Category: Uncategorized

  • The First Murder: What Cain and Abel Still Teach Us About Violence

    How humanity’s first act of bloodshed became the world’s greatest curse

    Before bullets, there were stones. Before wars, there was envy. And before humanity learned to hate one another, one brother killed another.

    In Save Abel: There Was a Gun in Paradise, Johnny P. Beason returns to the earliest pages of Genesis to uncover a truth we’ve long ignored: the problem isn’t the weapon—it’s the heart that wields it.

    Beason draws a profound connection between the ancient story of Cain and Abel and the epidemic of violence that plagues modern society. From mass shootings to global wars, from domestic abuse to racial hatred, the same spirit that drove Cain to murder his brother still lives within the human heart.

    The book asks difficult questions: How did paradise become a battlefield? Why do we still kill what we should protect? And what does God expect from a world that has forgotten its humanity?

    Beason writes with prophetic urgency and unflinching honesty, challenging readers to confront their complicity in a culture that glorifies violence. His message is not political—it’s spiritual. He argues that no amount of policy can heal what only repentance can fix.

    He reminds us that every act of violence is first an act of separation—from God, from love, and from ourselves. The gun in paradise is a symbol of how far we’ve fallen from grace. But Beason doesn’t leave us in despair. He points to the hope of redemption—the possibility that if we “save Abel” by protecting the innocent and seeking peace, we might also save ourselves.

    In a time when hatred echoes louder than love, Save Abel stands as both a warning and a promise: humanity can still return to paradise—but only if it chooses to lay its weapons down and listen once again to the voice of God.

  • Abiding in Faith: Finding Stillness in a Noisy World

    Why spiritual endurance is the key to surviving modern chaos

    When was the last time you were truly still? Not scrolling, not reacting, not worrying—just still?
    In an age of constant noise and distraction, Abide by Johnny P. Beason calls us back to the quiet strength of faith, to a deeper understanding of what it means to live connected to God in a divided world.

    To “abide” is more than to exist; it is to dwell in something unshakable. It’s choosing to remain grounded in truth even when everything around us is uncertain. Beason reminds us that abiding in Christ means maintaining peace when chaos reigns, hope when despair tempts us, and faith when the world demands fear.

    Our culture rewards speed, opinion, and noise—but Beason’s message stands as a gentle yet powerful contradiction: slow down, listen, and rediscover your divine rhythm. Through scripture and heartfelt reflection, Abide teaches that the only way to hear God’s voice is to silence the others competing for our attention.

    This book speaks to those who feel overwhelmed by headlines, burdened by division, and weary from life’s trials. It offers more than inspiration—it offers a spiritual survival guide.

    To abide is to resist spiritual burnout. It is a call to maturity, to depth, and to patience in a world obsessed with instant gratification. Beason’s wisdom echoes Christ’s words in John 15:4:

    “Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in Me.”

    In the stillness, you rediscover power. In the abiding, you rediscover peace. And in the process, you rediscover yourself.

  • America on Trial: The Case for Truth, Justice, and Healing

    How political hypocrisy mirrors the brokenness in our homes and hearts

    The story of America has always been told through its fathers—those who wrote the Constitution, fought for independence, and envisioned a land of freedom and equality. But as Johnny P. Beason boldly reveals in Founding Fathers to Floundering Fathers, the legacy of fatherhood in America has been corrupted.

    Beason draws a haunting parallel between the fathers who founded this nation and the fathers who lead it today—both in the halls of government and in the homes across America. The moral decline of leadership, he argues, is not just a political crisis but a personal one.

    Our leaders, like absentee fathers, have abandoned responsibility. They have traded duty for greed, truth for convenience, and service for self-interest. The result is a nation adrift—without guidance, without moral compass, without accountability.

    Beason’s critique is fierce yet redemptive. He does not write to condemn but to awaken. He challenges readers to look inward, to hold themselves to the same standards they demand of their leaders. “You cannot fix a broken government,” he writes, “until you fix the broken hearts that elected it.”

    His analysis is not partisan—it is prophetic. Whether Republican or Democrat, rich or poor, black or white, Beason insists that America’s healing must begin with moral restoration. Our democracy will never be stronger than the integrity of its people.

    He ends with a question that echoes long after the final page: If the Founding Fathers gave us freedom, what will this generation of fathers leave behind?

  • From Fathers to Failures: The Moral Collapse of Leadership in America

    How political hypocrisy mirrors the brokenness in our homes and hearts

    The story of America has always been told through its fathers—those who wrote the Constitution, fought for independence, and envisioned a land of freedom and equality. But as Johnny P. Beason boldly reveals in Founding Fathers to Floundering Fathers, the legacy of fatherhood in America has been corrupted.

    Beason draws a haunting parallel between the fathers who founded this nation and the fathers who lead it today—both in the halls of government and in the homes across America. The moral decline of leadership, he argues, is not just a political crisis but a personal one.

    Our leaders, like absentee fathers, have abandoned responsibility. They have traded duty for greed, truth for convenience, and service for self-interest. The result is a nation adrift—without guidance, without moral compass, without accountability.

    Beason’s critique is fierce yet redemptive. He does not write to condemn but to awaken. He challenges readers to look inward, to hold themselves to the same standards they demand of their leaders. “You cannot fix a broken government,” he writes, “until you fix the broken hearts that elected it.”

    His analysis is not partisan—it is prophetic. Whether Republican or Democrat, rich or poor, black or white, Beason insists that America’s healing must begin with moral restoration. Our democracy will never be stronger than the integrity of its people.

    He ends with a question that echoes long after the final page: If the Founding Fathers gave us freedom, what will this generation of fathers leave behind?