Suffering Servants

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The last post in my series on suffering and work is now posted at The Green Room:

The bookends of the Great Commission tell us that Jesus is in two places at once. He is in heaven, reigning at the right hand of God the Father, and that is why we are sent out on a mission into the nations to make disciples and carry out God’s purposes in the world. But he is also with us by the Spirit “to the very end of the age,” and that is why we have power to carry out our mission.

And transformation is, above all, painful! Jesus has chosen, at least in the present life, not to transform us without our involvement. He could, by an act of mere power, purify us unilaterally. But his holy love is glorified more when we choose to submit to a painful process of transformation that uses our own self-sacrificial labor as the means of transformation.

This has been a very fruitful series for me. Next up – practical thoughts about the different ways in which different kinds of churches respond to the challenges of a dark culture.

How to Fix the Evangelical Political Mess

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Mere Orthodoxy carries an article in which I say a few things that need to be said:

Yet it is fear of these very dangers that has prevented responsible leaders from building an authentic gospel witness to politics. That paralysis has created the vacuum within which fools like James Dobson and Tony Perkins, glory hounds like Eric Metaxas and prostitutes like Ralph “I Need to Start Humping in Corporate Accounts!” Reed operate.

For too long, our only political duty has been to not be Jerry Falwell. Well, it turns out that if all we know how to do is not be Jerry Falwell, the gap is filled by Jerry Falwell, Jr.

The article is actually about something else – a six-part program for fixing the mess, including:

Moore is one of the few evangelical leaders who has firmly and consistently campaigned against the sellout to Trump from the beginning. He is also one of the few evangelical leaders whose full-time job is building a credible political witness. Other prominent evangelical voices who were against Trump from the beginning, like David French, Peter Wehner and Michael Cromartie, are also professionally charged in various ways with maintaining a credible political voice for evangelical Christianity.

This is not a coincidence; it is a critically important pattern. We need many more Christians in positions like this, whose professional calling is to steward such efforts full time. Politics is a domain with specialized knowledge, and we need experts – thinkers and practitioners alike – with mastery of its subtleties.

Your thoughts, challenges, affirmations and rotten vegetables are appreciated, as always.

Why You Should Vote for Evan McMullin

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The Kenosha News carries my letter to the editor today:

Regarding your recent endorsement of Hillary Clinton: It’s never a good idea to choose the lesser of two evils; it only rewards evil and incentivizes more of it. Voting for a candidate who lies and breaks the law with impunity, and whose campaign was recently caught trying to incite a violent riot at her opponent’s rally, is no less a bad idea because her major opponent is a racist, misogynistic, illiberal reprobate. The election of either of these candidates would be a major blow to our national political culture. Every vote for an alternative reduces that damage.

Your readers can vote to preserve America’s national honor by writing in Evan McMullin. Don’t forget to mark the oval or rectangle next to the write in space, so your vote will count!

Greg Forster 

Pleasant Prairie, Wi.

Taking Over the World

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My seven-part series on work and suffering approaches its conclusion with Part 6, now posted at The Green Room:

The word “therefore” is important. The church is sent out into the world to make disciples of all nations because Jesus has been given all authority in heaven and on earth.

And as we learn to understand, trust and obey Jesus in our whole lives, we help him rule the world…We are sent out into the world to tell it the truth about God, with gentleness and respect but not ashamed of the gospel; to reconnect it to God, with justice and mercy; to rule it for God, responsible for his world as his stewards.

And that is often a painful task!

Consider what Martin Luther says about changing diapers…

As always, your thoughts are most welcome!

What to Do about Clinton – and Trump

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Clinton belongs in jail, and her walking around free threatens the rule of law and is thus extremely destructive of basic constitutional norms. But campaigning on a promise to jail your opponent, and/or actually jailing her, also threatens the rule of law and is thus extremely destructive of basic constitutional norms.

So get elected, give a big speech laying out the evidence proving her guilt, then pardon her.

That’s what to do about Clinton.

What to do about Trump? Listen to Josh Hammer.