Disturbing The Peace with John Amanchukwu
What happens when a culture stops honoring God's design and starts celebrating its own? Pastor John Amanchukwu welcomes April Chapman — Christian conservative commentator, host of Unshakable with April Chapman, and a Project 21 ambassador — for a sharp, funny, and unflinching conversation on faith, family, and culture in the Black community. They open with a viral clip on image and aesthetics, and April makes the case that "refined" is a word that used to define Black womanhood — pointing to her own great-grandmother, grandmother, and mother, and to icons like Lauryn Hill, Patrice Rushen, and Tisha Campbell who looked like "enhanced versions of themselves" rather than what she calls the cartoon caricatures being marketed to women today. Her deeper point cuts past the surface: the rebellion against what godly men actually find beautiful, she argues, traces all the way back to the fall in the garden — and the answer isn't a new trend, but women embracing how God created them. The heart of the episode is a substantive defense of the biblical family. April unpacks why the intact, heteronormative, father-headed nuclear family has become "controversial," coining the term "matriarchal squalor" to describe generations raised without present fathers — and connecting it to crime, low literacy, and the breakdown of healthy pair-bonding. She and John confront a viral post attacking "Christian families run by a masculine man who is master of his home," and April reframes what the Bible actually teaches: the masculine man is not a tyrant but a steward, accountable to God, called to love his wife as Christ loved the church — "this man got to die for you" — and to shepherd his children without provoking them to wrath. It's a bold, biblically grounded answer to a culture that, in her words, wants to emasculate men on purpose so they'll abandon their God-given authority. Along the way April shares a moving personal testimony about finding her childhood King James Bible decades later, a whole chapter circled in her fourth-grade cursive — proof that the seeds planted in a child can germinate in God's timing. The episode closes on a lighter but genuinely useful question sparked by another viral clip: should Christians get married in a courthouse, or is a church wedding spiritually required? April's answer is refreshingly clear-headed — the venue is irrelevant; the covenant is everything. Married in a courthouse with just her husband, her mother, and a coworker present, she and her husband are celebrating twenty years this December, while plenty of couples with full church ceremonies and wedding parties divorced within three. She warns against over-spiritualizing "enter His courts with thanksgiving" into a doctrine about courthouses, cautions that the couples who spend the most on the wedding often have the least sustainable marriages, and lands on what actually matters: a bona fide, legal, one-man-one-woman covenant that God honors regardless of where the vows were spoken. Watch, share, and drop your honest take below — am I right or am I wrong? #DisturbingThePeace #JohnAmanchukwu #AprilChapman #Unshakable #BlackFamily #BiblicalManhood #BiblicalWomanhood #FaithFamilyCulture #ChristianMarriage #Project21 #BiblicalWorldview #FaithOverFear #ChristianConservative #Marriage #ChristianYouTube 🔥 Shop & Support ⚡️ Website: → https://iknowgod.us/ 👕 Merch → https://www.iknowgodmerch.com/ ▶️ Stay on YouTube Subscribe for more truth and bold commentary: https://www.youtube.com/@revwutruth 📲 Follow Me on Social Media Instagram ➤ https://www.instagram.com/revwutruth/ X (Twitter) ➤ https://twitter.com/REVWUTRUTH #JohnAmanchukwu #REVWUTRUTH
100 episodes
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