Hogsweat misquotes the Bible

#1
Magical Realist Offline
Pretty much par for the course. The dork was after all a Fox News morning show host.

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Google AI

"The famous "Path of the righteous man..." speech in Pulp Fiction is almost entirely creative writing for the movie, heavily inspired by a similar scene in a 1973 Japanese film, Karate Kiba, rather than being a direct quote from the Bible.

Recent Controversy: In April 2026, it was reported that U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth recited the fictional Pulp Fiction monologue at a Pentagon prayer service, believing it to be a "CSAR 25:17" combat prayer."
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#2
Syne Offline

CSAR 25:17 refers to a "military prayer" recited by U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth during a Pentagon worship service on April 15, 2026.
The prayer gained significant attention and controversy because its text is not found in the Bible; instead, it is a modified version of the famous monologue delivered by Samuel L. Jackson’s character, Jules Winnfield, in the 1994 film Pulp Fiction.

The Context
Hegseth presented the passage as a prayer used by the "Sandy 1" Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR) teams.

The Origin: He stated it was shared with him by a mission planner involved in a recent operation to rescue downed airmen in Iran.
The Intent: He claimed the prayer was "meant to reflect Ezekiel 25:17," a real biblical verse.
The Occasion: The service took place just hours before House Democrats filed articles of impeachment against him.
- Google AI

Hegseth literally says "CSAR 25:17." You know, not the Bible.
Gullible moron.
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#3
Magical Realist Offline
(Apr 17, 2026 02:35 AM)Syne Wrote:

CSAR 25:17 refers to a "military prayer" recited by U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth during a Pentagon worship service on April 15, 2026.
The prayer gained significant attention and controversy because its text is not found in the Bible; instead, it is a modified version of the famous monologue delivered by Samuel L. Jackson’s character, Jules Winnfield, in the 1994 film Pulp Fiction.

The Context
Hegseth presented the passage as a prayer used by the "Sandy 1" Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR) teams.

The Origin: He stated it was shared with him by a mission planner involved in a recent operation to rescue downed airmen in Iran.
The Intent: He claimed the prayer was "meant to reflect Ezekiel 25:17," a real biblical verse.
The Occasion: The service took place just hours before House Democrats filed articles of impeachment against him.
- Google AI

Hegseth literally says "CSAR 25:17." You know, not the Bible.
Gullible moron.

You don't even know what CSAR is do you?

"CSAR most commonly stands for Combat Search and Rescue, a specialized military mission to locate, support, and recover personnel (such as downed pilots or stranded troops) from hostile or denied environments. These high-risk, time-sensitive operations often use helicopters to retrieve personnel from behind enemy lines."

No such book, no such verse, and no such passage except in the movie Pulp Fiction. He's an idiot just like you are.
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#4
Syne Offline
(Apr 17, 2026 02:41 AM)Magical Realist Wrote:
(Apr 17, 2026 02:35 AM)Syne Wrote:

CSAR 25:17 refers to a "military prayer" recited by U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth during a Pentagon worship service on April 15, 2026.
The prayer gained significant attention and controversy because its text is not found in the Bible; instead, it is a modified version of the famous monologue delivered by Samuel L. Jackson’s character, Jules Winnfield, in the 1994 film Pulp Fiction.

The Context
Hegseth presented the passage as a prayer used by the "Sandy 1" Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR) teams.

    The Origin: He stated it was shared with him by a mission planner involved in a recent operation to rescue downed airmen in Iran.
    The Intent: He claimed the prayer was "meant to reflect Ezekiel 25:17," a real biblical verse.
    The Occasion: The service took place just hours before House Democrats filed articles of impeachment against him.
- Google AI

Hegseth literally says "CSAR 25:17." You know, not the Bible.
Gullible moron.

You don't even know what CSAR is do you?

"CSAR most commonly stands for Combat Search and Rescue, a specialized military mission to locate, support, and recover personnel (such as downed pilots or stranded troops) from hostile or denied environments. These high-risk, time-sensitive operations often use helicopters to retrieve personnel from behind enemy lines."

No such book, no such verse, and no such passage except in the movie Pulp Fiction. He's an idiot just like you are.
Yes, I know what CSAR is (it's literally right there in my post... if you'd bother to read), but this is obviously you deflecting from watching that video and thinking he was presenting it as a Bible verse (after you being the jackass claiming to be an expert on Christianity 9_9).

No one claimed or thought it was from the Bible... except morons like you.
Gullible dipshit.
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#5
Magical Realist Offline
Quote:Yes, I know what CSAR is (it's literally right there in my post... if you'd bother to read), but this is obviously you deflecting from watching that video and thinking he was presenting it as a Bible verse (after you being the jackass claiming to be an expert on Christianity 9_9).

He literally referred to the chapter and verse of Ezekiel: "CSAR 25:17". That's claiming to quote it from something with chapters and verses. Since CSAR isn't such a book, it must be the Bible. He's a spiritual retard just like you are.
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#6
Syne Offline
(Apr 17, 2026 03:30 AM)Magical Realist Wrote:
Quote:Yes, I know what CSAR is (it's literally right there in my post... if you'd bother to read), but this is obviously you deflecting from watching that video and thinking he was presenting it as a Bible verse (after you being the jackass claiming to be an expert on Christianity 9_9).

He literally referred to the chapter and verse of Ezekiel: "CSAR 25:17". That's claiming to quote it from something with chapter and verses. Since CSAR isn't such a book, it must be the Bible. He's a spiritual retard just like you are.

That's the joke, moron. It's a military paraphrase of the Pulp Fiction lines, which claims to be Ezekiel 25:17 in the movie. He literally said CSAR 25:17 so anyone who's not a complete dumbshit knows it's not from the Bible.

Gullible dimwit. 9_9
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#7
Magical Realist Offline
Quote:He literally said CSAR 25:17 so anyone who's not a complete dumbshit knows it's not from the Bible.

He lied. There is no such thing as a CSAR book with the chapter and verse quoted. If you're going to use a verse in a prayer, it's probably a good idea you use a real one instead of making one up so you don't look like a jackass before millions of Bible-studying Christians.
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#8
Syne Offline
(Apr 17, 2026 03:37 AM)Magical Realist Wrote:
Quote:He literally said CSAR 25:17 so anyone who's not a complete dumbshit knows it's not from the Bible.

He lied. There is no such thing as a CSAR book with the chapter and verse quoted. If you're going to use a verse in a prayer, it's probably a good idea you use a real one instead of making one up so you don't look like a jackass before millions of Bible-studying Christians.

Again, that's the joke, moron.

Unlike you, people who actually study the Bible don't need to be told that.

Lying moron.
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#9
Magical Realist Offline
Quote:Again, that's the joke, moron.

He used it in a prayer asswipe. That's not joking. It's twisting a line from a movie as if it were from the Bible. And Christians don't take kindly to such things.
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#10
Syne Offline
(Apr 17, 2026 03:44 AM)Magical Realist Wrote:
Quote:Again, that's the joke, moron.

He used it in a prayer asswipe. That's not joking. It's twisting a line from a movie as if it were from the Bible. And Christians don't take kindly to such things.

You're such a lying moron. You obviously can't know much about Christianity if you think only Bible verses can be used in prayer.
It is funny how quickly you're exposing your own lie though.
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