Saturday, January 21, 2017

JANUARY 20, 2017

In the good old USA it is inauguration day.  As I write we have a new president, Donald Trump.  The country could not be more divided than it is concerning this new administration.  Even as I write there are protests throughout the land.  Anger and frustration and bitterness runs very deep in those who did not support Mr. Trump.  Social media is ablaze with harsh rhetoric coming from both sides of the issue, and there is a fear that verbal rhetoric might turn to physical violence. Actually, it already has.  We'll see where it goes but, hopefully, at some point cooler heads will prevail and keep people on a track for good and not for harm.

My thoughts today turn to what it means in times like these to be Christian.  And, believe me, this issue is extremely important on this day and in the days to come.  The Church is split on President Trump.  Some "believers" basically hate the man, and view him almost as the devil incarnate.  Others celebrate his victory because they believe that once again America will be great. The chances of the two sides coming together as brothers and sisters in Christ seems almost impossible to imagine.

In this world of chaos and bigotry and sexism and name-calling and shock, how should we as Christians live?  Hopefully, like the way we should have been living all along.  The great prayer on the heart of every believer should be, "Our Father in heaven, hallowed be Your name.  Your kingdom come.  Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven" (Matt. 6:9-10).  Followers of Jesus can't support or practice anything that violates this call to a full yielding to the will of God. 

In this light I'm not sure the best way forward is simply complaining about Donald Trump.  We all know who he is, how he operates, and what he believes.  We're not going to change his mind.  So, instead, lets fall on our knees, search our own hearts, and pray with deep seriousness, "Your kingdom come.  Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven."

The presidency of one man ought not to influence who we are or how we live.  We should be living the Matthew 25 life anyway, and if we aren't, why aren't we? Works of mercy ought to be a part of our lives no matter who the national leader might be. Today and everyday our creed should be:

1.        We must continue to seek justice for people of all races, creeds, gender, and color.
2.        We must continue seeking to end oppression and discrimination.
3.        We must continue to speak into and against all matters that reflect man’s inhumanity to man.
4.        We must seek to end poverty, to get fresh water to those who so desperately need it, to find ways to destroy the means by which human trafficking inflicts pain and suffering on women at home and around the world. 
5.        We must take care of the sick, treat with decency those who are in prison, feed the hungry, and give our time, talents and treasures to meet the needs of people who live disenfranchised, marginalized, and in many ways, dehumanized. 

Whoever the president of the USA might me, has nothing whatsoever to do with our passion, our zeal, our commitment to walk in the footsteps of the One we call Savior and Lord.  In fact, we are citizens of two worlds, this one in which we now find ourselves, and heaven (see Philippians 3:20); and until we get to heaven we are to be about the business of what is "True, honorable, right, pure, lovely, good repute" (Philippians 4:8).  We must "love…without hypocrisy, abhor what is evil; cling to what is good and be devoted to one another in brotherly love" (Romans 12:9-10).    

Today I am not pre-occupied with the National Anthem but with another anthem that has for all time and eternity captured my imagination.

Rise up, O Church of God!
Have done with lesser things.
Give heart and mind and soul and strength
To serve the King of kings.

Rise up, O Church of God!
The kingdom tarries long.
Bring in the day of brotherhood
And end the night of wrong.

       (Based on the words of William Merrill, 1911)

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