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THE PINE TREE RIOT | When Tyranny Takes an Inch, Men Must Draw the Line

THE PINE TREE RIOT | When Tyranny Takes an Inch, Men Must Draw the Line

Season 4 Episode 95 Published 1 week ago
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On April 14, 1772, in Weare, New Hampshire, a group of colonial men violently resisted British officers enforcing the Crown’s pine tree laws. What looked like a fight over timber was really a fight over tyranny, overreach, and the right of free men to draw a line before power takes everything.

In this episode, we break down the Pine Tree Riot, what it reveals about human government, and why men must learn the difference between rightful authority and creeping control. Because if you never resist when power takes an inch, do not be shocked when it comes back for your whole city.

SOTD: Acts 5:29 (ESV) - “But Peter and the apostles answered, ‘We must obey God rather than men.’”

HOW TO DEVELOP IT

1. RULE YOURSELF FIRST

If lust, fear, comfort, and appetite rule you, you are already easy to control.

2. KNOW THE BOUNDARIES

Know what belongs to God, the state, the church, and the household.
If you do not know the lanes, you will surrender ground too easily.

3. BUILD A STRONG HOUSE

Weak homes trade conviction for safety.
Strong homes can absorb pressure.

4. SPEAK EARLY

Most men wait too long.
Resist small compromises before they become normal.

5. LOCK ARMS WITH OTHER MEN

Tyranny loves isolated men.
Brotherhood makes men harder to move.

6. ACCEPT THE COST

Real resistance costs comfort, convenience, and approval.
If it has to be painless, you are not ready.

FIELD OP 1: IDENTIFY THE INCH

Where are you tolerating overreach in your thinking, home, speech, or convictions?

FIELD OP 2: DRAW THE LINE

Take one visible action this week that says, no farther.

Do one thing that strengthens your resistance muscle:

  • speak truth
  • set a boundary
  • gather with strong men
  • lead your house clearly
  • cut off one compromise

NIGHT DEBRIEF

  • Where did I tolerate what I should have confronted?
  • What cost am I afraid to pay?
  • What happened when I stood firm?


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