Month: March 2016

An Easter View of American Politics

America is going through our quadrennial bout of political theatre.  Some think it’s great fun, some that it’s “par for the course,” some that it’s worse than ever, while most are in a just-be-quiet-and-tell-me-when-it’s-over mode.  In any case, it has to be admitted openly: it is not overly begraced with saintliness.  Or even sanity.  

Actually no knowledgeable person can be surprised at such antics.  Hobbes said man’s natural state is war, Acton (for some, the historian) that “no historian thinks well of human nature,” Freud that all men everywhere are power-hungry and incorrigibly aggressive, Nietzsche that all men are brutal power-seekers, Solomon that every man’s heart is full of madness, St. Paul that “all men have sinned and come short of the glory of God,” St. John that all men sin continually, and Jesus that all humans are so sinful that no one—no exceptions!—can reach heaven apart from His saving grace.  The heavy hitters all got it right!  Not one of them would be surprised at the hysteria.  

How shall we think about it all?  What is the larger view?  

(1)  Most of us, if in the politician’s seat, would suffer similar diseases.  Admit it.  You may well think there will be no truly sane and sober candidate until you enter the race.  No offense, but I don’t.  Maybe a bit better, maybe a lot worse. 

(2)  Leading others is a difficult task; if that weren’t so, somebody would be doing it much better than they—or we—are.  In America or anywhere else.  In settings little or large. 

(3)  American politics often reeks of braggadocio, and worse, but most (!) people all over the earth would gladly trade their governance process with ours.  They’re trying to get in, not out, as you must have noticed. 

(4)  I’m reading “The Founding Fathers Guide to the Constitution,” by Brion McClanahan” and, again, am shocked at the contentiousness of the debate in Philadelphia in 1787 when “The Miracle of Philadelphia,” our constitution, was crafted.  Much more erudite language was used, but the temperature was about the same.  (The book is a must read for all of us.) 

(5)  We have lived through worse times (the Revolutionary War, World War I and II, the Great Depression, plus several administrations which manifested something less than Solomonic wisdom) but here we are, still stumbling along after 240 years.  Lincoln knew it was going to be tough: remember his warning, given just eighty-seven years after the nation’s birth, that the great battle of his day was about determining whether a nation “so conceived and so dedicated, could long endure!”  He was hopeful, but not certain.  If God got us through all that, maybe He is not devoid of nation-saving power yet.

(6)  Easter?  I watched, just recently, a memorial service.  It was a moving ceremony of the former wife of the most powerful man on earth, and, thus, a woman who experienced deference, wealth, power and privilege, at a level unimaginable to most of us.  And famed, too, around the earth for her cinematic success.  She was also a woman rich in political “creds,” as they say, and used them with consummate skill and effect.  Put simply, she was a world-famous politician with all the expected accoutrements.  

But here’s the question: when “the tumult and the shouting dies” and “the captains and the kings depart,” will Nancy Reagan be in what Jesus called “the resurrection of the just” (John 5:29) or not?  One hopes so.  And if so, it will only be because she believed the central event in that first Easter, and received, existentially and personally, His resurrection life into hers.  You and I can hope for her; we can make sure of only one person who ever lived, who lives, or who will ever live: ourselves.  

All Americans should appreciate the grace Nancy Reagan brought to the American presidency.  And, in retrospect, feel a bit sorry for her having to experience our current process several times.  

But what mattered then will not matter at all in the end.  I said, what mattered then won’t matter at all in the end.  That is in no way to denigrate her, or our political process.  It is to tell the telling truth.    

unAmericanizing America

To My Children, Grandchildren, and Great Grandchildren:

On April 19, 1775, in Lexington, Massachusetts, the first shot of the American Revolutionary War was fired and was labeled—in a bit of overstatement—“the shot heard ‘round the world.” Without overstatement, the true “shot heard ‘round the world” was fired on June 26, 2013 in Washington, DC. Actually “shots.” The Supreme Court sent down two rulings which have changed America forever, in fact, which have un-Americanized America.

First the Court said, in effect, to the state of California: “No matter what citizens in a given state vote for (Californian voters had overwhelmingly voted to overturn Prop 8, which eliminated rights for same-sex marriage), we, the Court, may well overturn their vote. Our vote counts; yours does not.”

In a second matter, relating to the Defense of Marriage Act, the vote of the court (in five years or so, say proponents) will legalize same-sex marriage in all states, with such unions receiving all the federal benefits (over 1100 of them) due to traditional marriages today. (A question: now that no law prohibits me from marrying a Cocker Spaniel, if I precede my canine spouse in death, does it continue to receive Social Security benefits?) As an interesting footnote, an echo of Washington, DC, as it were, the Texas legislature—on the same day—in attempting, among other things, to stop abortions in the state beyond twenty-two weeks, was filibustered causing a delay of the vote—by two minutes beyond the legal time-line–requiring that the legislature meet in special session to re-vote. Note: the vote, which was passed too late to be legal, sought only to stop abortions after twenty-two weeks, but the abortionists want more blood, both early and late. Even if they lose now, they won’t later.

I am writing you this note, after eighty years of observing —and loving!—America to say America is no more. America is gone.  We have seen it coming, in spades, since the sixties, but now it has arrived. I mean the America as founded on a constitution and by men who were motivated by conservative values (a “conservative” being a person who wishes to conserve foundational values of natural law, even if not biblical law). Any conservative who denies my assessment needs only to be asked to name the last conservative victory attained at the federal level. Add to that (a) a profoundly distrusted federal government in free-fall, (b) the accruing of an astronomical national debt which is fatally inimical to national health, (c) a burgeoning and rapidly growing underclass which sees itself as entitled to “womb-to-tomb” care by the nation’s tax-payers, (d) a refusal or inability to protect America’s borders (which no nation has survived), and (e) the commonly-and-openly expressed hatred for God, the Bible, and Christians. Malcolm Muggeridge once said of western culture: “…the last foothold of law and order is being dislodged; we may expect the darkness.”

(1)  None of that should surprise us; we have the explicit teaching of the Bible on the subject. (See II Timothy 3:1-5!  And Romans 1:21-32 where God’s life-sized portrait of natural man is displayed. And Revelation 18 which depicts the rapid fall of man’s final society—Mystical Babylon. The rapidity is shocking.)

(2)  None of that should make us think our walk is going be as easy as it was for recent generations—even my own! We have lived in a bubble of God’s protection and gracious deliverances as a nation. Now, things are (and will increasingly become) changed, and we will do what our godly forbears did—and what our contemporary brothers and sisters in Christ are doing around the globe—we shall learn to sing the Lord’s song in a strange land. But sing it we shall! (Study carefully Psalm 137 which depicts Israel in such a situation in Babylon.)

(3)  None of that should prevent us from being salt and light in a putrifying and darkening culture. (Matthew 5:13-16) Doesn’t take a lot of salt to save a boiled egg and a flash-light no larger than my thumb allows me to walk safely through a huge building on the darkest night. THAT IS OUR BIG ASSIGNMENT!

(4)  None of that should cause us to forget that there are many truly godly people in America—scores of millions of them(!), and much ministry that honors God, and points others to heaven while helping them in practical and mundane ways to cope with life’s challenges, all of which blesses our country and honors God.

(5)  None of that should steal our joy! Paul spoke in Acts 20:24—as he faced certain death— of “finishing his course, his race, with joy!” (The larger context of Acts 20:17-38 is a rich study, especially fitted for modern saints in Babylon.)

You are my joy!  Know, for certain, that I call your names before God often, and will do so as long as God gives me breath (and sufficient mental acuity to remember!).  I’m glad I have the joy of the journey with you, and that I lived long enough to know each of you!

All love,

DAD/DAH

Bill Anderson,  Grapevine, Texas