Sunday, July 3, 2022

Real Citizenship


    American Statesman, Daniel Webster, famously said, “Whatever makes men good Christians, makes them good citizens.”

        In the past ten years, I’ve heard and read far more about Patriotism and Nationalism from Bible-believing Christians, than ever before in my life and ministry. The two are not synonymous and they’re certainly not equal. Nationalism is the dark side of Patriotism. However, what I find jarring in that discussion; what is typically missing altogether, is any expression of Real Citizenship, Biblically speaking.

        If you will allow me on this Independence Day, I’d like for us to let God speak into this confusion and division, and guide us all to a better understanding of Real, Christ-honoring citizenship. 

 

WHAT IS PATRIOTISM?

        Whether or not you can define patriotism in sentence or two, we all know what it looks like when we see it every 4th of July. Simply put, patriotism is, loving your country. Some would add that it’s a sacrificial love for one’s country.

        That begs the question, “Is it wrong for followers of Christ to be patriotic; to love their nation?” No, not as long as your love for your country does take the place of, nor supersede your love for God; and as long as your love for country is its proper place in line with for your love for family, for your church, etc... 

        For many of you, especially those of you who are older Americans, asking, “Is it wrong to be patriotic...” seems almost ridiculous. "Of course it’s not!" we think. However, I’ve found that abuses of patriotism and the rise of nationalism, both within and without the church, has led some in younger generations to question. I get it. We must always compare these things with Scripture.

        We are reminded that God is the One who established nations in Genesis 11. When mankind repeatedly refused to obey His command to be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth, when they gathered as one people with one language to build the Tower of Babel in rebellion against God, the Lord confused them with an instantaneous variety of languages, which then scattered them over the face of all the earth. As people began to cluster together with those who spoke like them, nations were formed, which were divided from other nations. Ethnicities and cultures began to take shape generation after generation.

        Take a look at Acts 17:24-27 and you'll find that the Apostle Paul is preaching the Gospel to a group of philosophers on Mars Hill in the Greek city of Athens. Seriously, go read this part of his sermon...  In the face of Greek and Athenian national and ethnic pride, Paul told them that God made people of all nations of one blood. Greeks were no better or worse than any other nation. We are all descendants of Adam and Eve. God created one race: the human race. And all nations rise and fall, with their ever-changing borders, under the sovereign will of God. He created the nations of man and He oversees them. As Benjamin Franklin observed, "...God governs in the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His aid?"

        In fact, the word nations in Acts 17:26, is the Greek word ethnos, from which we get ethnic and ethnicity.  All of this to say that it is not inherently wrong or sinful to simply love your nation and seek its best. Certainly God loves the nations of mankind and seeks to guide them according to His Word and Will. Paul openly expressed a love for his own Jewish nation in Romans 9, though he wasn’t blind to its national sins or their rejection of Jesus.

        The Swedish man is right to love Sweden, the Liberian woman is right to seek the best for Liberia, and the American child is right to sing, “God, bless America.” As Christian Attorney, Joshua Hershberger wrote in his blog for The Good Citizen Project, “Christians should practice patriotism as a general love of country that celebrates God’s blessings on our nation (Psalm 33), confesses national sins (Daniel 9) and works for national flourishing.”   

 https://www.goodcitizen.us/a-faithful-4th-patriotism-nationalism-and-christian-citizenship/

 That brings us to...

 

WHAT IS NATIONALISM?

        Nationalism used to be synonymous with patriotism, but it has taken on a distinctively negative meaning in recent years. One definition of Nationalism is “an extreme form of patriotism, especially marked by a feeling of superiority over other countries.”

        Believing that your country is the best, is not necessarily a bad thing. However, thinking that EVERYTHING your country does is far better in every way than everything anywhere else is not realistic; and it leads to an arrogant, haughty, prideful spirit. Unchecked, Nationalism can lead to the sins of bigotry and racism. Nationalism quickly becomes idolatry, elevating your love of country over your love of Jesus or even making them equal.

        The worst of all nationalism is so-called "Christian Nationalism" that seeks to put politics, politicians, parties, and platforms on equal footing with thus saith the Lord. Beloved, there is no “Jesus Party” in American politics. Neither the Republicans nor Democrats have God’s stamp of approval. God is sovereign and rules over the affairs of nations, but don’t blame God for putting Joe Biden, Donald Trump, or any other official in office - - especially when you and I exercise our wills and our right to vote in a Democratic Republic. God may permit things, God may even give us what we demand to our hurt, but it doesn’t mean that any leader in office has God'ss full endorsement or blessing.

        By way of contrast, you could say that a Patriotic spirit led Paul to love and pray for his Jewish nation in Romans 9; whereas Nationalistic spirit kept Peter from wanting to share the Gospel with a Roman man named Cornelius and his people from other nations in Acts 10 - - and God corrected Peter here, and did so again!  

        A Believer and Patriot who truly loves Jesus and loves his country will not compromise or jeopardize Biblical principles for political gains. A Nationalist will. We must all be on guard that loving our nation never becomes worshipping our nation. With those in mind, we move on to...

 

WHAT IS CITIZENSHIP?

Your Heavenly Citizenship

        God speaks to us directly in the Scriptures about our citizenship.  For example, if you will turn to Philippians 3:20, you will find that the King James translation says, For our conversation is in heaven; from whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ: Do you see it?

        Here’s the thing: first, the English word conversation has changed over the past 400 years. Everyone today knows that conversation means “two or more people talking with one another.” In 1611, it meant, “the way you live in you daily life; your citizenship lived out in the community.”

        Here’s the other thing: the Greek word that the Holy Spirit led Paul to use here is the word polit’-yoo-mah, the same root from which we get the word politics. God’s Word is telling us as born-again Believers that our citizenship is first and foremost in heaven. We may all be citizens of America, but that is secondary to the reality that we are citizens of heaven.

        The Philippian people immediately understood the concept of dual citizenship. They were citizens of Philippi, but Philippi was also a Roman colony; making them Roman citizens, too. Being a Roman citizen was of greater value and importance. It took precedence and their heavenly citizenship took precedence over that.

        Dear Citizen of Heaven, you are pilgrims in a foreign land, strangers in a strange place. Like Abraham of old, you are searching for a City which has foundations whose Builder and Maker is God. Never forget that!

 

Your Earthly Citizenship

        God also speaks to us directly about our earthly citizenship. How we represent and honor Him in the nations and kingdoms of humanity. One such place is Romans 13:1-7 - - a passage that has too often been ignored or downright disobeyed by Christians, especially in the last few years.

        The context and reality of God’s instructions given here is that Christians were told to submit to the authorities of the Roman Empire and to local governing authority, who were far from being Christ-honoring entities! Just a little knowledge of Roman Emperors will open your eyes to unspeakable immorality and ungodliness; yet we’re called to show honor wherever we can without ever compromising the Gospel.

        God has ordained human government as a way to curtail human evil; even with all of its flaws and injustices. Like our ancient church fathers, we are to obey civil authorities unless or until doing so means disobeying God.

        When Adolph Hitler was first appointed Chancellor of Germany in January, 1933, most Protestants church leaders rejoiced. Nazi flags were hung in church sanctuaries and hopes were high that Hitler would make Germany great again. “Pastor Siegfried Leffler declared that ‘in the pitch-black night of church history, Hitler became, as it were, the wonderful transparency for our time, the window of our age, through which light fell on the history of Christianity. Through him we were able to see the Savior in the history of the Germans.’ Pastor Julius Leutheuser added that ‘Christ has come to us through Adolf Hitler.’” What seemed like harmless patriotism and good citizenship, opened the door to the horrors of Nationalism in the years that followed. Pastors like Dietrich Bonhoeffer, recognized the direction that Nationalism was headed and refused to compromise the Gospel. 

https://www.christianitytoday.com/history/issues/issue-32/radical-resistance.html

        Loving our country as citizens is a bit like loving our family. Sometimes we’re proud and thankful for our family for the great things they do. Other times, as one friend wrote, “family members act like a bunch of knuckleheads and make you think twice about your last name!” (Joshua Hershberger)  And then there are those times when family members do things so sinful, so evil that your heart breaks and your eyes are wet with tears. But still, they are family, and you love them in spite of their flaws. 

        So it is, with my American family. I still love America. I still want to be a good Christian, a good neighbor, and a good citizen in the ways that bring honor to the name of Christ and His Kingdom.

        I want to pray for my nation according to 1 Timothy 2:1-4 [making] supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings for everyone, 2 for kings and for all who are in authority, that we may lead a quiet and peaceful life in all godliness and honesty, 3 for this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, 4 who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.

        The best way to be a good citizen is to be a good Christian; letting your love for Jesus and your love for your neighbor shine in the public square. Seek real & lasting change by giving the Gospel to everyone, everywhere. Of all the needs in the world, people need the Lord most of all. Start there.

 

WHAT SHOULD YOU AND I DO NOW?

Go, celebrate our national Independence Day as a patriot! Enjoy the cookout with family and friends! Aim the beanbags and throw the baseballs! Eat the hot dogs and the coleslaw! Sing the national anthem, watch the fireworks, and at the beginning and close of the day, Praise the God that hath made, and preserv’d us a nation!

        Submit to the authorities. Pray often for them. Ask God to bless all of the good that they do, to keep them safe, and by His hand, turn their hearts from evil to all that is pure and Christ-honoring.

        By God’s grace, keep your love of country beneath your love for Him. Shun the sins of nationalism, racism, bigotry, hatred, and callousness toward the poor & needy, and the widow & orphan.

         Most of all, be sure that you know Jesus Christ as your own Lord and Savior. Believe that He is the God who loves you; that He died on the cross to set you free from the penalty and power of sin; that He was buried, but rose again from the dead on the third day. If the Son therefore shall make you free, you shall be free indeed! Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof!

         If we can help, let us know so that we can help you grow spiritually and get you connected with a local church family. Please reach out to us in person or online at  www.Grace4Pekin.com  




Sunday, December 6, 2020

An Unexpected Christmas


Grace Baptist Church of Pekin

Pastor Randy Justus, Sunday, December 06, 2020
from the Christmas series, "The Year That Stole Christmas"

Staring down from his cave with a sour, Grinchy frown,

At the warm lighted windows below in their town.

For he knew every Who down in Whoville beneath,

Was busy now, hanging a mistletoe wreath.

"And they're hanging their stockings!" he snarled with a sneer,

"Tomorrow is Christmas! It's practically here!"

Then he growled, with his Grinch fingers nervously drumming,

"I MUST find some way to stop Christmas from coming!"

How The Grinch Stole Christmas, Dr. Seuss


Well, it seems in 2020, that the Grinch has found a way and named it Covid-19. Be honest, are any of you having a hard time getting into the Christmas spirit? Have you been thinking that this Christmas is just not going to be the same? Are you not quite feeling it?  Are you afraid it might be less of a Holly Jolly Christmas and more of a Blue Christmas? 

I asked friends to describe how they’ve felt during this pandemic year using words that start with the prefix, “un-”.  Some people were more optimistic. They said that the hardship has left them unstoppable, undeterred, unwilling (to let it stop me), unbelievable but unchanged…

But most replied with: unplanned, unexpected, uncomfortable, unhappy, unstable, unsociable, unreal, unsettled, unfriendly, unloved, unhinged, unable, unwelcome, unclean, unfamiliar, and unemployed. 

There’s all kinds of “un-ness” this year. It kind of feels like an Un-Christmas. However, nothing, not even the Corona-Grinch, can keep Christmas from coming.  After all, the very first Christmas had plenty of its own “un-ness”.  For today, let’s consider that the first Christmas was An Unexpected Christmas. Take a moment to read Luke 1:5-41

In so many ways, that first Christmas was An Unexpected Christmas.

 

THE ANGEL WAS UNEXPECTED

In both, the lead-in story of Zacharias and Elizabeth, and the story of a young lady named Mary, the sudden appearance of Gabriel, God’s faithful messenger, was definitely unexpected.

Zacharias was one of many priests who gave one week, twice a year, every year, to serve at God’s Temple in Jerusalem. He was an old man who had done this many, many times. But this time, when a name was drawn for a priest to go inside the Temple to burn incense on the altar, he was chosen – a once-in-a-lifetime honor.  Imagine how nervous he was.

“I’ve never done this before and I’ll never do this again! Lord, don’t let me mess this up!” While he was alone inside the Temple, standing at the Altar of Incense, without any warning, the angel Gabriel suddenly appeared right next to him!

…when Zacharias saw him, he was troubled, and fear fell upon him. 13  But the angel said unto him, Fear not, Zacharias… Luke 1:12-13

It was similar with Mary. This young lady, legally married to Joseph, but waiting to make it official at the ceremony, was by herself. Out of nowhere, the angel Gabriel unexpectedly appeared before her very eyes.  He immediately greets her joyfully, tells her that she’s favored with God’s grace and presence, a blessed woman, among women and by women.

For both Zacharias, and then Mary, The Angel Was Unexpected

 

THE NEWS WAS UNEXPECTED

Remember, Elizabeth and Zacharias were old, well-past child-bearing years. Their village in the hill country, only 5.5 miles west of Jerusalem, was small. Everyone knew them as “that godly elderly couple, you know, the childless ones.”  But still they prayed. Maybe, just maybe, God will hear.

And He did. God heard every prayer. The Lord always knew that He would answer their prayer and give them the desire of their hearts. But it had to be in His perfect time, because their son was to be the Forerunner of His Son. So, how unexpected was God’s message through Gabriel, …thy prayer is heard; and thy wife Elisabeth shall bear thee a son, and thou shalt call his name John. 14 And thou shalt have joy and gladness; and many shall rejoice at his birth. Luke 1:13-14

The news was so unexpected by Zacharias that it was unbelievable. Literally!  He didn’t believe Gabriel; which meant, more importantly, that he didn’t believe God. It never pays to tell an Almighty God what is impossible. Though the Lord didn’t take away His promise to Zacharias, He did take away his voice temporarily.

As unexpected as it was for an elderly couple to get that news, how much more unexpected, unprecedented, and unbelievable was it for a virgin to be told, “Don’t be afraid. You’re going to have son?”

“How? I’ve never been with a man, not in that way. Not even with Joseph.” Mary asked, How shall this be, seeing I know not a man?  Her question is different from Zacharias’s because he asked in doubt, while she asked for detail. Imagine, if you will, how unexpected was that news!

Never in human history, has there ever been that KIND of Unplanned Pregnancy.  From Unexpected News to being an Expectant Mother.

The Angel was Unexpected, The News Was Unexpected, and…

 

THE CHANGE WAS UNEXPECTED

Zacharias finished out his week of service at the Temple and went home to explain all of this exciting news to Elizabeth, but unable to speak. He had to write it down and act it out. He couldn’t talk, right? Well, Elizabeth and her husband conceived a baby, and she quarantined for the first five months of her pregnancy.  To read the passage, it seems that no one else in the village even knew they were expecting until Elizabeth’s much younger cousin Mary came to visit them from up north in Nazareth.

Life was about to drastically change for this old man and his wife, well stricken in years! Were they in their 60s… 70s… 80s?  And now they’re facing a monumental change:  physical changes for her, a crying baby, the midnight feedings, and dirty diapers. But unexpected and uncomfortable does not always equal unwanted or unwelcome.

Then there is Mary; young Mary. Everything she had planned was suddenly changed. Though legally espoused, or married; she and Joseph would not fully married. There was the ceremony, the celebration, and the wedding night in their new home still to come. But now… what would Joseph say? How will he respond? The Gospel of Matthew tells us Joseph wanted to break it off when he first heard the news of Mary’s pregnancy.

Unexpected changes. “What will my parents say? What will people assume about me? Will I be put to death according to the Law? Where will I go now?” Everything changed. Her plans fell apart.  And she was ok with that.  How could she be ok with that?

Because she knew that God could be trusted in the unexpected. She took Him at His Word and believed Him in spite of the odds, and the gossip, and the risk of losing Joseph, her reputation, and everything else.

Like an offering laid out on the altar, Mary laid out her life and her future before God when she said in sweet submission, …Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to thy word. Luke 1:38 

God was calling her to serve Him in a life-changing way, & she willingly obeyed.  She risked it all in faith, until one night… nine months later… God in Human Flesh was born to save Unexpected People like you and me.

The Angel was Unexpected, The News Was Unexpected, and The Change Was Unexpected.

 

Why does all of this matter?

 I know that a lot of unexpected things have happened this year; that if feels like 2020 is The Year That Stole Christmas.  Plans and dreams have been deferred. Hopes have been paused. Trips have been cancelled. Weddings have been postponed. Even funeral services have been delayed. From Easter until Thanksgiving, and now with Christmas almost here, everything has changed.  Everything... except God.

His plans are greater than our plans.  Our loving Father reminds us in Isaiah 55:8-9  For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the LORD. 9 For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.

When you’re feeling overwhelmed, remember Zacharias and Elizabeth, and Mary and Joseph. Though there was plenty of room for panic, anxiety, and fear; in the face of unexpected changes, God worked out everything for perfectly. He is still in control. Trust Him, dear Christian. Follow Him through the unexpected. Rest in Him & be at peace.

Do you know Jesus Christ as your Savior? Have you come to the point of believing that the Child of the manger is the Creator of the universe? Jesus lived a sinless life and yet died on the cross as the way of: 1) taking our sin and punishment, 2) rescuing us from an eternal hell, and 3) offering to us forgiveness and eternal in heaven with Him.  He did everything that was needed to save you. You just need to turn from your sin to believe and receive Him for yourself. If you will call to Him in prayer right now, and He will save you! He will not push you away.

If we can help, let us know so that we can help you grow spiritually and get you connected with a local church family. Please reach out to us in person or online.