notes from the wall

Thomas Plemmons Thomas Plemmons

Sharpen the Sword #1 – The Handgun Grip

Train your spirit. Train your hands.

Before we even talk stance, before we talk sight picture, before we talk about the draw—let’s get one thing nailed down: how you hold the thing. Grip is the handshake you give your handgun. And like any good handshake, it should be confident, controlled, and say “I know what I’m doing” without you having to say a word.

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Thomas Plemmons Thomas Plemmons

He Hath Made Us Priests: The Call to Intercede and Sacrifice

If we’re going to talk about what it means to be kings in Christ—leaders in the fight—then we must also talk about what it means to be priests.

Because the truth is: you cannot rightly lead as a king if you do not bow as a priest.

Revelation 1:6 says:

“And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father; to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.”

—Revelation 1:6

Not just kings. Priests.

Not just leaders in battle. Intercessors at the altar.

And this—this forgotten identity of priesthood—is a burning need in today’s church, in today’s homes, and in the hearts of Christian men.

We are good at charging forward. We’re good at acting. But have we remembered that the first and most sacred role of the priest was not to fight, but to stand between God and the people in intercession and sacrifice?

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Thomas Plemmons Thomas Plemmons

He Hath Made Us Kings: The Call to Lead the Fight

Christ isn’t just calling us to be equipped. He’s calling us to lead.

To step forward in the war against our own flesh. To take initiative in the battle for our homes. To rise with courage against evil in high places. To war in prayer and lead in purity. To shepherd those around us—not from behind—but from ahead.

Too many Christian men today live like castled kings—protected, passive, peering out at the chaos from safety.

But Scripture doesn’t picture us as stationary monarchs sipping wine in golden halls. It pictures us as battle-scarred sons of the Most High, riding under the banner of the Lion of Judah, conquering not with steel but with truth, not with pride but with power from on high.

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