The Nonmicrowaved Truth With C.L. Whiteside

A phrase used by late rapper Tupac Shakur has had a unique meaning in our culture: "only God can judge me." Uppity, judgmental people rub so many the wrong way, but as Christians are we supposed to judge? God is the ulitmate Judge, and there are many passages in the Bible that discuss judging, rebuking, and correcting others. Evaluate how true or false that phrase should be in a Christian's life.                 

Genesis 39:12-19   
Matthew 7:1       
Ezekiel 3:18,19         
Proverbs 9:8     
Proverbs 27:5,6   
Ephesians 5:11   
Romans 15:2       
John 7:24     
Matthew 7:15,20   
Romans 2:21,22   
Matthew 18:15-17     
Matthew 7:21-23         
Matthew 10:14       
Titus 3:10         
James 4:12       
Isaiah 33:22       

You can now also WATCH C.L.! That's right: C.L. is also recording The Nonmicrowaved Truth on video! Just go to our Time of Grace video site (timeofgrace.org/TV), search for the Time of Grace app on your devices, or watch on C.L.'s YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfmL7jUfMBm0FKV-I0Op_Vg or on Time of Grace's YouTube channel: https://bit.ly/3Hcyk5J

About "The Nonmicrowaved Truth":
How fast do you have to have "IT"? Our culture tells us to find a microwave to speed up the process. C.L. Whiteside, a man who sees and hears multiple perspectives through his life of coaching sports, serving in education, and attempting to conform to Christ, searches for the nonmicrowaved truth. C.L. gets that what’s cool and acceptable now, may not be cool and acceptable tomorrow—and most importantly, may not be what’s best.

What is The Nonmicrowaved Truth With C.L. Whiteside?

How fast do you have to have "IT"? Our culture tells us to find a microwave to speed up the process. C.L. Whiteside, a man who sees and hears multiple perspectives through his life of coaching sports, serving in education, and attempting to conform to Christ, searches for the nonmicrowaved truth. C.L. gets that what’s cool and acceptable now, may not be cool and acceptable tomorrow—and most importantly, may not be what’s best.