You and the New Government

America survived the first week of the not yet Donald Trump presidency, who knew?

Like many, Brenda and I stayed up into the early morning hours watching election returns. As we watched the returns and the pundits sheer disbelief at the news they were reporting, I smiled from ear to ear. The American people denied Hillary Clinton’s pursuit of the American Presidency.

I am no fan of Mrs. Clinton. Her public policies, her lawlessness, her suspect ethics, and especially her dereliction of duty concerning Benghazi put me firmly in the #NeverHillary camp early on in the election cycle.

To be clear I am no fan of Mr. Trump either, not yet anyway. My vote during the primary season went to a more conservative candidate, but my candidate of choice was not on the ballot for the general election. I could become appreciative of Mr. Trump if he somehow leads in such a way to hold the line against progressive liberalism or even rolls back policies of the left as he boldly campaigned. Time will tell if he does what he said he intends to do. Like all government before him, I suspect we will be disappointed at some point over the next four years.

The Bible gives more than ample instruction to Christ’s followers concerning our role and responsibility to government. Paul writes extensively about the conduct of a believer in the Roman Empire. We see in the Old Testament faithful examples we can follow in Joseph (Gen 37-50), the Hebrew midwives (Ex 1), and in Daniel and his friends, while John the Baptist, the Apostles, and our Lord provide our model in the New Testament (Mark 12:17).

The common thread in each example or command is “we are told to bend over backwards to honor the king or be obedient to the civil magistrates.”

  • Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God (Romans 13:1).
  • Be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution, whether it be to the emperor as supreme, 14 or to governors as sent by him to punish those who do evil and to praise those who do good. 15 For this is the will of God…Honor the emperor (1 Peter 2:13-17).
  • Remind them to be submissive to rulers and authorities, to be obedient (Titus 3:1).

Both Peter and Paul give the same directive without qualification or condition: Christians willingly submit to every civil authority. Someone retorts, “What if obeying man means I disobey God?” Of course we “obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29). But here’s the fact, I suspect few, if any of my readers, have ever faced the situation where obeying an ordinance of man meant disobeying a command of God. It just doesn’t happen that often in 21st century America. The default position for Christians is submit to every obligation government lays upon us.

The Christian response goes farther than simply obeying civil laws. “It also includes genuine honor and respect for government officials as God’s agents for maintaining order and justice in human society.” Christians who made crass jokes about President Bill Clinton did so in violation of God’s commands. Any who used a racial slur in reference to President Obama were not merely politically incorrect or rude, they were wicked and ungodly. Snickering at a politician’s speech patterns or faux pas, critiquing his policies, or condemning his immorality is one thing; sharing a meme on social media that mocks his office or the image of God he bears is something altogether different.

So, we have a new president and a greatly altered government at every level. At best we are certain that we are not certain what our country will look like four years from nowTo this we must commit: we Christians will be model citizens in this United States of America.

As always, I welcome your feedback and any suggestions you might have for an upcoming Lunchtime Musing.

Celebrating Infanticide

100 years is a long time. Only a small number of us will live to that grand ol’ age. Few technologies stay in use that long. It is not common for an organization or business to mark that milestone. Yet astonishingly, Planned Parenthood, the abortion industry’s leading agency for ending the life of the unborn, recently celebrated its 100th year of operation. And celebrate they did.

President Obama tweeted, “For a century, Planned Parenthood has made it possible for women to determine their own lives. Here's to another #100YearsStrong.”

Hillary Clinton said, “I’m proud to stand with Planned Parenthood. I’ll never stop fighting to protect the ability and right of every woman in this country to make her own health decisions.”

Advancement in medical technology over the last 100 years confirms what the Bible teaches and what expectant mothers know intuitively, life begins inside the womb. Still, Planned Parenthood has murdered nearly seven million babies since the Roe v. Wade decision of 1973. Leading politicians, elected government officials, lauded celebrities, national media outlets, college professors, and so many more applaud the organization founded by the notorious eugenist, Margaret Sanger.

In a day of political correctness, it is beyond belief how so many cling to Sanger. Some debate exists which quotes actually originated with her, but consider this quote from the New York Times April 8, 1923:

Birth Control is not contraception indiscriminately and thoughtlessly practiced. It means the release and cultivation of the better racial elements in our society, and the gradual suppression, elimination and eventual extirpation of defective stocks — those human weeds which threaten the blooming of the finest flowers of American civilization.

“Better racial elements”…”defective stocks”…”human weeds”... Who gets to make these judgments? Who determines which elements of race are better than others, which stock is defective, and who among us is a weed that threatens the rest of the beautiful flowers? This is wicked speech born out of a rebellious heart toward our Creator. And so many of the elite in the American culture applaud without shame or caveat Margaret Sanger and Planned Parenthood.

Reprehensible.

In 2014, the year for which most recent statistics are available, Planned Parenthood murdered more than 300,000 unborn children. That same year across the United States, 1,000,000 babies’ lives were terminated by elective choice.

Supporters of Planned Parenthood like to note that only 3% of its funding goes toward abortion services. So what? Are we supposed to say, “Oh, ok, then. You only kill babies with a little of your money. My bad.”

Most of you are staunchly pro-life and stand firmly against abortion. You do not need me to persuade you to the horrors of infanticide. My purpose in this Musing is to remind you again of the tragic reality of the American culture of death. We kill our babies when the fact of their existence is inconvenient to our way of life or desired lifestyle. My purpose to call you to hold your ground concerning the sanctity of life.

Do not give up a single inch.

As much as I could hope and pray that abortion would end, it won’t any time soon. The heart of man is deceitful and desperately wicked. Abortions will end when the Lord of the gospel dominates the hearts of human beings. So we take a two-pronged approach. We decry the action of abortion and we defend the unborn by every legal means possible. And we determine to be about the business of gospel conversations for the sake of those yet to be born.

As always, I welcome your feedback and any suggestions you might have for an upcoming Lunchtime Musing.

Your Vanishing Freedoms

What a mess.

On the right side of the aisle, the nominee for the President of the United States is a vulgar representation of the American male. Recent revelations only confirmed what we already knew – Donald Trump is more John Kennedy than John Adams. On the left side of the aisle, the nominee for the leader of the free world is a liar, schemer, enabler, profiteer along the lines of Hugo Chavez and Jean-Claude Duvalier. One of them will hold the title Commander-in-Chief. Excuse me while I go throw up.

By now, like me, you’ve read blogs and columns all across the spectrum predicting what will happen when one of the two nominees takes office. “If Hillary Clinton wins…” or “If Donald Trump wins…” To the extent the prophecies are true, none of us knows. In hindsight, conservatives thank Ronald Reagan for his appointment of Antonin Scalia to our Supreme Court but shake their heads in amazement at the legacy of Sandra Day O’Conner.

I’ve read Facebook posts from strangers and people I love warning, “We are going to lose our freedoms.” My answer, “Yes, we probably will.” I propose we will continue to lose freedoms without regard to who wins the upcoming national elections. To the best of my knowledge, the freedoms the people of the United States and much of Western Civilization have enjoyed during the 18th – 20th centuries has been an anomaly for the people of God and those who would live righteously. The Bible presents a history of God’s people living under intense opposition. Church history flows with the horrors of exiles and executions for those who will live godly in Christ Jesus.

  • Joseph suffered deeply for his righteous living.
  • Daniel lived righteously in exile from his homeland only to meet with extreme hatred from accusers.
  • Jeremiah preached the Word of God to his own people and his own king attacked Jeremiah for his sermons and writings.
  • The nation of Israel suffered under the bondage of Egypt, Babylon, and Assyria. For any who might say, “they got what they deserved,” remember not everyone was a rebel against God. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego loved God and His word and were still thrown into the fiery furnace.
  • The pages of the New Testament record the murders of John the Baptist and Stephen, the scattering of Christians across the empire, and the beatings of so many faithful followers of Jesus Christ.
  • Church history tells of William Tyndale, John Bunyan, the Huguenots, John and Betty Stam, and untold numbers of those who have suffered loss of life, employment, or family because of commitment to Jesus Christ.
  • Our own country owes much of its origins to the religious persecution of the puritans who fled Europe and England after refusing to compromise religious convictions and regularly facing the sword and chains.

Our brief period of religious freedoms is not the norm of human history. The exception to the rule is freedom; the rule is opposition. If history teaches us anything, we can assume freedom will wane for the faithful.

True freedom existed for humanity in the Garden of Eden. Every expression of freedom since the fall has been temporary and a shadow. Because evil wars against righteousness, those who embrace righteousness will be in the crosshairs of those who call evil good. Why should expect our lives to be any different?

In the Old Testament the prophets of God and faithful followers called out kings and people of influence for their debauched living, immoral rule, and abusive policies. We should do no less. Fight against abortion. Stand up against welfare schemes that oppress the poor. Decry the rebellion against the creator that is gender identity or so called same-sex marriage.

In the New Testament the apostles prepared Christians for persecution to come or instructed them how to respond to the persecution at present. Faithful pastors must do the same. The best your pastor can do is to preach to you what Paul and Peter wrote to the early church who knew very little of freedoms and nothing about a “Bill of Rights.” While the freedoms we love and have so wonderfully enjoyed mean a great deal to us, those freedoms are not necessary to live faithfully as disciples of Jesus Christ.

I am not certain if I will have more to say on the coming election. I am sure of this: I will need to say more from the Bible to myself, to my family, and to you about how to live faithful to Christ in a culture increasingly hostile to Jesus and his followers.

This is the new norm.

As always, I welcome your feedback and any suggestions you might have for an upcoming Lunchtime Musing.

Please Value Your Bible

“Look at my new Bible, Pastor!” He is only three-years-old and cannot read, but the excitement could not be contained. I knelt down close to him, and he showed me his small, storybook copy of God’s Word. Technically, we probably shouldn’t call it a Bible. It is not a translation from the original languages, does not contain one of the sixty-six books in its complete form, and cannot provide to an individual believer or to a local church the doctrines of our faith or the practice of Christianity. But he doesn’t know that; what he knows is this is his Bible – his very own copy of God’s Word, and he cherishes it.

Last Sunday in our Fall Missions Emphasis, we heard from missionaries with Bibles International, the division of Baptist Mid-Missions whose charge is delivering the Bible to the hundreds of millions worldwide who still do not have God’s Word in their native language. At present BI has projects in 17 countries over 44 languages.

Last Sunday, we watched brief video footage of an Asian church receiving God’s Word in their own language. Prior to this effort by BI, no person in that people group had read the Bible in his own language. You can imagine the euphoria as pastors and people held out their hands to receive their own copies. They clutched them like a three-year-old boy.

As the video continued, the pastor addressed the church, pleading with them, “Please value your Bible. Keep in in your heart.” He knew the elation of the moment soon would wane – if not for the current generation, then for the generation that followed.

Like my pastor-brother on the other side of the globe, I plead with you who carry your Bible in your pocket or purse in digital form on your smartphone or tablet, who have multiple copies of God’s Word around your home, who have known a Christian life and church always and only with the whole Bible at your immediate beck and call – Please value your Bible. Keep it in your heart!

  • Your Bible is the only light while navigating a dark path (Psalm 119:105).
  • Your Bible is the only means for life giving faith (Romans 10:17).
  • Your Bible is the only way to secure wisdom (Matthew 7:24).
  • And so much more.

There was a time when we English speakers were no different than the tribal group in Myanmar. More than 500 years have passed since John Wycliffe, who was persecuted mercilessly for his work in Bible translation, delivered the first handwritten copies of the Bible in English. His countryman William Tyndale, a later Bible translator whose work makes it possible for you to read the Bible in English, was choked to death and his body burned at the stake in the fall of 1536 for daring to translate the Scriptures into the language of everyday people.

That was a long time ago. The events of the years have been forgotten, but what cannot be forgotten is the Word of God itself. We cannot allow the Word of God to decrease among us in any way. So, please, value your Bible. Keep it in your heart.

As always, I welcome your feedback and any suggestions you might have for an upcoming Lunchtime Musing.

#NeverPain

Maybe you’ve read the small, 93-page book that took the Christian community by storm back at the turn of the millennium. Since 2000,The Prayer of Jabez has sold more than 10 million copies, a huge number in the publishing world.

Tucked away in a lengthy genealogy of hard to say names are these words by a Jew named Jabez, “Oh, that You would bless me indeed, and enlarge my territory, that Your hand would be with me, and that You would keep me from evil, that I may not cause pain!” (1 Chronicles 4:9-10).

The book and the wave it produced prompted people from here to there to ask God to bless them and enlarge their territories, that is, their influence, opportunities, and holdings. In the preface author Bruce Wilkinson writes, “I want to teach you how to pray a daring prayer that God always answers. It is brief — only one sentence with four parts…but I believe it contains the key to a life of extraordinary favor with God… In fact, thousands of believers who are applying its truths are seeing miracles happen on a regular basis.” There aresignificant problems with Wilkinson’s interpretation of the prayer but what about the last line of the prayer, “that I may not cause pain”? Do we pray this enough?

We live in a world of intense pain. Sadly, some pain Christians experience comes from those who should be the last to inflict such harm. Onlookers have accused Christians of “eating their own,” “kicking him while he’s down,” and “friendly fire.” As Christians we never want to be the cause of another believer’s pain, but it’s all too easy. As proactive deterent to self-inflicted wounds, let’s pray, “Lord, prevent me from causing pain to another.”

In My Words

Painful words can escape our mouths or be the product of our fingers. Over the last few weeks I’ve read emails, social media posts, and text messages that make me cringe at the writer’s words. How could she not know the pain that would come because of hastily tapped out words? How could he not know that comment would leave the reader devastated? I’ve listened to communication between family members and shuddered at the harshness, the vulgarity, the threats, the sarcasm, or the complete insensitivity to the damage the words would do to the hearer. But these were not posts or phrases from unbelievers who have little capacity to do anything but hurt with their words. These expressions came from Christians! “Oh, Lord, grant that I do not cause pain in my words, especially toward other Christians.”

In My Neglect

A deep pain emerges from neglect. “He doesn’t…” “She won’t…” “Why can’t they just…” “My dad never…” A word of thanks not offered. A hug denied. An apology withheld. These and more examples occur again and again, day after day in our homes, relationships, and churches. Indwelt by the Holy Spirit, we Christians have everything we need to be vessels of good to other human beings as instruments of God. When we refrain from doing what is good to or for those who could benefit from our words and efforts, we sting the very people already in distress. Neglect says, “I don’t care about you,” an attitude that leaves a mark. “Oh, Lord, grant that I do not cause pain by neglect, especially toward other Christians.”

In My Actions

There’s a reason we use the phrase, “a helping hand” because our hands are a principle way we act when giving aid to another. Yet, some hands bring great pain when they strike, steal, or supply the route for addictive behaviors. What could be tools to bless become weapons to destroy. “Oh, Lord, grant that I do not cause pain by neglect, especially toward other Christians."

Most won’t argue the pain in the world and the pain closer to home. The curse means pain will be a part of our lives until we are with the Lord. However, the fact of pain doesn’t mean I have to be a contributing partner. In the words of Jabez, “Oh, Lord, grant that I may not cause pain.”

As always, I welcome your feedback and any suggestions you might have for an upcoming Lunchtime Musing.