Is This the End of Transgender Hysteria?

 

A few years ago, things looked pretty bleak for skeptics of transgenderism — those of us who have great compassion for those afflicted by what the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders long referred to as the “disorder” of gender dysphoria, but who refuse to accept the lie that a man can become a woman or a woman can become a man.

During the 2020 presidential race, then-candidate Joe Biden tweeted, “Transgender equality is the civil rights issue of our time.” As president in 2023, Biden followed up by stating, “Transgender people are some of the bravest Americans I know.” That same year, the transgender fad achieved unprecedented reach among impressionable youngsters: While Gallup reported that (an already-high) 7% of all Americans identified as LGBTQ, that number soared to 20% of all Gen Z — and as high as 38% on some elite Ivy League campuses.

But the social craze began to face setbacks. In the UK, the National Health Service’s Cass Review cast substantial doubt on the underlying scientific evidence purporting to support “gender-affirming care.” Enterprising investigative journalists, such as Christopher F. Rufo, began to expose rampant ethical concerns with America’s gender clinics. Polling began to reflect broader concerns with the transgender narrative on issues such as women’s athletic competition. President Donald Trump, intuiting that law can shape culture just as culture can shape law, signed numerous transgender-related executive orders in the first few weeks of his second term.

Now, it seems the dam may be breaking.

In a landmark legal judgment on Jan. 30, a 22-year-old biological woman named Fox Varian was awarded $2 million in Westchester County Supreme Court. Varian, a “detransitioner,” had an irreversible double mastectomy when she was 16 years old. The New York court held her psychologist and surgeon liable for $1.6 million for past and future suffering, and an additional $400,00 for any future medical expenses. Varian, whose mother initially opposed the operation but consented following the surgeon’s “emphatic” insistence, became deeply depressed following the procedure. Now, she has become the first “detransitioner” to win a medical malpractice lawsuit at trial.

The message out of Westchester County is clear: Doctors and psychologists are now potentially on the hook for irrevocable mutilation of patients in the name of gender ideology.

The response has been swift. On Tuesday, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons became the first major medical association to recommend that transgender “surgeries” be delayed until a patient is at least 19 years old. Immediately, the American Medical Association, in a statement to National Review, reversed its previous enthusiasm for teenage “gender-affirming care”: The AMA now “agrees with ASPS that surgical interventions in minors should be generally deferred to adulthood.” On Thursday, the American Academy of Pediatrics followed suit: “The guidance from the (AAP) for health care for young people with gender dysphoria does not include a blanket recommendation for surgery for minors.”

Transgenderism is having a tough time on the legal front as well. In United States v. Skrmetti, a 6-3 Supreme Court majority held that Tennessee’s comprehensive ban on transgender-related medical procedures passes constitutional muster. Justice Amy Coney Barrett, one of the more centrist Republican-nominated jurists, went out of her way to argue in a concurring opinion that transgender-identifying individuals do not constitute a “suspect class” or “discrete and insular minority,” in the court’s Fourteenth Amendment jurisprudential jargon, such that heightened judicial scrutiny is required. This term at the high court, Idaho and West Virginia recently defended their own laws that prohibit biological males from competing in women’s sports; most court-watchers expect the two states to prevail.

The fundamental problem for transgender activists was always easy to spot: Transgenderism is premised on a lie, and in the long run the truth has a stubborn tendency to prevail. We know from the biological truth of sexual dimorphism, the chromosomal truth of dichotomous XX and XY structure, the biblical truth that “God created man in His image … male and female He created them,” millennia of unquestioned human experience, and basic common sense that there are precisely two sexes. That is not to deny that there are intersex, or androgynous, individuals — there are, and there always have been. And that is not to deny the very real psychological malady of gender dysphoria.

But one cannot change his or her sex by subjectively identifying as such or by subjecting oneself to either hormonal treatments or a surgeon’s knife. It is simply not possible. And the notion that it ever was possible, advanced by so many cultural and societal elites for so many years, was always going to end in pain, suffering, massive legal liability and the desecration of the Hippocratic Oath-based medical profession itself. Clicks and fads may sometimes rule the day, but the truth is eternal. Kudos to the American people for beginning to realign political, legal and social mores with the truth.

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Josh Hammer | 7:30 PM on February 06, 2026

 

Source: Is This the End of Transgender Hysteria? – PJ Media

Turning Point; David Jeremiah – The Greatest of These Is Love: Love Your Neighbor

 

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And the second is like it: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”
Matthew 22:39

Recommended Reading: 1 Peter 1:22-23

During the week prior to His crucifixion, Jesus engaged in debates with religious leaders in the temple in Jerusalem. One of His critics, a lawyer, asked Him, “Teacher, which is the great commandment in the law?” Jesus quoted Deuteronomy 6:5 about loving God with all there is within us. Then He went on to say the next greatest command was to love our neighbors, and He quoted from Leviticus 19:18.

“On these two commands hang all the Law and the Prophets,” Jesus said (Matthew 22:40). In other words, one single syllable—love—when biblically understood, fulfills every single law of the Bible.

A few days later Jesus demonstrated these two laws by dying on the cross. He loved the Father and submitted to the Father’s will. He loved us as neighbors and laid down His life for us. He was perfect in every way because He loved perfectly. He can love your neighbor through you. If there is someone you don’t particularly like, ask the Lord Jesus to love that person through you today.

When we give the Lord Jesus Christ more and more room in our lives, we cannot help but become more loving because Jesus will love others through us.
Michael Youssef

 

 

https://www.davidjeremiah.org

Our Daily Bread – How the Proud Fall

 

Before a downfall the heart is haughty. Proverbs 18:12

Today’s Scripture

Proverbs 18:1-12

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Today’s Devotional

John Taylor was a British eye surgeon in the 1700s who, driven by arrogance, fabricated a prestigious reputation. He pursued celebrities and became the personal eye doctor for King George II. Taylor traveled the country performing medical shows that promised miracle cures, often escaping towns under the cover of night carrying bags overflowing with villagers’ cash. However, records suggest Taylor was a charlatan and likely blinded hundreds of patients. History remembers him not as a medical luminary but as the man who destroyed the eyesight of two of the century’s greatest composers: Bach and Händel.

Taylor craved reputation and acclaim, but his legacy declares his lies, and the embarrassment and hurt he caused. Proverbs explains how egotistical addictions lead to devastation. “Before a downfall,” we read, “the heart is haughty” (18:12). Taylor’s disgrace warns us of how arrogance can ruin our lives, but one’s foolishness often harms others too (vv. 6-7). The “downfall” is great indeed.

While a proud heart destroys us and others, a humble heart leads toward a life of meaning and joy. “Humility comes before honor,” the proverb says (v. 12). If we selfishly pursue only self-interests (v. 1), we’ll never find what we crave. If we yield our heart to God and serve others, however, we honor Him and reflect His goodness.

Reflect & Pray

How have you seen pride lead to a downfall? How have you seen humility lead to honor?

 

Dear God, please give me a humble heart and help me reject a haughty, arrogant spirit.

Sin keeps us from being in union with Christ. Find out how to overcome sin by reading Walking Free.

 

Today’s Insights

These dozen verses weave the strands of pride, speech, and foolishness into a cohesive idea. A proud person “pursues selfish ends” (Proverbs 18:1) and refuses to seek “understanding” (v. 2). Our words can be “deep waters” (v. 4), but “wisdom” provides “a rushing stream” (v. 4) if we will drink from it. The speech of a fool creates “strife” (v. 6), and the very words of fools “are their undoing” (v. 7). Similarly, gossip poisons everyone affected, as it’s “like choice morsels” (v. 8) that tempt the naïve while damaging the target of the rumors. And it’s “the righteous” who find that “the name of the Lord is a fortified tower” (v. 10).

 

http://www.odb.org

Denison Forum – The Seattle Seahawks win Super Bowl LX

 

The popularity of football and “the most infallible sign of the presence of God”

NOTE: A video depicting the Obamas as primates dominated headlines over the weekend. For a biblical and personal response, please see my latest website article.

The Seattle Seahawks won yesterday’s Super Bowl LX over the New England Patriots with a dominant defensive performance. If you’re like the vast majority of us, you don’t live in either team’s media market and thus likely don’t have a personal interest in what I just wrote. But if you’re like more than two hundred million other Americans, you watched the game (or at least part of it) anyway, as did people in over 180 countries in nearly 25 languages.

Perhaps it was the party you attended for which the game was more or less an excuse to go. Perhaps it was gathering with family and friends for this now-annual tradition. Perhaps it was the commercials that interested you more than the game. Those who made them certainly hope you watched, since they spent $8 million on a single thirty-second ad.

Nonetheless, you probably knew the result of the Super Bowl before you read it in my article this morning. I would not necessarily expect the same if I were writing about the World Series, the Kentucky Derby, the Masters, or any other headline sports event. But NFL football and its championship game hold an unrivaled place in our culture.

As I am reflecting on this fact today, I am also wondering why it is so.

And I am wondering if the explanation matters for the rest of the year.

It turns out, the answer to my first question answers the second as well.

“Sentiment, emotion, passion, and allegiance”

Reasons for the popularity of professional football are well known and unsurprising: among other factors, watching the game fosters relationships, tailgating is fun, league parity keeps things interesting, the game is fast-paced, and fantasy football has real stakes.

A game with roots in antiquity, as I noted in my recent website article on the history of the Super Bowl, has become one of the most dominant parts of contemporary culture. Nothing rivals it for viewership, ad revenue, or any other audience metric.

But I think there is another factor at work here, one that is less obvious but even more significant.

The British political philosopher Edmund Burke (1729–1797) is widely considered to be the founder of conservatism. A biographer summarizes his worldview this way:

Human passions are guided by empathy and imagination. Human well-being is grounded in a social order whose values are given by divine providence. Human reason is limited in scope, and insufficient as a basis for public morality. . . .

People cannot reason themselves into a good society, for a good society is rooted not merely in reason but in the sentiments and the emotions.

Burke asserted that “politics ought to be adjusted, not to human reasonings, but to human nature; of which the reason is but a part, and by no means the greatest part.” His biographer therefore notes:

Human reason is a wonderful thing, but Burke insists we are above all creatures of sentiment, emotion, passion, and allegiance, for good or ill. What matters and should matter to us is not abstract liberties, but the liberty to live our lives well alongside others and in our communities.

Burkean philosophy and football

What does Burkean political philosophy have to do with the popularity of the Super Bowl?

“Sentiment, emotion, [and] passion” aptly describe a typical fan’s experience. We feel the highs and lows of the game. We cringe at the physical collisions and marvel at the athletic exploits. None of this is a rational choice or the product of a rational process.

In addition, almost nothing regarding our “allegiance” to our preferred team is the product of reason. I cannot imagine that many fans examine a team’s roster in detail, explore its finances, scrutinize its leadership structure, and then make a rational decision to support it. Our allegiance is the product of where we live and/or other emotional factors that tie us to our team “for good or ill.”

All of this points to the transformational heart of biblical Christianity, a fact that explains its explosive early growth and that compels us to embrace it for ourselves.

“The life was made manifest”

Six decades after he left his father’s fishing boat to follow Jesus (Matthew 4:21–22), John was still not over the experience. He described his relationship with his Lord in these intimate terms:

That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon and have touched with our hands, concerning the word of life—the life was made manifest, and we have seen it, and testify to it and proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and was made manifest to us (1 John 1:1–2).

After teaching world religions with four seminaries and writing numerous books and articles in the area, I can report that no other religion offers such a personal engagement with the deity it worships. But the living Lord Jesus, God “made manifest to us,” could be “looked upon” and “touched with our hands.” His followers heard his omniscient wisdom, experienced his omnipotent power, and felt his omnibenevolent grace.

Then, when they were “filled with the Holy Spirit” at Pentecost, they were so transformed and empowered that they had to tell “the mighty works of God” and Peter had to preach the glorious gospel of redemption in Christ (Acts 2:41114). The movement that resulted worked out its worldview with reasoned brilliance, to be sure, as any reading of the book of Romans will show.

But it was birthed in an intimate engagement with the personal, living Lord Jesus, and never lost its fervor for him.

“The most infallible sign of the presence of God”

The Christians who have made the greatest impact on my life were the believers who were the most passionate about their Lord. Their joy in Jesus was contagious and appealing. Their commitment to Christ, often in the face of great challenges and suffering, made me want what they had.

How can we experience Jesus in such a passionate way?

David said to God, “In your presence there is fullness of joy” (Psalm 16:11; note the present tense). If we make time today to meet with the living Lord Jesus, to kneel before him in adoration, hear his voice, feel his touch, and give him our lives in profound gratitude for his astounding grace, how can we be the same?

The brilliant philosopher and scientist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin claimed, “Joy is the most infallible sign of the presence of God.” Julian of Norwich was therefore right to say,

“The fullness of joy is to behold God in everything.”

Will you experience such joy today?

Quote for the day:

“No soul that seriously and constantly desires joy will ever miss it. Those who seek find. To those who knock it is opened.” —C. S. Lewis

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Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – Going the Right Way

 

 Don’t you realize that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, who lives in you and was given to you by God? You do not belong to yourself, for God bought you with a high price. So you must honor God with your body. 

—1 Corinthians 6:19–20

Scripture:

1 Corinthians 6:19–20 

Every now and then, it seems that my GPS has a mind of its own. I’ll be driving on the freeway, going to a destination where I’ve never been before, when suddenly my device tells me to turn right at the next off-ramp. It doesn’t make sense, but I turn right. Then it tells me to turn left, so I turn left. Then it takes me back to the freeway. What was that all about? It makes no sense at all.

The Lord gave the Israelites an amazing GPS system: a fire by night and a cloud by day. It was very simple. When the cloud moved, they moved. When the cloud stopped, they stopped. At night, when the fire moved, they moved. When the fire stopped, they stopped.

We might be tempted to think, “I wish I could have that kind of obvious guidance, because a lot of times I don’t know what I should do or where I should go.”

But as believers under the New Covenant, we have something better than a cloud or a fire. We have Christ Himself living in our hearts. Every one of us who believes in Jesus Christ has God residing within us. We don’t need a fire in the sky. We have the fire of the Holy Spirit in our life, giving us the power to do what God has called us to do.

As believers, we are not masters of our fate. We do not control our spiritual journey. The apostle Paul wrote, “Don’t you realize that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, who lives in you and was given to you by God? You do not belong to yourself, for God bought you with a high price. So you must honor God with your body” (1 Corinthians 6:19–20 NLT).

The Lord will lead us in the way that He wants us to go. Sometimes His will won’t make sense to us. Sometimes it may seem as though God is trying to ruin all our fun. But in time we will realize that God knew what He was doing all along.

Unlike the GPS maps on our devices, we can’t plug in our destination coordinates for this life. That’s because we have no idea where it will take us. That doesn’t stop us from trying, of course. We may try to plug in where we would like to end up. Or where we’re planning to end up. But as the old Yiddish expression goes, “Man plans, and God laughs.” Proverbs 19:21 (NIV) puts it this way: “Many are the plans in a person’s heart, but it is the LORD’s purpose that prevails.”

GPS devices aren’t always right, but God is. God’s way is always the right way.

Reflection Question: How can you trust God’s way even when it doesn’t make sense to you? Discuss this with believers like you on Harvest Discipleship!

 

 

Harvest.org | Greg Laurie

Days of Praise – Selah

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“Many there be which say of my soul, There is no help for him in God. Selah.” (Psalm 3:2)

The word Selah occurs 74 times in the Bible (three of which are in the prophetic psalm of Habakkuk, with the other 71 in the book of Psalms). The first of these occurrences is here in Psalm 3:2, and it also occurs at the end of verses 4 and 8, thus in effect dividing Psalm 3 into three “stanzas.”

However, its exact meaning is uncertain. Most authorities think it is some kind of musical notation to be applied when the psalm was being sung with accompanying musical instrumentation. It suggests a pause of some kind, perhaps to allow the instruments to play a few notes while the singers were silent before proceeding with the next portion, possibly changing to a different key.

When the psalm is merely being read, however, as must often be the case, this explanation would be pointless. Thus, some think it indicates a brief pause for reflection on the truth just revealed before proceeding to the next point. Selah might, therefore, mean something like “think of that!”

In Psalm 3, as the first instance, verse 2 notes that many (perhaps originally those involved in Absalom’s rebellion against King David) are saying, “Not even God can help him now!” But then the psalmist remembers God’s promises. He prays and God answers, so now he can say, “Well, what do you think about that?” Both exclamations seem implied by his Selah.

Then in the third stanza, he stresses his security in his Lord. He can sleep and “not be afraid of ten thousands of people, that have set themselves against me round about. . . . Salvation belongeth unto the LORD: thy blessing is upon thy people” (Psalm 3:6, 8). So, what can you say about that, you enemies of God and His Word? (Selah). HMM

 

 

https://www.icr.org/articles/type/6

Joyce Meyer – See with the Eyes of Faith

 

This is the day which the Lord has brought about; we will rejoice and be glad in it.

Psalm 118:24 (AMPC)

When I woke up this morning, I didn’t feel well. I was tired and would have loved to crawl back in bed and stay there a long time, but I couldn’t because I had a full day ahead of me. When we don’t feel well, it is easy to feel overwhelmed and start thinking negatively. But we don’t have to!

Because I understand the power of our thoughts, while I was washing my face, brushing my teeth, and making my coffee, I thought and said, “Today is going to be a great day. I am energetic and joyful. I am blessed, and I am a blessing to others.”

There was a time when I often had to take my elderly mother to the eye doctor. In the past, those visits were very challenging. She was losing her eyesight yet insisted the doctors didn’t know what they were doing, and trying to convince her otherwise frequently ended in an embarrassing scene. But on one particular trip, instead of dreading it as I usually did, I made up my mind to expect a peaceful and pleasant experience. And you know what? That simple shift made all the difference.

Whatever you might be facing today, you can still get a head start on things going well by partnering with God and believing that He is on your side and that something good is waiting to happen to you.

Prayer of the Day: Father, You are good and I am expecting You to show up in my life today and manifest Your goodness. Thank You!

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Max Lucado – Fear of Failing God 

 

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“A person can request forgiveness only so many times,” contends our common sense. If the devil can convince us that God’s grace has limited funds, we’ll draw the logical conclusion. The account is empty. No access to God.

“Take courage, son; your sins are forgiven.” Jesus spoke these words to a paraplegic as recorded in Matthew 9:2. Jesus was thinking about our deepest problem—sin. He was considering our deepest fear—the fear of failing God. God keeps no list of our wrongs. His love casts out fear because he casts out sin. 1 John 3:20 says,“If our heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart, and knows all things” (NKJV).

 

 

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Today in the Word – Moody Bible Institute – Galatians: Pay Attention!

 

Read Galatians 3:1–6

The sound of a siren is meant to evoke a strong and immediate response. The powerful wail means one thing: There is an emergency, so be ready to act. You may need to stop, you may need to pull over—pay attention!

In his letter to the Galatians, Paul sounds a warning siren for a theological emergency. He had received a report that the Galatians had begun to change their minds about the gospel. He taught them that Christ’s sacrifice was sufficient to secure their salvation (v. 1) but now they had begun to believe that this was insufficient. They wanted to earn their salvation. “Are you so foolish?” asks Paul (v. 3).

The Galatians had a stunning change of mind. Paul points out that they received the Holy Spirit at salvation by believing (v. 2). The Spirit was the sign of their salvation, and they received that as a gift. He sounds the alarm even louder by pointing out that God had been working among them, and this was not because they earned it by doing good works (v. 5). No, they had believed, and God saved them, so why would they try to earn those gifts now? Abraham serves as the perfect example. When confronted by God, he believed, and God made him righteous (v. 6).

The Galatians needed to pay attention and act. They needed to think differently about their situation. They needed to accept the grace of God’s gift and stop trying to work for it. Their very salvation was at risk. If they tried to earn it, they would surely fail. No one can be righteous enough to overcome their sin problem! Thankfully, there is One who has taken care of it for us.

Go Deeper

Do you wrestle with earning your favor with God? Remember, Christ’s sacrifice paid the full debt of your sins. Rejoice! Salvation has come to you as a free gift. If you do not know Jesus as your Savior, accept Him today! Learn More Extended Reading:

Galatians 3-6

Pray with Us

Lord God, the false theology Paul addresses in his letter to “foolish” Galatians still plagues our churches today. We pray for Your wisdom to lead us in exposing false teachings and to follow the truth of Your Word.

Who has bewitched you? Before your very eyes Jesus Christ was clearly portrayed as crucified.Galatians 3:1

 

 

https://www.moodybible.org/