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Home Improvement Meets the Gospel

Home Improvement Meets the Gospel

How two co-founders of the home-supply store TreeHouse infuse their business with environmentally sound faith.

Austin, Texas—with its "Keep Austin Weird" motto emblazoned on locals' t-shirts and bumper stickers—is ground zero for a green-building revolution, due in no small part to nearby University of Texas, hipster culture, and ...

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Rick Dalbey

May 17, 2013  11:56am

Again, this is not the gospel. These are Anglican social gospel crusaders who mistake green building and sustainability for the gospel. Progressivism, sustainability, organic, radical ecology, low VOC paints, Democrat talking points IS NOT THE GOSPEL. This isn't Home Improvement Meets The Gospel. The gospel means something specific and Paul said “If we, or an angel from heaven, should preach to you a gospel contrary to what we have preached to you, he is to be accursed! As we have said before, so I say again now, if any man is preaching to you a gospel contrary to what you received, he is to be accursed!” This is a huge distraction from the real gospel. And again you have to drive home the politicaly progressive slogan, “But that is the nature of Common Grace for Common Good.” Can you not (common good) stop saying (common good) that socialist, non biblical (common good) slogan? I hear it from Jim Wallis (his new book has Common Good in the title), Huffington Post, the Daily Kos, etc.

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