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Christ is King: The Fight to Reclaim Faith in America’s Schools

The phrase “Christ is King” is at the center of a heated cultural debate. While Christians have always proclaimed this truth, radical groups are twisting it to spread hate. A new report warns that extremists online are using “Christ is King” to push antisemitism and division. But believers shouldn’t back down. This sacred message belongs to the Church, not to those who misuse it.

In Oklahoma, leaders are fighting to bring faith back into public schools. The state’s education department wants to put Bibles in classrooms. Liberal groups are attacking the plan, claiming it violates “separation of church and state.” But conservatives argue this isn’t about forcing religion—it’s about honoring America’s Christian roots. Taxpayers deserve to know where their money goes, and parents should decide what values their kids learn.

The chaos we see today didn’t start overnight. Decades ago, radical movements kicked God out of schools and public life. The 1960s rebellion against tradition planted seeds of confusion. Now, morality is crumbling, and kids are lost. Restoring biblical truth is the only way to fix what’s broken.

Philippians 1:6 gives hope: “He who began a good work in you will carry it to completion.” God isn’t done with America. Christians must stand firm, reject cultural decay, and raise the next generation to follow Him. The woke left wants to silence believers, but truth always wins.

The “Christ is King” uproar proves how far the nation has strayed. Instead of caving to critics, Christians should shout this truth louder. Let extremists twist words—the Church must reclaim what’s rightfully ours. This Easter, proclaiming Christ’s reign is more important than ever.

Oklahoma’s Bible plan faces legal battles, but the real fight is spiritual. Public schools teach kids to doubt God and embrace chaos. Giving students access to Scripture isn’t coercive—it’s compassionate. The Bible shaped Western civilization. Removing it only helps those who hate America’s heritage.

Some claim saying “Christ is King” hurts Jewish people. That’s dishonest. Jesus was Jewish, and Christians love Israel. The problem isn’t the phrase—it’s the hateful hearts misusing it. True believers must drown out poison with grace and truth.

The 1960s radicals wanted a godless society. Look where that got us. It’s time to reverse their damage. Let’s rebuild on the firm foundation of faith. Christ is King, and no online mob can change that.

Written by Keith Jacobs

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