NEWS HEADLINES: Marco Rubio Just Delivered A More Powerful GOSPEL Message Than Most Pastors Out There! * 100PercentFedUp.com * by Noah

Marco Rubio Just Delivered A More Powerful GOSPEL Message Than Most Pastors Out There! * 100PercentFedUp.com * by Noah

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Folks, I don’t know what is going on today, but this is a FULL BLOWN REVIVAL at the Charlie Kirk Memorial!

I am having a hard time keeping up, it’s just one after another.

And these are not professional Pastors either….

This one was, and I am still blown away with how well this man delivered this message:

But the rest are not Pastors….

That man is GONE.

Today we saw “Pastor Marco Rubio” stand up on that stage and deliver a Gospel message more powerfully than most churches I have been to!

And that was just a small clip….

I really encourage you to listen to the full speech.

About, uh, maybe ten or 12 years ago, a person I knew very well, who had been very helpful to me in my campaigns when I was in the Senate, came to me and said she had met this very impressive young man. He was gonna start this group to go on college campuses and try to convince young Americans that ours is the greatest country in the history of the world, and that Marxism was bad.

And I remember thinking back then, I was, uh, I’m gonna admit to you guys, I was a little skeptical. I said, “College campuses, you’re gonna do that? Why don’t you start somewhere easier, like, for example, communist Cuba?” You know? But my skepticism was proven wrong. In place after place over the last 12, 14, 16 years we’ve seen this renaissance.

Understand where we were at that time in our history. Understand where we are still today in many places, where young Americans are actively told that everything they were taught, that all the foundations that made our society and our civilization so grand, they were all wrong, they were all evil. That marriage is oppressive, that children are a burden, that America is a source of evil, not of good in the world.

And here was this voice that inspired a movement in which young Americans were told, “That is not true. The highest calling we are called to is to be in a successful marriage and to raise productive children.” And a movement that taught them that ours was not just a great country, but the greatest, most exceptional nation that has ever existed in the history of all mankind. And that it’s worth fighting for, it’s worth defending, it’s worth preserving, and it’s worth passing on to the next generation.

This was the mission and the work of Charlie Kirk. And a couple things that stand out about him—he led this movement, but he did so with incredible knowledge. It’s unbelievable how much he knew.

He came to me very recently, he said some quote. I asked, “Who said that?” He said, “Marcus Aurelius.” I said, “What district does he represent?” I kinda knew who it was, but, uh, he said back, “No, it’s a Roman, you know, philosopher king or emperor.” His incredible knowledge. Let me tell you, one of the last messages I had with him was just a few days before his passing, where he wrote me from overseas, “I’m in South Korea.

I have many concerns I want to share with you when I get back.” He was constantly expanding his horizons. But he just didn’t have knowledge. He had wisdom—an uncanny amount of wisdom for a man as young as he was. Wisdom that sometimes takes a lifetime to accumulate, he had it in just 31 years. He was also bold.

It is so easy, and it—we’ve been guilty of it, I think many of us have been guilty of this—you hide behind the walls and you surround yourself with people that agree with you. We do it as a society all the time. Increasingly, people are moving into neighborhoods with other people that agree with them politically, and isolate themselves from people that do not agree with them. But Charlie Kirk was bold.

He actively sought out to engage peacefully, respectfully, those who he disagreed with. As recently as two days ago, we learned of one of the hosts on CNN who said that one of the messages he had gotten just a few days before Charlie’s passing was from him, inviting him to dialogue. And he did this on campuses, he did this on podcasts, he did this on radio shows, he did this on television shows.

Time and again he sought to engage those he disagreed with because he understood that we were not created to isolate ourselves from one another, but to engage. The irony in all this is that what our nation needs—one of the many things it needs—is the ability to discuss our differences openly, honestly, peacefully, respectfully. And Charlie Kirk did that more than anyone alive in America today is doing. And Charlie Kirk was impactful.

Impactful because of all the things I’ve said, but look around this place. There’s a hundred-something thousand people here. The President of the United States is here, his entire Cabinet is here. Television outlets and media outlets from all over the world are covering this. I just came from overseas, in every country I stopped they gave us their condolences for his passing.

Impactful—in just 31 years of life he made a difference, he mattered, and he will matter now more than he ever has before. And let me close with this: how do you remember? This is a memorial service, it’s to honor him. How do you best remember it? I’ll take the liberty of saying what I think we can best do.

Look, I think he had a tremendous impact on young Americans in general. I think he had a very special and direct impact on young men in this country. That’s one of the greatest developments I’ve seen, it’s been very positive. I think we remember him for that. I think we remember him for constantly saying, “You want to live a productive life? Get married, start a family, love your country.” These are powerful messages.

But I hope many who are watching—I imagine there are people watching here tonight that didn’t know much about Charlie Kirk until 11 days ago. Maybe they were disengaged from politics, maybe they were partially engaged. I hope one of the things they take from this is that the movement Charlie Kirk led and started and gave fuel to was about politics, but not only about politics. It was deeper, it was broader.

And I would say that, taking the liberty, but I’m confident he would agree, one of the things he wants us to take away from this, from all of this, is the following: his deep belief that we were all created, every single one of us, before the beginning of time by the hands of the God of the universe. An all-powerful God, who loved us and created us for the purpose of living with Him in eternity.

But then sin entered the world and separated us from our Creator. And so God took on the form of a man and came down and lived among us, and He suffered like men, and He died like a man. But on the third day He rose unlike any mortal man. And to prove any doubters wrong, He ate with His disciples so they could see, and they touched His wounds.

He didn’t rise as a ghost or as a spirit, but as flesh. And then He rose to heaven, but He promised He would return, and He will. And when He returns, because He took on that death, because He carried that cross, we were freed from the sin that separated us from Him. And when He returns, there will be a new heaven and a new earth, and we will all be together. And we are going to have a great reunion there again with Charlie and all the people we love.

Thank you, and God bless you.

This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport.





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