Category Archives: politics

San Bernardino and Christmas

Its a nightmare come true, a horrific tragedy, a true act of “terror;” I have and am grieving for those who lost loved ones in SanBernardino….for them, and for those in Paris, and for a host of other human ills.  What I am about to write is from the detached perspective on a theoretical level: this event coalesces with Christmastime in my mind.  It reminds me of the truth; it makes the truth dearer to me and more important in daily life….because each day is a gift and, just like the victims of the shooting, I know not what tomorrow holds.  There are no guarantees of anything.

We live in a web of deception really.  I think its fair to say we Americans expect the norm of life to be made up of physical safety, comfort, upward mobility, good healthcare, and happiness. I know on a subconscious level I certainly have expected these things. Indeed, we founded our country on these “inalienable” rights: life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.  Over time, however, we have redefined our humanity in the modern age (due to industrialization and our geopolitical location) on such a level as to think of sufferring in terms of scratchy pajamas and joys as a date with the DVR.  We have so removed things like obtaining our very food from daily life that i think we have forgotten our humble position.  We have mastered survival, or so it seems.  The concerns of a fellow human in Sierra Leone are absolutely foreign here, in the full sense of the word.   And with our success at physical flourishing, we have taken this “pursuit of happiness” to “a whole ‘nother level.”  Anything that threatens our desired feelings…feelings of acceptance, freedom from offense, freedom from fear… is as much the enemy as poverty, starvation, and physical danger.   The sobering realities of the San Bernardino shooting put all that in its place.

All threats to human happiness: disease, lack, danger, strife, and sadness — are never going to be securely defeated, by our country or any other.  Never.  Because….we are still only human.  Every person is a wild card, and we are not the masters of our own destinies.

This crime defies all assumptions about prevention: they shot their co-workers, were parents of a young child, one was a female, one was raised in America, were well off financially, were befriended, and had freedom within the United States to pursue their brand of happiness (in this case, martyrdom in Islam).  In contemporary moral thinking, shootings are carried out by bitter or poor or mentally ill people who have no friends, no money, white-male rage, took lots of psychiatric medicines, and of course were very unhappy or justifiably angry about something.  However, the perpetrators of this act were shrewd and cunning, outsmarting every law and totally using America and its values against itself.  Anyone could do that again, and many probably will.  As America scrambles to eradicate every possible threat presented by this massacre, it becomes more evident that it just can’t be done.

So why is this bracing and strangely comforting to me?  Because its a reminder of who I really am.  It is when we forget who we are that we pursue ridiculous solutions to our problems.  I wonder where we got the idea that we have the right to happiness and liberty?  Do I even have a “right” to life?  Says who?

What this shooting shows is that there is truth and there are lies.

The minute someone argues that it was wrong for this couple to shoot up their co-workers and fellow holiday party-goers, is the minute that the existence of “right” and  “wrong” becomes clear.  And who determined that?  And where can you go to be safe?

The reality is that we do not determine all we have and are.  The reality is that we are just creatures.  Our lives are a vapor and vanity.  What we have become and achieved, for ourselves and others, is out of our control.  We do not choose where we are born, our personality, our intellect, our education, whether we are loved or whether we are safe.  We do not even always choose our own desires (I would love to hate sweets!) Self-determination is largely a lie, and so is self-protection.  In short, we are not God.

So what hope then do we have for life, liberty or happiness?  Do we put our faith in the odds?  None of us knows what tomorrow brings.

SanBernardino is just a glaring reminder that we are not our own.  There is only one safe place, under the protection of the King of Kings, who made us and owns us and will shelter us for eternity if we would only acknowledge our humility and weakness before Him.

A christmas song that pulls it all together….

Who would of tho’t that long ago
So very far away
A little child would be born
And in a manger laid?
And who would have tho’t this little child
Was born the King of kings
The Son of just a carpenter
For whom the angels sing?
And who would have tho’t that as He grew
And with other children played,
This child with whom they laughed and sang
Would die for them some day?
And who would have tho’t this little child
Could make a blind man see
Feed the hungry, make rich the poor,
And set the sinner free?
Oh who would have tho’t this little child
Was who the prophets said?
Would take away the sins of man
And rise up from the dead?

O I believe! and I will always sing!
This little child, he is the King!
O I believe and I will always sing
This little child
He is the King of Kings!

Many years have come and gone,
Yet this world remains the same.
Empires have been built and fallen,
Only time has made a change.
Nation against nation,
Brother against brother,
Men so filled with hatred
Killing one another,
And over half the world is starving,
While our banner of decency is torn
Debating over disarmament,
Killing children before they’re born.
And those who march to win the right
To justify their sin,
Oh ev’ry nation that has fallen
Has fallen from within!
Yet in the midst of this darkness,
There is a hope a light that burns.
This little child the King of kings
Some day will return!

And I believe and I will always sing
This little child is the King
And I believe and I will always sing
This little child
He is the King of kings

Who would have tho’t this little child
Is who the prophets said
Will return to judge this world
The living and the dead
Oh can’t you see that long ago
So very far away
This little child our only hope
Was born a King that day
And can’t you see that here and now
As unto Him we pray
This Lord of lords who is our hope
Is still King today
He’s still the King today

song by Scott Wesley Brown

Made in Small Batches

I was shopping for some “healthy” potato chips (admittedly an oxymoron, I know) and found some that were, reassuringly, “made in small batches.”

Which, a few aisles over, led me to realize why I do not need to fear what happens to America.   Crazy I know!  But let me explain.  Recently I have noticed that here in the post-modern USA we believers have a propensity to desire, perhaps even an expectation, that swaths of humanity at a time come to know and love and praise God and see Jesus for the wonderful merciful savior he is.   It is assumed that if just a few celebrities would convert, surely every reader of People magazine would follow?   We could somehow have Tim Tebow give his testimony at the Super Bowl halftime show and that could really work for the gospel couldn’t it?  And if our president were godly and our laws more like the Ten Commandments then surely Christianity would flourish, so the thinking goes.

This is why the current events these days are so hard to take.  I’ve been battling low-grade discouragement for months now, since the sky began falling (or so it seemed) on election day.  As if to confirm for me that doom had arrived, the next week my daughter had a basketball game at one of the local high schools  —a very beautiful historic building in a wealthy suburb bearing the subtle, worldly implication: “good kids.”   I passed a huddle of  lettered jackets laughing over a “smart” phone, and got a glimpse of the apparently amusing screen.  I still regret this curiosity; when I remember it,  I get punched in the stomach all over again.    My queasy heart was not despairing and downcast; no, those words are too happy.  Suicidal is more like it;  a feeling of “get me out of here” – and more importantly, get my kids out too.  It seems the combination of technology and our mistaken ideas of “freedom”  is breeding barbarians.  And now, with the recent rulings on marriage coming down from the Supreme Court, which are sure to create culturally seismic shifts not friendly to Christian life and witness, the fear and dread of the future of our faith feel smothering.  How will the people of God survive, let alone grow?  How can the Kingdom of God advance in these conditions?

At my first Andrew Peterson concert, he introduced a song of hope by saying despair is a sin.  What?  Isn’t despair a normal human response to evil, tragedy and woes?  Isn’t this why we have the Psalms?  Isn’t all  that’s happening totally despairing?  The bible even says that it is better for all when righteousness is practiced.  (Prov 11:11, 14:34, 16:12)  No one believes that righteousness is on the rise here in America.  Can’t we have our own modern day American lamentations?

No.  In fact, when I look in God’s word and at the history of our faith, I see something rather un-American.  The people of God have never been produced by corporate-America-style machinery on a large scale, manufactured without originality or inspiration.  When you are shopping at the grocery store, “made in small batches” means “made by artisans,” “crafted slowly” of “high-quality ingredients,” “distinctively inspired,”  “using traditional methods” and in “small quantities.”     In fact, each Christian is one of a kind and they have  usually been “made in small batches.”

God has always been and continues to be the Ultimate Artisan, combining the high quality ingredients of his spirit and his word using the traditional method of spirit-enabled people preaching that word and loving their neighbors. Beginning with that small batch of twelve and now in small batches called churches, slowly he is crafting ever more new creations that bring him glory and fill them with joy.  God’s technique is organic and mysterious like the growth of a plant, or the blowing of the wind; we don’t know how he does it,  but his handiwork is undeniable. Brick by brick by brick, he is always building his kingdom just how he wants it.  (Psalm 75:3; John 5:17)    I think its safe to say we forget that historically God’s true worshippers have usually been a rare commodity, that true faith in him flourishes in harsh conditions; suffering and persecution are part of the recipe.  His craft is unhindered by whatever his competitors are  manufacturing elsewhere.  Even barbarians have been put out of business before.  Cultural renewal happens as a byproduct of the kingdom taking root in the hearts of his people, as they pursue his kingdom righteousness first.  But expectation that the true church be popular is more American than Christian.  It’s a sin to think that His workmanship must bear the label “Made in America.”  Despair at the “decline” of America is really just disillusion about God’s ways and God’s Kingdom: its reality, its scope, and its ultimate triumph.

Shout for joy in the Lord, O you righteous!

Praise befits the upright.
Give thanks to the Lord with the lyre;
make melody to him with the harp of ten strings!
Sing to him a new song;
play skillfully on the strings, with loud shouts.

For the word of the Lord is upright,
and all his work is done in faithfulness.
He loves righteousness and justice;
the earth is full of the steadfast love of the Lord.

By the word of the Lord the heavens were made,
and by the breath of his mouth all their host.
He gathers the waters of the sea as a heap;
he puts the deeps in storehouses.

Let all the earth fear the Lord;
let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of him!
For he spoke, and it came to be;
he commanded, and it stood firm.

The Lord brings the counsel of the nations to nothing;
he frustrates the plans of the peoples.
The counsel of the Lord stands forever,
the plans of his heart to all generations.
Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord, (this is not America or any other earthly nation!)
the people whom he has chosen as his heritage! (it’s a small batch overall.)

The Lord looks down from heaven;
he sees all the children of man;
from where he sits enthroned he looks out
on all the inhabitants of the earth,
he who fashions the hearts of them all
and observes all their deeds.
The king is not saved by his great army;
a warrior is not delivered by his great strength.
The war horse is a false hope for salvation,
and by its great might it cannot rescue.

Behold, the eye of the Lord is on those who fear him,
on those who hope in his steadfast love,
that he may deliver their soul from death
and keep them alive in famine.

Our soul waits for the Lord;
he is our help and our shield.
For our heart is glad in him,
because we trust in his holy name.
Let your steadfast love, O Lord, be upon us,
even as we hope in you.   -Psalm 33

Hero

Senator Sessions on Kagan
As my daughter has had logic now for two years I am starting to wonder if we can hang the hat of what’s wrong in America on the “we quit teaching logic in schools” peg.  This gentleman seems to be functioning on the basis of evaluating ideas in a reasoned manner just like the founders of our country envisioned.  While I call my self a republican, and he is democrat,  I appreciate his logical appeal to fellow democrats in the Senate and pray reason a-la-Senator Sessions prevails among them.

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