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Sojourners & Exiles

No one serving as a soldier gets entangled in civilian affairs, but rather tries to please his commanding officer. 2 Timothy 2:4

We Christians are sojourners and exiles.  This is not where our ultimate allegiance lies!  

David Van Drunen, Politics After Christendom

We certainly arenโ€™t lacking in opportunities to engage in political discourse these days.  From mask wearing to vaccine mandates and budget crises to abortion laws the world around us is in quite a turmoil.  But when, as Christians, are we to engage?  When are we called to join the fight and stand resolutely in our faith?  These next two posts will look at our life as Christians and the political realm.  First, starting with what role the church, and therefore Christians, play in our common citizenry.

But letโ€™s back up a bit.  For those of us living in the United States weโ€™ve seen a serious deterioration from our Christian-held values over the last 70 years or so.  Not long ago almost all businesses were closed on Sundays and you certainly couldnโ€™t by alcohol on that day.  Now, a business that makes the decision to not be open on Sundays because of their beliefs is vilified.  Iโ€™ve heard different arguments about whether or not the United States was a special project by God.  Whatever stance you may take on that we can be certain that every single nation was formed by God.  Every single head of state has been placed in their position by God and therefore is subject to His expectations and final judgment.

For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him. 17 He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. Colossians 1:16-17

That the United States was founded with God and the idea of His sovereignty at the forefront should not, however, be in dispute.  Besides the federal founding documents, all state constitutions, except one, reference God and His oversight of said government in the beginning of those documents.  It was then left to the citizens, as it has throughout the history of the world, to maintain that stance.

When you get deep in to C.S. Lewisโ€™ great Christian apologetic book, Mere Christianity, youโ€™ll find the concept of a Moral Law.  Through every empire, every phase of human existence we turn to this moral law for guidance.  We know what basically is wrong (ie: killing another human for gain or pleasure) and what is right (ie: helping a widow or orphaned child).  And, as Mr. Lewis argues, no matter your faith or lack thereof those concepts have been placed in our hearts and minds by someone.

But as a society drifts further away from a common faith, as in the case of much of Europe, North America and South America, we create new ways of working around what we know to be right and wrong.  We bend the moral law to fit the desires of our flesh and we seek to be accepted by the world.

You cannot make men good by (man-made)law; and without good men you cannot have a good society.

C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity

And so, as Christians we watch as one of the last bastions of religious freedom, the United States, which also built upon that with many other freedoms, begin to crumble.  And we can so easily misplace our fears on our elected officials and the laws they create. 

So do not be ashamed of the testimony about our Lord or of me his prisoner. Rather, join with me in suffering for the gospel, by the power of God. He has saved us and called us to a holy lifeโ€”not because of anything we have done but because of his own purpose and grace. 2 Timothy 1:8-9

At the time Paul wrote this letter to Timothy the Romans ruled with an iron fist.  Anyone that did not submit to their laws was imprisoned, tortured, killed, or pushed out of everyday society.  And Paul reminds not just Timothy but all of us who read this message that we have one commander to whom we must be most concerned โ€“ God and His son Jesus Christ.  We are set apart to be holy and live a holy life.

We are reminded that our role in this world is a sort of dual citizenship โ€“ to the country we call home and the home that waits for us.  Itโ€™s a balancing act that the disciples knew all too well.  We are to obey the laws of our government as good guests yet remembering we have limits based on Godโ€™s expectation of our adherence to His moral laws and knowledge of the final judgment.

Dear friends, I urge you, as foreigners and exiles,to abstain from sinful desires, which wage war against your soul. 12 Live such good lives among the pagans that, though they accuse you of doing wrong, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day he visits us. 1 Peter 2:11-12

It may come as a surprise to many Christians in the United States but it isnโ€™t our role to create a โ€œjust society.โ€  It is our role to seek justice for those in need in our communities but we canโ€™t right every wrong.  We need to be comforted that God is in charge and we can, as individuals and corporately do His good works.  But Jesus, time and again, never sought regime change.  He sought heart change. He sought obedience by His followers to God’s expectations.

Being a sojourner did not require isolation from surrounding societies.  Abraham seems to have understood the need to exercise prudential judgment about how, when and with whom to share common activity.  One approach did not fit all cases.

David Van Drunen, Politics After Christendom

So does this mean we shouldnโ€™t try and affect our governmentโ€™s choices or laws?  No, itโ€™s just remembering who we serve first, resolutely.  Itโ€™s remembering the difference between violently protesting a wrong and speaking out within the framework of how God wants us to act.  Itโ€™s figuring out where God and the church stands on an issue (ie: abortion) and where something may not be biblical at all (ie: the federal budget).  Itโ€™s making sure our heart and mind set firmly with God, not the world.

Believe me, Iโ€™ve struggled with these issues a lot.   Iโ€™ve stood on street corners waving my countryโ€™s flag and promoting a candidate.  Iโ€™ve stood up to politicians who have demonstrated a lack of moral character. Neither of which are wrong for a Christian.  I vote in every single election. Which is, in a way, expected as a Christian. But as my faith progresses, Iโ€™m taking a new view of my place on this big blue planet.  When I firmly set King Jesus as my authority, as my hope, as the Lord and Savior not just of my world but of every single human that has existed and will exist, my perspectives change.

As Christians we cannot continue to say we trust God, we know God will judge in the final conflict and still scream in outrage at people who disagree with our political opinion.  That message speaks loud and clear to non-believers that we donโ€™t trust God.  That we haven’t set Him as our authority. That we have no concern for eternity. 

Itโ€™s time, fellow sojourners, to pull out our passports and remind ourselves of our future travel plans.  To stand resolutely with the one King that will judge everyone for all ungodly acts.  He has not appointed us commissioners of that judgment.  Yet, we are also not called to be passive in our worldly citizenry — sitting back and watching the world fall around us. He has appointed us as soldiers to exhort others to follow Him before it is too late.

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Walking The Talk

The living, the livingโ€”they praise you, as I am doing today; parents tell their children about your faithfulness. Isaiah 38:19

I have a confession to make.  I wasnโ€™t an intentional Christian parent.  Church was often relegated to the backseat during softball season (which pretty much lasts 9 months).  I didnโ€™t make sure my kids were involved in Christian youth groups.  When we did pray at dinner we prayed the same prayer each time until it became almost meaningless.  We didnโ€™t talk about the Bible, we didnโ€™t talk about our faith.  I donโ€™t think Iโ€™m alone in this confession.  And Iโ€™m sure Iโ€™m not alone in saying there was a price paid for our โ€œChristian-liteโ€ stance.

I am thankful that, when my younger daughter went off to college, she was drawn to a Christian athlete organization and then a local church.  Through that program she learned what we had failed to teach โ€“ the truth about our Savior and how much God loves us.   My older daughter?  Sheโ€™s probably like a lot of our twenty-somethings.  She believes in God but beyond that it gets murky.  

โ€œThe single most important factor of shaping childrenโ€™s religious lives is their parents โ€“ not society, not youth leaders, but their parents.โ€

Christian Smith, Handing Down the Faith

In other words, if you model faithfulness, if you live out what you say you believe on Sunday, the chances of your child being a devoted follower of Christ is increased exponentially.  And if, like I did, you lead a lukewarm faith life youโ€™ll most likely create the same fruit. Even worse, if you act or speak hypocritically you may get no fruit at all.

A few weeks ago, our pastor taught on Genesis 18:16-19:29.  An overarching theme in these verses is the concept of being or having an advocate.  Someone who will hold us up and speak for us to God.  Abraham wrangled with God to save just a few people from the sin-filled cities of Sodom and Gomorrah.  In the end, his pleas saved his nephew, Lot, and Lotโ€™s daughters.  Itโ€™s a beautiful foreshadowing of the ultimate Advocate โ€“ Jesus.  As you can see in these two verses.

Then he (Abraham) said, โ€œMay the Lord not be angry, but let me speak just once more. What if only ten can be found there?โ€  He (God) answered, โ€œFor the sake of ten, I will not destroy it.โ€  Genesis 18:32
Jesus: My prayer is not that you take them out of the world but that you protect them from the evil one. John 17:15

How many of us, as parents or grandparents or even aunts and uncles, see ourselves as โ€œadvocatesโ€ for our children?  See being in that role as possibly one of the most important ones we will ever have?  How many of us have prioritized our faith over the sparkling lights of โ€œafter school activities?โ€ Their very souls are what we are talking about here.  Iโ€™ve heard so many parents grieve their adult childrenโ€™s faith.  And so we pray as their advocate.  How about we also live as one too?

Abraham was able to plead directly with God.  A back and forth conversation.  How?  From the beginning of his relationship with God, Abraham obeyed and worked to be a faithful servant โ€“ with a few hiccups along the way.  What does that look like as modern parents today?  How can we be resolute in not compromising our childrenโ€™s eternity?

In my next post I’ll talk about opening our eyes as parents to our everyday decisions.  Are they of the world of the flesh or of Godโ€™s will?  I recently listened to author Christian Smith about the research he has done in the area of youth and faith.  His current book is titled, Handing Down the Faith.  Hereโ€™s few great nuggets from the book.

  1. Teens are actually paying attention to you.  That might come as a shock to many.  He found that even into their 20s our kids are actively noticing how we live and what we โ€œpreach.โ€
  2. Just saying you are a Christian (Buddhist, Jew, etc) isnโ€™t enough.  Kids are learning both positive and negative faith examples.
  3. We arenโ€™t just counteracting world views but some church ones as well.  Many Christian youth programs teach what he termed, Moralistic Therapeutic Deism โ€“ act morally, be a nice person, and donโ€™t judge.   Thatโ€™s great when life is easy.  But as our kids age and the world comes crashing down it causes them to fall away.
  4. Be authoritative โ€“ demand expectations, standards, with an abundance of warmth and support.  Note: not โ€œauthoritarian.โ€
  5. Talk routinely about religion.  While your faith doesnโ€™t need to be the subject of each discussion your faith should be woven in and used for handling conflict and decision making.
  6. Walk the talk.  If you live a life of service, humility, forgiveness and worship your kids will have the best example they will ever need.
  7. Channel โ€œinternalization.โ€  Or in other words place your child in situations where they will be influenced positively in your faith by others such as youth groups, religious schools, etc.
  8. Know the Word.  A good teacher is only as good as how well they know their topic!
  9. Play the long game.  None of us are wholly responsible for anyoneโ€™s faith and salvation.  But the building blocks you instill are certainly a great cornerstone!
  10. Pray.  And pray some more.  Pray for knowledge, pray for discernment, pray for your children and your spouse. Pray for doors to open for conversations and then walk through them!

I may have missed the opportunity when my kids were younger to instill Jesus into their lives.  But to be fair, He wasnโ€™t deeply rooted in mine either.  Thankfully, how Iโ€™ve allowed Jesus to change me and use me is also a great lesson for my adult children.  Until this Age of Grace is over, it is never too late for God to work in our familys’ lives.  As a changed follower Iโ€™m asking for His help, so that I can stand resolutely and faithfully in being my kidsโ€™ advocate.  

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Back to Bethel

From the Negev he went from place to place until he came to Bethel, to the place between Bethel and Ai where his tent had been earlier and where he had first built an altar. There Abram called on the name of the Lord. Genesis 13:3-4

I heard a great sermon the other day about Genesis 13.  I love how God lets us view people in the Bible with an almost cinematic touch.  We reach deep into their thoughts, their trials, their sins, their joys.  We can sit back and know they are about to fail or conquer.  But like any good director, God places seemingly insignificant artifacts and occurrences into the story that, in order to get the beautiful breadth of the story we need to look again and dig deeper.

Thatโ€™s the advantage of being in a church which hosts a good teaching pastor.  They find the nuggets and carefully remove the outer layers, revealing the gems.

And so, I learned the other day about Bethel.  About coming home.  About retracing my steps to bring me back closer to God.  Two little sentences in the Bible showing me where to go when I feel lost.  When I have gone off track.  I praise God today for Bethel โ€“ for His welcoming home.

Many years ago, I wrote a short poem for my mother in law.  The gist of the poem was that like a bird finds its comfort in a beautiful birdhouse, so I find my home with her.  A lot of people feel that way around her.  She brings you in and gives you rest and comfort.  In Abramโ€™s case, after he had made some disastrous decisions while in Egypt, he made the wise choice to go back to Godโ€™s house โ€“ Bethel.  Itโ€™s where he had built the first altar to honor God.

He didnโ€™t just show up there, he entered back into communication with God.  And he was surely welcomed.  

Our human nature is to grow up and out of our parentsโ€™ homes.  To plunge into the world of adulthood, seemingly going it alone.  But for many who come from loving, healthy homes they know they can always come back for advice and aid.  

Our relationship with God is unique.  He wants us always tethered to Him.  He desires to be constantly asked about who to marry, where to work, how to handle difficult relationships.  He wants us to join His home gym, giving us strength to make it through trials and tribulations.  He longs to have us sit around His dinner table sharing our day โ€“ our joys and our pains.

And when we wander too far away, we need to remember to retrace our steps.  We need to follow our hearts back to Bethel.


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Unswerving Faith

Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we 
profess, for he who promised is faithful.  
Hebrews 10:23

We sing songs about God being our Rock.  We hear sermons about not living as though on shifting sand.  And yet so often I find myself having days where my faith feels more like something Iโ€™ve placed in a box to access at a later date and time.  I rush about โ€œdoing life,โ€ not as a Christian but as a citizen of the world.  I let go of my Rock and hold on to my to do list.

But what do we, as Christians, really want to accomplish in our lives?  If itโ€™s simply completing to-do lists every day, we miss out on some of the greatest human qualities God gifted us โ€“ the ability to dream and grow and have hope. 

When I was in high school, I wanted to be an astronaut.  I met with Air Force recruiters who were enthusiastic about me joining up.  But when I sat down with my parents, they immediately discouraged me.  They thought I couldnโ€™t handle the rigor and discipline of training.  I had two choices โ€“ to ignore them and join anyway or give up my dream.  Had I a strong prayer life, I couldโ€™ve lifted up this quandary to God.  And then be guided by Him.  At each roadblock I couldโ€™ve held fast to the knowledge that He put me on that path.  But Iโ€™m sorry to say, I neither prayed nor kept my dream alive.

This verse today harkens back to Abraham and Sarahโ€™s unswerving faith in God.  They went through terrible trials in which it wouldโ€™ve been understandable had they given up on Godโ€™s promises.  We see throughout the Old Testament when the Israelites did give up hope.  They grumbled to Moses and set off in directions which brought death.  And who can forget Lotโ€™s wife โ€“ looking backward rather than forward to Godโ€™ promise?

How often do we pray for help from Jesus, knowing that He answers prayers, and then after things get a bit tough or we feel the wait is too long we give up on our hopes and dreams?

Blessed is the one who perseveres under 
trial because, having stood the test, 
that person will receive the crown of 
life that the Lord has promised to those 
who love him. 
James 1:12

God never breaks a promise.  Itโ€™s always us.  Itโ€™s us that needs to take our faith out of the box and place it at the top of our list each day.  We need to hold fast to the knowledge that God is working for us and not against us.  Whenever we are tempted to give up or get discouraged about our dreams, we need seize the promises that God has shown us.

Hereโ€™s a prayer from Sparkling Gems from the Greek that might help you, through faith, โ€œhold unswervinglyโ€ to your dreams!

Lord, I am well aware that events will occur in life that will tempt me to release the dream You put in my heart.  So right now, I ask You to fill me with the courage I need to refuse to let go of my dream.  Even though my mind and the circumstances around me may send signals that the dream will never come to pass, I know that You are faithful to what you have promised.  Help me wrap my arms of faith around your promises and never let go until I see them come into manifestation!  I pray this in Jesusโ€™ name!  

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His Lifeline of Love

In a surge of anger I hidย my 
face from you for a moment,
but with everlasting kindness
I will have compassionย on you,โ€
says theย Lordย your Redeemer.
โ€œTo me this is like the days of Noah,
when I swore that the waters of Noah 
would never again cover the earth.
So now I have swornย not to be angryย 
with you,never to rebukeย you again.
Though the mountains be shaken 
and the hills be removed,
yet my unfailing loveย for you will
not be shaken nor my covenantย of 
peaceย be removed,โ€ says theย Lord, 
who has compassionย on you.
Isaiah 54:10

I recently stumbled upon these verses while doing a study of Genesis. As you read above, verse nine discusses โ€œthe days of Noahโ€ and recounts the covenant God made with Noah after the flood waters receded. Noah then built an altar in remembrance of all from which God had delivered him. In witnessing Noahโ€™s obedience, God established a covenant of peace with Noah, promising him that never again would he wipe out all of mankind in anger (Gen. 8:20-22).ย 

When God called Noah to build the ark and spared his family from the worldwide destruction, God extended Noah a lifeline of love. Because he had compassion on Noah and truly loved mankind, God created a way out of death by giving Noah clear guidance for surviving the flood.

God showed Noah that while yes, sin had entered the world and man was disobedient, that He still loved His creation. We often get caught up on Godโ€™s wrath by sending the flood in the first place. Mass destruction and death seems a bit harsh. But if God was so harsh, then why did he save Noah? He couldโ€™ve wiped out all of mankind on Earth and started over, but His steadfast love for Noah and his offspring prevailed. God showed Noah that no matter how bad things got on Earth, His lifeline of love would always be there for those who trust in Him with complete obedience.ย 

That lifeline shown to Noah, is Jesus. When the Lord states, in Isaiah 54:10, that his steadfast love shall not depart from you โ€“ He is talking about His son Jesus. You see, from Noah until now, we as believers all still hold on to the same lifeline that Noah, Abraham, Moses and David held onto.

The covenant God established with all those men was the covenant of His Son. The promise that one day, there would be complete restoration of all sinners who call on His name and that those holding on to the lifeline of His steadfast love,ย would all be brought into the glories of heaven.ย 

Though 2020 has seemed like a worldwide disaster โ€“ think again. There will be the day when every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus is Lord because of the power of God they see all around them. Godโ€™s steadfast love for us believers never expires. We have the eternal hope of Godโ€™s love forever โ€“ into eternity.ย 

This is love: not that we loved God, 
but that he loved usย and sent his 
Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.
1 John 4:10

Until then, we hold fast to His lifeline of love. Hold fast to the God that established His covenant with ordinary people like Noah and Abraham and you and me. Through His son Jesus Christ, he once again established his eternal love with us โ€“ until the day we see him again.ย 

Godโ€™s love is abundant to those who trust in Him. He cares for us and loves us as His children โ€“ are you resting in that truth today?ย  Have you accepted your side of the covenant?

Since you are precious and honoredย in my sight,
ย ย ย ย and because I loveย you,
I will give people in exchange for you,
ย ย ย ย nations in exchange for your life.
Isaiah 43:4