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Politics, it's all over our news feeds.
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My name's Lena Schuler and I'm the Crossroads Anywhere Community P
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astor. We're glad to have you joining us from anywhere you are right now.
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And we're in a new series this week called Don't Panic, Take Heart 2020.
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We actually believe that there's a promise
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that we can take heart in the midst of this election year,
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regardless of where we are in the political spectrum.
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And so we're going to be taking communion
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a little bit later in our service.
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And if you believe in the promises of Jesus
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and what He says about taking heart, who He is,
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then get something to eat or drink so that you can take communion
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a little bit later.
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But before we get into that, we actually went onto the street
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to hear where people are and what they think
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in the midst of this divisive election year.
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Let's check it out.
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TOME: Excuse me, sir. How are you?
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- I'm doing wonderful.
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- Do you mind talking politics?
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- Where are you? On the right or are you on the left?
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- I think I'm at somewhere in the middle.
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- I feel like the right is very extreme
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and the left is very extreme and I'm more towards the middle.
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- Kind of a left-ish, but right now,
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it's just it's too polarized on both sides.
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- There's never a good choice for me.
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I don't really fit in anywhere.
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So election year comes around, I'm like, ugh.
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- Yeah, they're both very extreme and I'm not an extreme person.
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- This is wild, it's wild.
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TOME: It is wild.
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- I mean it's going on a turn for I think the worst.
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TOME: How doesn't make you feel?
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- Confused and angry.
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They all just have their own ideas of what they want to do
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and they aren't really listening to me.
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It's like that song clowns to the left of me, jokers on the right?
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- I'm so afraid to tell what I'm really feeling to my friends
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because sometimes they're so like radically attached
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to their viewpoint I don't like to share.
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- We don't want to talk issues.
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We just want to root for our team.
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- You know, like out in social media,
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like Facebook and stuff, it's just instant shut down.
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- I frankly try not to think about it very much
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because it's quite depressing.
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TOME: What's depressing about it for you?
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- Just all the hatred and anger.
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TOME: Do you feel I'm angry with you right now?
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Because I'm very angry right now.
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Are you feeling that?
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- A little bit, yeah.
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- I think Republicans and Democrats need to hear
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that just because you're Republican
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or I'm a Democrat doesn't mean that we don't have a lot in common.
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- Our elected officials, I just --
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I don't have a whole lot of faith in them right now.
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- It's very frustrating.
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- I really don't feel like anybody represents me
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because everybody has pushed
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way to one end of the spectrum or the other.
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- I don't feel like either party truly represents
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all the policies or all the issues that I would fall on.
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- It's a tough one. It's tough one.
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I mean, there's a lot that I disagree with.
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It's a lot that I will agree with.
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But I'm all for change and going for something
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that's going to benefit everyone of the majority.
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So, yeah.
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- Hey, my name's Robbie.
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Great to have you here, as we're were in this election series
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called Don't Panic or Don't Panic 2020 Take Heart.
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We're going to -- We're gonna start our time together
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right now by singing songs that have been sung for a few centuries.
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And nothing helps us say something so succinctly as a song.
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And there's a song that I grew up singing.
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I called it the money song, but it's actually called The Doxology.
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So it's real simple.
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It goes like this:
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Why don't you guys stand up?
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Praise for the soul and all the.
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God, we come to you right now with our eyes fixed on You
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for our hope, not anything we see on the landscape,
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but we lift our eyes to You.
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We lift our eyes to heaven to say we want to hope in You.
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So we're here because we want to encounter You.
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We want to encounter Your truth, Your character, Your presence.
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Would You would meet us here?
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Would You see our steps into this place as
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silent prayers of hope?
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It's in that precious name, Jesus, that we pray.
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Amen.
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- I love worshipping with you week in and week out online
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because it sets my week up really well to experience God.
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00:13:08
One of the other things that I do that sets my week up,
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my month up, my year up really well to experience God
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is I get together with friends regularly in the midst of a group.
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And as much as this has been good for me,
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I hear stories time and time again of how it's been good for you
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and other people who are part of our church.
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I was meeting with Patti and Brian,
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who are some of our group leaders in Michigan
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just a couple of weeks ago.
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And they were telling me a story about
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how when they were meeting with their group,
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Brian actually passed out and it was in the midst of passing out
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and then going to the hospital from that group
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that a medical issue was caught in his heart.
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And this group of people that they were regularly meeting with
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rallied around them and cared for them
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in the midst of this unexpected, difficult time
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where they had a medical emergency.
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And they were just telling me how great it was to have friends
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who cared so deeply for them and were there for them
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in the midst of this difficult time.
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And I want that for you.
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I want you to have great friends who are with you
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in the midst of unexpected, difficult times,
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the way that Patti and Brian have experienced
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and the way that I've experienced.
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And so if you want that, you can head to Crossroads.net/groups
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00:14:17
and see if there's a group meeting near you, maybe in a home
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or a coffee shop or online week in and week out
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so that you have friends who are going after God with you
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and who can be there for you in the highs and the lows of life.
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One of the other things that set me up really well
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for the rest of my life was not just meeting in a group regularly,
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but years and years ago, I actually experienced camp
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as a middle schooler.
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I experienced camp where I made great friends
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who I laughed with and played games with
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and who eventually stood by me on my wedding day a few years ago.
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And it set up my relationship with Jesus for years and years to come.
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And we have camps available for you if you're in middle school
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00:15:02
or high school or you've got a student in your home or close to you.
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We have summer camps happening for your students
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to experience life change through Jesus
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and through genuine friendships
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and just some good old fun in the midst of the summer.
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And you know, I was sitting around a table
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with all of our community pastors a few weeks ago
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across all of our Crossroads sites.
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00:15:25
And the question was asked, how many of us experienced Jesus
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and maybe received him for the first time
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00:15:31
in the midst of a summer camp in middle school or high school.
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And over half of that room raised our hands.
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And so it might just be camp that sets your student
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on a totally different trajectory for the rest of their life
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00:15:44
and really solidifies a relationship with Jesus for them.
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And I want that for your middle school or high school student.
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I want that for you if you're in middle school or high school.
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You can head to Crossroads.net/summercamp
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to find out more
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and sign up for a camp this summer,
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regardless of where you live in the country.
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00:16:03
And I want you to know that if you're a giver at Crossroads,
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00:16:06
part of your money is fueling life change in kids and students.
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00:16:11
So if you want to give for the first time today,
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you want to become a giver and you want to see Jesus
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break into the lives of high schoolers and middle schoolers around you.
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You could do that by heading to Crossroads.net/gi
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00:16:24
ve and becoming a giver for the first time today.
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00:16:27
But we're in this series called Don't Panic, Take Heart 2020,
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00:16:32
and today we get to hear from Chuck Mingo.
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00:16:34
- If you are experiencing a bit of heartburn
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00:16:36
after consuming heavy dose
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of polarizing political posts on social media
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00:16:40
with a side of inflammatory national news for breakfast,
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00:16:43
and you can feel your blood pressure rising
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00:16:45
and your anxiety skyrocketing, you are not alone.
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The good news is that you don't have to panic in 2020.
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This is not the first time in human history
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we faced a fractured and about to boil over political storm.
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About 2000 years ago, things were looking pretty bleak
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for people who follow Jesus.
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00:17:03
You could say they had just lived through
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the most important election of their lives, and lost.
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OK, so there were no elections back then, only hostile takeovers.
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And Jesus wasn't running for President.
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He was unjustly crucified.
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But you get the idea, these people were freaked out.
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The guy they thought was going to literally
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overthrow the Romans and the religious Jews
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and run the country was dead.
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Taxes were high. There was no health care.
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No one could agree about who should be in power.
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Sound familiar?
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Followers of Jesus were so scared
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they hid and huddled together.
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Not knowing what else to do,
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the women in their group went to the tomb.
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And you know what happened next.
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He had risen, just as He said.
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In Luke 24 it says two angels had to remind them
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of what Jesus had said to them just a few days before.
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They said, and I quote:
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remember how He told you this would happen?
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It goes on to say: Then they remembered His words.
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If the people closest to Jesus were so freaked out
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00:18:00
by the political tension they were in
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00:18:02
that they panicked and forgot what He said.
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Then it begs the question, did H
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e say anything to us that would be helpful
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to remember during this election?
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Turns out, yes.
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Yes, He did.
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This is the message that He gave to H
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is followers about to venture out
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into a fractured political culture:
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Anyone who loves their father or mother,
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insert political party, more than me is not worthy of me.
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00:18:25
And anyone who loves their son or daughter,
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00:18:27
insert their beliefs about climate change or immigration,
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more than me is not worthy of me.
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00:18:32
Whoever does not take up their cross,
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insert forgive their Facebook and Twitter foes,
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and follow me is not worthy of me.
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Whoever finds their life,
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insert puts their faith in winning the election, will lose it.
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And whoever loses their life,
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insert puts their faith in the kingdom of God,
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for my sake will find it.
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00:18:51
Jesus also said:
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00:19:01
So no matter who you are, your party affiliation,
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00:19:04
or growing fear over the outcome of the election,
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you can win no matter who gets elected.
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00:19:09
Because this is the promise of Don't Panic 2020 Take Heart.
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00:19:17
- Man who wants that? Who wants to take heart like that
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and feel that kind of hope, that kind of peace?
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00:19:22
That's what we're talking about in this series,
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00:19:24
Election 2020, Don't panic, take heart.
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00:19:28
And if this is your first week in this series, you might be asking,
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00:19:31
why is Crossroads doing this series again?
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00:19:34
I know that's a question that came up a lot this week
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00:19:36
And I thought Brian did a great job of framing it.
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00:19:39
And I want to go right back to the words of Jesus
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that you heard in that video and saw in that video.
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00:19:44
We believe that by addressing this, by talking about this
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00:19:47
as a community, more of us can actually experience
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00:19:50
the words that Jesus promised in John 16:33, He said:
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00:20:04
And we want to be in a place where we can engage
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00:20:06
in the political process in a healthy way,
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00:20:09
but also take heart no matter who wins in November.
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00:20:13
Because right now the odds of your candidate winning
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00:20:15
are about 50/50 unless you live in Rabbit Hash, Kentucky,
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00:20:19
not too far from here where Brynn is still mayor
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00:20:22
and everything is well in the world.
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00:20:24
So I don't know if you know this or not,
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00:20:25
but Rabbit Hash, Kentucky for years has elected a dog
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00:20:28
to be their mayor. It's really small town.
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00:20:30
And so you can imagine there's not much
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00:20:31
political tension in Rabbit Hash, Kentucky.
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00:20:35
which makes that like Mars compared to
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00:20:37
everywhere else in our country right now.
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00:20:39
You know, in some ways what an election does
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00:20:41
is it just concentrates our hopes, our aspirations,
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00:20:45
what we believe, our fears, our anxieties,
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00:20:47
and it concentrates all those things onto one date on the calendar.
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00:20:51
And it reminds me of what I used to do when I was younger,
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00:20:54
when I would have a magnifying glass
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and it was a hot summer day.
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And I would take that magnifying glass and try to burn ants.
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00:21:00
Am I the only person who tried to do that with real live things?
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00:21:03
Yeah, paper too, paper too.
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00:21:05
But it was always cool if you could try to catch an ant.
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00:21:06
I never set an ant on fire, but that's what an election does,
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00:21:10
is it kind of concentrates us to this point
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00:21:12
and it gets us all fired up.
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00:21:14
It burns us in that way.
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00:21:15
And I want to say something very clearly.
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00:21:17
There's real tension stepping into this,
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00:21:19
stepping into this conversation.
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What is our duty or what is our choice
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00:21:24
as an American citizen who votes
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00:21:26
and what is our duty or our response as people
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00:21:30
who are either already in the kingdom of God
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00:21:33
or who are interested in learning more about
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00:21:35
what does it look like to respond to this
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00:21:37
as a person who's in a kingdom of God?
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00:21:38
And I also recognize there are issues of consequence
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00:21:41
in this election, and I'm not minimizing that at all.
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00:21:44
But every week in this series, we're coming against a myth,
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00:21:47
a myth that may be true based on how the media
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00:21:51
or pundits are talking about this election.
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00:21:53
Last week's myth was that this is
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00:21:54
the most important election of your life.
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00:21:57
That this is the most important election of your life.
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00:21:59
And Brian talked about that last week.
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00:22:00
And what we've realized is
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00:22:02
this is an election of consequence for sure.
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00:22:04
And yet you can engage, you can step into this
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00:22:07
and you can have peace regardless of who
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00:22:09
the President is on November 4th, 2020.
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00:22:13
And so this week we're leaning into another myth
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00:22:16
and we're going to dive into that.
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00:22:17
But here's what I want you to know.
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00:22:18
Today what I want to do is prepare you for
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00:22:20
what you do when you walk into that ballot booth.
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00:22:24
So what you do before, during, and after the ballot booth,
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00:22:27
that's where we're going today.
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00:22:28
Let me pray as we jump in.
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00:22:29
God, I ask that you would speak.
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00:22:33
That You would speak a word that resonates with all of us deeply.
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00:22:37
I believe that You can
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00:22:39
and I believe that's exactly what You want to do.
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00:22:41
That only happens when I get out of the way
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00:22:43
and you, quite frankly, get more in the way.
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00:22:46
And so we just give this time to You, in Jesus' name.
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00:22:48
Amen.
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00:22:50
All right. Let's take a look at the myths that we're busting today.
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00:22:52
We've got our myth lever over here.
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00:22:54
Here's the myth we're going after.
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00:23:00
Oh, Chipotle is healthy.
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00:23:03
Of course, Chipotle is healthy.
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00:23:05
There's vegetables in there, beans.
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00:23:07
Yes, Chipotle is healthy.
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00:23:09
But that's actually not the myth for today.
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00:23:11
Here's another myth we want to come after today.
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00:23:17
You shouldn't pee in the pool.
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00:23:21
How many people think it's OK to pee in the pool?
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00:23:22
Don't raise your hands, please.
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00:23:25
I don't even want to know.
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00:23:26
I don't even want to know.
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00:23:28
No, no, no. That's clear.
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00:23:29
You shouldn't be in the pool.
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00:23:30
So two very clear: Chipotle is healthy.
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00:23:32
You shouldn't pee in the pool.
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00:23:33
Here's the myth we're actually going after today.
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00:23:41
All Christians vote this way.
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00:23:45
That one is actually not as simple as it seems.
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00:23:49
And if you're in here and you're part of the 61%
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00:23:52
of people that by some polls would say are the frustrated majority,
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00:23:55
you're asking the question, though, "OK, but how do I decide?"
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00:23:59
Today I'm gonna give you that answer.
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00:24:02
I'm going to give you that answer today.
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00:24:03
And as I do that, let's just remember, I'm the Pastor you like.
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00:24:07
Can we just be OK with that?
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00:24:10
I'm the Pastor you like.
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00:24:12
I'm your friend.
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00:24:13
I'm Chuck and I'm the pastor you like.
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00:24:15
So we're going to dig into that.
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00:24:16
We're going to go straight at it.
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00:24:18
And I think it'd be helpful for you to understand my political story.
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00:24:21
So I think about myself growing up in my home.
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00:24:24
I would say my parents were one lever Democrats.
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00:24:28
That's what they were.
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00:24:29
And what I mean by that is this.
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00:24:30
I don't know what the voting booth looked like where you grew up.
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00:24:32
Where I grew up in Philadelphia.
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00:24:34
you would go into a booth.
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00:24:35
You'd pull one lever.
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00:24:37
That lever would close the curtain behind you.
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00:24:39
And then you had a bunch of different individual choices.
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00:24:42
But you also had two other choices:
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00:24:44
You could pull one lever
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00:24:46
and all the Republican ticket would be voted for
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00:24:48
or you could pull one lever and all the Democrats would be voted for.
-
00:24:50
Of course, I remember as a kid, my mom and dad
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00:24:52
would work the polls regularly.
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00:24:54
And I remember walking in and it was a two lever experience,
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00:24:57
one lever to close the curtain.
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00:24:59
And there was another lever to vote
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00:25:00
the whole Democratic line down the down the edge.
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00:25:03
That's what I grew up with.
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00:25:04
And so that's how I grew up.
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00:25:06
But this changed for me as I got more politically aware.
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00:25:10
Does anybody remember something called Channel One?
-
00:25:12
Channel One. You were in school.
-
00:25:14
For me, it was in high school.
-
00:25:16
And it was like closed circuit TV.
-
00:25:17
And they would give you all kinds of information.
-
00:25:19
And I remember when it was George Bush running against Bill Clinton
-
00:25:24
for whatever reason that just sparked in my mind,
-
00:25:26
because they were showing that on Channel One.
-
00:25:28
I remember saying to myself, like, "I can't vote in this election,
-
00:25:30
but the next election I'll be voting."
-
00:25:32
And it just increased my awareness.
-
00:25:33
And I was kind of just like, hey,
-
00:25:35
this is something I need to pay attention to.
-
00:25:37
Fast forward, I would say that as I began to vote,
-
00:25:40
the way that I would define myself even today
-
00:25:42
is that I'm an independent voter with conservative leanings.
-
00:25:44
That's been true for me when I was in college.
-
00:25:47
That's been true for me even beyond college.
-
00:25:48
Obviously, that's kind of where I stood
-
00:25:51
in terms of the whole political landscape.
-
00:25:53
And then 2008 happened.
-
00:25:55
And I will tell you that as an African-American man,
-
00:25:58
the opportunity to vote for our first black President
-
00:26:01
was a moment of history for me.
-
00:26:02
Surprise, surprise. I voted for Obama in 2008.
-
00:26:05
And you're probably not surprised by that.
-
00:26:07
But for me, that was a historic vote
-
00:26:09
for a couple reasons that I remember.
-
00:26:11
I remember when he was elected and all the results were in
-
00:26:14
and he was in Chicago at that park
-
00:26:16
and he was walking onto the stage with his family.
-
00:26:18
I did two things in that moment.
-
00:26:19
I called my then 80 plus year old dad
-
00:26:23
who grew up in Jim Crow St.
-
00:26:24
with separate water fountains,
-
00:26:26
not being able to be treated as a human being.
-
00:26:28
He never thought he would see a black President in his lifetime.
-
00:26:31
And I called him and I just wanted to hear
-
00:26:33
what he was thinking that night.
-
00:26:34
And the next thing I did is I wrote a letter
-
00:26:36
to my then few month old son about
-
00:26:39
what just happened in our country that day.
-
00:26:41
So that was 2008, but fast forward to 2012.
-
00:26:44
And I will tell you, 2012 for me was not a clear cut decision.
-
00:26:49
It was not. It was not a no brainer
-
00:26:51
that I was going to vote for Obama a second time,
-
00:26:53
because for me, I knew as I was walking into 2012,
-
00:26:57
my decision had to be based on more than just my racial identity,
-
00:27:00
it had to be based on more than just my quote unquote, politics.
-
00:27:04
Here was the question that I leaned into aggressively in 2012,
-
00:27:09
and I'm challenging all of you to lean into in 2020.
-
00:27:12
And it's this: am I willing to put my faith filter
-
00:27:16
ahead of my political filter?
-
00:27:20
Or put it this way, how do I put my faith filter
-
00:27:24
ahead of my political filter?
-
00:27:27
And I will tell you this is hard.
-
00:27:29
In fact, it's so hard
-
00:27:30
that I think most of us think we've already done it.
-
00:27:33
We think we've already done the work on this.
-
00:27:35
But I want you to see today that it is not that simple,
-
00:27:38
that if you are using a biblical filter
-
00:27:41
for the way that you show up at the polls,
-
00:27:43
it is not as simple as we make it out to be.
-
00:27:46
This tension exists if we step back from the soundbites,
-
00:27:50
if we step back from the talking points and we look at scripture.
-
00:27:53
I could give a bunch of different examples of this,
-
00:27:56
but I'm just gonna pick three.
-
00:27:57
I've got an image here and I want what you just walk with me through this.
-
00:28:00
Three things that I know you're hearing about,
-
00:28:02
three things you probably have an opinion on:
-
00:28:04
immigration,
-
00:28:05
charity or you could call that how we take care of the poor,
-
00:28:08
and the environment.
-
00:28:09
These are things that are hot button debates, hot button discussions.
-
00:28:13
And can I just tell you, if you think the Bible
-
00:28:16
is overtly clear on one side of this or another,
-
00:28:19
I don't think you're reading the Bible that I'm reading.
-
00:28:22
I don't think it's that simple because the Bible says this about immigrants.
-
00:28:26
There's clear scripture that says we're to protect
-
00:28:28
and welcome the foreigner and the scripture teaches
-
00:28:31
that we're to obey the laws of the land.
-
00:28:32
Those are both in the Bible.
-
00:28:34
So I just don't think it's as easy as we make it out to be.
-
00:28:38
Here's on charity. Charity.
-
00:28:39
The scriptures clearly teach we're obligated to give generously to the poor.
-
00:28:43
And yet in 2 Thessalonians it says: if you don't work, you don't eat.
-
00:28:48
Those are on the same Bible I'm reading.
-
00:28:50
Here's another one on the environment.
-
00:28:52
Yes, humans are called a steward the earth.
-
00:28:54
We see that in places like Genesis,
-
00:28:55
but also the scriptures teach that humans are above all other creation.
-
00:28:59
That doesn't mean that we're to abuse nature.
-
00:29:01
But there's a difference between me and other creative beings
-
00:29:04
and you and other creative beings being created creatures on the earth.
-
00:29:08
And all I'm saying is this: if you're not feeling the tension on this,
-
00:29:12
then I want to ask you to read the Bible again.
-
00:29:15
If you're not feeling the tension on this,
-
00:29:17
I don't think that you're hearing and feeling it.
-
00:29:20
The question though is what do we do with this tension?
-
00:29:22
We're still on a two party system.
-
00:29:23
Right?
-
00:29:25
So how do we deal with this tension?
-
00:29:27
Well, for years, churches have made it real simple
-
00:29:29
for people to deal with this tension because
-
00:29:31
churches have published a voter's guide.
-
00:29:33
And the voters guide was very clear to tell you
-
00:29:36
here's who you vote for and here's what you vote for issues wise.
-
00:29:38
And it was super, super clear.
-
00:29:40
And I think some of you have been desperate for Crossroads
-
00:29:43
to give you that for a long, long time.
-
00:29:45
And I'm going to give it to you right now.
-
00:29:48
I'm going to give it to you right now.
-
00:29:49
I'm going to give you the official voter's guide right now.
-
00:29:52
In fact, you might want to take your phone out.
-
00:29:54
You might want to have this with you
-
00:29:55
when you stand in the ballot box on November the 3rd.
-
00:29:58
I want you to be very clear, very unequivocally know,
-
00:30:02
here's how Crossroads wants you to vote.
-
00:30:04
Your voter's guide for 2020 is this: I want you to VOTE &.
-
00:30:10
I want you to VOTE &.
-
00:30:12
Some of you feel like you've been clickbaitedt, you haven't.
-
00:30:16
Some of you think this is a cop out, and it isn't.
-
00:30:19
And I'm going to show you why.
-
00:30:20
We're going to look at a scripture today that I think illustrates this.
-
00:30:24
And let me just be clear on what I mean when I say VOTE &.
-
00:30:26
I mean this.
-
00:30:27
I mean, on November 3rd, you should vote your biblically informed conscience
-
00:30:32
AND if you think your responsibility starts and ends at the ballot box,
-
00:30:38
you are sadly mistaken if you're a follower of Jesus.
-
00:30:40
That's what I mean by VOTE &.
-
00:30:42
There's a story where Jesus really walks us right into this example.
-
00:30:51
It comes from the book of Matthew 22.
-
00:30:52
Let's read it. It says:
-
00:31:46
What's happening in this story is too extreme factions
-
00:31:51
who would never come together on anything
-
00:31:53
come together to try to trap Jesus.
-
00:31:55
The Pharisees and the Herodians.
-
00:31:58
The Pharisees were absolutely people who were like,
-
00:32:00
"Look, we should not be aligned to this evil empire of Rome."
-
00:32:05
And yet you had the Herodians who were supporting Herod
-
00:32:07
and saying, "Hey, well, you know what?
-
00:32:09
These two factions would never have gotten together on anything.
-
00:32:12
They're trying to trap Jesus.
-
00:32:14
They come up with a really interesting dilemma.
-
00:32:17
"A simple question, Jesus.
-
00:32:19
Should we pay taxes to Caesar or not?"
-
00:32:22
Now, if Jesus simply says, "Of course, you should pay taxes to Caesar.
-
00:32:27
This is Caesar's coin and Caesar has the coin of the realm,
-
00:32:30
he's in authority. Yes, she should pay taxes to Caesar."
-
00:32:32
If he only says that, they would have said,
-
00:32:35
"See, he's a collaborator with the evil Roman Empire.
-
00:32:38
There is no way he could be the Messiah."
-
00:32:40
And they would have discredited his ministry.
-
00:32:43
On the other side, if he says, "No.
-
00:32:46
Above and beyond,
-
00:32:47
whatever Caesar tells you to do.
-
00:32:48
There is a greater God."
-
00:32:49
If he only said that, they would've said, "This guy's an insurrectionist.
-
00:32:52
He doesn't support Caesar's authority.
-
00:32:54
He should die."
-
00:32:56
And in either case, they would have discredited and honestly killed him.
-
00:32:59
They would have destroyed his ministry.
-
00:33:01
So they're trying to catch Jesus in a trap.
-
00:33:03
But Jesus is always the smartest man in the room.
-
00:33:07
And so what does he do? He says, "Give me the coin.
-
00:33:10
Give me this coin that you use to pay the tax."
-
00:33:13
And a denarius on one side would have had the image of Caesar.
-
00:33:16
And Jesus, I believe.
-
00:33:18
and all scholars believe,
-
00:33:19
was holding up that side of the coin when he said,
-
00:33:21
"Whose inscription is this?
-
00:33:22
Caesar's? Yes, of course.
-
00:33:24
Pay to Caesar what is Caesar's?"
-
00:33:26
But there's two sides to the coin.
-
00:33:29
And on the other side of the coin would have been an image
-
00:33:31
of a Roman god or a Roman goddess.
-
00:33:33
Obviously in Jesus's perspective, a false god or a false goddess.
-
00:33:37
And so he turned the coin over and said, "And give to God what is God's."
-
00:33:41
What was Jesus saying?
-
00:33:42
Jesus was saying, absolutely, in this world
-
00:33:45
there are political governing authorities and they are to be respected.
-
00:33:50
And at the same time, God is a greater authority.
-
00:33:54
And so if you're going to look at this, honestly, you VOTE &.
-
00:33:59
Because, yes, we give to Caesar what is Caesar's,
-
00:34:01
but we give to God what is God's.
-
00:34:03
That's why I subscribe to the radical middle.
-
00:34:07
You've heard Brian talk about that.
-
00:34:08
And some of you are like, what's the radical middle?
-
00:34:09
It feels like a copout.
-
00:34:10
And I'm telling you, it's not.
-
00:34:12
It's way easier to pick a tribe.
-
00:34:15
You got people on your tribe.
-
00:34:16
You've got people who support your opinion on your tribe.
-
00:34:19
There's whole economic engines supporting the tribes.
-
00:34:22
It's way easier to pick an extreme.
-
00:34:24
It's a lot harder to sit in the radical middle
-
00:34:27
and help understand what Jesus means when he says
-
00:34:30
give to Caesar what is Caesar's and to God what is God's.
-
00:34:32
I'll just tell you, I live in the radical middle.
-
00:34:34
I've lived in the radical middle before we named it the radical middle.
-
00:34:38
Interesting, I came across a quote from an African-American activists
-
00:34:42
and musical artist, Christian music artist Sho Baraka, and he says this:
-
00:35:02
And I'll just tell you, man, he's starting to get it how I feel.
-
00:35:07
Because I'm just -- this is just Chuck.
-
00:35:08
This is just me talking.
-
00:35:10
As a black man, I am disturbed by the over and implied racism
-
00:35:16
that I hear in Republican Party politics.
-
00:35:19
Because here's the thing, oftentimes, I'm the only black man in the room.
-
00:35:23
And my my Republican brothers and sisters,
-
00:35:25
who are Christians I'm talking about,
-
00:35:27
they can forget that I'm in the room.
-
00:35:28
And I have heard things and had things said to me that deeply disturbed me.
-
00:35:34
And I am also deeply disturbed by the undermining of scripture
-
00:35:38
that I hear from Democrats who are also Christians.
-
00:35:43
Because sometimes I'm the only independent in the room
-
00:35:47
and my Democrat brothers and sisters, who are Christians,
-
00:35:49
can forget that I'm in the room.
-
00:35:51
And I hear things that deeply disturbed me.
-
00:35:54
And the question I have is this: I feel the tear.
-
00:35:57
I feel the pull.
-
00:35:58
Can I be a conservative black man who also is passionate about social justice?
-
00:36:04
Can I stand in that place?
-
00:36:07
Maybe you feel it this way: Can I be a woman
-
00:36:10
who wants to see women treated equally in the workplace
-
00:36:13
but also doesn't support abortion?
-
00:36:15
Or can I be a successful white male entrepreneur
-
00:36:18
who's a capitalist and believes in free markets,
-
00:36:20
but also cares deeply about taking care of the poor?
-
00:36:23
Or maybe you feel like I can be someone who's really concerned
-
00:36:26
about the overreach of government and cares for the planet?
-
00:36:30
Or maybe you're asking can I be a first generation American
-
00:36:33
who wants stronger borders and a clear immigration policy?
-
00:36:37
And friends, the answer biblically is yes.
-
00:36:39
Yes, we can. We can stand in this place of tension and be who we are
-
00:36:44
because I'm not here to try to support or maintain
-
00:36:47
primarily the unity of the United States of America.
-
00:36:50
That's great if that happens, but we must maintain the unity of the church.
-
00:36:54
And in the church, you should be able to stand in those different places
-
00:36:57
and still be brothers and sisters in Christ.
-
00:36:58
[applause]
-
00:37:02
We should be able to stand that way.
-
00:37:05
So vote your biblically informed conscience.
-
00:37:07
Hear me very clearly, recognize that it's never going to be clear
-
00:37:10
and it's never gonna be perfect.
-
00:37:12
And you can do that as long as you embrace the &.
-
00:37:16
So what is the &? What is the &?
-
00:37:19
I'll give you three practical ways to VOTE &.
-
00:37:22
The first is VOTE & bear one another's burdens,
-
00:37:28
because we are complex beings living in a complex time.
-
00:37:32
Galatians 6:2 says this:
-
00:37:43
There's a guy named Rufus Miles,
-
00:37:44
and he used to lead the Office of the Budget in government.
-
00:37:47
And he has a principle, a law that's named after him is called Miles' Law.
-
00:37:50
And he said this:
-
00:37:55
Isn't that true? Where you stand depends on where you sit.
-
00:37:58
What is he saying?
-
00:37:59
Our cultural perspectives determine --
-
00:38:02
our cultural context, I should say, determine our perspectives in life.
-
00:38:05
If you grew up middle class,
-
00:38:07
you have a middle class perspective on life.
-
00:38:08
If you grew up poor, you have a poor perspective on life.
-
00:38:11
If you grew up wealthy all the time, that's your perspective.
-
00:38:14
If you grew up African-American.
-
00:38:15
If you grew up Asian.
-
00:38:16
If you grew up Hispanic.
-
00:38:17
If you grew up in a family that was a one lever Democrat.
-
00:38:19
If you grew up in a family that was a one level Republican.
-
00:38:21
Regardless of how you grew up, where you stand depends on where you sit.
-
00:38:25
So let's not act like our political opinions were shaped in a vacuum
-
00:38:29
because they weren't, for any of us they weren't.
-
00:38:32
And we just need to understand that.
-
00:38:34
And we also have something working against us.
-
00:38:37
Actually we're going to have a guest next week
-
00:38:39
who's going to dig into this even more detail.
-
00:38:40
I think you're gonna love what he has to say,
-
00:38:42
even though it'll be challenging for us to go beyond what he has to say.
-
00:38:45
But man telling you, we all have a fundamental cognitive error
-
00:38:49
that gets in the way when it comes to things like this.
-
00:38:51
It's called the fundamental attribution error.
-
00:38:53
And here's a definition of it.
-
00:38:54
It's a cognitive bias that causes us to attribute
-
00:38:57
another person's behavior to their character,
-
00:38:59
what kind of person they are,
-
00:39:01
while attributing our behavior to social and environmental factors.
-
00:39:06
Let me give you an example.
-
00:39:09
Don't we all have that person who's always late for the meeting?
-
00:39:13
Right? Right?
-
00:39:14
Or the person who's always late for the family function?
-
00:39:16
You know who I'm talking about, right? You know what I'm talking about.
-
00:39:18
If you can't think of who that person is, you know what they say, right?
-
00:39:23
Might be you. Might be you.
-
00:39:25
But, hey, we all know that person.
-
00:39:26
And here's the thing, when they're consistently late,
-
00:39:29
what do you think about that person?
-
00:39:30
Do you think they're lazy?
-
00:39:31
You think they just don't respect other people's time?
-
00:39:33
That's exactly what you think.
-
00:39:36
What do you think when you're late?
-
00:39:39
I mean when we're late it's legitimate, right?
-
00:39:40
I mean, there was a conversation that couldn't end
-
00:39:42
and I had to finish the conversation.
-
00:39:44
Or the traffic today, I planned, I prepped, but it --
-
00:39:47
It was just there was an accident. There was something.
-
00:39:48
We always have an excuse, but when it's another person's issue,
-
00:39:51
we say it's their problem.
-
00:39:53
nd that's exactly the problem with our politics.
-
00:39:55
You know what? The Democrats are all corrupt.
-
00:39:58
The Republicans are all heartless.
-
00:40:00
Who are we fooling, all the Democrats are closet socialists.
-
00:40:03
We know that.
-
00:40:04
Who are we fooling, all Republicans are closet racists.
-
00:40:07
We know that.
-
00:40:09
And so we go back and forth in this thing
-
00:40:12
because we fall prey to the fundamental attribution error.
-
00:40:15
We all struggle.
-
00:40:16
And here's the thing, fundamental attribution error,
-
00:40:19
it drives ad sales, it makes a lot of money,
-
00:40:23
and it's terrible for relationships.
-
00:40:26
And again, remember, I'm Chuck.
-
00:40:28
I'm the Pastor you like.
-
00:40:30
Hang with me here. I'm the Pastor you like.
-
00:40:33
Mature, emotionally intelligent people don't fall for that
-
00:40:39
and you're better than that.
-
00:40:43
You are better than to buy into the lie
-
00:40:46
that your brothers and sisters who vote differently than you
-
00:40:49
are somehow evil or don't know Jesus.
-
00:40:52
You're better than that.
-
00:40:53
Friends, were better than that.
-
00:40:55
We're better than to judge a book by its cover.
-
00:40:58
We are better than that.
-
00:41:00
You are better than that.
-
00:41:04
So let's bear one another's burdens.
-
00:41:06
If I could prescribe one thing for all of us to do
-
00:41:09
between now and November, it would be to listen to people
-
00:41:12
who experience the world differently than you do.
-
00:41:16
And I mean that across the entire spectrum of things.
-
00:41:19
I mean, haves and have nots spending time together.
-
00:41:23
I mean, Christians and non-Christians spending time together.
-
00:41:25
Young and old, married and single, new citizens and old citizens,
-
00:41:30
those who love the military and those who despise the military.
-
00:41:33
If you could sit down with people who are different from you,
-
00:41:36
not to fix, but to listen and understand where they're come from,
-
00:41:41
especially people who who believe in Jesus the same way you do.
-
00:41:45
Man, think about what that would feel like
-
00:41:47
and what that would do for our ability to VOTE & bare one another's burdens.
-
00:41:53
VOTE & bear one another's burdens.
-
00:41:55
Here's the second one: VOTE &
-
00:41:57
get proximate to the problems we're trying to solve.
-
00:42:02
Bryan Stevenson wrote a book called Just Mercy,
-
00:42:04
it's also an incredible movie that's out right now
-
00:42:06
for those of you who have seen it.
-
00:42:08
And he says:
-
00:42:13
Let me tell you one thing that Washington or Columbus
-
00:42:16
or City Hall gets wrong every election.
-
00:42:20
They make you believe that the deal ends once you vote for them.
-
00:42:24
But Jesus wants you to put your money where your mouth is.
-
00:42:27
He wants more from you than just to show up at the ballot box.
-
00:42:30
Think about what it says in Micah 6:8, it says:
-
00:42:43
There is a call for us beyond the ballot box to be about the things.
-
00:42:47
So hey, vote for the issues you care about, but recognize
-
00:42:51
that a kingdom person is called not only to vote,
-
00:42:54
but to engage in this broken world.
-
00:42:57
How does that look? How does it look?
-
00:42:59
Again there's a whole bunch of issues we could apply this to.
-
00:43:01
I'm going to give you two, I'm going to give you two just as examples.
-
00:43:04
One is abortion. One is abortion.
-
00:43:06
Let me be very clear.
-
00:43:07
The Bible is clear that a baby is a fetus in the womb.
-
00:43:10
I mean, a baby is a person in the womb.
-
00:43:12
That a fetus has a soul.
-
00:43:13
That's very clear from scripture.
-
00:43:15
So if you're going to vote pro-life, if that's your thing,
-
00:43:18
then VOTE & take care of orphans and widows.
-
00:43:22
Are you called to adopt?
-
00:43:23
Are you called the foster?
-
00:43:24
Are you called to support the families who adopt and foster?
-
00:43:27
How about this one?
-
00:43:28
Are you called to advocate that felons can get their rights back
-
00:43:32
so they can take care of their own children?
-
00:43:34
If you're going to care about that issue, VOTE &
-
00:43:37
get proximate to the problems you're trying to solve.
-
00:43:41
Hebrews 13:3 says:
-
00:43:51
If you're going to vote for social issues, you need to know
-
00:43:54
that the word justice shows up 450 times in the Bible,
-
00:43:57
so there's biblical precedent for voting that way.
-
00:44:00
But if you're going to vote for that on social issues,
-
00:44:02
VOTE & support those programs that don't just give a hand out,
-
00:44:07
but give a hand up, because a hand out never helped anybody alone.
-
00:44:12
And recognize that people need to be growing in their ability
-
00:44:15
to take care of their own responsibilities in their own families.
-
00:44:18
That's how generational poverty is ultimately broken,
-
00:44:21
not just dependence.
-
00:44:22
So if you're going to vote social issues, VOTE & be about those things,
-
00:44:27
get proximate to those problems.
-
00:44:28
Again, 2 Thessalonians 3:10:
-
00:44:38
Tension. We don't get to escape the tension.
-
00:44:41
It's hard, any decision in life that's of consequence is hard
-
00:44:45
and we have to hold the tension in this way.
-
00:44:47
VOTE &.
-
00:44:48
And so ask yourself, whatever the issue is for you,
-
00:44:51
whatever things you're passionate about, ask yourself,
-
00:44:54
what am I doing as a citizen as I VOTE & what's God calling me to do
-
00:44:59
beyond my vote to get proximate to that problem?
-
00:45:04
And I'll just tell you, I go I'll go back to 2012.
-
00:45:06
For me, as I thought about 2012 and the election,
-
00:45:09
what I recognized from me was the thing that I was passionate about,
-
00:45:14
that I believed Obama was passionate about,
-
00:45:16
was bringing about equality, equality.
-
00:45:18
That was a big deal for me.
-
00:45:20
And what I had to recognize though, is my vote is not the only way,
-
00:45:24
nor is it the main way that God has called me to engage in that issue.
-
00:45:28
And so it's probably no surprise that a few years after that,
-
00:45:31
Undivided was birthed.
-
00:45:33
And Undivided as this movement of people
-
00:45:35
who have stepped into a conversation around race,
-
00:45:37
not just to have a conversation, but to actually mobilize to action
-
00:45:41
to bring about racial justice in local communities.
-
00:45:44
We have had 5000 people go through Undivided just at Crossroads.
-
00:45:47
We've had another 14 states where people are engaging in Undivided.
-
00:45:50
And Undivided is poised to go beyond that this year.
-
00:45:53
And it isn't just that people are getting together for the conversation.
-
00:45:56
There has been real action taken by people coming out of Undivided
-
00:46:00
that is righting racial wrongs right here in our city and beyond.
-
00:46:05
VOTE &.
-
00:46:06
And I'm not saying everybody has start another program.
-
00:46:08
I'm not saying that you have to do that,
-
00:46:09
but I'm asking you, ask the Lord what is He calling you to do?
-
00:46:13
Because that was a call they put on my life that I had to step into.
-
00:46:17
And I'm so glad that I did.
-
00:46:18
In fact, one of the things that I would say is, while Undivided --
-
00:46:21
I mean, I don't think Undivided would have lived
-
00:46:23
if it had gotten political right off the bat.
-
00:46:24
I don't think that it would have lived if we said
-
00:46:26
here's the side of the political party that we're going to stand on.
-
00:46:29
I'm glad that we've been able to live in a space of a radical middle with that.
-
00:46:32
I think we've learned how to do that through things like Undivided.
-
00:46:35
But can I tell you this?
-
00:46:36
It didn't mean that I didn't get political, because I did.
-
00:46:40
I did.
-
00:46:41
In 2016, I got political about an issue I got proximate to.
-
00:46:45
And it was the power of providing quality preschool education
-
00:46:48
for kids in our city who didn't have access to it.
-
00:46:51
And the data on this is super clear.
-
00:46:52
This is a bipartisan understanding that
-
00:46:54
if you can give a kid access to quality preschool,
-
00:46:57
it literally changes the dynamics for them,
-
00:47:00
not just at third grade with reading, but in high school, graduation,
-
00:47:03
honestly, incarceration, all those things are connected.
-
00:47:06
And so I got proximate to that.
-
00:47:07
And as I got proximate to that, I got political.
-
00:47:10
I actually campaign to raise my own taxes.
-
00:47:16
I actually did commercials to raise my own taxes.
-
00:47:19
I was a spokesperson for that campaign.
-
00:47:22
And many of you in here knocked on doors.
-
00:47:24
And many of you in here voted for it,
-
00:47:26
because it passed by the largest margin of any
-
00:47:28
school levy in the history of Cincinnati.
-
00:47:31
Why? Because our passion overrode our politics.
-
00:47:34
And when we got proximate, we recognized we could VOTE & do something.
-
00:47:40
And I know, I got push back for that.
-
00:47:42
I got push back for that.
-
00:47:43
I understand that.
-
00:47:44
I also know that there are kids in our church who are in preschool
-
00:47:48
because of what many of us helped to bring about for them.
-
00:47:52
And I'm proud of that. I'm proud of that.
-
00:47:54
[applause]
-
00:47:56
VOTE & get proximate to the problems.
-
00:47:59
Here's the final thing:
-
00:48:02
VOTE & pledge allegiance to a King and a Kingdom above all.
-
00:48:07
Because at the end of the day, as Christians,
-
00:48:09
our ultimate reason for hope doesn't rest in any candidate.
-
00:48:13
It doesn't rest in any politic party.
-
00:48:15
It doesn't rest in a political system.
-
00:48:16
It doesn't rest in a country.
-
00:48:18
It rest in a King and in a Kingdom,
-
00:48:20
who has inaugurated hope for everyone in the world
-
00:48:23
through the death, burial, and resurrection of himself, Jesus Christ.
-
00:48:27
That's the ultimate vote.
-
00:48:29
That's the ultimate thing that we stand for.
-
00:48:31
Jesus put it this way in Matthew 6:33, he said:
-
00:48:40
What is it that you're freaking out about?
-
00:48:42
Let me tell you what, if you seek him first
-
00:48:46
all these things will be added unto you.
-
00:48:48
Let me ask a question: What would it look like
-
00:48:49
if Jesus was in charge of your neighborhood?
-
00:48:53
What would it look like if Jesus was in charge of your city?
-
00:48:56
What would it look like if Jesus was in charge of your country?
-
00:48:58
What would it look like if Jesus was in charge of the world?
-
00:49:01
Our Christian hope is that we are marching toward a day
-
00:49:04
when that's going to be true, where everything in the world
-
00:49:07
is going to operate the way the King desires it to operate.
-
00:49:10
And so we are to be people who participate now in the coming of that Kingdom.
-
00:49:16
There are some people who've been nominated,
-
00:49:19
and it's you and it's me.
-
00:49:20
We've been nominated to participate with Jesus
-
00:49:23
in the bringing about of his Kingdom.
-
00:49:26
There's a verse that has a phrase tied to it.
-
00:49:28
And I just want to explain it to you,
-
00:49:30
because oftentimes I think the phrase is misused.
-
00:49:33
In John 17:16 Jesus is praying for the church.
-
00:49:37
How we doing? You guys are quiet.
-
00:49:38
Are we good? Everybody good?
-
00:49:39
Let's just take a break.
-
00:49:42
I'll tell you one thing that was really funny about preparing for this weekend.
-
00:49:45
I had to be super intentional about the clothing I wore this weekend.
-
00:49:51
If you go to Crossroads often, you know, I have a lot of blue shirts
-
00:49:54
and I have a lot of red shirts.
-
00:49:55
Those are like my shirts.
-
00:49:56
Those just happen to be my shirts.
-
00:49:58
So I'm leaving -- I'm leaving and I'm like,
-
00:50:00
"I cannot wear a blue shirt or a red shirt this weekend."
-
00:50:03
Guys, I'm talking about a shirt.
-
00:50:05
I was freaking out about this.
-
00:50:06
I'm like, OK. So green. I green is green neutral?
-
00:50:08
I'm spilling water on it, but green is neutral.
-
00:50:11
Now, you think I'm money hungry or something?
-
00:50:12
I don't know what you would make from green, but anyway.
-
00:50:15
There was a Green Party, wasn't there?
-
00:50:17
That was -- see, I can't even win with green.
-
00:50:20
Oh, my goodness. I can't even win with green.
-
00:50:21
So back to what I was saying.
-
00:50:23
Back to the Bible.
-
00:50:24
Let's go back to the Bible.
-
00:50:25
So Jesus is praying for the church and John 17:16, he says:
-
00:50:32
And so there's this phrase that comes from this where we say,
-
00:50:35
as followers of Jesus, we are in the world but not of the world.
-
00:50:40
But oftentimes I think that phrase is used
-
00:50:43
to justify retreat from the world.
-
00:50:46
So let's just keep reading two verses later.
-
00:50:49
What is he to say about that?
-
00:50:50
He says:
-
00:50:55
So if you're a follower of Jesus, you are in the world, but not of the world,
-
00:50:59
but you were absolutely called to engage the world.
-
00:51:03
And when is the church at its best?
-
00:51:06
When is the church best equipped to engage a broken world?
-
00:51:11
It's when we're united.
-
00:51:13
It's when we are one.
-
00:51:14
It's when we are unified.
-
00:51:16
Jesus says in John 17:21:
-
00:51:31
How can we be one when we disagree on these issues?
-
00:51:36
How can we be one? We can be one when we choose
-
00:51:39
to put our faith filter above our political filter,
-
00:51:44
when we choose not to be divided over the person
-
00:51:47
who's going to sit in an Oval Office for four years
-
00:51:50
and instead unite under a King who's going to reign forever.
-
00:51:55
That's how we do this.
-
00:51:56
What does it look like practically?
-
00:51:58
Well, I can think of any number of people in my life
-
00:52:01
where I have different political perspectives from them.
-
00:52:03
And one of the things that was helpful for me with this message
-
00:52:05
is I ran it through all of those people.
-
00:52:07
I talked to people who were different from me
-
00:52:09
in how they think about these things, because you know what?
-
00:52:11
At the end of the day, we might disagree on those issues,
-
00:52:14
but we're one in Christ.
-
00:52:16
So we choose to give each other grace.
-
00:52:18
We choose to keep talking about the tough issues.
-
00:52:21
And at the end of the day,
-
00:52:22
we choose above all else to be together, to be one.
-
00:52:25
And we can all do that.
-
00:52:27
Let me tell you my vision is for Crossroads.
-
00:52:30
My vision is that we would be a radically inclusive
-
00:52:34
and radically engaged church, a church that embraces the &,
-
00:52:39
a church that believes that you don't have to check
-
00:52:41
your political affiliations at the door, but a church that says
-
00:52:44
we're going to be people who elevate our unity in Jesus above partisan politics
-
00:52:49
and be about the business of bringing about the Kingdom of Jesus right here.
-
00:52:54
Right here. We're gonna VOTE & so that the world can believe
-
00:53:00
that He is the one that got has sent.
-
00:53:05
So I got two things for us to do as practical,
-
00:53:08
so what?
-
00:53:09
Now, what kinds of things.
-
00:53:10
And the first is I think we collectively need to repent.
-
00:53:16
We need to repent.
-
00:53:18
Repentance is a word in the Bible that means to change direction.
-
00:53:21
It's to recognize I've been going a way that doesn't honor God
-
00:53:23
or I've been going a way that actually isn't helpful for me
-
00:53:25
and I need to change my direction.
-
00:53:27
And I believe that as it relates to this 2020 election season,
-
00:53:31
we need to repent collectively as a community.
-
00:53:35
Some of us need to repent for taking our vote too seriously
-
00:53:41
and being so wrapped up in the partisan politics of what's going on
-
00:53:45
that we put more eggs in the earthly political basket
-
00:53:48
than we have in the Kingdom basket and we need to repent.
-
00:53:53
Others of us need to repent for taking our vote way too lightly.
-
00:53:57
And because it's contentious and because it's complex,
-
00:54:00
we've chosen to disengage when you need to be engaged and we need to repent.
-
00:54:07
And I think others of us need to just be honest and say
-
00:54:09
political differences have put space between you
-
00:54:13
and people who Jesus said well worth dying for.
-
00:54:17
And we need to just recognize that those things don't need to divide us
-
00:54:20
and that Jesus wants us to be one
-
00:54:21
despite the differences we have on these issues.
-
00:54:26
So I want to invite us to have a moment of repentance right now.
-
00:54:28
A prayer that if you want to do that, if you want to say
-
00:54:31
to God right now, "God, I want to have a different perspective.
-
00:54:34
I want to be in a different place, particularly as it relates
-
00:54:36
to You and Your kingdom and to other people around me."
-
00:54:39
Then I want to invite you in this moment of repentance
-
00:54:42
to pray this prayer with me with every eye closed.
-
00:54:44
Right now this is between you and the Lord.
-
00:54:46
This is not between you and me.
-
00:54:50
If you know that this is what you need,
-
00:54:51
then I want you to pray this prayer after me.
-
00:54:53
You can say, Jesus, I lay all my party affiliation,
-
00:54:58
all my political rights, all my social goals,
-
00:55:06
and worldly identities at your feet.
-
00:55:10
Unite my heart to fear your name
-
00:55:15
and submit every other allegiance to Your throne.
-
00:55:24
I want to play that again.
-
00:55:28
And in some people, I think you were hesitant to pray it,
-
00:55:31
out of fear because you didn't know what the words were.
-
00:55:38
I'm just going to invite you to pray again.
-
00:55:41
Jesus, I lay all my party affiliation, all my political rights,
-
00:55:48
all my social goals, a nd worldly identities at your feet.
-
00:55:57
Unite my heart to fear Your name
-
00:55:59
and submit every other allegiance to Your throne.
-
00:56:05
Amen.
-
00:56:12
The second thing that we're going to do is this act of unity
-
00:56:17
that has united followers of Jesus across all kinds of regimes,
-
00:56:22
whether it was an empire, a dictatorship, a democracy,
-
00:56:26
wherever followers of Jesus have gathered,
-
00:56:28
this act has united us all, it's communion.
-
00:56:32
This symbol of unity, this symbol of solidarity,
-
00:56:35
where we celebrate and solidify that we are one under the blood of Jesus Christ,
-
00:56:40
that the thing that unites us ultimately is
-
00:56:42
that God of the universe thought we were worth dying for
-
00:56:45
and He offered Himself to us through His broken body and His blood.
-
00:56:48
He brought us into a family, he's adopted us and now we are one in Christ.
-
00:56:53
Paul puts it this way in 1 Corinthians, 10:16-17:
-
00:57:16
So, friends, we're going to take communion at our sites.
-
00:57:18
If you're online, you're going to be able to participate with this.
-
00:57:21
But I just want you to think about for this year, what's your guide?
-
00:57:24
It's VOTE &.
-
00:57:26
Vote your biblically informed conscience,
-
00:57:28
recognize it is never going to be clear
-
00:57:30
and it's never going to be perfect, but VOTE & bear one another's burdens.
-
00:57:35
VOTE & get proximate to the problems we're trying to solve.
-
00:57:38
And VOTE & pledge allegiance ultimately to a King and His Kingdom.
-
00:57:43
Let's pray God. God, I ask that in this time, in this moment,
-
00:57:46
You would seal people who are engaged in this right now
-
00:57:50
with a solidarity and a oneness and a love that only You can provide.
-
00:57:55
Help us to take that out to others.
-
00:57:57
Help us to be salt and light and love in the world around us.
-
00:58:01
In Jesus' name, Amen.
-
00:58:03
- So if you want to take communion right now from home or wherever you are
-
00:58:07
as a way to remember Jesus
-
00:58:08
and be brought together with other believers and followers of Jesus
-
00:58:12
that have been doing this for thousands of years,
-
00:58:15
you could take communion with us right now
-
00:58:17
if you just have something to eat and something to drink.
-
00:58:20
If you don't have something to eat and drink,
-
00:58:22
you actually can pause this video and go grab
-
00:58:24
something to eat and drink and do this with us right now.
-
00:58:29
So when Jesus was sitting around the table with his best friends,
-
00:58:32
with his followers, he said to them,
-
00:58:34
"I want you to do this, to remember me."
-
00:58:37
He said this bread, in my case, this doughnut right here,
-
00:58:42
this represents the body of Christ that is broken for you.
-
00:58:47
Eat it. And remember him.
-
00:58:51
Then he took the wine that he had at the table.
-
00:58:54
I have some Crossroads coffee right here.
-
00:58:56
Whatever drink you have in front of you, take it.
-
00:59:00
And the drink that you're about to drink,
-
00:59:02
this is representing the blood of Jesus that shed for you.
-
00:59:06
Drink it and remember him.
-
00:59:08
You know, we get to Take Heart in 2020
-
00:59:11
because of what Jesus did years ago thinking about us today.
-
00:59:16
So I hope that you go into this week taking heart,
-
00:59:19
remembering what Jesus has done for you so that you have hope
-
00:59:22
and know that you are united with other believers of Jesus
-
00:59:26
all over the globe for generations and generations because of what He's done.
-
00:59:30
Join us next week for week three of Don't Panic, Take Heart 2020
-
00:59:35
where we actually are gonna get to hear from a special guest speaker.
-
00:59:38
We'll see you next week.