Living in Exile

Before the 2024 presidential election, my pastor launched a sermon series entitled Life in Exile. The first week, he asked, “How do you know you are in exile, and how can you be in exile in America?” The sermon was based on Daniel chapter three.

The Bible story

Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, besieged Jerusalem. Jews were captured and exiled to Babylon. Nebuchadnezzar ordered the chief of his court officials to select several Israelites from the royal family and nobility to serve in his palace. Those chosen were to be trained for three years and to learn the Babylonian language. Daniel was one of the men chosen to serve the king, along with three other men that the Babylonians renamed Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.

In chapter three, King Nebuchadnezzar made an image out of gold. He gathered officials together to dedicate the image. The king’s herald proclaimed to all the nations and peoples:  “As soon as you hear the sound of the horn, flute, zither, lyre, harp, pipe and all kinds of music, you must fall down and worship the image of gold that King Nebuchadnezzar has set up.” He declared that anyone who defied this command would immediately be thrown into a blazing furnace.

Word got back to King Nebuchadnezzar that Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were disobeying the king’s commands. They were not serving the king’s gods and were not worshiping the golden image.

King Nebuchadnezzar was furious! He summoned Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego and told them that if you worship my gods and the image of gold, all will be well. If you don’t, you will be thrown into a blazing furnace.

Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego refused to bow down to Nebuchadnezzar’s gods and were thrown into the furnace. A fourth man, thought to be Jesus, appeared in the fire with them, and they were unharmed.

Israelites were physically banished from their homeland and had to assimilate to the Babylonian culture. They had to learn the language. To avoid execution, they had to abandon their own God.

The Sermon

The sounds of musical instruments were the signal to bow down and worship Nebuchadnezzar’s gods. Pastor Bob pointed out that the list of sounds in Daniel 3:5 – the horn, flute, zither, lyre, harp, pipe and all kinds of music – was repeated verbatim in three more verses: seven, ten, and fifteen. He asked the congregation to read the list multiple times. The repetition was a driving, relentless rhythm that would have been hard to ignore.

So, how can you be in exile in America if you are not physically banished from the country as the Israelites were? American culture encourages people to bow down to things and to other versions of the truth.

Although we are not tempted today to worship images of gold, we face idolatry that is subtle and more dangerous. An idol is anything that becomes the most important thing in your life. If you are a Christian, Christ is supposed to be Lord of all. If he is not Lord of all, he is not Lord at all.

Whenever you hear the relentless rhythm driving people to conform to their master, have the courage to not bow down.

My thoughts on living in exile

Christians should not conform to the ways of the world. We are to submit to being transformed by Jesus Christ. In not conforming, we choose to be exiled from the secular American culture.

Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.

Romans 12:2 NIV

My pastor said that King Nebuchadnezzar was an insecure narcissist full of rage. I immediately thought to myself, “he sounds like Trump.” Donald Trump is a narcissist, and he is motivated by rage and grievance. He gets very angry at anyone who opposes him and at anyone who does not praise his greatness.

When I thought about the sermon, it occurred to me that I am an exile among exiles. I live in exile from other Christians. By that, I mean that not only do I not conform to the ways of the world, but I also do not fit the pattern of American Evangelicals.

I have not adopted the language of evangelical Christians. You will not hear me bemoaning people who are “woke” or complaining about cancel culture. You won’t hear me whining about immigrants taking our jobs. You won’t hear me saying that families will be destroyed if LGBTQ people have civil rights. You won’t hear me condemning women for choosing to end their pregnancies. That’s between them and God.

And I will not bow down to Trump. I will not give him praise that he does not deserve. A bad tree will never produce good fruit.

Likewise, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, and a bad tree cannot bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Thus, by their fruit you will recognize them.

Matthew 7:17-20 NIV

For years now, many Christians have been listening to a relentless driving rhythm that drowns out the voice of Jesus Christ. This includes “news” programs that are nothing more than propaganda targeted to conservative Christians, preachers with a political agenda, etc. In their quest for power or ratings, false teachers repeat messages that provoke anger and the fear of others. These messages drown out Christ’s messages of love, mercy, and grace.

For the second time in eight years, Christians overwhelmingly chose a profoundly ungodly man to lead them – a man who is the complete opposite of the One who is supposed to be their one true king. Christians claim that they are trying to take the country back for God, yet forsake his word in the process.

Christians have succeeded in acquiring political power through a Faustian bargain.

People are leaving the church because of the hypocrisy of people who call themselves  Christians.

Thankfully, my pastor avoids talking about politics. I have chosen to remain in my church and to worship alongside people who were willing to sacrifice Christian morality for political power. I pray for them.

Examining the Divide in Christianity Today

For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever.

Tim Alberta used the closing line of the Lord’s prayer in the title of his book, The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory, subtitled American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism. As a reporter, Alberta went to places where I would never go and spoke to people with whom I would not associate (because our values differ too much). His book is disturbing, but it gave me insight into the damage false prophets and their followers have done and continue to do to Christianity.

Alberta noted that Christian conservatives are now Donald Trump’s “most unflinching advocates.” Given DT’s immorality and unrepentance, as a follower of Christ, I can not help but ask the question that prompted Alberta to write his book: Why

I also ask myself, What can I do to counteract the damage that has been done to  Christian witness? How can I disciple Christians who have been seduced by false teachers?

As Alberta wrote, it isn’t fair to lump all Christian Trump supporters into one homogeneous group. They fall along a continuum. Like Alberta’s, my conservative Christian friends have “to some extent been seduced by the cult of Trumpism.”

An interviewer asked Alberta if he really believes that evangelicals are divided into two camps, as he implied when he tweeted that there are Russell Moore Christians and Jerry Falwell Jr. Christians. Alberta says he fumbled in his response, not stating his position clearly. He responded that some Christians see issues through the eyes of Jesus, while others process everything through a partisan lens. The truth is, Alberta sees evangelicals as either “faithful to an eternal covenant” or “seduced by earthly idols of nation and influence and exaltation…” In other words, one camp has its eyes set on this earthly kingdom, political power, and the exalting of people, not on God and his kingdom.

Evangelicals are not easy to define. Today, the description is frequently used as a cultural or political identity. At one time, evangelicals were born again Christians, characterized by activism – sharing the gospel (the good news) so that others might believe in Christ and be born again. There are still Christians who believe this is our mission. However, with the influence of groups like the “Moral Majority” in the 1980s and the Heritage Foundation today, a growing faction of Christianity has been transformed into a partisan political movement.

Alberta’s book is structured around how politicians, Christians, and others have attempted to coopt the kingdom, the power, and the glory that belong exclusively to God.

God has His own kingdom.

God has His own power.

God has His own glory.

Earthly kingdoms like the one envisioned by conservative Christians and politicians can not compare to the kingdom of God.

No amount of political or cultural power, not even the amount DT and wealthy political donors hold, can compete with the power of God.

The glorification of DT by the Trump cult and his own self-aggrandizement can’t hold a candle to the glory that belongs exclusively to God.

Alberta ended the book’s prologue with this admonition – you can not serve and worship both God and the gods of this world. Christians must resist idolatry. We must reject our worldly identity if we want to become more like Christ, the author and perfector of our faith.

The state of Christianity in the U.S. today is an unpleasant topic that’s been bothering me for years. It isn’t getting any better. The extremism persists. The false witnesses drown out the witness of the faithful. I feel called to resist the false witness.

Heavenly Father, the Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory are yours forever.

The Blessedness of a Poor Spirit

Chapter two of The Pursuit of God, The Blessedness of Possessing Nothing, left me feeling uncomfortable with myself. What is fighting for first place in my heart?

Men have now, by nature, no peace within their hearts, for God is crowned there no longer, but there in the moral dusk, stubborn and aggressive usurpers fight among themselves for first place on the throne.

A.W. Tozer, The Pursuit of God

Dear God, I have been doing a lot of soul searching since I read what A.W. Tozer had to say about possessiveness. He called the love of things a disease that takes the place of you in the heart. So I have to ask myself: am I too attached to material things?

Tozer said that the way to have deeper knowledge of you is “through the lonely valleys of soul poverty and giving up all things.” Lord Jesus, this reminded me of the time you challenged a rich man to sell all of his possessions, give the money to the poor, then come and follow you. He walked away sad because he had a lot of possessions. How would I respond if you asked me to sell all my earthly possessions? I have to confess that I don’t want to give away everything I have. But I do want to follow you. And I know that I have everything I need in you.

When I was a kid, we were poor and I didn’t like it. It wasn’t because I had to do without things; it was because people looked down on us and made me feel like I wasn’t good enough. You used physical poverty to teach me that my worth isn’t determined by what I have but by who I am. I learned to have empathy for the “least of these” because I know what it like to be one. I learned that money and things are not the keys to happiness. Thank you for teaching me these things.

Lord, you have blessed me greatly. I have a nice, comfortable home. I have a lot of stuff. Everything I have, I owe to you – not just my physical possessions, but my talents and abilities. More importantly, you paid my spiritual debts in full. Sin had left a crimson stain, you washed it white as snow.

Tozer wrote about Abraham and his willingness to sacrifice his son in obedience to you. Even though he was a rich man, he possessed nothing. This, Tozer said, is the spiritual secret. The secret is not to have nothing; it is to possess nothing. It is to renounce possessions and to make you the real treasure of the heart.

I know, God, that it isn’t just things that take your place in my heart. Sometimes for me, it is the desire for social acceptance and approval or the desire to be in control. Lord, thank you again for all you have given me. Please reveal all the things that fight you for first place in my heart and root them from my heart.

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Jesus Paid It All

  1. I hear the Savior say,
    “Thy strength indeed is small;
    Child of weakness, watch and pray,
    Find in Me thine all in all.”
    • Refrain:
      Jesus paid it all,
      All to Him I owe;
      Sin had left a crimson stain,
      He washed it white as snow.
  2. For nothing good have I
    Whereby Thy grace to claim;
    I’ll wash my garments white
    In the blood of Calv’ry’s Lamb.
  3. And now complete in Him,
    My robe, His righteousness,
    Close sheltered ’neath His side,
    I am divinely blest.
  4. Lord, now indeed I find
    Thy pow’r, and Thine alone,
    Can change the leper’s spots
    And melt the heart of stone.
  5. When from my dying bed
    My ransomed soul shall rise,
    “Jesus died my soul to save,”
    Shall rend the vaulted skies.
  6. And when before the throne
    I stand in Him complete,
    I’ll lay my trophies down,
    All down at Jesus’ feet.