The official X home of Relatable with @conservmillen. New episodes Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays on YouTube and wherever you listen to your podcasts.

Joined January 2025
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Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey retweeted
"I don't think I'm going to heaven as a man. I don't think I'm going to look at Jesus and I don't think He's going to see a man. I think He's going to see the girl that He made." Haley Furst spent years identifying as a man and embracing a transgender identity. But after a coworker faithfully shared the gospel with her, her heart softened to the truth, she put her faith in Christ and surrendered her life to Him. Today, Haley is living as the woman God created her to be and sharing how Jesus redeemed and transformed her life.
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“I want to follow Jesus. But I don't get to do that because I'm transgender." That's what Haley believed until a co-worker's Christ-like example challenged everything she thought she knew about Christianity. After a simple prayer inviting Jesus into her life, she encountered the love of Christ for herself. "Just a touch of His love made me mourn all the years I had spent apart from that. And I knew in that moment that I could never spend one day of my life apart from that ever again." Jesus saved her, and she eventually realized she was the woman God had made her to be.
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There has been a lot of support for Karmelo Anthony following the verdict. Instead of showing compassion to the Metcalf family, Jasmine Crockett says the Metcalfs don't know the kind of fear and agony that black mothers experience. Her words of “sympathy” are not for the Metcalfs. It's actually to say, 'You don't really know suffering. You've never been through anything as hard as black moms.' If black mothers fear for their son's lives, the fear should be toward other black men because statistically, black men are the ones killing black men. It has nothing to do with white people, the police, or Austin Metcalf.
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Jasmine Crockett says this about the Karmelo Anthony verdict: “Black women, especially black women who have black male children, live in fear and agony every single day. A fear and agony that I promise you the Metcalfs probably never spend a day living that way. And we're going to have to have just some real conversations about race in this country." This is a cruel, calloused, and evil response for a congresswoman to say in reaction to a verdict of a trial that has to do with a boy being murdered. Her words of sympathy are not for the Metcalfs. It's actually to say, 'You don't really know suffering. You've never been through anything as hard as black moms.' Why do moms of black boys and black men live in fear and agony? It has nothing to do with Austin Metcalf, or the police, or with white people. If black mothers fear for their son's lives, the fear should be toward other black men because statistically, black men are the ones killing black men. Every single day, black boys are killing black boys in the streets. That has nothing to do with white people or with the police.
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Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey retweeted
Today marks the beginning of what some call Pride Month. For Christians, we celebrate today like we do every day - that this is the day the Lord has made, so let us rejoice and be glad in it. When we see the acronym LGBTQ, we don’t see sexual identities to celebrate, we see image-bearers of God who are doing what’s right in their own eyes and need the kind of love that points to Jesus and His truth. The truth is God made us male and female so that a man can leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh. God IS love and He has the authority to define it. He calls homosexuality a sin, and holy marriage between a man and woman very good. The most loving thing we can do is agree with God. We can’t love others by affirming sin. This is my response to why we don’t celebrate Pride Month:
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Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey retweeted
Did the government warn pastors of impending alien doom? @MikeWingerii has investigated the claims of several charismatic pastors who say they had access to secret government briefings about aliens. These faith leaders led people to believe government officials were sharing classified information about UFOs and an extraterrestrial plot to disprove Christianity. But, when people began to question the pastors’ claims, many of them retracted their previous statements. Winger says the meeting actually involved some pastors discussing publicly available information. The meeting did not involve the government. Here's his breakdown of what really happened & how it ties into a bigger problem that exists within charismatic leadership:
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Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey retweeted
Hey, Daddy Gang: Alex Cooper is lying to you. Cooper just announced her pregnancy. We love that for her. But, what she doesn’t admit is: for most women, pursuing the promiscuity she promotes won’t end in a marriage proposal. The result isn’t a beautiful wedding and a pregnancy announcement. It’s STDs and a broken heart. It’s a crisis at 35 when you realize that your fertility window is closing and there are no prospective fathers on the horizon. Cooper was able to rich-and-famous her way out of that consequence, but most of her audience won’t have that ability. Alex Cooper hasn’t actually bought what she’s selling. She’s made millions convincing women of the benefits of one night stands, while she’s abandoned that lifestyle for the more traditional—and fulfilling—route. If you’ve already been sold on Cooper’s empty promises and have regrets, you are not without hope and you are not beyond redemption. But if you’re a young woman who’s just begun taking Alex’s life advice, here’s my warning to you:
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Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey retweeted
Former band members from the popular 90's CCM band Avalon have re-released the song "Testify To Love" as an LGBTQ affirming anthem and claim it's always has been about queer love. One of those former members, Melissa Greene, writes in her Substack post alongside photos of another band member kissing his husband at the altar that "love is for everyone" and "Michael never needed to be redeemed. He was always whole and worthy." This phenomenon of believing that we are somehow nicer than God, that Romans 1 is too harsh or that passages affirming the holiness of marriage between one man and one woman are simply too difficult to accept, is false. We go to God's word for what's true about sexuality and marriage. If something in the Word of God seems wrong, cruel, or confusing to us, the problem is not with God. It’s not with His Word. It’s with us.
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Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey retweeted
I have firm parameters around how I use tools like Grok because of a big concern I have about what we’re giving up when we outsource our creativity and critical thinking to AI. I think we’re surrendering part of what it means to be made in God’s image when we trade our reason for convenience. AI isn’t always evil, but I think we have to be very careful about the power we give it. These are my 5 reasons for why Christians should be restrictive about our reliance on AI, both for ourselves and our kids:
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Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey retweeted
I will never forget this unplanned, Holy Spirit–filled moment during Charlie Kirk’s memorial when the band began to play and the crowd held up signs with Charlie’s face that said, “Here I am, Lord send me.” It felt like, for a brief moment, tragedy might spark a spiritual revival and unify Christians on the Right. But in the months since, things have felt increasingly divided and disoriented. It appears we've lost people to a conspiratorial world view and pro-Islam world view. I asked @JeremyDBoreing whether we’re heading toward a great revival or total fracture. His answer, and his reflection on Pentecost, is powerful:
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Eric Church’s commencement speech at UNC struck a chord… literally. This was my favorite part:
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Former devout Muslim @RealShahriqKhan came on Relatable to share his testimony and his family's response to him becoming a Christian: "They hated it when I became Christian. Very, very emotional. Still one of the hardest things I've ever done." He went on to say, "The Lord says to honor your mom and dad and I just don't feel like I'm doing that. So I feel like I'm being so disobedient." Allie responded, “Honor your father and mother. And then also Jesus says, 'If you're not willing to hate your father and mother, take up your cross and follow me, then you're not worthy to be my disciple.'" She encouraged Shahriq, "There's a way to honor while also saying, 'My allegiance is completely sold out to Christ and I'm trusting that He's going to take care of them because He loves them even more.’ I bet that's really hard." He responded, "I actually needed to hear that... He's come with a sword that is going to divide families, and like how much more willing are you guys going to bear your cross?"
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Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey retweeted
A viral video showed highschool kids unable to sound out words like “extraordinary” and “silhouette.” ~25% of 16-24-year-olds qualify as “functionally illiterate.” They read below a 5th grade level. This can change, but we have to go back to the basics. One, parents have to read to their kids - no excuses. Two, we have to teach our kids phonics, not the exclusive “context clue” method we’ve tried and failed for decades. Here are my two “whys” for ensuring our kids read well: 1. They’ll be lost in every way without it. 2. It’s our Christian obligation to do so.
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Allie interviewed Dr. Carlos Campo, President and CEO of Museum of the Bible, to talk about the accuracy and legitimacy of the Bible: "If men wanted to write a book, they wouldn't have written a book that makes them look so bad. Over and over again, we see the failures and the foibles of God's people and their rebellion, and if this were just a book written by people who wanted to tell the history of a particular group, they wouldn't include all of this stuff that proves that it's really God who's powerful.” Allie continues on to say, “If someone were to conspire together to try to build a man-made ideology just for power, it wouldn't have been the Bible." Campo responded: "It's true. It's one of the reasons I'm so proud to say I'm a person of this faith, because it doesn't try to hide our past. It doesn't try to say, ‘Look, we serve only perfect people.’” He says, “Despite our sin, God loves us and He has a story of reconciliation to tell us."
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