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Green & Sheets: Trump ‘the Great Architect’

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At this point in history, America does not need a statesman. And we certainly do not need a politician. Frankly, and this will upset some of my religious friends, we do not need a peacemaker. We need a boat rocker.

by Dutch Sheets

America has been in a season of significant, inappropriate change for half a century. We are now moving into a time of restoration and reformation. Like a surgeon cutting out a cancer, a dentist removing an abscessed tooth, or a chiropractor twisting a body like a pretzel in order to make it straight again, America is being restored. And just as with the human body, the process can, at times, be painful. 

Surgeons, dentists, and chiropractors all hurt us to heal us. A therapist demands that we trade pain for gain. A home remodel becomes a mess before it becomes beautiful. Martin Luther’s great reformation was a giant upheaval of the religious and political world while also restoring the true gospel and liberating the people. Reformation can be challenging, complicated, and very messy, which brings me to Donald Trump and his allies.

We would do well to remember that they are not simply making a few changes. America is well past the point where that would be enough. Like it or not, we have a cancer in our culture, an abscess in our government. We are twisted and out of alignment, in drastic need of straightening. The restoration is going to hurt, and it is going to be messy.

At this point in history, America did not need a statesman. And we certainly did not need a politician. Frankly, and this will upset some of my religious friends, we did not need a peacemaker. We needed a “boat rocker,” a status quo wrecker, a business-as-usual interrupter. We are in the first part of Jeremiah 1:10; the second part is coming, but that will be a little slower: “See, I have this day set thee over the nations and over the kingdoms, to root out, and to pull down, and to destroy, and to throw down, to build, and to plant.”

Do I like everything Donald Trump says? Do I like all of his actions and attitudes? Do I like everything in his past? Of course not; that’s not why I voted for him. I voted for a reformer. And at this point, I am more interested in his willingness to face those destroying America than I am his language. I am more concerned about determination than diplomacy. I want a John the Baptist who is willing to make crooked places straight, remove mountains, and raise valleys. 

I want someone who will stare down the propaganda arm of the Democrat party, otherwise known as the mainstream media, and not be intimidated. I want someone who will build a military that is an effective war machine, not a woke machine. I want someone who will close our borders to all immigration that is not legal; someone who will demand that our education system teaches our children how to read; and someone who will stop the trans madness. I want healed children, not butchered children, common sense above Ivy League idiocy, and a Congress that can balance a checkbook. 

I want reformation. 

The progressive Left has used against us our desire for peace and “getting along.” They preach civility and spew venom; they speak of fairness while weaponizing government; they preach diversity and insist on conformity; and they speak of freedom while exerting control. For too long, those on the right have fallen prey to this hypocrisy. 

Hearing them criticize Trump, accusing him of inappropriate and insensitive statements, then listening as they sit on committees and model rudeness, character assassination, lying, and the misrepresentation of facts is both laughable and infuriating. They epitomize the evil and ugliness of the political spirit.

The Left only wants to get along in order to get ahead. They are like the female black widow spider who says to the male, “Help me multiply, then I will kill and eat you.” 

Now that America has seen what they are doing to our nation, and has elected a man with backbone enough to resist it – and who also happens to be a person they tried desperately to humiliate and destroy – the Left is terrified. They maligned his character, turned our judicial system loose on him, “sicked” our FBI on him and his followers, and defiled his home. Now, he is even more angry and determined; their hypocritical cries for civility, kindness, and compromise are falling on deaf ears. 

The progressive Left is also watching fifty years of antichrist secularization and globalism dissolve, their media lose influence with the populace, and the American people stand up and say, “Enough!” DEI is being dismantled; DOJ employees and Inspectors General are being fired; lazy employees willing to trade blind loyalty for a free ride have been served notice; and billions of dollars are being pulled from worthless and ridiculous government programs. The Left is angry and horrified. The nation they “changed” is being “reformed.” The time will soon come when America needs builders, statesmen, and peacemakers. At this time, however, we are in the demo stage. As we find the termites, mold, leaks, and cracked foundations, we can repair, reconstitute, and restore. A great revival is coming to fuel this process, also causing the desired changes to align with God’s will and ways. 

Keep appealing, church. Do not trust this process to humans, regardless of how well-intentioned they are. Keep it in the hands of the great Heavenly Architect.


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Categories: National News, Opinion

1 reply »

  1. Reformation is a profound spiritual journey that transcends political boundaries and partisan ideologies. True cultural transformation begins not with political conquest, but with heart-level renewal guided by divine love and grace.

    The biblical model of societal change fundamentally challenges the notion of using aggressive political strategies as a means of restoration. Christ’s approach demonstrates that lasting change emerges through compassionate engagement, sacrificial love, and personal spiritual transformation.

    When faith becomes entangled with political tribalism, it loses its prophetic power. The gospel offers a radical alternative to divisive cultural narratives, calling believers to see beyond partisan lines and recognize the inherent dignity of every individual. This perspective demands we approach cultural challenges with humility, understanding, and a commitment to reconciliation.

    Authentic spiritual reformation requires us to prioritize character over political effectiveness, unity over division, and love over confrontation. It means rejecting the language of cultural warfare in favor of healing dialogue, seeing each person as made in God’s image rather than as a political opponent.

    The invitation to participate in God’s redemptive work is not a call to political revolution, but to a profound spiritual journey of personal and collective transformation. It demands we approach societal challenges with wisdom, compassion, and an unwavering commitment to embodying divine love in every interaction.

    Ultimately, true reformation happens heart by heart, relationship by relationship—not through political machinations, but through the transformative power of grace that breaks down walls, heals divisions, and reveals a more excellent way of living together.

    To do otherwise is to throw away the Gospel for worldly prosperity.