|
November 6, 2008
I feel certain that many in
my stream of the Church want
a statement from me
concerning Tuesday’s
presidential election. I
will be frank in my remarks
but I do not, however,
intend to vent anger or
attack anyone. I have read
several statements from
friends and colleagues I
respect very much. Their
thoughts are well stated
and, for the most part,
insightful. None of them,
however, seem to want to say
some things that I believe
need to be said. I do not
claim infallibility or to
have the final word, but my
convictions run deep and I
believe I bear a God-given
responsibility to share
them.
Was This God’s Will?
Was what
happened Tuesday God’s
will? I am quite confident
it was not. America was
offered a very clear choice
between moving further
toward protecting the unborn
or further away; between a
Supreme Court that would
move toward honoring God,
life and morality or away
from it. The stakes
couldn’t have been higher
nor the cost greater. As a
nation we put on blinders
concerning Barak Obama’s
background, associations,
beliefs and practices, and
set these causes back years,
possibly decades.
And in doing so we took
another step away from God
and His plans for America,
and another step toward
judgment.
Judgment Will Increase
This is not a
fire and brimstone warning
from an angry, legalistic
preacher. In fact, I feel
more sadness and grief than
anything else. Perhaps I
feel what Jesus felt as He
wept for Jerusalem while
announcing its judgment. I
am not hoping for judgment;
I am saying it is
inevitable. I don’t know
where the unbiblical belief
comes from that says a
nation can live any way it
pleases, can reject God and
His ways—even mock Him—and
not receive His judgments.
Nor do I know when the
belief came that it is
always mean-spirited or
judgmental to warn of these
things. To the contrary, I
believe it is our
responsibility.
In warning of judgment, I am
not suggesting that God is
going to intentially and
directly hurt people. Much
judgment is simply the
absence of God’s protection
and provision, caused by a
rejection of His laws and
ways. We have been
experiencing some forms of
judgment in America for
years, but God in His
incredible patience and
mercy has kept us from the
level we’ve deserved. I
believe this will change to
a degree and judgment will
now increase:
·
For those in the Church who
aligned themselves with
pro-abortion forces, I
believe judgment will
result.
·
For leaders in the Body of
Christ who refused to take a
stand for fear of losing
people, money, and
tax-exempt status—I believe
there will be a degree of
judgment.
·
For those, both within the
Church and without, who
voted money over morality—a
potential raise or better
health insurance over the
life of a baby—there will be
judgment. (The irony is that
this decision to base one’s
vote on the hopes of a
better economy won’t produce
the hoped for result anyway.
The scriptures teach that it
is righteousness which
exalts a nation and that the
nation is blessed whose God
is the Lord.)
I have heard the argument
that God cares as much about
social justice issues (such
as poverty and racism) as He
does abortion, making a vote
for Obama OK. I certainly
believe God puts a very high
priority on caring for the
poor and I, too, have wanted
to see equality demonstrated
through a “minority”
president. But to equate
having a better income or
the desire for a first black
president, regardless of
his positions on abortion
and morality, to the
issue of killing 50 million
babies is not justice—it is
a gross distortion of
justice and great deception.
I fear that we have been
desensitized to this issue
of abortion. I believe it
kills babies and takes
innocent life. I also
believe it is blood
sacrifice that empowers
demons. Let’s not forget
this in our noble attempts
to be kind and conciliatory.
For African Americans I can
easily see how it could
bring healing to have a
first black president, just
as it would be for Native
Americans to achieve this or
for women if a woman were
elected president. Again, I
have wanted to see justice
in this way. I am only
saddened that the price for
this healing ended up being
Barak Obama, a man that will
set the cause of life and,
most-likely, our God-given
destiny as a nation back so
drastically. (I also realize
there are some who interpret
any criticism of Obama as
racism. Racism is so NOT
what I am about nor what I
live, that I will not even
dignify any such accusations
with a response.)
What Can We Expect?
What are some of the
judgments we can expect on
our nation from this
election?
·
More economic woes
·
More violence in an already
violent nation
·
Disease and death (satan,
who is responsible for these
things will have greater
inroads to our nation.)
·
Natural disasters
(weather—tornadoes,
hurricanes, floods, drought;
fires; earthquakes; etc.)
·
Terrorism (they will fear us
much less now)
·
War, perhaps on our own soil
·
Judgments relating to the
Court. The stacking of the
Supreme Court against the
sanctity of life and God’s
influence on America will
occur, which will in turn
cause the shedding of more
innocent blood, more
rejection of God’s laws and
the stealing from us of our
godly heritage—all of which
will perpetuate a cycle of
even more judgment.
How Did This Happen?
I’ve been asked
if this could have been
averted had there been more
prayer. I’m not sure. I
believe there was a remnant
of Christians fervently
praying over these
elections—I don’t think
there was anything more they
could have done. Others,
obviously, should have done
more. The complacency and
lack of discernment
concerning our real
condition in
America—especially by the
Church—is both appalling and
horrifying. America is in
serious trouble and it seems
no one wants to say it.
Fewer still are willing to
do anything to change it.
Though I
understand our reasons, we
must be careful in our
attempts to placate our
feelings and calm our fears
through religious phrases
like “God is still on the
throne” or “God has a
plan”. He was on His throne
35 years and 50 million
babies ago. And He had a
plan back then. The problem
is, it was us. I understand
our reasons for waving high
the banner of God’s
sovereignty at times like
these—it gives us hope. I
will wave it, as well. But
please be careful with this.
Too much emphasis on God’s
sovereignty and we’re
worthless; too little and
we’re hopeless. Maybe we
should say, “we lost a
critical battle but God will
give us strategy to win the
war.” Then find the
strategy.
But still yet, since God is
usually willing to work
through a remnant, I thought
we had enough prayer.
Obviously, God decided
otherwise. There comes a
time when He will not
forgive or bless the
majority based on the
prayers or actions of only a
few. America rejected God
and asked for a king; I
believe we now have our Saul
(see 1 Samuel 8:5-7)—a man
who does not have God’s
heart for America but his
own. Like Israel in
scripture, our nation
believes it can turn from
God and still be blessed.
In His mercy and justice He
will show us otherwise.
Like many,
believing I had many
promises and confirmations
that God would “grace” us
with a pro-life president in
this election, I failed to
consider strongly enough
that all promises—even
scripture—are conditional
99.9% of the time. Though I
never prophesied or made
guarantees that McCain-Palin
would win, failing to factor
this principle in strongly
enough no doubt caused me to
share my optimism with
others inappropriately. If
this caused any harm or
confusion, I apologize.
Has the fact that my prayers
weren’t answered shaken my
faith? No. I’m a little
confused and discouraged.
I’m also somewhat angry at
the nation in general and
much of the Church. Mostly
I’m grieving over the nation
and what this will cost us.
I am not, however, angry
with God and do not question
His justice. And it is not
true that we wasted our
time, energy and money in
our efforts anymore than it
is a waste when we share the
gospel with people who don’t
get saved. We must keep in
the forefront of our
thinking the fact that
ultimately we are doing this
for Him and that He will
reward us for our
faithfulness. And who
knows, perhaps He will store
up all those prayers for the
next battle (Revelation 5:8,
8:3-5).
A friend and fellow warrior
said it well,
“We did ‘give it our all.’ I
know the Lord was pleased
with that. A coach wants to
know one thing at the end of
a heartbreaking sports loss:
‘Did you leave it all on the
field?’ (your passion, your
commitment, your strength,
your courage, etc.) I know
that we ‘left it all on the
field.’ We didn’t hold
anything back until the game
ended. Tragically, it ended
in defeat. We will rise for
another day because Jesus is
worthy.”
Where Do We Go from Here?
Does this
election outcome shake my
faith that we can see a
great awakening and
ultimately reformation in
America? Absolutely not (and
it strengthens my resolve).
We will simply get there
through greater pain and
loss. Even my passion to
see the Supreme Court shift
is not from a presupposition
that there can be no
spiritual awakening without
it.
It is
simply due to my deep
conviction that their
decisions bring so much
death, destruction, curses
and judgment to America;
and because our full
destiny as a nation is
unquestionably linked to
their decisions. So, yes, we
will get an awakening and
reformation; but the reality
is that this reformation of
the nation will reform the
Supreme Court (and
government, in general), not
vice-versa. My faith has
never been in people or a
political party; my faith is
in the God who works through
them.
I’ve been asked
if my feelings about Sarah
Palin have changed. They
have not. I believe she is
an Esther, a Deborah, with a
huge mantle from God for
reformation. God has a great
destiny for her related to
this nation if she chooses
to continue down this path.
So, in
conclusion, we must re-group
as an apostolic, praying
church and advance. We must
maintain an immovable faith
in God, His plans for
America and His mercy. And
we must move beyond simply
asking God for a spiritual
awakening and ask Him for
strategy to produce
reformation, as well. I,
for one, am just getting
started!
For God and this great
nation, |