The B2T Show
Introduction of Trump’s External Revenue Service (ERS)
Rick introduced the concept of the ERS, which will replace the IRS and focus on collecting tariffs and foreign revenue. The plan includes eliminating various taxes, particularly those affecting military personnel, veterans, and Social Security recipients.
Could this be the first step toward eliminating the criminal international banking cartel and the Babylonian financial system? Rick things so!
Trump plans to create the External Revenue Service (ERS) starting January 20, 2025
Pete Hedges’ Confirmation Hearing Highlights
Rick provided detailed coverage of Pete Hedges’ confirmation hearing for Secretary of Defense. He highlighted his strong performance under scrutiny from Democrats and support from military veterans. Hedges’ experience as a counterinsurgency instructor in Afghanistan was also emphasized.
Most MAGA people felt he did extremely well and put him as a 10 or 11 on a scale of 1 to 10.
Let’s continue prayer support for Trump’s administration and his nominees!
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Trump’s Environmental Management Strategy
We discuss Trump’s criticism of Gavin Newsom’s handling of California wildfires and water management. Trump emphasized the need for better forest management and criticized the state’s water diversion practices.
Could this be the end of Gavin Newsome’s career?
Now is an ideal time to call Kirk Elliott at 720.605.3900 for a free consultation on precious metal investment strategies specific to your situation. You can also fill out a form here:
Spiritual and Health Discussion
Rick led a discussion on worship and health, focusing on God’s greatness and receiving strength. He introduced topics from his blog, Rick’s Alone Time with God, where the Lord speaks about overcoming burdens and the concept of God having unlimited time.
WordNWorship
Rick teaches about God’s Greatness and receiving His Strength based on Isaiah Chapter 40, emphasizing the importance of moving from Fatigue to Vitality. We receive four special promises if we wait on the Lord:
1. that we can walk and not faint,
2. run and not be weary,
3. to be mounted with wings like eagles,
4. and have our strength renewed!
We study the context of Isaiah 40:31 and worship to beautiful praise videos, then read the entire scriptural context and end the study with a devotional all in between the worship videos.
Rick also has a new 24X7 Family with Faith channel on CUE Broadcasting. Learn more about how to subscribe or help spread the word at
Exodus Study Guide
Fatigue to Vitality
The evil one wants you to be fatigued constantly so that you cannot enjoy your life. He especially wants you drowsy when reading the Bible and Praying. The Lord wants you to have vitality and enjoy time with your family and Him without dependence on caffeine, Big Pharma drugs, or synthetic solutions.
Use this Reading Plan to allow God’s Word to help your Mind, Body, and Spirit beyond the Exodus Premium Supplement and Prayer Guide. You will better understand the verses in the Prayer Guide with more context and related scripture so you can have the Mind, Body, and Spirit that God intended you to have!
Day 1: God’s Greatness & Receiving His Strength
By Rick Rene of Blessed2Teach Ministries (https://blessed2teach.com)
Prayer Guide Day #1
I will wait for the Lord, and my strength will be renewed. Fill my body with your life-giving energy, and let me accomplish all that you have called me to do today.
Isaiah 40:31: but they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.
Father, I commit to focusing and waiting on you because you promise to renew my strength, and I will no longer be weary or fatigued but be filled with energy and vitality. In the name of Jesus. Amen.
Context
Isaiah 40:31 is a powerful verse that we can own to move from fatigue to vitality. It promises four things:
- that we can walk and not faint,
- run and not be weary,
- to be mounted with wings like eagles,
- and have our strength renewed!
To receive these 4 promises, all we have to do is wait for the Lord! What does that really mean? We have to start by understanding the full context of this verse which starts in verse 12 and ends this powerful verse in verse 31. We can summarize this entire context as “God’s Greatness and Receiving His Strength.”
Isaiah starts with questions that are a poetic reflection on the omnipotence and omniscience of God, emphasizing His incomparable greatness and sovereignty over creation.
- Measurement of Creation: We are rhetorically asked who could measure the vastness of the waters, the heavens, the earth’s dust, mountains, and hills, underscoring that only God has this capability.
- Divine Wisdom: Questions are posed about who could counsel God or teach Him justice, knowledge, or understanding, highlighting God’s infinite wisdom and self-sufficiency.
- Human Insignificance: Isaiah portrays the nations as insignificant in comparison to God, likening them to a drop from a bucket or dust on scales, and even the great forests and wildlife of Lebanon as insufficient for an offering to God.
- God’s Supremacy: The passage underscores that all nations are nothing before God, emphasizing His supreme power and the relative emptiness of human constructs when measured against His majesty.
Next, Isaiah contrasts the incomparable nature of God with the limitations and folly of human-made idols:
- The uniqueness of God: We are asked who or what could be compared to God, emphasizing His unmatched nature.
- Critique of Idolatry: The practice of idol worship is ridiculed, describing how idols are crafted by human hands, from gold, silver, and even wood, by those too poor for more lavish offerings, highlighting their artificial and immobile nature.
Idolatry can be a big stumbling block, even for those who are doing works for God, as outlined in Hosea:
Hosea 13:2: And now they sin more and more, and make for themselves metal images, idols skillfully made of their silver, all of them the work of craftsmen.
It is said of them, “Those who offer human sacrifice kiss calves!”
Again, we are reminded of God’s power and human’s lack of power in comparison:
- God’s Majesty and Power: We are reminded of God’s preeminence from the creation of the earth, describing Him as sitting above the earth, with humans appearing insignificant by comparison. God is depicted as powerful, stretching out the heavens and having authority over earthly rulers, who are described as fleeting and easily diminished by His will.
- The impermanence of Human Achievement: Isaiah uses the imagery of plants to show how quickly human power and structures can be undone by God, likened to a breeze blowing away stubble.
Next, Isaiah emphasizes God’s unique nature:
- God’s Uniqueness: God rhetorically asks who could be compared to Him, asserting His singular nature as the Holy One.
- Creation and Power: It invites people to look at the stars, noting that God created them all, knows them by name, and maintains them through His immense power, with none missing.
He even uses the stars as his garment as discussed in Psalm 104:
Psalm 104:2: covering yourself with light as with a garment, stretching out the heavens like a tent.
Isaiah continues with an emphasis on God’s care for humanity:
- God’s Awareness and Care: Addressing Israel, it challenges the notion that God is unaware or uncaring about their plight, asserting that God is ever-knowing and ever-present.
- God’s Endurance and Support: It describes God as eternal, never tiring or lacking understanding, who provides strength to the weary, contrasting with human frailty.
Isaiah concludes with the promise of renewal for those who trust Him. They will find their strength renewed, metaphorically gaining the endurance and vigor of eagles, running without tiring, and walking without fainting.
We just need to wait on the Lord by recognizing his great majesty and power and trusting in him. What a powerful word that demonstrates God’s greatness and his promise to give us vitality and strength. Fatigue be gone!
Isaiah 40:12-31:
Read the full context of God’s word here:
Devotional
Isaiah inspires us with his inspired writings about God’s greatness and how we can receive his promises of strength and stamina by waiting on the Lord. He starts by asking rhetorical questions about God’s greatness:
- Who has measured the waters in the hollow of his hand
- and marked off the heavens with a span,
- enclosed the dust of the earth in a measure
- and weighed the mountains in scales
- and the hills in a balance?
- Who has measured the Spirit of the Lord,
- or what man shows him his counsel?
Man cannot counsel God or know his mind as discussed in Romans:
Romans 11:34: “For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who has been his counselor?”
God does not have to consult or be taught by anyone:
- Whom did he consult,
- and who made him understand?
- Who taught him the path of justice,
- and taught him knowledge,
- and showed him the way of understanding?
As the omniscient, all-knowing God, He does not need to be taught, and he is far greater than all the nations:
- Behold, the nations are like a drop from a bucket,
- and are accounted as the dust on the scales;
- behold, he takes up the coastlands like fine dust.
- Lebanon would not suffice for fuel,
- nor are its beasts enough for a burnt offering.
- All the nations are as nothing before him,
- they are accounted by him as less than nothing and emptiness.
If fact, nothing is like God, so making idols is foolish:
- To whom then will you liken God,
- or what likeness compare with him?
- An idol! A craftsman casts it,
- and a goldsmith overlays it with gold
- and casts for it silver chains.
- He who is too impoverished for an offering
- chooses wood that will not rot;
- he seeks out a skillful craftsman
- to set up an idol that will not move.
Isaiah then asks us if we really understand that God is the creator:
- Do you not know? Do you not hear?
- Has it not been told you from the beginning?
- Have you not understood from the foundations of the earth?
- It is he who sits above the circle of the earth,
- and its inhabitants are like grasshoppers;
- who stretches out the heavens like a curtain,
- and spreads them like a tent to dwell in;
This is one passage where the Bible discusses the “circle” or “globe” of the earth, but the point is not the shape but the fact that God made everything. And creation itself gives people no excuse to question his existence, as shown in Romans:
Romans 1:20: For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse.
This is often called the general revelation verse clearly showing he exists from things made. This God also controls the fate of world leaders:
- who brings princes to nothing,
- and makes the rulers of the earth as emptiness.
- Scarcely are they planted, scarcely sown,
- scarcely has their stem taken root in the earth,
- when he blows on them, and they wither,
- and the tempest carries them off like stubble.
Nothing compares to God and the very stars and planets in the sky testify to him:
- To whom then will you compare me,
- that I should be like him? says the Holy One.
- Lift up your eyes on high and see:
- who created these?
- He who brings out their host by number,
- calling them all by name;
- by the greatness of his might
- and because he is strong in power,
- not one is missing.
Isaiah then appeals to Israel who continued to rebel against him:
- Why do you say, O Jacob,
- and speak, O Israel,
- “My way is hidden from the Lord,
- and my right is disregarded by my God”?
- Have you not known? Have you not heard?
- The Lord is the everlasting God,
- the Creator of the ends of the earth.
- He does not faint or grow weary;
- his understanding is unsearchable.
This majestic and powerful God, then promises us great things if we wait on him and trust him:
- He gives power to the faint,
- and to him who has no might he increases strength.
- Even youths shall faint and be weary,
- and young men shall fall exhausted;
- but they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength;
- they shall mount up with wings like eagles;
- they shall run and not be weary;
- they shall walk and not faint.
So if you just periodically suffer from fatigue or you have been diagnosed with chronic fatigue, you can receive strength from the Lord by waiting and trusting in him! Let’s trust him and claim this promise!
Father, I am so humbled that despite me being a vapor in the wind, you love me and promise to renew my strength, help me run and not grow weary, walk and not faint, and even be mounted with wings like eagles. I claim these promises as I wait and trust in you. In the name of Jesus. Amen.