The election has come and gone.
How are you doing?
For some, this is a time of great hope and expectation. As a man said to me the other day, "This is a great time for America." It was one of those 'I'm sure you agree with me so I'm just walking by, smiling, and saying it' kind-of comments, but needless to say, he was excited to see Trump win.
For others, this is a time of great trepidation. What will become of the America they knew, or at least that they thought they knew? Will there be radical impacts on either their lives or the lives of people they know and love.
Let me skip out on digging into those questions for now and take the discussion to a different place. Let me ask us all 2 questions that dig into the heart and soul of the presidential election for us as individuals. I think these questions take us to a place where Jesus might go (see Luke 6:45 for one of many glimpses from Jesus into how central the heart is).
Question 1: How happy or upset were you about the election results?
How are you doing?
For some, this is a time of great hope and expectation. As a man said to me the other day, "This is a great time for America." It was one of those 'I'm sure you agree with me so I'm just walking by, smiling, and saying it' kind-of comments, but needless to say, he was excited to see Trump win.
For others, this is a time of great trepidation. What will become of the America they knew, or at least that they thought they knew? Will there be radical impacts on either their lives or the lives of people they know and love.
Let me skip out on digging into those questions for now and take the discussion to a different place. Let me ask us all 2 questions that dig into the heart and soul of the presidential election for us as individuals. I think these questions take us to a place where Jesus might go (see Luke 6:45 for one of many glimpses from Jesus into how central the heart is).
Question 1: How happy or upset were you about the election results?
When I ask this question, I am not asking it in the 'what is the right answer' kind-of way. I am asking us to consider what our response was when we heard the Donald J. Trump was going to become the 45th President of the United States of America. Was it joy? Was it deep joy? Was it fear? Deep grief? Our visceral response to this question tells us something about where we place our trust.
Proverbs 21:1 tells us that, "The king's heart is a stream of water in the hand of the LORD; He turns it where ever He will." This verses speaks to the sovereignty of God. You don't have to be a hardcore Calvinist to believe and trust in the power of God, and this verse tells us that God is not going to be overpowered by the next president, or the next dictator from the other side of the globe for that matter. This verse doesn't give a picture of a battle between the heart of the person in power and God. It instead gives a picture of God moving history where He pleases. For a biblical image of God's reign over the world, just consider that famous verse Jeremiah 29:11. God doesn't say, "I have good plans and we will see if I can work it out." He tells His covenant people He has plans, and we see that God's efficacious plans are always successful.
Now I've got to press pause here for the churchy-folk (I'm a pastor so I can be one of those as well), and point out that in my first question here I am not asking if we have a knowledge of the facts about the power of God in all things. That is good to know, but the Bible says that the demons believe that God is one (James 2:19). Knowing the facts isn't the question. The question is about our gut-level response. This should give us pause to ask if any of us are trusting in leaders to be our savior. Again, most people would say no, but I lovingly again press us to look deep inside ourselves and see if - while we know that we should say no - there is part of us that is trusting in the power of man instead of the grace and power of God.
At this point, one can be dismissive of the real fears some people have about the president elect. It is worth noting that there were some of these same fears on the political right after Obama won both his first and second elections. All that to say that we should listen, care, and engage with those who are feeling scared now. At the same time we have to examine our place of deepest trust. Psalm 9:10 reads, "And those who know Your Name put their trust in You, for You, Oh LORD, have not forsaken those who seek You."
Question 2: Are you loving people?
My second question is about both words and actions. Are you loving people - in what you say and what you do - now that the election is done? Were you loving people before the election was over? Were you and are you loving people who don't see the world in the same way that you do politically? Will you love them now? I've said this so many times but I often wonder if people would LIKE, SHARE, and POST some of the things they do if Jesus was one of their friends on various social media outlets.
It has been a hard campaign, and while I am happy that many politicians on both sides of the aisle are asking people to 'come together', that should not be something new for the follower of Christ. In a world that is so often built on identity politics and loving my group while demonizing the other group, the follower of Christ is called to love all people - people who are made in the image of God (Genesis 1:26). We love because the call of Christ is to love God and to love people (Matthew 22:36-40).
Now that the election is over, some things are truly different.
But some things are not different and should never be different regardless of who is in the White House.
- tC