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The Lay of the Land
Scripture References: (Context implies: Gal 5:22-23; Jas 1:19; Matt 7:5; Matt 5:44; 1 Tim 2:1-2). Note: As stated by the speaker, this introductory sermon focuses more on the cultural landscape than specific scripture exposition.
Intro: Welcome to this sermon kicking off a new series on Church and State. While maybe only 4% are excited by politics, over half (55%) feel exhausted or angry. The speaker shares his own past disinterest, forced into the conversation by recent events (COVID, etc.). He comes not as a political expert, but as a pastor seeking and offering help for disciples navigating today's divided landscape. The goal isn't political endorsement but fostering Christ-like posture.
Key Points:
- The Goal: A King of Kings Commitment: This series aims to cultivate 10 commitments focused on how we engage, prioritizing posture over specific political positions. Key themes include: Allegiance to Jesus above all; loving neighbors through civic life; honoring God's image in everyone; seeking biblical wisdom; fruitful speech; humble learning; self-critique first; pursuing biblical justice; peacemaking; loving/praying for enemies and leaders. (See source for full list).
- Understanding Our Divided Nation: The current division feels intense, amplified by:
- Social Media: Algorithms often push users towards polarizing extremes.
- Negative Polarization: Many align against the "other side" out of fear/hatred, more than for their own side's policies.
- Politics as Religion: In a secularizing culture, political ideologies increasingly function like religions, promising salvation, identity, and provision, becoming potential idols even within the church.
- Mapping the Landscape (Butler's Quadrants): America is fragmented into roughly four ideological "tribes," each making ultimate claims:
- Progress (Upper Left): Salvation through science, reason, technology. ("We can change the world.")
- Responsibility (Upper Right): Salvation through personal freedom, hard work, free markets. ("Pull yourself up by your bootstraps.")
- Identity (Lower Left): Salvation through self-expression, social justice, dismantling oppression. ("Live your truth.")
- Security (Lower Right): Salvation through boundaries, tradition, safety from perceived threats. ("Good fences make good neighbors.")
- Redeeming the Desires, Rejecting the Idols: Each quadrant reflects a legitimate God-given desire (progress, responsibility, identity, security). However, when detached from God and made ultimate, these good things become destructive idols. Christianity affirms the underlying longing but points to Jesus as the only true source and fulfillment. He brings true progress without depravity, offers grace beyond mere responsibility, bestows true identity, and provides ultimate security.
Conclusion: Jesus doesn't fit neatly into any single political quadrant or ideology; He transcends them all. These human systems, derived from good desires, ultimately belong under His Lordship.
Call to Action: Identify your own natural "lean" towards certain values (progress, responsibility, identity, security). Acknowledge the good desire God placed within that. However, consciously submit your ultimate allegiance – your "bow" – only to King Jesus. Refuse to let any political party or ideology become an idol promising what only Christ can deliver.
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