Power

A wise man once  said, “You cannot serve two masters” (Matthew 6.24). The man who said this: Jesus Christ.  Ultimately the downfall of the nation of Israel in the Old Testament was rooted in this reality.  They desired God and ________.  

When God becomes not enough for His children they do what the nation of Israel did.  They make an idol (Exodus 32).  They desire a new king (1 Samuel 8).  Some days they even say, “God you aren’t enough”, but not always with their words but often with their actions.  They replace pursuit of holiness with pursuit of influence. After all, why wouldn’t they.  “Did God really say” (Genesis 3.1) becomes a question used to justify this.  Yet no-one seems to pause long enough to recognize that this statement was authored by the father of lies (John 8.44).

When power becomes the pursuit of those who call themselves followers of the All Powerful One, it declares to those who watch, God is not enough.  One simply cannot live by faith and pursuit of power.  “A house divided against itself will not stand” (Mark 3.25).

Satan once said to Jesus, “bow down to me and I will give you all the kingdoms of the earth” (Matthew 4.9).  Jesus replied with, “Away from me, Satan!  For it is written: ‘Worship the Lord your God, and serve Him only’” (Mathew 4.10)  Today Satan is saying to the followers of Jesus, “I have something for you but you too must compromise your allegiance.  Don’t worry, the end justifies the means.”  My prayer is that believers will give the same response that Jesus did, “Get behind me Satan!  I only worship the one true God!  I only serve the one true God!”

In conclusion, “what good is it, if a man gains the whole world, yet loses his own soul?” (Matthew 16.26)

Fruit>Power – Jesus said it.

Jesus did not desire to overturn Roman rule.  He desired to overthrow the throne of your heart.  The overthrow of the throne of your heart would then lead to a radical transformation of your life.  His Kingship, though internal, would manifest itself outwardly.  The fruit of this would then be seen, heard, and felt.  Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control would all be present.  At the same time outbursts of anger and an argumentative spirit would be among things that would no longer be present because the fruit that was produced would eventually choke out these poisons.  

In world where it still appears as though Rome is ruling, does it appear to those who are watching you that Jesus is ruling you?  

There were attempts made to take Jesus and make Him king.  Whenever His followers pursued influence over holiness Jesus always countered with correction.  Domination and power over are never the goals of the kingdom of God.  It is power under.  As we live a life under the influence of our King and we allow His influence to permeate every facet of life and flow forth in such a way that the aforementioned fruit becomes available and accessible to all who come in contact with us.  

If you spend all your time guarding your garden, your vegetables will eventually get choked out by weeds. True, birds, rabbits and rodents might never eat your fruit but guess what?  If you spend all your time tending your garden, weeding it, watering it, pruning it, you will also not have the birds, rabbits, and rodents eating your crop?  Why?  Because you are also present.  Yet at the same time, you will produce way more fruit.  Simply put, if your whole life is spent watching for evils to fight versus cultivating the good around you that you can control, your fruit production will always suffer.  At the same time those around you will suffer because God in His providence has called you to produce His fruit and give it away to those He has put in your path.  

Brokenness>anger, fear, and judgment

Jonas Salk is quoted with “Hope lies in dreams, in imagination, and in the courage of those who dare to make dreams into reality.”  When I read this quote, I can’t help but ask the question: where has the hope gone.  

Years ago, I did a sermon series and through the series I included the following big idea: for, not against.  With the idea that the church world needed to be known more for what they were for than what they were against.  I fear that we are living in times when this is often not the case.  Sadly, much of the church world has taken their cues not from the Scriptures but rather they have taken their cues from culture and politics.  I fear that many Christian leaders may have replaced time in their studies with time spent with their favorite cable news commentor.  We must get back to the place where we, like John Wesley, strive to be known as men and women of one book and not men and women of one political persuasion.

I was born in 1979 and grew up in the height of the purity culture and culture wars.  Like many in that era who were from the more conservative persuasion, there was a time when I was a disciple of Dr. James Dobson and Rush Limbaugh.  When I was in my 20’s I tuned both of them out.  I distinctly remember the day that I was at work and had Rush Limbaugh playing in the garage bay that I was working in.  I was struck with the thought; all Rush did was make me angry.  I was not full of compassion as Jesus was when He surveyed Jerusalem and wept over those who never get it.  I was just mad because people were living like they would never get it.  

With Dr. Dobson it was different.  I have fond memories of things that came from his organization like “Adventures in Odessey” and the recommended book for my wife and I, “The Strong Willed Child.”  At the same time, when I think of Dr. Dobson, I have a much different perspective than many.  I know this will upset many but again please remember I am sharing my perspective that I gained as a youth.  It is one that I have carried with me since the 80’s when Christian’s began reading every label in the grocery store to make sure they were boycotting the proper company.  This stuck with me.  Dobson to me, even as a child, represented a voice that typically sounded kind but took every opportunity he could to point how the church was under attack.  During this time, his views were tied directly to politicians.  For many people of my generation, we grew up believing a politician, not Jesus, was the hope of America.  Some of you probably even had a friend or relative that had a picture of Ronald Reagan somewhere in their home and every two years you got a voting guide that was either mailed to your home or passed out in your church.  This voting guide told you exactly how to vote and somewhere in the process you were told, this is the most important election ever. 

In the mid to late 90’s there was a season where I attended a King James only Independent Fundamental Baptist Church.  Here, protecting the 1611 KJV Bible was seen as more important than protecting anything else.  Some refer to this not as King James only but King James ugly.  There was an ugliness that existed in this isolationist cult-like corner of Christendom.  I believe they truly love Jesus, and they truly will be in heaven someday but when they get there, they will be shocked to find that St. Peter isn’t going to be speaking the King’s English at the pearly gates.  They will be equally as shocked when they realize that the worship in heaven might include cymbals and won’t be a collection of their favorite hymns.  The most shocking of all is that they will encounter not just fundamental Baptists in heaven but will worship with people that they thought would never be there.  They would see Lutherans, Catholics, Methodists, Presbyterians, Charismatics, Wesleyans and others.  While my first question to Jesus might be, “can you introduce me to your mom,” they will be asking “why are all these reprobates in heaven?”  This may sound harsh but what I learned in this period of my life was that everyone was wrong and liberal but us.  

I no longer ask Rush Limbaugh, Dr. Dobson, or Independent Fundamental Baptists for their opinions when I seek to engage with the world around me.  I now ask Jesus.  I look to the character, actions, and words of my Savior.  Limbaugh made me angry, Dobson made me scared, and the Fundy’s made me judgmental.  Jesus provides another path.  I am now full of hope.  I am now more compassionate.  I am now more patient.  I am now more forgiving.  I am now more loving.  I hope that I am now more like Jesus.  

Above all, I am heartbroken. 

I routinely pray that I would resemble Jesus who went up on the mountain top that overlooked Jerusalem and wept.  Even though Jesus knew that the people in the city below would viciously murder Him, He wept over their spiritual condition and the future that awaited them.  He wanted better for them.  Ultimately, this broken heart, drove Him to walk back down that mountainside, walk back into Jerusalem, and walk to the cross where He would be crucified to pay for the sins of His executioners and others.  There He would declare, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.”

I find heartbreak is a much better place to live out my life than anger.  Heartbroken people tend to live lives determined to heal where anger when it sits long enough often only creates wounds and division.  Jesus, the Great Physician, offers healing where much of His church offers outrage.  He offers hope where those who claim to follow Him often offer judgement.  

Friends, let’s not forget, “we wrestle not against flesh and blood.”  When we do, our outrage is directed towards those that Jesus directs grace towards.  May we too weep over our cities.  May we too pray, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.”

When we fix our eyes on Jesus, we become men and women of hope.  Jesus did not just weep over the nation; He provided a solution and invited them into a right relationship with His Father.  He provided hope.  Restoration of humanity was no longer just a dream but a reality to be grasped.  This is found in Christ alone.  

Processing Yesterday’s Murder of Charlie Kirk

Yesterday afternoon as I waiting for children to get off a bus at my church, I received a text from a friend who informed me that Charlie Kirk had been shot while he was speaking at one of his events.  Shortly thereafter, two more friends began texting as well.  Two of them even sent videos which I watched.  I nearly threw up after watching the first video and concluded on my own that the shot had been fatal.  

As I sat there at my desk, I could hear children in our church.  They made squeals of joy, and I could hear the pitter patter of little footprints as they played games and enjoyed their friends.  As they innocently enjoyed life, I sat alone in my office wondering what in the world this world was coming to.  At the same time, I was thankful for their innocence and even a bit envious.

Once I processed things for a moment, I was struck with the thought, this doesn’t surprise me.  The violent and angry rhetoric that has invaded both sides of the aisle had led us to this point.  Some would argue that we have left our roots as a Christian nation.  Charlie Kirk was one of those who would argue this.  My concern is that many of my brothers and sisters are living in the pursuit of returning to a Christian nation and in turn have set aside their marching orders in order to get there.  The call is not to create a theocracy but an expanse of a kingdom that is already here: the kingdom of God.  Not a pursuit of power but a pursuit of holiness.  For the believer, our marching orders are not the Constitution and the Bill of Rights (although we are blessed to have these documents).  Our marching orders are found in the Sermon on the Mount.  They are found also in Matthew 22 which speaks of loving God and loving people.  

Why do I bring that up?  Well, the response to this shooting is to be expected.  The outcry is loud as it should be.  Kirk was an influential voice and most of the country witnessed his murder as they scrolled their phone through their social media feeds.  Also on our social media feeds are ugly responses.  We don’t really know what happened yet, but the blame game is already going full force.  As to who did it and what is their reason, we don’t know.  I have my suspicions as many do but I just really don’t know.  

Tragedy always reveals the heart of a nation and always reveals the heart of God’s people.  I am deeply saddened at what it has revealed.  Again, I am not shocked.  I am disappointed.  I am sad.  I am saddened that a 31 year man was senselessly murdered (probably because of ideology).  I am saddened that a young wife spent last night awake wrecked with grief.  I imagine she ventured into her sleeping children’s rooms and cried over them and wondered how she is going to raise them on her own.  Her little one’s woke up this morning and momma looked at them, she knew, life would never be the same.  I am saddened that there are Utah Valley University students whose lives will never be the same.  They witnessed a disgusting act of a violence that most of them cannot even process, but their minds have put the whole thing on repeat.  I am saddened that my social media feed is full of conspiracy, finger pointers, and even celebrators.  What the heck is wrong with you people?  I don’t want to sound all high and mighty here but come on.  The body is still warm.

Now is not the time to point fingers.  Now is the time to weep with those who weep.  Now is the time to ask ourselves, have we contributed to the hate.  We must ask ourselves, have I led my sphere of influence closer to the one whose kingdom I represent, or am I a divisive voice in divisive times.  Now is the time to offer hope to the hopeless.  We must ask ourselves if our priorities are in order.  Are we living a life in pursuit of the expanse of the kingdom: His kingdom or are we living in pursuit of power?  

As a man who is deeply pro-life, I too am angry.  I am angry at the Kirk murder.  I am angry at the school shooting that also took place yesterday at Evergreen High School.  I am angry that a Ukrainian immigrant woman was senselessly murdered this past week.  I am angry at the school shooting that happened at Annunciation Catholic Church.  I am angry that woman who were sexually abused feel they must hold a press conference to get justice.  I am angry that a friend of mine’s son in-law was rounded up by ICE.  I am angry that a number of men I once looked up to have turned out to monsters.  I am angry.  This is a tiny list by the way.  Anger is valid.  Anger is justified. 

Yep, I am angry but, I am commanded by Scripture to “be angry and not sin”.  I am told in Scripture that I am to be “salt and light”.  I am told that I am an “ambassador for Christ.”  In spite of my anger, I choose to be a hope dealer.  I know who wins.  I will serve relentlessly.  I will speak up for the marginalized.  I will provide services to those who cannot afford it.  I will love my God, and I will love my neighbor.  I will volunteer.  I will be thankful.  I will choose joy.  This world doesn’t need more darkness it needs more shining lights, and I will try my darndest to be that.  I pray that if you read this and are also a follower of Christ that you will do the same.

My point is this, we do get to make a choice.  Today, I choose love.  

“Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”-MLK

There is Never Enough

There is never enough…And I hate it!

Last spring I was in Mexico.  I was standing in a large courtyard with a number of other folks, and we were handing out food to Mexican families in their small town.  When the people came through there were smiles, hugs, and God bless you’s spoken.  It was a beautiful thing.  Our group fed nearly 300 hundred families.  It was truly amazing.  I had a smile on my face nearly the entire time.

Then the food ran out but there were still people in line.  At first, we gave away the few things we had left.  A vegetable here and there or a bag of rice but then, nothing.  We had nothing left.  We did not have enough.  The truth is, there is never enough.  This killed me.  While many in my group happily cleaned up and celebrated the good that was done, I kept on my sunglasses so that my tears would be covered up as I looked at the faces of those who walked away empty handed.  Mothers and fathers who genuinely did not know where their next meal would come from.  They walked away dejected with bags empty.

The truth is, there is never enough.

Jesus said, “You will always have the poor.” (Matthew 26.11) This is not Jesus saying, inaction is ok.  Rather it was a statement of reality that speaks to the truth that our work is never done.  But still, it kills me.  As a dad, I can’t imagine standing in line hoping that I could get free food to feed my hungry family only to go home empty.  

So why is there never enough?

I often wrestle with this question.  I feel as though I am living in a paradox. I believe there is enough, but I also believe there isn’t.  After all, isn’t Jesus enough?  Yet, hopelessness prevails in many lives.  Is there enough or isn’t there?

I believe that God provided enough resources necessary to take care of all His creation adequately.  He provided enough for human flourishing.  When God is the one in charge of providing and distributing His resources, there is always enough.  When 5,000 people were hungry on a hillside and Jesus distributed food, there was enough.  When the nation of Israel was hungry in the wilderness and God provided manna, there was enough.  God’s provision is purposeful and just right.  

So why isn’t there enough?

I believe that God’s resources have been mismanaged and squandered and therefore there is the illusion that there are not enough resources to care for His creation adequately.  When Jesus said, “the fields are white unto harvest, but the laborers are few” (John 4.35), He wasn’t saying there wasn’t enough help.  He was saying there wasn’t enough people willing to work.  God had not miscalculated the need/laborer equation.  Rather those willing to work were few.  

There are many in this world who are tempted to blame God when people suffer.  They are willing to blame God when there is not enough.  They are willing to blame God when things aren’t getting done.  Often these critiquers sit idly by waiting for others to fulfill the need they clearly see.  Yet they fail to see, God has allowed them to see so they can do.  They are the reason the fields don’t have enough workers.  They are the problem.  Their eyesight isn’t broken but their heart is.  

If there is one thing the world needs more of, it is servants.  There is enough money.  There is enough food.  There is enough stuff.  There are not enough servants.  

So next time you are tempted to say, “You know what they should do”, perhaps say, “Here am I Lord, send me.” (Isaiah 6.8)

Servant of ALL

“If you want to be great in My kingdom, be a servant of ALL.” -Jesus

This idea of being a servant of all is not designated for times when it is convenient, not just when those in need of service look like you, vote like you, speak the same language as you, and dress like you. ALL is a pretty wide net. All includes “every tribe, every tongue, every nation.”

When considering this concept, if we include a “but, what if they…” then we aren’t getting it. God’s commands do not include asterisks, exceptions, and exemptions just expectations. The expectation is not that we can say it, the expectation is that we would live it.  

Jesus spoke the following words, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments.”  He did not ask His followers how much you know rather He said, do what you do know.  At some point we have flipped the script.  We place a large amount of weight on knowledge and have seemed to relax a bit on the doing or have simply relegated the doing to being nice.  

Please do not think that I am diminishing the importance of knowledge.  I am not.  I live in pursuit of it every day of my life.  But at the end of the day, you and I will be remembered not by what we knew but by what we did with what we knew.  

I have a relative that at one point told me the entire plan of salvation.  Is that enough?  Nope. She flat out rejects it as truth.

I know people who believe the Scriptures when they say “all people are image bearers of God and therefore have value” but at the same time live very privileged lives and never consider that Jesus heart was positioned towards “the least of these.”  This is not a gap in knowledge.  This is a gap in obedience.  

The problem is that our faith is often big enough to embrace a truth while we attend Bible Studies but is not big enough to embrace while we are interacting with the marginalized.  In this Jesus says, “If you love me, you will keep My commands.”  Jesus does not just want your amen to be something that comes out of your mouth.  He desires that your amen would be something that flows from your life.  Our hearts should be bursting with the idea that I am convinced therefore, I do. 

In Romans 12.1 we read, “Therefore I urge you, brethren by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship.”  How does one present their bodies as a living holy sacrifice?  It is much more than putting on the mind of Christ.  It also includes the hands and feet.

Billionaires, World Hunger, and Coffee Thoughts

I recently read an article about the 15 richest people in the world.  My first thought? They could end world hunger.  Did a little research, as I am not the first to have that thought and found that a 2% annual donation from the world’s 3,000 billionaires could eliminate global hunger and malnutrition, according to various studies.

While I know that forced donations (taxes and tariffs or whatever you want to call them) aren’t a popular method it does show that we don’t live in a world that is lacking resources.  We live in a world where there is excessive hoarding of wealth.  All that is needed for humanity to flourish (at least on the physical side) already exists.  We don’t need more programs.  We need people who see their neighbors and who value of their neighbors.  This world does not have a shortage in resources, it has a shortage in compassion.

Furthermore, there are some very generous deep pockets out there, but generosity is often tied to what the giver wants rather than what those who are vulnerable need. The question ought not be what do I want but rather what are the real needs in my community.  We need to ask these questions as humans, as organizations, as churches, as governments, etc…

I guess what I am trying to say is this.  Love your neighbor.  See the vulnerable, not as people or situations to be fixed but as fellow people to be served.  Offer hope with the help.  Jesus did this all the time.  Not only did He pass out real bread, but He also said, I am the bread of life.  Not only did He heal the sick, but He is also I am the great physician.  

Whenever I share thoughts like this, I get lectured that it would never work because donations given would be taken by the powerful before they ever reached the vulnerable.  Those who claim this are correct, but this shouldn’t stop us from trying to eliminate hunger and alleviate hardship.  Our doing good should not be dependent on how those who do evil might respond.  We are responsible for us, not them.  And hypothetical wrongdoing does not release us from very real needs.

“So, whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him it is sin.” -James 4.17

These are my morning coffee thoughts… 

Get Curious

Allow me to begin with my thesis statement; curiosity is the fruit of maturity.

As I have grown in my faith and become more and more convinced of the truth found Matthew 22 it has caused me to become way more curious about people.  For those of you not familiar with Matthew 22, let me catch you up to speed.  

In Matthew 22 Jesus is asked a question, “Teacher, which commandment is the greatest.”  Jesus replies with, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength.”  He does not end here.  He goes on to say, “and the second is like it, love your neighbor as yourself.  All the law and the prophets hang on these two commands.”

Obviously, we know that we are to love God and to love others if we are Christians.  But let me ask the question, have we ever thought of the idea that loving your neighbor is like loving God?  Jesus says, the second command, the command to love one’s neighbor, is “like it”.  The “it”, being the first command of loving God.  He also would go on to say in Matthew 25 that what we do to others, we do to Him.  How we treat the poor, the imprisoned, the sick, etc, is felt by Christ Himself.  I didn’t say it.  Jesus did.  Loving others, is in fact, the fruit that is produced when our heart loves God properly.

As a Bible college and seminary student, I was taught to be a student of the Bible and to be a student of God.  In my churches growing up I was taught the same.  In the summer Christian summer camps I attended, I got the same message.  I was taught to be a student of the Bible and to love God and to love people.  Yet, something was oddly missing in my spiritual formation and for much of my formal training and in my time in church.  While I was taught to love others, I was also taught to fear them.  Avoid sin.  Avoid sinners.  Don’t drink, don’t dance, don’t chew, and don’t go with girls who do was actually said in a church I attended at a child.  

This mentality is at odds what we see of Jesus in the Scriptures.  For as many live their lives trying not to have sin rub off on them, Jesus lived in such a way that righteousness rubbed off Him and onto others.  

There seems to be an us versus them idea that has crept into much of the church world.  Amongst the churchy, you can hear it in the verbiage that is used to describe people who are not Christ followers.  Many Christians use “the world” as labels for those outside the church and use it in such a way that it’s more like a derogatory term of insult than anything else.  Sadly, far too many Christian communities do not resemble a lighthouse but rather a holy huddle hiding its light under a bushel basket, fearing the influence of the world and seemingly forgetting they are the ones who are to be doing the influencing.  

I would suggest that this is not a sign of spiritual maturity but rather a blatant showing of spiritual immaturity.  Safety is not the call that God has on the life of His followers.  In fact, He said, they hated me, don’t be surprised if they hate you too.  

Allow me to reiterate my thesis statement: curiosity is the fruit of maturity.  How does this tie into what I said above.  Well, if Jesus was serious about what He said in Matthew 22 and how we treat others is in fact felt by Christ, then our spiritual formation should not just include Theology Proper (the study of God and His attributes) but should also include anthropology.  While my use of anthropology might not be the proper sense of the word here, I think you understand what I mean.  We must be students of those we are called to love so that we can more effectively love them. 

The truth is this, because I love God, I seek to know Him.  Many Christians say they love their neighbors but do zero homework on how to love them better.  The first way to demonstrate one’s love is to get to know the object of the love so that you can love them more effectively.  Get to know their stories and get to know the whys behind what they do.  This is not hard, but it also isn’t popular.  Get curious.  Approaching one’s neighbor armed with trite statements like, “God said it, I believe it, that settles it” will never lead to life change.  Approaching others with a genuine love and curiosity is where true connection happens.  Much of the problem is that many church people have treated those who aren’t in the church as targets of a command (Think the Great Commission) rather than objects of their love.  People aren’t goals to be conquered they are valuable image bearers of God to be cherished. 

These ideas have led me down a path over the last several years that have caused others to call me woke, been the reason for verbal confrontations and social media ones, and even been reasons people have left my church.  Yet, I cannot stop.  My curiosity of others has caused me to research many topics that I lacked knowledge in.  My research sprung up from a deep seeded conviction that I could not love people well if I did not understand their stories.  Questions like, why has there been so much racial unrest in our country?  Why do men and women of color cry out “Black lives matter”?  Why are people trying to sneak over our borders?  What is redlining?  Why is quality healthcare more accessible for the wealthy?  Why is quality of education based on where you were born when my state has the “same standards” for all schools?  Why are women limited in many places with what they are allowed to do?  There are so many questions to be asked, and these questions should be asked.  After all, its hard to love people well when we don’t know their story.  Where did you come from?  Where do you desire to go?

Simply put, I cannot claim to love people if I am unwilling to my homework.

I am quite aware that there will be some who read this and struggle with the words that I write because of their deep seeded belief that people need Jesus and the message of the cross is where power exists to change lives.  I too believe that it is in the power of the cross that brings true change, but I also believe that we ignore both Christ’s example and many of His teachings if we limit our call to merely preaching the Gospel.  After all Jesus fed the hungry, Jesus healed the sick, Jesus elevated women, Jesus defended the downcast, Jesus shared meals with sinners, Jesus offered hope to criminals, Jesus instilled value into the lives of all He met, and so much more.  This list is not exhaustive, but it is a demonstration of the fruit of the Gospel.  I cannot claim to love someone and at the same time be content with their pain.  Jesus did all these things and died on the cross.  

While I recognize that food does not save a soul, I do believe it can be a step toward salvation. When you tell a starving person, “you need Jesus” do you know what they are thinking?  They are thinking, “no, I need a sandwich.”  Start where they are.  Love them there.  That’s what Jesus would do.  

In conclusion, get curious.  As the hard questions.  Sit at a table with a person who is living a life you disagree with and ask words of clarification.  Share a coffee with a person who votes differently than you and ask them to articulate their why.  And PLEASE, don’t use their answers as a means to judge them more effectively.  Use their answers as a means to love them better.   

Love God, Love Others…Love Other Stuff

Discernment is a word that has created some confusion in my life.  Not because I don’t know what it means but rather because of its absence.  I have known many who I would view as wise discerning people that lose all semblance of that definition when it comes to politics.  If I might be frank, I would also add that I have lost a ton of respect for people that I once viewed as discerning in the last few years.  

What is the reason for this?  My belief won’t sit well with many but as a pastor and someone who has spent my entire life in and around Christian organizations and Christian people it is my belief that a large portion of Christendom does not have a biblical world view.  Before you get mad at me, please understand that I am not alone in that perspective.  In fact, the Barna Group conducted research and concluded that only 17% of practicing Christians have a biblical worldview.  Many have a world view that is by in large shaped by opinions that they have sprinkled a little Bible on top.  It is my belief that for many their discipleship and formation has been crafted not by the Word of God but by partisan party politics and by their cable news channel of choice. It is my belief that many do not find their identity in Christ as much as they find their identity in a man-made system.  

The idea that we are aliens and strangers and that this world is not our home seems have gotten lost in 2025 American Christianity and the reason for this is because many would define themselves as American Christians rather than simply Christian or Christ follower.  Many of these folks loudly speak of loving God and country when the Word of God clearly speaks not of loving God and country but rather of loving God and neighbor.  These are two wildly different things.  And wildly different because my neighbors and I have a much different view of what our country is supposed to look like.  

If Jesus was serious of what He spoke of in Matthew 22 then loving God is to be our primary objective, loving our neighbor is a close second, and everything else is pretty far down the list.  As a person who claims to be a Christ follower, when my politics grant me permission to mistreat those I disagree with, this is a red flag that my allegiance to country has surpassed my allegiance to my Savior.  When this happens, I have violated the commandment, “You shall have no other God’s before me.”

When loving country outweighs loving neighbor, this is where you find republicans sitting in the diner verbally trashing the democrats or the democrats in the coffee shop verbally trashing the republicans.  When loving country outweighs loving neighbor, talking points become signs placed in front yards and neighbors with different perspectives become enemies.  Why is that?  Because when idols are attacked, idolators must defend them.  

On the flip side, when love of neighbor takes precedence over love of country, and a country abuses its citizens, this is when we are to rise up.  The Bible is littered with references about caring for those who are most vulnerable amongst us. 

I 100% recognize that what I am writing here is controversial in many circles and none more so than the circle I live in.  Over the past few years, I have had people that I thought were in my circle turn on me because they disagreed with something I said about politics or simply had a different perspective than they.  They allowed views of country to ruin a friendship.  In several of those cases, I was stunned.  

I have long been concerned that those who claim Christian as their banner have been way more vocal about what they were against than what they were for.  This should never be.  Our hearts must be positioned towards people.  When this idea holds a proper place in our hearts it is here that we find common ground.  It is here that people feel loved, valued, and safe.  You and I should not have to agree on much for us to be able to treat one another with dignity and kindness.  After all, it is at the core of our belief system…or is it?

That being said, I love America.  I am thankful to be an American.  Despite her flaws, I still believe she is a great nation, and I am blessed to be here.  My goal, make America a little better everyday by serving and loving my fellow man in the name of Jesus.  My God didn’t call me to change the world, but I do believe when I live out His Word, He can change someone’s else world.  So, I will keep living, loving, and serving.  

Put Down The Sword

Like many of you, I am tired of the violence.  I am tired of the vengeance.  I am tired of the weaponization of Facebook posts.  I am tired of the weaponization of Twitter/X posts.  I am tired.  I am tired of the weaponization of words.  We live in a world that seems to love the destruction of enemies.  We witness public celebration when an enemy falls.  As if, the sermon on the mount’s teachings is only to be followed when it is convenient.  The idea of turning the other cheek and loving one’s enemy was not just countercultural when Jesus presented this teaching so many years ago, but it is countercultural today.

If Christ was here, I am sure He would say to many of His followers, “put down your sword”, just as He did to Peter. He would then offer to heal those that sword wielding Christians had wounded. 

The narrative of the arrest of Jesus is remarkable in several different areas.  I would like to highlight Peter’s sword fight and Jesus’ work of healing.  The moment Jesus was arrested, Peter started swinging a sword.  He did not even begin to consider that the bad stuff happening was instigated by divine providence.  God the Father set the timing and the plan into motion before the beginning of time.  Perhaps, Peter did not consider this because he never asked.  If he had asked Jesus, what should I do?  Jesus would have replied, nothing or perhaps, pray, and stay awake while you do.  

But Peter never asked Jesus for directives, rather, he just started swinging his sword.  While he believed that he was defending Jesus, he was harming those Christ came to save.  He was stepping in front of an eternal plan that was written out in the very throne room of God Himself and Jesus said, “Peter, put down your sword.”

When we are quick to do battle and slow to consider that perhaps some hardship is necessary for the eternal plan to unfold, we are only revealing that we have a very limited perspective.  We are revealing the biblical truth that “God’s ways are higher than our ways” (Isaiah 55.8-9).  How funny it is that we often regurgitate this truth as though it was merely a motivational saying but at the first sign of hardship, we grab our swords and start lopping ears off.

And that’s exactly what Peter did.  He busted out his trusty sword and started swinging.  Thankfully his aim was a bit off.  Still, he connected.  His sword lopped the ear off a man who was part of Jesus’ arrest party.  A man whom we are told was the servant of the temple guard.  Peter wildly swung the sword, Jesus intervened, and then Jesus picked up the dismembered ear and healed a man who was there to help arrest Jesus.  Jesus healed His enemy and chastised His follower for harming His enemy.  Let that sink in, Jesus healed His enemy and chastised His follower for harming His enemy.  

This should not surprise us if we are students of our Savior.  We must remember that on Palm Sunday, Jesus did not come riding into Jerusalem on a war horse as a conquering hero.  No!  He came riding in on donkey as a symbol of peace.  After all, Jesus is the Prince of Peace.

If that is true, that Jesus is the Prince of Peace, and it is also true we are His disciples, then peace should be the overflow of our hearts and lives as disciples of the Prince of Peace.  With this final thought in mind, two Scriptures come to mind, Luke 6.45 and Matthew 5.9.  Luke 6.45 says, that your words, “flow from the abundance of the heart” and Matthew 5.9 says, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the sons of God.”  Now I don’t know about you, but I want to bare the title, “son of God” and I also want the overflow of my heart to look like the overflow of the heart of Jesus.  That will only happen when I put down the sword and make it my mission, like Christ, to be in the business of healing rather than harming.  Friend and foe alike, both need more Jesus and less swords.