thousands of dollars a year to have your children indoctrinated to anything but righteousness.
Philip:And I think the church needs to have a voice. And I'm glad to tell you that this pastor friend of mine today has got a voice. Daily Faith on YouTube — check us out, YouTube forward slash Daily Faith. DailyFaith.org is our main base. I've just been told right now that for some reason we're not getting up on the Facebook page. It's up on the Daily Faith page but not on Facebook. But we're working on it. Oh, I've just been told we are live on all pages. Thank you, Andrew, for telling me that. Listen, I'm delighted you're with us. We are gonna have a great show today. Welcome to Daily Faith.
Philip:Hey, welcome to Daily Faith. My name is Philip Cameron, and I am delighted you have happened past this program. I believe that we walk by faith on a daily basis. And this program started during the pandemic because a lot of pastors were calling, asking what was going on. We traveled in churches all across America, so we were kind of like a periscope as to what was going on. And it's grown and developed and changed in its format, but the message is the same. We want to affirm your walk with God every day. You are important to the Father. He loves you.
Philip:The Bible says with a love that will never let you go. You are so secure. In my Christian walk with God, I'm not holding on to him. It isn't how good I am and how many hours a day I pray, or how much Bible reading I do. They're all important and they're necessary for your Christian walk. But I'm gonna tell you something, the older I get, I understand more the fact that there's an eternal Father that isn't moved by planetary shifts or political parties.
Philip:This God stands supreme and sovereign in your life, and he has got you. And no weapon formed against you can prosper, because he is on your side. And if God be for you, who can be against you? So we are here to help you and strengthen you.
Philip:I've got a great friend on today. My goodness. His name is Randy Fuller. We've been friends for decades. We're getting old. We're growing old together. He pastors a great church. When I first went to his church, it was a storefront church. And it is now a tremendous church in Tuscaloosa, Northport, which is a suburb of Tuscaloosa. And we're gonna be talking to him today. And I believe he's got a word for you to stand up for what you believe.
Philip:As you know, we do work in Moldova. 35 years ago, I walked into an orphanage. I didn't want to be there. My dad had made me go. It was the last thing on earth I wanted to do. I was on all the TV shows, one of my books had sold 300,000 copies, all of my bucket list was checked. I was done. I was thrilled. 35 years ago. And when he called me and that phone rang in my home that day, I didn't realize that my whole life was about to change.
Philip:And for more than half my life, I adopted a wee boy. I founded an orphanage in Timișoara, Romania. And for over half of my life, I've been spending my time rescuing kids. We work primarily now in Moldova, which is next to Romania. It's right next to Ukraine. It is under threat constantly of Russian invasion. That country, which is the poorest in Europe, has the highest alcoholism in the world — a terrible place.
Philip:And the darkest of all the parts of that world is trafficking, human trafficking. More girls come out of Moldova than any other country in Europe. It's in terrible, terrible condition. We bring them to a place called Vatra Village, the most amazing place you've ever seen, right on the largest lake in the country. We bought it. Rich folk had made this village up to have a summer home on that lake.
Philip:And they poisoned the lake with chlorine to kill algae, and no one wanted to stay in a house next to a chlorine-filled lake. They fixed the lake, we bought the houses, and one by one we fixed them up. And every girl you're looking at right now on your screen is worth $300,000 a year to the traffickers. If they can get that girl, they will. Three of those girls will make a million dollars a year for them.
Philip:Instead of that, we make friends with them while they're in the orphanage. We visit them, we bring them stuff, and we tell them there's hope. And they come to our place and we put them back in school. And we are seeing the most amazing transformation. These kids are now lawyers and doctors and police officers. Two of our girls work in the French embassy translating — orphan kids that no one wanted — and God has transformed them.
Philip:But the thing that excites me more than anything else is the fact that they're turning into missionaries. They come as orphans, they become sons and daughters, and then they go out as missionaries all through the summertime. Now all year long they work, but in the summertime they do summer camps. Each of our homes adopts a village for a whole year, finds out every widow in the village, gets an evangelical church to partner with us, and finds the alcoholic families where the kids are broken.
Philip:And they literally go through a village with like a fine-tooth comb, working in the families for the gospel's sake. And then in the summertime they have a crazy summer camp. Our church has a three-day VBS, and it took about six months of preparation. My wife Chrissy, this year, worked all day in our warehouse, and then at nighttime she changed hats. Our VBS was building with Lego. And she made hundreds of Lego blocks and made the wee figures.
Philip:I don't like Lego. I'm sick of seeing Lego. But our kids do this all through the summertime for a whole week, night and day, feeding and caring for these kids. My two granddaughters are there right now for the summer — Ally and Kara — sleeping with the kids in their homes and in the villages as well, on floors and mattresses. And they just sent me this video. And as a proud grandad, I want to show you what God is doing through my grandkids and our kids in Vatra Village. Watch this.
Philip:They eat more food in a week than they've seen their whole lifetime, have more fun. They all get backpacks and school supplies to go home with, and change their life. On the last day, we invite the parents of the kids to come and watch what the kids have learned during the camp. And we take that opportunity to share with their mom and dad the hope of Christ and what Jesus can do for the family. Many of them live in poverty. These villages have got no streets, no sidewalks, no street lamps, no indoor plumbing.
Philip:And they live like they're in Africa, but it's in Europe — minus 30 degrees in the wintertime. And these orphan kids, God used to help change their lives. And we need you to help us if you could. We are about to finish one new house. We've just bought two homes and a farm with a barn on it. One of the houses is finished apart from painting. And we can take 25 little kids between the age of four and 16 — a thousand dollars at the bottom of your picture right there — this house.
Philip:And on that same piece of property, there's a house that will also hold 25, which is not finished yet. So we are looking for God to provide a miracle. We just made a payment on this last week, and that was an oh-my-goodness moment, asking the Lord if he forgot what we were doing. And he always shows up. I just wish he would show up early sometimes. Instead it's just on time. It would be good for my heart. But we are just so excited to start this new ministry for 50 kids under the age of 16 in Vatra.
Philip:We could only take girls 16 and upwards. And we had to put a girl back — after we took her in at 14, we put her back because the government wouldn't allow us to keep her. And she was gang raped and lost her mind. It was horrendous. And the answer to that is to have a place where we can take little kids. So we are working on that. Yesterday I spent a couple of hours on the phone going through the logistics of getting it open.
Philip:There are 73 villages around where this new ministry — it's called Promised House, in a town called Ungheni. There are 73 unreached villages. And we are gonna make a difference for the kingdom of God. To open a house needs 300 sponsors giving a dollar a day. If I were to take you to those kids and say, we can rescue these kids for $1 a day, I don't think there's one person watching me just now that wouldn't say, Philip, I can believe God for a dollar a day, you can go ahead.
Philip:If I can make 300 people think that thought, we can open the next house, and then the next house, the next 300. And that's why I'm asking — help us if you can. You can give a one-time gift if you feel led to do that. Also, we are building this. The second house is not finished. It's about 80% finished. And we need the funds to finish that. Yesterday, my wife Chrissy and my daughter Melody and I were discussing how much furniture we need — 50 beds, 50 chests. You get the picture. It's like furnishing a whole house for your own family, but there's 25 in your family.
Philip:Let the Lord speak to you. You may be a businessman or a businesswoman that God has blessed for this purpose. If you can help us, I'd really appreciate it. Real simple — just write to The Orphan's Hands, PO Box 25, Clinton, Tennessee 37716. That address will stay up on the screen under my name.
Philip:You can also go to DailyFaith.tv — there's a giving page there, and you can just earmark it. If you earmark it for the new place, the new orphanage, we'll put it right there. You can also give by phone, which is how I would do it if I was you. Just dial 833 and then dial Daily Faith — spell out Daily Faith on the keypad on your device. And a real-life person will pick up the phone. You can change a life for a dollar a day.
Philip:The greatest challenge we face is the monthly support of these buildings. It is tens of thousands of dollars a month that we're sending there, and your giving makes the difference. So please help us. We're gonna have a brand new place with two homes and a youth camp. We're gonna build a barn into the best youth camp in Moldova. We're looking for a great big swing park, and if anyone knows where there's one available, let me know, because we want to get it and ship it to Moldova.
Philip:If you saw that video, there was a popcorn machine and a candy floss machine and a trampoline that all went on the last container. And the kids think they've gone to heaven if they get hot popcorn — they've never seen it before. And I laugh, they're going through more popcorn than Moldova can produce. So please help us.
Philip:I'm delighted to have a dear friend with me today. What a great man of God. We've known each other for decades. He pastors New Beginnings Family Worship Church in Tuscaloosa, in a place called Northport. If you're anywhere within driving distance, this is a church — no nonsense, boots on the ground, kingdom-thinking people. And Randy is the pastor of it. Welcome to Daily Faith, my friend. How are you doing today?
Randy Fuller:I'm doing well, Philip. Thank you for having me.
Philip:Oh, I love it. You've been to Moldova, haven't you?
Randy Fuller:Yes, sir. And I know you're gonna make fun of me.
Philip:Here we go. I drove him over the Carpathian Mountains, sick as a dog. He just sat with his head down against his backpack, and it was just like, just please tell me when this is over.
Church's Mandate to Engage Culture
Randy Fuller:That was a lot.
Philip:You'll do a trip, but now we'll fly you in to Moldova. Won't drive you. It's a much smoother experience than it was. Those were the wild west days of our mission work in Moldova. I love you for many reasons, but one of the things I love about you is your directness. You are a no-nonsense guy as far as the kingdom of God. And you believe that the church has a part to play in the discourse of what's going on in the world. And the church most times sits on the sidelines and wrings our hands.
Philip:Randy, I remember coming to America with my dad, and the pastor — it was during the prayer in school issue. And I remember sitting at pastors' tables, them going, wow, there'll always be prayer in school. This is America. One woman took prayer out of schools. Same thing with abortion. And that happened because the church didn't speak.
Randy Fuller:Well, you know, the church has a mandate. In all of the scripture — New Testament scripture — where anything is mentioned about the last days, about persecution, about the nearness of Christ, about the coming of judgment, it's always followed with therefore.
Randy Fuller:Gird up the loins of your mind. Be ready. Live out your faith. Put off the old, put on the new. And this is the time that the church can shine the brightest.
Randy Fuller:When the world is growing darker, the church can shine the brightest. But we have to remember who we answer to. Our accountability is to the Lord. And we are going to face judgment for what we've done with our opportunities — or what we haven't done.
Randy Fuller:And so we have fallen into the trap — the secular trap — of thinking that we are accountable to school boards, or city councils, or mayors, or governors, or political parties. The mandate of the church is that we are to deny ourselves, take up our cross, and follow Jesus.
Separation of Church and State Redefined
Randy Fuller:And the idea that we can divorce our daily lives, our politics, or anything like that from our faith — which everyone says is separation of church and state — what that meant in the Constitution, Philip, you know this, was that the government of the United States would not establish, nor would it promote any particular faith.
Philip:Or persecute.
Randy Fuller:Or persecute it for any particular faith. So we just took that, we let people redefine that, and we let government and secular humanism — and now we find out higher education — we've let them teach us, shame us, and politic us into a corner where we just choose to remain silent. And that is not — that is the antithesis of where we're supposed to be.
Randy Fuller:Jesus got so involved in the political times that he was involved in that they crucified him. He was before Pontius Pilate. Herod tried to kill him. They were all governors and state representatives trying to kill this guy called Jesus that was messing with their world. And unless the church is messing with the world we live in, we are not being the church.
Randy Fuller:Salt and light. Who wants to see the light in the dark? They prefer to be dark. And who wants the salt? So the idea that the church is supposed to remain silent, ambivalent, and not stand up for issues such as heterosexual versus same-sex marriage, as you mentioned a while ago, the sacredness of life, and the preservation and the protection of unborn children in the womb, men and women changing their sexual appearance.
Abortion and Gender Ideology Silence
Randy Fuller:I don't like to say identity. That doesn't change. They're changing their sexual appearance, feeding it to us as changing their identity. And we just let them go participate in our sports programs where you have daughters, I have daughters, and we want them to swim against, play tennis against, play soccer against, box against men, and then go dress with them.
Philip:What blows my mind is the other day — just two or three days ago — this guy entered this biking competition and they didn't put his name in the roster, and he won the thing. And he is a guy. I saw the video. He's a brute of a great big square-shouldered guy, and he's standing up in first place. The woman who should have won wouldn't go on the podium in second place. And they did it underhandedly. They snuck the guy in, didn't put him on any of the names of the competitors. They are deviant. They are sick in their minds.
Philip:And the church needs to speak about this. Otherwise — prayer in school, abortion — we kept our mouth shut. And we are as culpable for these babies dying as the ones that are actually doing the job, because we didn't speak up about it.
Transgender Athletes in Women's Sports
Randy Fuller:Exactly. Now here's the other issue. This is the kill switch right here. This one will cause a nuclear explosion inside the church. It has made its way into the church. It's made its way into our seminaries at the highest level. And it's overtaking — and that is replacement theology, where the church has usurped and replaced the nation of Israel within God's covenant.
Replacement Theology and Israel's Covenant
Randy Fuller:Now think about this term — the fallacy of it — that God had a covenant. God made a promise, an eternal covenant, to a nation of people, Israel. And then because of something that they did quote-unquote wrong, or they turned their back, he etched them out and put us in, and now they're on their own.
Randy Fuller:And I'm thinking to myself, do you understand that if God was not faithful to his covenant with Israel, where is the confidence that the church has that he will be faithful to his covenant with the church? If that's the case, we are in trouble. We have done grievously. We're looking at it right now.
Randy Fuller:We're looking at not only our nation — it will soon, probably if not prior to Trump's departure, certainly afterward — think about this: that the nation of Israel will exist on the planet with no visible, tangible support group of people on the planet. That is a terrifying thought.
Randy Fuller:And for us, that is — without us, for us — we're gonna turn our back on the politics of it. And again, I'm not letting the church off the hook. It's being propagated. Matter of fact, I love John Piper. He knows more about the Bible — he's forgotten more about the Bible than I've ever learned. But he's dead wrong on this. I read a quote in church last Sunday where he says, because the covenant has been rescinded with Israel, that now they should, under the principle of international law, divide their land and provide a two-state solution with the Palestinian people.
John Piper and the Two-State Solution
Randy Fuller:God said, particularly in the future in Zechariah, that he's coming to judge the nations, the gentile nations. And he's on record as saying, because they have divided my land. And so we're falling into that. So if you let or allow some of this replacement theology to change your ideology about the support of national Israel, you're gonna feed into — listen — anything that is anti-Israel is antichrist.
Philip:He's a Jew, by nationality. Great Britain's empire was way bigger than America's empire ever was. We ruled the world when Queen Victoria was on the throne. They said the sun never sets on the British Empire. If you go to Britain today, the government is anti-Israel, the people are anti-Israel, they are pro-Palestinian. Our whole country has changed around its belief system, and it is now almost bankrupt.
Philip:There is trouble. All of the Muslims that have been taken into the country — look, London is Islamic, has an Islamic government. Birmingham, Manchester — I mean, they are taking over the country. And they say this — I was showing Andrew — they'll say, we are not here to participate. We are here to take over. The country that sent the missionaries originally, before America was even thought about, is now at the point of becoming a Muslim country.
Anti-Israel Ideology and Western Decline
Philip:France, Italy, Spain — they are taking over. Because the church, not because the government, because the church has failed to stand with Israel and stand for the truth of the gospel.
Randy Fuller:And all I say — I just tell people, if you wanna look at it from the purely secular side, just purely secular — there's never been a nation that stood against the nation of Israel. Even though they ceased to be an organized group of people inside the boundaries of their land, they are the only nation that exists in its original boundaries, still in the same language, with their original language. And they have been brought back and preserved in that land. And every kingdom and nation that's come against them has been on the losing side.
Philip:Every time, and will continue.
Randy Fuller:It's always been that way, and it will be that way until the end of time. Islam is 1,500 years old. Israel is thousands of years old — way long before Muhammad had his revelation from Gabriel. God had his revelation about Abraham. And I'm gonna make a covenant with my people. And if you love Israel, you're gonna prosper. If you curse Israel, you're gonna be cursed.
Philip:And I'm telling you now, guys, I know which side I want to be on, Randy. I'm going down on that side. All my chips are on that — whatever color that is.
Randy Fuller:Exactly. Here's what he said, Philip. He said, I will make you a great nation. And we've just watched them destroy Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis all at one time — a multi-front war — and they have defeated every one. And they will continue.
God's Covenant Promise to Abraham
Philip:And they're that big. Oh, gracious me. Listen, thank you for being with me today. Time's gone. I appreciate you. Keep preaching the truth. If you are anywhere near this church in North Alabama, you've got to go and be a part of the service. It's really simple. It's New Beginnings Family Worship Center. It's on Park West Drive in Northport. We love you. Thank you for being with me today. Thank you for watching. Love watching Daily Faith. Help us with those new houses in Ungheni. We'll see you again. Bye-bye.
For over 25 years, the Cameron family has been changing the lives of orphans in Romania and Moldova — from providing running water, flushing toilets, and clean wells, to coal for heat, new windows, as well as food and clothing. They champion the physical needs of the orphans in these broken and desolate countries. Many of Moldova's orphans are saved from the horrors of trafficking through homes founded by the Camerons. And in the process, orphans become daughters and sons.
They come to know their heavenly Father and are forever changed by the love of Jesus. God helped the Camerons lift these amazing young men and women out of darkness — now no longer orphans. They want to return and invade that very same darkness with the light of Jesus Christ. The Orphan's Hands equips these daughters and sons to become missionaries. Your monthly gift of $31 will allow us to rescue and take in more girls and boys, saving them from the hell of human trafficking.
Your monthly partnership will allow us to care for those in The Orphan's Hands homes in Moldova and Ukraine. If you want to join Philip and Chrissy in taking care of these precious young people, please contact us today by calling 833 Daily Faith. You can also give by going online to www.DailyFaith.tv, or by writing to Post Office Box 25, Clinton, Tennessee 37716. So many lives depend on what we do. Thank you for loving the lost.
Common questions
Why does Randy Fuller think the church can't stay silent on political and social issues?
Randy argues that every New Testament passage about the last days or persecution is followed by a 'therefore' — a call to action. He believes the church's accountability is to God, not to school boards or political parties, and that staying silent is the antithesis of what the church is supposed to be. He even points out that Jesus got so involved in the politics of his day that the authorities crucified him.
What is replacement theology and why does Randy Fuller think it's dangerous?
Replacement theology is the belief that the church has replaced Israel in God's covenant. Randy says this is a 'kill switch' that has crept into seminaries and churches. His core argument is logical: if God broke his eternal covenant with Israel, the church has no grounds for confidence that God will keep his covenant with them either. He also warns that Zechariah records God promising to judge nations that divide his land, making support for a two-state solution spiritually perilous.
How does Randy Fuller respond to the idea of separating faith from politics?
Randy says the constitutional principle of 'separation of church and state' was only ever meant to prevent the government from establishing or persecuting a particular faith — not to silence believers. He argues that secular humanism and higher education have shamed and politicked the church into a corner of silence, which he calls a trap the church has fallen into.
What does Randy Fuller say about Israel's track record against its enemies throughout history?
Randy points out that every kingdom and nation that has come against Israel has ended up on the losing side — and says that pattern will hold until the end of time. He notes that Israel is the only nation still existing within its original boundaries, still speaking its original language, and that it has just defeated Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis simultaneously in a multi-front war.
What is Randy Fuller's view on transgender athletes competing in women's sports?
Randy is direct: he says these individuals are changing their sexual appearance, not their identity, and that the church should not stay silent while biological males compete against — and share locker rooms with — daughters. He sees this as one of the key social issues the church has a mandate to speak out on.
Topics
randy fullerreplacement theologychurch and politicsbiblical courageisrael covenantgender ideologypro-life church