Disturbing The Peace with John Amanchukwu
Pastor John Amanchukwu welcomes Elder Jude T. Albert — a native of New Orleans, Louisiana; retired United States Army Master Sergeant with 30 years of honorable service and two combat deployments to Afghanistan; recipient of the Bronze Star Medal; ordained elder in the Church of God in Christ under the leadership of Bishop Patrick Lane Wooden Sr. at Upper Room COGIC; Chief of Staff to the Chairman of the COGIC PK Connection; adjunct professor; and faithful father of two. Elder Albert brings to Disturbing the Peace what may be the most substantive conversation of the year on what the modern American church has forgotten about servitude, discipline, and the biblical foundation of manhood — from a man who has actually lived it in uniform for three decades. They walk through what servitude actually means when it isn't a dictionary definition. Elder Albert takes John back to the enlistment oath he raised his hand to in 1995 — "I do solemnly affirm to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic, and I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the officers appointed over me" — and explains what it costs a man to willingly subject himself to a superior authority for thirty years. Then they turn to discipline as the daily lived reality that undergirds every faithful father, every functional home, and every church that actually produces leaders instead of consumers. Elder Albert lays out his four-phase framework for training children — tell from 0-5, guide from 6-12, then coach through the teenage years, then partner in adulthood — and shares the sentence his own father spoke over him when Albert's oldest son was one year old that Albert says he has never forgotten: "Whatever you teach him — that's what he'll know." The second half of the episode confronts the shocking recent Raleigh teen takeover at Glenwood and Brier Creek — where roughly 8,000 kids descended on the area and created chaos across the city — and asks the question Elder Albert says nobody is willing to answer honestly. Where were the parents? John shares his own now-viral teen memory of returning to his childhood home at 3 AM, climbing through a window he had left cracked open, and encountering his mother waiting inside with a bottle of bleach and a warning that he still remembers word for word. Elder Albert answers with his own belt-behind-the-door memory from his father. Both men agree on the diagnosis: what happened in Raleigh was not a mystery. It was the predictable fruit of a generation of what John calls "punk mamas and punk daddies" — parents unwilling to be the disciplinarians their households required. This is Christian manhood and biblical discipline content from a man who has trained soldiers, deployed to Afghanistan twice, raised sons, and served the body of Christ for decades. Watch it. Share it. And thank a service member the next time you see one. 🎙️ New to streaming or looking to level up? Check out StreamYard and get $10 discount! 😍 https://streamyard.com/pal/d/6253188399300608 ⚡️ 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://x.com/REVWUTRUTH
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