Used to say “really” or “forreal”
You righteous tripping bro.
Im righteous hungry as hell
Oh righteous?
When you get something right you yell out "righteous" and act like it's very normal. And keep on going
"Ayy what did you get for 6.A" "I got -15" "righteous"
Means someone who has an infection and makes fun of TURTLES having sex
Look that turtle is gay and it's a piece of shit righteous
Righteouse means religious someone is going in right path.
Friend : look bro she is so righteous
Me : lower your gaze and get your eyes off you only look ones go ask her hand and marry her bro
When you have struggled and suffered alone your entire life and you still step up to the plate to help people when they need you that makes you a righteous motherfucker
Nobody was ever there for Susan but Susan was always there for everybody that makes her a righteous motherfucker
One who lacks the critical thinking skills to see beyond one's own prejudices; an inept thinker with a sense of irony in naming himself
The critic of Jonah Goldberg's book is a Righteous Bubba
A restorative act of helping someone embrace forgiveness—both giving and receiving—by lovingly challenging their perception of guilt, shame, or unresolved conflict.
It involves gently leading them to understand that through true forgiveness, the past is erased, as promised by God’s mercy and grace. This approach seeks to restore relationships and align hearts with the divine principle that forgiven sins are no longer remembered.
Biblical Anchoring
Jeremiah 31:34 (KJV):
“For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.”
• Connection: God’s forgiveness is absolute and restorative. Righteous gaslighting reflects this by encouraging people to fully accept forgiveness as a clean slate, rather than clinging to past sins or grievances
Examples of Righteous Gaslighting
1. Forgiving Others:
If someone says, “I can forgive them, but I’ll never forget what they did,” you might gently challenge this with, “True forgiveness means letting it go entirely—like how God forgives us and remembers our sins no more (Jeremiah 31:34). Can you trust Him to help you erase the past?”
2. Accepting Forgiveness:
When someone insists, “I don’t deserve forgiveness,” you could respond, “God says otherwise. Psalm 118 reminds us that His mercy endures forever, and He restores us as a new creation.”
3. Rebuilding Relationships:
If a person holds onto old grievances, you might remind them, “If God has forgiven and forgotten your sins, shouldn’t we do the same for others? Imagine what healing could come from letting the past truly stay in the past.”
Righteous Gaslighting restores hearts by reshaping perceptions of forgiveness, aligning them with God’s truth: that forgiven sins are erased, and each day is an opportunity to rejoice in a restored relationship with Him and others