Wednesday, July 20, 2016

In God We Trust?




As the national conventions for the two main political parties in America take center stage for the next couple weeks, I’m trying to ignore some of the things I’ve been seeing on social media and things reported by the news media.  That’s because I feel they are more likely to distract me from the things that really matter than to help my walk with God.  But I can’t help but notice a trend that I think indicates where the hearts of many Americans, including many Christians, are: we are trusting ourselves instead of what our national motto says, “In God We Trust”.

Now this isn’t something new.  Ever since Adam and Eve sinned and passed a sin nature on to the rest of mankind, people have struggled to trust God more than they trust themselves.  No one in history was immune from this, and none of us is either.  Built into each of us through sin is the desire to control our own little world, which then transfers to controlling others who don’t accept our sovereignty.  And this is where the root problem shines through: there can only be one sovereign ruler in each of our lives.  God is sovereign (whether we acknowledge it or not), but he will never force us to accept his sovereignty.  If we insist on being on the throne, he will step aside and let us.

But here’s the problem: God’s sovereignty is the basis/framework for all of his other characteristics to operate.  So if we don’t understand and trust God’s sovereignty, we have an unhealthy view of who God really is – and this is obvious in the political arena that we’ve been experiencing.  However, even more important than any country’s politics is how this affects our individual relationships with God.  Without a proper Biblical view of God, we cannot hope to trust his sovereignty as we experience “real life” here on earth.

God intends for us to rest in his sovereignty and trust him to take care of us; but many times we are too busy imposing our expectations on God.  We decide how God’s sovereignty should act instead of trusting that he knows more than us and can see a bigger picture than us when exercising his sovereignty.  I’m not saying it’s always easy to trust God’s sovereignty, but our struggles don’t change who God is.  Accepting and embracing his sovereignty and choosing to truly trust him is the call for every Christian in every situation in life where they find themselves.  Here’s some examples that come from my own experiences or the experiences of people I know:

. . . when your 23-year-old son is in a car accident that leaves him in a wheelchair with a traumatic brain injury for the rest of his life

. . . when you encounter cancer or other life-threatening or life-altering physical diseases

. . . when you spend most of your adult life dealing with chronic depression or other mental disorders

. . . when you encounter severe financial losses

. . . when you face infertility despite your strong desire to become parents

. . . when your healthy teenage son dies in a hiking accident

. . . when your innocent child is abused by someone

. . . when a pastor you trusted abuses his position and hurts people in his congregation

. . . when someone with anti-Biblical values is elected to the highest office of your country and uses that value system to govern

This just scratches the surface of things that we face in this life, but the question of how we will respond is the same for each one.  Will we trust God’s sovereignty when we can’t see anything that makes sense?  Will we trust God’s sovereignty instead of bringing to the table our expectations for his behavior?  The people I know who have answered these questions with a resounding “yes” despite their circumstances are the ones whose joy is complete and who have mastered the art of resting in God’s sovereignty.   

Let’s stop expecting this earth and this country to feel good and right, because we were not made for this world.  We were made for eternity, and only when we get there will everything make sense.  In the meantime, as Christians let’s choose to model a rephrased version of our national motto: in God alone we trust.

Monday, July 4, 2016

Happy Birthday, America!




Today America is 240 years old – a milestone worth celebrating.  But when it comes to other nations and cultures, we are quite young.  Traveling outside of the United States puts some of this in perspective, and I have had the opportunity to see the ruins of cultures in several countries that are hundreds and thousands of years old.  Some failed, and some still exist; but there hasn’t been a perfect society yet.

Yes, our founding fathers had a good idea and went to great lengths to implement that idea in the best way they envisioned.  They didn’t all agree on how to do that, and there were many fights and political moves even in the 1700’s and early 1800’s when our nation was forming.  And I am thankful for the freedoms I enjoy in this country.  But, regardless of their efforts, the sin nature inherited by all humans in the fall that took place in the Garden of Eden was and will always be present until Christ returns and establishes his new heaven and new earth.  Like all human societies that came before us, America is not perfect and never has been.

I have lived through nearly half of the 20th century and all of the beginning of this century, and a tremendous amount of things have changed in my lifetime.  I remember living near the ocean as a young child and parking on the mesa above the water to watch the 4th of July professional fireworks.  From my childlike perspective, it was a fun time.  At the risk of sounding old, it really was a more innocent and simpler time in our nation’s history.  Right or wrong, the social mores of my childhood kept some of society’s worst (according to God’s standards) in check and guaranteed that most of its citizens lived a more similar lifestyle than they do today.

But then almost everything changed as we moved through the 1960’s and 1970’s – which opened the door for every person and every group in our country to demand its own rights and endeavor to exercise its own freedom whether at the expense of others or not.  Forty to fifty years later, the worst of society is not only no longer in check, but they are the ones who are actually leading the nation!  Through the past few years, I have found it increasingly difficult to remain patriotic.  I want to celebrate what America used to be; but I cannot fully celebrate what we have now become.

We are a post-Christian nation, and those of us who are Christians would do well to recognize this and stop expecting God to continue to bless us as a country.  Yes, God is still present here, because there are many of his people still here.  But we cannot claim Bible verses for our nation that were meant for the people of Israel in Old Testament times just because we believe that America was founded on Christian principles.  Many other passages in the Bible make it clear that God will not tolerate continuous sin or nations/people groups that intentionally choose to walk away from his principles.  As much as I want our nation to return to God, I fear it is too late in many ways; we have simply moved too far away from what pleases God (which he has made clear in his Word never changes – regardless of how “enlightened” we feel we have become).  Individual Christians CAN make a difference where they live, but we must do it with a different approach than the politicians and activists around us who have been winning the war.  Shouting on social media and expecting everything to return to the way it was 240 years ago just isn’t effective.

Of one thing I am sure: No politician or political party or specific laws or repeal of laws holds any hope for our nation.  Only God can bring about the type of change that will allow America to continue as a country with the ability to influence other countries in a positive way.  That’s because only God can effect changes of the heart; and only heart changes make a difference that is of eternal value.  On this 4th of July, I’m praying . . . not for a particular politician or political party to come out on top, not for a return to Puritan values or the destruction of those who disagree – but for God to be the center of the lives of American Christians and for their behavior wherever they go to reflect his Lordship in their lives.  Only when we consistently model Christ’s perfect balance of all of God’s attributes (regardless of our current circumstances or the prevailing political climate) will we provide the atmosphere God needs to be able to work in our nation for his glory.  Then we’ll truly have a reason to say, “Happy Birthday, America”!