Monday, June 08, 2026

Best Advice.

The Aussie 'Take' On Henry's Death.

Critical Race Theory Killed Henry Nowak!

4 June 2026.

The murder of 18-year-old Henry Nowak has reignited debate over policing, race, multiculturalism, and DEI policies, following allegations that officers prioritised racism claims over a dying victim.

Remember the name, Henry Nowak.

He was the 18-year-old British student stabbed to death by a Sikh, then falsely arrested by police because the United Kingdom’s multicultural sectarian “safetyism” laws see all white men as oppressors.

The Fatal Encounter and Court Findings

British national, Indian Vickrum Digwa, was sentenced for Nowak’s murder on 1 June.

Judge William Mousley KC recounted the incident in a sentencing statement.

This was, he said, a “chance meeting.”Nowak, a first-year college student, was walking back to his university accommodation. Digwa claims the student barged into him.

Footage from Nowak’s phone contradicted that.

The judge said the phone shows Nowak “cheekily” asking the Indian British national if his Sikh knife made him feel tough.

Nowak was being neither “aggressive nor threatening” towards Digwa.

Video then showed Digwa take Nowak’s phone from him, after stating that the knife made him a “bad man.”

Digwa repeatedly stabbed the 18-year-old because his turban had been knocked off during the wrestle over Nowak’s phone. Something that is anathema to Sikhs, the Judge explained.

Responding to the attempt to cover up Nowak’s murder, Judge Mousley damned it as “wicked lies.”

He then sentenced Digwa to life in prison.

Police Conduct Under Scrutiny

Condemning the “behaviour of police officers,” and politicians, Nigel Farage said, hearing sirens, “young Henry must have thought that help was at hand.”

“Far, far from it.”

Police arrived after Digwa’s brother called them, and not an ambulance, telling officers that they had been drunkenly “abused by a white guy.”

As published by The Telegraph, part of the transcript from that call reads,

“We’ve just got attacked racially by some white person. He’s physically attacked my brother; we’re Sikhs, we wear a turban, and he’s just attacked my brother.”

“I can’t let him go until this gets sorted. I am not being racially attacked and letting him get away with it.”

Farage said that when on the scene, police treated “an accusation of racism more seriously than an act of murder.”

Although police claim Nowak’s injuries were not survivable, they repeatedly ignored his cries as he bled to death.

Instead of receiving counsel and comfort, Nowak was shown contempt. DD.

Birdie.


 

Rather Better Than Us.

Sydney Anglicans: The Sex-Selection Abortion Bill Should Unite Parliament.

Sydney Anglicans: The Sex-Selection Abortion Bill Should Unite Parliament

29 May 2026


A bill to prohibit sex-selective abortion will shortly come before the New South Wales Parliament. Archbishop Kanishka Raffel urges the government to support it without hesitation.
DD.

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Ephesians 5.

 8) For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light 9) (for the fruit of the light consists in all goodness, righteousness and truth) 10) and find out what pleases the Lord. 11) Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them.

Sunday, June 07, 2026

The Resurrection Matters For All.

Why the resurrection matters for both Christians and non-believers.

CP.

Exodus 23 - 25


 

An Early Concentration Camp.

 https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2026/jun/05/namibia-shark-island-herero-nama-genocide-fractured-lifeworlds-spore-initiative-berlin-forensic

Birdie.


 

A VERMINOUS Claim!

 Lord Hermer: Reform would let migrants drown in Channel.

Attorney General attacks Nigel Farage’s party and Tories over promise to quit European Convention on Human Rights.

Well Argued, Camilla.

 

DT.

Saturday, June 06, 2026

D-Day.

WE MUST NEVER FORGET!programme of the 2026 D-Day Festival ...
                                                            

The Passover - Designed For Israel.

Anti-Semitism Is Anti-Christian.

 https://www.christianpost.com/voices/4-reasons-why-antisemitism-is-anti-christian.html

Birdies.

Are we inventing a fake God? - This is a very good and challenging question.

 Are we inventing a fake God? Why reverence is dying.


Before his passing in 2017, the late theologian R.C. Sproul remarked, “the greatest spiritual need in people’s lives today is to discover the true identity of God.” Those words are just as convicting today, if not more so, than they were a decade ago. Though many in our world would never reject God outright, multitudes are content to reinvent Him.

Modern versions of Christianity continue to shrink God to a size that is more manageable to our senses. We prefer a tame deity who stays in the background. One who shows up when we need Him because He fancies us the center of the universe. This god is anxious to take his marching orders and eager to remain quiet when we disagree with him.

Isaiah 6 offers a much different picture. With a vision of the Lord enthroned, untamed, glorious, and burning with holiness (Isa. 6:1-4), Scripture confronts us with the unrivaled identity of the only true God. This prophetic picture shatters our sentimental preferences. The living God far exceeds the watered-down mascot who cheers our every ambition, no matter how misguided.

The background of Isaiah’s glorious image was a season of national uncertainty in Judah. After a reign of more than 50 years, King Uzziah died, leaving a hole inhabited by instability and anxiety (2 Chr. 26:3). Yet, when God’s prophet looked toward Heaven, he did not see the Lord panicked or pacing, but reigning from His throne without interruption (Dan. 4:34-35). History does not rattle Him. Evil does not overcome Him. The future does not intimidate Him (Isa. 46:9-10).

Around the throne flew seraphim — angelic servants — who antiphonally sang, “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts, the whole earth is full of His glory” (Isa. 6:3). We prefer to speak more casually about the God we serve, eagerly reducing Him to the man upstairs, our life coach, or even worse, our co-pilot. Yet, Isaiah’s description leaves no room for such frivolities.

The seraphim did not chant, “Love, love, love,” even though God is love (1 John 4:8). Nor did they cry, “Merciful, merciful, merciful,” even though the Lord delights in mercy (Mic. 7:18). Instead, they selected the single attribute that most fully captures God’s essence. Holiness does not stand beside God like one trait in a list of many. Holiness defines God, along with all the glory and majesty that accompany Him (Lev. 11:44–45; 1 Sam. 2:2; Ps. 99:3, 5, 9).

Even the repetition matters. The three-fold declaration marked the emphasis that should grip us. Our God is in a category all His own, without rival or equal. The scene echoed Sinai, where the mountain quaked and smoke rose like a furnace due to Yahweh’s awesome presence (Ex. 19:18). The glorious holiness of God is heavy, and none swagger into His presence.

Isaiah certainly did not.

With a confession that cut through every self-illusion of righteousness, he lamented, “Woe is me, for I am ruined! Because I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts” (Isa. 6:5). Notice that there is no excuse for or dismissal of his sin. Holiness means that God stands completely separate from wickedness. Evil cannot corrupt Him. The darkness of our transgressions has no fellowship with the light of His purity. We cannot celebrate our sins and embrace God at the same time.

Tragically, our contemporary efforts to rush toward God’s love with no mention of His holiness forfeit the very grace we desperately need. Yet, the greatest testimony of God’s compassion for sinners is not His affirmation of our waywardness, but His transformation of our lives. Though we were formerly dead in our trespasses, walking according to the course of this world, God has made us alive together with Jesus (Eph. 2:1-5). Christ did not die to save us from nothing, but to rescue us from our vile disobedience.

In his humility, Isaiah experienced what countless Christ followers would later find out for themselves. When one of the seraphim took a burning coal from the altar and touched the prophet’s lips, his iniquity was taken away (Isa. 6:6-7). Therein is a picture of the same Gospel Christians preach today.

Notice that God took the initiative. The coal came from a place of sacrifice where the consuming fire of God cleanses our shame (Deut. 4:24; Heb. 12:29). The Lord does not negotiate with sin; He destroys it. Thus, God transferred Isaiah’s guilt to the offering, satisfying His holy wrath. Simultaneously, God covered His servant with grace and forgiveness.

The same mercy is available to us through the sacrificial death and resurrection of Jesus. He was pierced through for our transgressions and crushed for our iniquities, as God transferred our guilt upon Him (Isa. 53:5-6). Through His scourging we find healing and by means of His chastening He purchased our well-being (Isa. 53:5). Christ became sin for us, not because the Lord was eager to embrace our rebellion, but so that we could become the righteousness of God in Him (2 Cor. 5:21). God loves us enough to send His only begotten Son, not to wink at our sin, but to do something about it (John 3:16).

How holy is our God? So much so that He put His Son to death to save sinners like you and me. Our world does not lack opinions about God. What is missing, though, is reverence (Rom. 3:18). Many laugh at the idea of holiness. Others rewrite reality altogether (Isa. 5:20). Far too many demand affirmation, then punish dissent. Thankfully, our God does not take cues from this fallen age. He reigns from His throne in strength and power, knowing that He will have the last word (Ps. 2:1–4).

Dr Adam B. Dooley is pastor of Englewood Baptist Church in Jackson, TN, and author of Hope When Life Unravels. Contact him at adooley@ebcjackson.org. Follow him on Twitter @AdamBDooley. CP.

Best Advice.