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Click to hear this sermon sermon080706
Two news
stories from other nations are all we need to show us why we should cherish our
nation on this Fourth of July weekend.
One Nation, Many Patriots - Psalm 125; Romans 8: 1-8 - July
6, 2008 - Cicero United Methodist Church - Everett J. Bassett
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Two news
stories from other nations are all we need to show us why we should cherish our
nation on this Fourth of July weekend. The first is from Columbia, where Ingrid
Betancourt was rescued from captivity. Ms. Betancourt was kidnapped by
militiamen in 2002 for having the audacity to run for president. She has been
held in chains and tortured for six years, and was rescued this week in a spy
operation, and reunited with her family. Praise God for her safety.
The second
news story is the ongoing tragedy of Zimbabwe. There, Robert Mugabe will
continue as president-dictator. Mugabe, who was cheered as a liberator when he
first took office in 1980, has become a tyrant. As a result, he was defeated in
an election a couple weeks back. But instead of surrendering office, he
declared the vote invalid. Then he used
the army to imprison his opponent, arrest and torture those who campaigned for
his opponent, and threaten anyone who would speak for his opponent.
He declared anyone who would stand for any ideas other than
his own a traitor. Mugabe will continue to be in office, thumbing his nose at
the will of his own people.
So, God
bless America. It is not difficult to find fault with our nation. We criticize
our government; we feel shame for some of the atrocities in our history - slavery
and oppression of Native Americans, and so on; we grow weary of endless
politics and public coarseness and commercialism. In many places, the so-called
'American way of life' represents shallowness and greed. Sometimes we can see
more wrong than right.
But we should never forget how lucky we are. Some day - I
know it's hard to believe - but someday, this current presidential campaign
will come to an end. We will go to the polls and vote for the candidate we
believe best for the job. And then, on January 20 next year, an amazing thing
will happen for the 43rd time in the history of the United States there will
be an orderly transfer of power from one president to another. And during that
whole process, no presidential candidate will be kidnapped or imprisoned; no
threats of physical violence will deter voters; no soldiers will intimidate
opponents; no one who is voted out or whose term is up will refuse to step
down. The people of Columbia, the people of Zimbabwe, the vast majority of
people in this world - do not have those assurances of freedom and democracy.
But we do, and for that reason all of us who live in America should feel
gratitude and patriotic pride.
As I
thought about what God was prompting me to share this morning, I thought about
what it means to be a patriot, and to express love for your country. People
call each other a lot of names these days, but if you call someone
'unpatriotic,' you hit a nerve. No one wants to be unpatriotic. So, what is a
patriot? How should a patriot act? As Christians, we look to the Bible to
answer questions like that.
And in one
way, that's easier said than done. Because when you try to match American
principles to the Bible, you have to squint your eyes a little bit, because our
form of government is not there. There is no democracy anywhere in the Bible.
In the
best of times, there might be a wise and benevolent king, or
there might be a stable occupation like the Roman Empire.
But the word 'vote' is not in the Bible.
And yet I
still believe that the values America represents are solidly biblical. They
grow out of the love of God for every single person on this earth. They express
the sacred worth of each person, and that each one of us is created in the
image of God, and thus has the potential to express Godly wisdom and goodness.
The idea of government by the people and for the people - with each person
getting an equal vote - each person able to run for office - each person with
the right to speak out - expresses that biblical affirmation of human worth
better than any form of government ever invented by humankind. We don't always
live it out. We foul it up royally. There are shameful chapters in our history.
But I believe the principles of equality and human worth are still the best
ideal for decent government ever tried, and for this we thank God.
But if
that's the case, why so much disagreement? Why so much nastiness expressed in
talk radio, or on political blogs, or in letters to the editor? Most would say
this nastiness has increased dramatically in the last twenty years, where what
used to be courteous political discussion is now little more than a shouting
match with neither side listening to the other. And yes, again, that word
'unpatriotic' gets thrown around. We get political books entitled Slander and
Treason and Lies.
The
positive spin on this is that we live in a nation where this kind of expression
is possible. There are plenty of other nations in this world where people using
that kind of language would be arrested or worse. So, again, God bless America.
But the
other factor, I think, is that we are one nation, with many patriots - and
patriotism can take many, many forms. And for this, we can look to the Bible.
For example, who would be a patriot in the Bible? Would a patriot be Moses, who
challenged the authority of his own king? Would it be David, who went into
battle for his king, and then tried to be a good king himself? Would a patriot
behave like the apostle Paul, who said that whatever government was in place
should be blindly accepted as a gift from God? Or would we imitate the prophet
Amos, who condemned his country and his government because of their sins? Would
we follow Jesus, who was for all appearances indifferent to government, and
taught, "Render to Caesar what is Caesar's, and unto God what is
God's?" All of them loved their country. But their views and behaviors
were radically different. Patriots come in all different shapes and sizes. We
should remember that when we are tempted to label someone unpatriotic because their
words are different from ours.
But, more
than that, we should notice what all of those biblical examples have in common:
and that is, an unyielding priority for the righteousness of God. For each of
those I named, and for others in the Bible, loving your country meant fighting
for the righteousness of God, and criticizing the country loud and clear when
it falls short of that righteousness.
The other
thing that needs to be said is that the righteousness of God is pretty clearly
defined. It has to do with two things -- putting God first, and then taking
care of the disadvantaged. Moses, David, Amos, Paul, Jesus all had these same
threads running through their patriotism: God comes first - a true patriot does
not worship his or her nation instead of God - the Bible is crystal clear on
this - putting your nation before God is contributing to the downfall of the
nation. And a true patriot holds his or her country responsible for the fair
and just treatment of the poor, the oppressed, the underprivileged.
Given those
two criteria, there has never been a nation on earth that was above criticism.
We can thank God that we are in a nation that is so great that we can talk
about that openly. We can criticize our leaders; in fact, we must criticize our
leaders, America is the land where the people hold the leaders accountable, not
the other way around. But we criticize in awareness that the freedom to do so
has been hard-won, and is not to be taken for granted. If we think that comes
cheap, we should think about Columbia, or Zimbabwe, or any of the countless
nations on this earth where freedom is only a slim dream.
On April
30, 1863, in the middle of the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln said these
words: "We have been the recipients of the choicest bounties of heaven. We
have been preserved, these many years, in peace and prosperity. We have grown
in numbers, wealth, and power, as no other nation has ever grown. But we have
forgotten God ... We have forgotten the gracious hand which preserved us in peace,
and multiplied and enriched and strengthened us; and we have vainly imagined,
in the deceitfulness of our hearts, that all these blessings were produced by
some superior wisdom of our own .. It behooves us, then, to humble ourselves
before (God), to confess our national sins, and to pray for clemency and
forgiveness."
Those are
hard words; some people would call them unpatriotic, especially to a nation at
war. But I believe they are eminently patriotic words, because they hold up a
great patriotic ideal - a nation humbled before God, and dedicated to justice
and freedom for everybody. With this patriotism, President Lincoln led our
nation through its hardest time.
Psalm 125,
a patriotic affirmation of Israel's faith, begins with these words: "Those
who trust in the Lord are like Mount Zion, which cannot be moved, but abides
forever." That could be our prayer for our own nation this morning. Not
all will choose to embrace it; religious freedom is another of our great
principles. But that doesn't stop we who believe in grace from praying for our
nation - that America will be humble before God; that it will care for the
downtrodden and struggling; and so long as it holds those as its most precious
values - that it too will be like a great mountain that cannot be moved.
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