Monday, February 28, 2011

Where Angels Fear To Tread – Politics and Faith

I deplore extremist rhetoric. People who use it are dictatorial fascists whose only aim is to destroy the American way of life, and deserve to be strung up or run out of town! For those who don’t get it that was sarcasm. Extremist rhetoric never benefits anyone and marginalizes the ideas and feelings of everyone. For people to demonize public union workers as self-absorbed, money hungry, lazy surfactants on the American taxpayer are ignorant of the demands and realities of most of their jobs. On the other hand those who portray conservative politicians as Hitler Nazis who only care about obtaining and maintaining power at the cost of the people is over the edge as well. Are their lazy public workers who need to be fired and politicians who are on an egotistical power trip? Yes!

The bottom line is that we all want to pay less and make more. No one wants to pay more taxes, more for groceries, or more at the gas pump. We all wouldn’t mind a little, or a lot, more in our paycheck. Both go hand in hand. In order to receive more in my paycheck someone has to pay more for a product. If government employees are paid more then someone is going to be taxed more. The cycle is vicious but unavoidable. At some point something has to give.

I am a fiscal conservative. I believe that living within your means is the only way to true prosperity. I have to do it and I expect the government to do it as well. But what happens when debt spending gets out of hand and the drastic cuts not only mean less for everyone but maybe all for some? What if the necessary steps means a change in the way we live our lives and the standard of living that we have grown accustomed to? And the real sticker is what if it happens to me and not to you? Why should I have to struggle and not you? I’m not a socialist and distribution of wealth person, but my goodness Charlie Sheen made 3 million dollars an episode and still feels under paid, sports stars are paid millions a year, and cooperate fat cats pay more for their homes then most of us will make in a lifetime. Should we tax them more? No, and the reason is that taxes do not bring prosperity. I have received little if any benefit when taxes are raised on the rich. It sounds good but it doesn’t make its way into my wallet.

So, what is the answer? It is love. It is thinking of others as more important than you. It is looking to the needs of your fellow man and making an effort to meet their needs. It’s about self-sacrifice for the common good of all. It’s about acting in complete deference to conventional wisdom. But it won’t work unless there is a change of heart and mind. It won’t work until we can learn to love and that only comes from God. It won’t work until we admit that there is someone who is a higher authority and has a better plan. Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth and life…and the truth will set you free.” It won’t work until we give our lives over to a loving Father through His Son Jesus. God balanced the budget of His holiness on the shoulders of His Son. In doing this he taught us love.

Yes, we have a right in the United States to freely express ourselves, our needs and our desires. But if we want a future for our children we need to remember the principles that have gotten us here today. Above all else let us love one another. Now go out and do it.

I’m just saying………..

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

A World Away in My Backyard

I opened my Ipad this morning to catch a glimpse of world events. I am hungry for news from the Middle East; I am glued to the unfolding revolution and change. My particular focus is on a little island kingdom that most in the world has little knowledge -- Bahrain. CNN, WSJ, Fox News, and USA Today are filled with accounts of Egypt and Iran but say little to nothing about this particular monarchy. I have downloaded an app from the infamous Aljazeera News Agency (English Version) to find up to date news.

Inspired by the protesting in Tunisia and Egypt the Bahrainis have taken to the streets as well, an upsurge against the government to decry its oppression of the Shia majority. There has been one death and many injuries as the protesters clash with police and military. The Shia delegation to parliament is threatening to walk out if certain demands are not met. A world away, we sit back, watch and wait.
For me, it is not just a world away but right in my backyard. My son, Joshua, and his family (Alison and Eva) lives in Bahrain. There are Christian brothers and sisters there that we have met and pray for who live, work, and minister in Bahrain.
The pastor of the church that Joshua attends wrote this:

“I managed to get myself tear-gassed at one point when I went for a ride to see what was happening…..Why would I go out there to look? Because we value incarnational ministry. Just as Jesus came to us, becoming fully human, sharing our sorrows and temptations, so we also go to others in the same way. We aim to become as much like them as possible, to rejoice in their hopes and weep in their despairs.…We can't witness to people, unless we also witness their struggles. The defining reality for Bahrainis is their feeling of injustice and oppression, of being excluded from government and denied many rights we take for granted. We may disagree with their goals, and dislike their methods, but we must understand their passion. “

It reminds me how easy we have it in the U.S., and how often we (I) squander the blessing and ignore the eternal needs of the people around us. There are spiritually oppressed people around us who don’t even know they need deliverance. However, they struggle with life issues. They fight with their children, argue with their spouse, suffer under abuse and addictions. Unless we are willing to go to where they are, to engage them in their struggle, to be the incarnate Christ in their midst then all we are doing is playing at church.

I continue to pray for my family in the Middle East, but maybe they need to pray for me more.

I'm just say……

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Standing on the Right Side of the Wall

I don’t think I could be any colder if I were standing in a cooler full of dry ice. This frigid weather has put a damper on the beautiful snow that gently fell across the landscape. I guess gentle is too nice a word; it was a blizzard. But it looked so nice after Rebecca and I spent an hour and half digging out. Yesterday I walked outside and thought, “Hmmm, this isn’t too bad.” After standing by the car for a minute the minus one degree bore through my clothes and my body was being stored in a cryogenics tube.

My poor dog Tobi has it the worst. He thinks because it is warm inside that it’s time to go out and play. I put him out for a bathroom break and had to chisel him free before letting him in the door. I want to take him for a walk but I don’t want his little pads to get freezer burn, and he refuses to wear those little socks I bought him. Teens what are you to do with them.

Stepping outside I run to my Jeep (it moans when I try to start it), shiver all the way to the church and finally make it to the semi-warmth of my office. It just won’t warm up if it is less than 15 degrees outside. So I wear two shirts, a sweater, and a light jacket---and I am still cold. A friend stopped in and I asked him if he was keeping warm. He said, “yep, I’ve been standing on the right side of the wall today.” That got me thinking.

Life is a lot like cold weather. It starts off refreshing, the snow looks pretty, but after a long winter you wished you lived somewhere else. Life can get tough and the joy of marriage, the enthusiasm of children, the adventure of a new career starts to wear thin after the years go by. We start to think that it might have been better to live somewhere else, pack it in, run away, or just give up. And when you’ve lived in the cold for too long you wonder whether you will ever warm up; if things will ever get better. That’s when you have to stand on the right side of the wall.

Psa. 107:10, 14 There were those who dwelt in darkness [Cold] and in the shadow of death, prisoners in misery and chains... He brought them

When we walk with Christ we are standing on the right side of the wall. He gives us hope because He is our hope. The difficulties that we face are not ours alone and Jesus gives us the strength to endure and the tools to bring healing---He brings healing. There have been tim

I’m just saying…….

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

God Can Be So Intolerant!

God Can Be So Intolerant!

That is the mantra of those who disagree with God. They do not come right out and say that God is intolerant; they rather lay it on those who strive to be faithful and obedient to God’s revealed will. I am referring to the latest political decision of the illustrious body that governs our state. Here is a quote from the New York Times.

"It's an important moment in the land of Lincoln," Governor Patrick J. Quinn said as the standing-room only crowd cheered and snapped pictures. "We believe in civil rights, and we believe in civil unions."

Our State has become one of the few that have approved civil unions for same sex couples. The argument goes that homosexual couples have been denied the same rights as heterosexuals; “emergency medical decision-making powers, inheritance rights, pension benefits, adoption and parental rights, and the ability to share a room in a nursing home.” Of course, in a secular/civil society it would seem logical for the government to make its decisions based on what people ‘feel’ is their right, and if we were a totally secular/civil society I might agree. However, we are not, nor have we ever been. A minority of people would like us to believe that our faith in God has no bearing on the decisions we make as a nation. Yet, we are a nation of and by the people. And though our government is to stand up for the rights of minorities that are repressed it is not its job to bow to the whims of people who believe their immoral behavior constitutes a minority status. Here is where I will be considered intolerant and misguided. This is what God says,

“1Cor. 6:9; 1 Tim. 1:10 Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived; neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor homosexuals….and immoral men and homosexuals and kidnappers and liars and perjurers, and whatever else is contrary to sound teaching…”
I know there are gays who argue that these passages are cultural, but that would be to say that condemnation of kidnappers, liars and perjurers are too, and we should not think those actions wrong. They might also say that if we deny them rights why not deny rights to those who commit the other immoral behavior. I would agree; fornicators, idolaters, and adulterers are just as wrong and sinful as homosexuals.
I can say this because the word of God says it. God has granted ‘inalienable’ rights to us, and true joy and peace come when we follow his commandments. In the end, however, the right or wrong about an action is determined, not by what you or I think is the standard, but what God lays down as an expression of His holy character. It is a sad day for the State of Illinois, not because same sex couples can be on the same insurance, but because, once again, they have trampled underfoot the Holy Character of God and have rejected Him.

Let’s keep praying, preaching, and teaching the gospel that all might hear and come to know the saving grace of God through Christ; only in this way will people change.
I am just saying……