Nov 07, 2025
As I am still trying to process the results of this past election cycle, I can’t help but feel a dark cloud looming over this nation. The election of Erica Deuso as Downingtown’s mayor on November 4, 2025 is a marker on a map growing darker by the day.
This man, born biologically male, now crossdressing and cosplaying as a woman, has claimed the mayoral seat in a Pennsylvania borough of 8,000, securing 64% of the vote against a Republican challenger. Pennsylvania’s first openly transgender mayor, they call him—a title heralded as “progress” by some, but to anyone still trying to live in reality, it reeks of a deeper unraveling.
With 50% turnout and a coalition of liberal voters, especially in Chester County’s shifting political landscape, this victory isn’t an anomaly, it’s a symptom.
I mean, think about it. What is this? What kind of world are we living in that we think being ruled by troons is good for us? It can’t be anything but what the Scriptures describe as being given over, creation subjected to futility. It feels like judgment—God’s hand turning America over to its own sin, city by city, town by town.
The Scripture is clear, a mirror held to our decline. Romans 1:24-26 speaks of a people given over to their lusts:
“Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves… For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions.”
In Pennsylvania, we are seeing it unfold—a man celebrated for rejecting his God-given nature, parading as a woman, and a community applauding the charade. This isn’t liberation, it’s rebellion codified, a town embracing the very perversion Paul warned against.
The applause from the LGBTQ+ Victory Fund, the global calls of congratulations, the framing of it as “hope over fear.” It’s the sound of a people reveling in their chains, blind to the chains they forge. Deuso’s platform—community building, domestic violence focus, open office hours—masks the deeper truth that a leader whose identity defies the order of creation is a leader marching headlong into destruction.
This is now a repeating pattern that spreads like a stain across our land. New York crowns Zohran Mamdani, a Muslim socialist whose faith subjugates women, while young feminists cheer.
San Francisco’s drag queen story hours multiply, Chicago’s gender policies blur biology into oblivion. The Biden administration appointed a “woman” who stands up to pee as the nation’s premier health official.
And now Downingtown, a quiet borough, joins the march—small, yes, but significant, a domino in a row stretching from coast to coast. Sodom’s shadow is lengthening.
Genesis 19 recounts a city so steeped in sin—homosexual assault, prideful defiance—that fire rained from heaven. America, with its pride parades and gender reassignments, its courts striking down God’s design, mirrors that ancient hubris.
This judgment isn’t distant, off in the future. It’s immediate, now, a swift hand of discipline. God doesn’t wait for a final reckoning to act—He lets nations taste their choices, as He did with Israel’s idolatry (Hosea 4:6). It’s not hate to speak truth. It’s mercy. Yet mercy is scorned, and the result is a nation sliding into Sodom’s fate, where every town, from big cities to small boroughs, reflects the same heart.
When are we going to consider the endgame? It should weigh on us. Sodom’s judgment was swift—fire and brimstone erasing a city that mocked God’s order. America, with its 330 million souls, won’t escape scrutiny. The transgender mayor in Downingtown isn’t the cause but a symptom, a flare marking where we’ve wandered.
Crime everywhere continues to rise as moral boundaries fade—Philadelphia’s murder rate, still well above pre-pandemic levels, hints at the chaos to come. Economic strain, like New York’s $7 billion deficit under Mamdani and his ilk, foreshadows collapse.
Yet, the world celebrates and applauds “diversity” as Romans 1 warns that those who even approve of those who practice such things deserve to die. God is patient, but His patience has limits. Both Scripture and history prove it. Nineveh repented and was spared, but Sodom did not, and its ashes are an object lesson in defying God.
This isn’t despair, it’s a call to see. Judgment begins with the house of God, yet the church sleeps while towns like Downingtown fall. Deuso’s term starts January 7, 2026—watch the policies, the cultural shifts, the quiet erosion of norms. It’s not just Pennsylvania. It’s a microcosm of America’s drift. God is turning us over, not with a sudden cataclysm, but with the slow, sure weight of our own choices.
Sodom’s fire awaits, sooner or later, unless we repent—town by town, heart by heart. I’m sobered by this truth, convinced we stand at the edge. Will we turn, or will the flames find us too?

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