Friends of the Kingdom — Community Guidelines Welcome, Friends. Friends of the Kingdom exists to help believers grow in intimacy with the Father, walk in their true identity in Christ, experience healing and freedom, and mature as disciples of Jesus Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit. Our goal is not simply information. Our goal is transformation through relationship with God. These guidelines help us steward a community where people can grow in safety, honor, truth, and love. By participating in this community, you’re agreeing to walk in them. 1. Walk in Honor Every person here is loved by the Father and is part of the bride of Christ — treat them that way. Disagree without dishonoring. Correct without crushing. Mocking, belittling, name-calling, and sarcasm aimed at a person have no home here. 2. What’s Shared Here Stays Here Members share testimonies, struggles, and prayer requests in this space because they trust it’s safe. Honor that trust. Do not screenshot, repost, or discuss another member’s story outside this community — not even anonymously. 3. No Harassment — Ever This includes unwanted direct messages, pressure, intimidation, romantic advances, or repeated contact after someone has asked you to stop. This is a zero-tolerance boundary. 4. No Solicitation or Self-Promotion This is a place to grow, not a marketplace. Do not sell products, recruit for businesses or other ministries, or post links to your own offerings without written permission from leadership. 5. Leave Deliverance Ministry to the Settings Built for It We believe in freedom — that’s why we take it seriously. Do not conduct deliverance ministry in posts, comments, or DMs. Pray for one another, encourage one another, point one another to truth. Deliverance ministry happens in covered, structured settings led by trained leadership, where people can be ministered to safely and followed up with well. 6. Don’t Diagnose One Another Not spiritually, not clinically. You are free to share your own story and what God has done in you. You are not free to tell another member what spirit they’re dealing with, what’s wrong with them, or what they need. Discernment serves people best in humility and prayer — not public pronouncements.