You’re more earthly minded than me. I don’t have one thing in this world to worry about. I don’t need Trump or guns to protect me.
If God doesn’t protect me then that means he chose not to protect me. I’ll take the good or the bad because all things work together for good to them that love God.
It’s impossible for me to lose.
Then stop butchering scripture to make it sound spiritual and avoiding what it actually says. The Word of God commands His people to be wise and to provide for and protect one another. To say "I don't need guns or leaders" doesn't make you more godly,
it makes you a cherry-picker of verses who ignores the rest. Jesus instructed His disciples to buy a sword (Luke 22:36). Nehemiah had his people carry weapons as they worked because enemies were a reality (Nehemiah 4:17–18). Exodus 22 allows for defending your home from a thief. You can't just strike those passages out of existence
because they don't fit your "there is nothing to worry about" slogan. Faith
is not foolishness. Trusting God is believing all of His Word, not acting like He didn't say what He did say.
Satan told Jesus, “If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down” from the pinnacle of the temple, quoting Psalm 91 about angels’ protection (Matthew 4:6). Jesus answered with Scripture: “It is written again, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God” (Matthew 4:7). He was quoting Deuteronomy 6:16, which says, “Ye shall not tempt the LORD your God, as ye tempted him in Massah.”
So the Bible warns us not to “test” or “tempt” God—meaning, not to put Him on trial by demanding He prove Himself, twisting His promises, or acting recklessly while expecting Him to bail us out. True faith obeys His Word, it doesn’t try to manipulate Him.
Tempting God means putting Him to the test, demanding proof of His power, twisting His promises, or living recklessly in unbelief while expecting Him to rescue you. Jesus refused to do it, Israel was judged for it, and believers are warned against it.
You said, “You’re more earthly minded than me.”
No, I think it’s the opposite. You act like you’re super spiritual, but in reality
you don’t even believe what the Bible actually says. Instead of submitting to Scripture,
you’ve made up your own version of faith that exists only in your imagination, not in the Word of God. Real faith obeys God’s Word, not just feelings or slogans.