Kingdom Conversations: Why Christians Must Engage in the Culture War
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For us, as Christians, it's about the Kingdom. It's not this life, it's the next.
And we want to see those people that want us killed and murdered because we don't agree with them.
We want to see them in heaven. Welcome to The Rap Report with your host,
Andrew Rapoport, where we provide biblical interpretation and application. This is a ministry of striving for eternity in the
Christian podcast community. For more content or to request a speaker for your church, go to strivingforeternity .org.
Welcome to another edition of The Rap Report. I'm your host, Andrew Rapoport, the executive director of Striving for Eternity and the
Christian podcast community of which this podcast is a proud member. We're here to give you biblical interpretations and applications for the
Christian life. And today I have a fellow friend and again, another board member from the
Truth Fellowship. You guys may have remembered maybe just two or three episodes ago where we had
Russell Fuller on talking about his message that he gave us at the National Conference on Antisemitism.
And I am bringing really the guy who we all kind of credit with the Truth Fellowship, Pastor Jeff Gower, to come on because he did a message for the conference that was delivered on Sunday that was a really good, well,
I say warning for the church, but also kind of the kick that many of us needed to take a stand.
And Jeff has been on the show before. We've talked about the stand he took as he stood up to the
Easy Free Church and they basically tried to kick him out for the nerve of calling out the truth of social justice.
And that's what created really what we now know as the Truth Fellowship. Pastor Jeff, welcome to The Wrap Report again.
Well, thank you for having me on, brother. I'm excited to be here. Yeah, it was really these woke wars one that brought us all together when we were fighting against the racial social justice nonsense.
You were part of crafting the Dallas statement back in 2018, brother. So that's what got
Russell Fuller in trouble because he signed it and lost his job at Southern Seminary. And I was fighting against wokeness in the free church, which got me expelled, as well as David Whitney.
And we all rallied to one another. And lo and behold, we have the Truth Fellowship. Yeah, so if you want, you can go to the truth fellowship dot org.
That's where you can find out about it. I'm sure that we'll eventually have the videos from the conference up there.
I don't know that they're there yet. And we are working on a book that is our 13 distinctives that we you can read what those distinctives are.
And we have a book that it's actually now in my hands to do some final tweaks to it in the formatting and just for book format.
And so it should be out very shortly. So, Jeff, you at the conference, this is now,
I guess, technically our second national conference because we had the first one at your church before we actually organized.
That was actually where we started the organization. And what came out of that conference was the
Truth Fellowship. Your message, I would say there wasn't a person there that didn't walk away with a new and refreshed if, or maybe if they didn't have one, a new need or understanding of the need to stand up against the, well, as on your podcast, you'd call the high towers.
Right. We didn't mention your high places. So you have a podcast called tearing down the high places, a podcast
I listen to regularly. Let's start with overall, what was your message? And then
I want to dig into some specifics that we talked about. Okay. So my message came from Matthew chapter 10 verses 16 to 23.
And the big idea was that the first part of Matthew 10, 1 to 15 was specific to the apostolic mission during the ministry of Jesus.
And it actually had this delegated authority to go ahead and cast out every demon and heal every disease, which was particular to that mission.
But when you get to verse 16 of Matthew 10, it transitions to something that would be in the church age.
The expectation for the church age is that we will be like sheep among wolves and we're going to be torn.
We're going to be in a truth war. It's going to be a battle. It's going to be fierce. And you're going to be dragged before kings and governors.
And maybe your own family is going to start betraying you and turning against you. So the expectation that Jesus sets for the mission of the church is such that we have to be warriors, truth warriors.
We have to be willing to suffer for the name. And if we're going to take ground in the truth war, you cannot be subtle and mild, but you have to be all in, willing to suffer and rugged and you got to have some grit.
That was kind of the big idea of the message. You got to have grit, be willing to go and take one on the chin and keep on moving and not give up.
Otherwise, you're not going to take any ground in the truth war. Yeah. And that's the thing you mentioned is the fact that we live in a culture that, well, they kind of want to soften things.
Can't we just get along? Can't we have an impact on the world, but not be in their face?
You kind of address that. Um, and shot that idea down pretty powerfully for folks who didn't listen to the message yet.
Is there a way we could just get along with the world? Can we just try to not be so in their face?
They're not really coming after us, are they? Well, I think there's a message within evangelicalism, mostly pushed by the gospel coalition and groups like that, that we ought to just preach the gospel.
We shouldn't get too political or get into the mud and deal with some of the cultural issues or fight the culture wars.
But that's not the heritage that we were given. We in America were given the heritage of George Whitefield and the great awakening and then the
American revolution. And I opened my, uh, my talk down in Florida with the story of John Mullenberg.
He was a preacher. I think he was a Lutheran down in Virginia, but he preached a sermon on Ecclesiastes chapter three, and the sermon was about a time to fight.
There is a time to fight and it was leading up to the revolutionary war. But the remarkable thing is as he finished his sermon, he came out of the pulpit and he stripped off his clerical robe to reveal a colonel's uniform under his clerical robe, and then he led 300 men to sign up for the eighth
Virginia regiment, and ultimately they went to war with Britain. That was a powerful way to start your sermon.
And for folks that were not at the national conference, it was funny because you were not on the stage for Q and A, but someone asked the question of whether you thought the revolutionary war was wrong.
Now, I don't know who wrote that question, but I do wonder if they read your notes because that is exactly how you started your sermon.
Well, it was great because they called me out in the night before I preached and said, Hey, Jeff, what do you think about that?
And I was like, I'm not telling you got to come back tomorrow. Yeah. So after I told the story of Muhlenberger, I said, well, how do we know whether that was actually right?
Just because it was cool, you know, it was dramatic. It was awesome. That doesn't mean that it was necessarily a just war.
And so I pointed out that when we declared independence from the
UK, the Americans gave a list of 27 grievances. One of them was taxation without representation.
But they also talked about how Britain is sending mercenaries often to kill them.
They're inciting the violence of the native Americans to stir up war against them.
They've burned towns and villages. They're capturing people and hauling them all the way back to Britain to stand trial.
So there's no real due process. If you can't be tried by a jury of your own peers, and then it's a mock and sham trial and they're convicted.
They were also impeding upon religious freedom. And that was a big one for Muhlenberger. The problem was they were trying to force everyone to register with the
Church of England. Well, what does that do for a Lutheran or a Baptist or a
Presbyterian? And so really there were many Presbyterians that were part of that black robe regiment that stood against King George.
So the idea was it was a just war because they were fighting for things that mattered. And then in my sermon,
I outlined seven areas that are of like kind today. Reasons why we do need to fight in the truth war, even if it touches on politics, these are moral issues that are worth fighting for and even dying for.
We have to. And this is the thing you brought up, Gospel Coalition, who they do like to we, those of us who want to stand on truth, shouldn't talk about politics, but they never seem to have a problem saying to vote for Harris and Biden and give all the justifications why
Trump is bad. It's amazing how they get into politics. We shouldn't. And there is this notion you addressed, which is the fact that many people in America think there's a separation of church and state, and this church should not get involved in state issues.
Your opening with the Black Coat Regiment really kind of nailed that because you have a pastor, preaches a sermon, then takes off his, okay, let's go to war.
He did exactly that. Is there really a separation of church and state? What should be the church's role in government or in our society?
Obviously, when Thomas Jefferson wrote about a wall of separation between church and state, he was writing to the
Danbury Baptists to assure them that they will be kept safe from government encroachment, that the state will stay within their sphere in this federalist arrangement and not impede upon the right of states and certainly of churches.
So there was a wall in how the constitution protected, first of all, speech, but also the establishment of religion.
So there's not a wall that protects the state from churches speaking to it.
We have absolute free speech to be prophetic voices, to speak to the state, to call for repentance like John the
Baptist did to Herod and say, what you're doing is unlawful. We're not getting out of our realm.
That is our realm. We have a prophetic voice to be salt and light in the culture. Salt is a preservative.
Light brings clarity and the ability to see what's going on. Well, that's what we have to be as Christians.
We've got to speak to the public square. That actually is some topics that will be in our book that's coming out for the
Truth Fellowship, because we do have sections on that. And you can go to the truthfellowship .org and you can see our distinctives and that is speaking into the public square is something that we think is a requirement for shepherds.
Yes. So the first area that I addressed in my sermon, this actually comes out of my book,
Blood Red Church. I have seven chapters. So I just mentioned one for each. Chapter one, life.
Our country is built on life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness. The first one is life.
And we have entered into an era in American history where life is so devalued that a human being is no longer regarded as a human life in the womb.
And as long as people are killing babies in the womb, we have to speak about that. If we're silent about that, there's an aspect of being complicit in it.
It's to that level. If we just ignore the issue, we are ignoring the destruction of innocent human life.
So we've got to speak about abortion, for example. There is this notion where they want to silence the
Christian. I mean, all right, you and I have a mutual view when it comes to Islam in America right now.
And what we see is right now you have the mayor of New York city leading worship services in the streets where they're taking over entire streets so that they could do a call to prayer in New York and they're being very open about what their goal is and it is
American domination, not just religiously, politically, because you can't separate those two.
You've been addressing it here in New Jersey. You've gone to their different events and did outreach there.
This is something that I think a lot of Christians are not willing to see the danger of.
And why must, if this is, I mean, the truth fellowship, we talked about the fact that yes, we started over social justice.
Now the topic we've been dealing with kind of recently is antisemitism because that's on the rise.
But I think the next big thing we're probably going to be tackling is going to be Islam. Is Islam compatible with American policy, with American government?
And can it be, I would argue, can it even be because America's based on Christian values?
So can it coincide with Christianity? It clearly cannot. So Islam is a political ideology as much as it is a religion.
When you really dig into the Hadith, the Sunnah of the prophet, and even in the Quran itself,
Islam is seeking through Sharia law to be a totalizing view of life, which includes the political realm, and it is not based on the
American conception of freedom that we derive from the Bible. And especially through the reformation, it is built on Muhammad's sword, conquering by the sword and bringing into subjection the world.
And that would include forcing anybody who's not a Muslim to pay the Jizya, Surah 929, that they can lay in wait for Christians.
And if they refuse to pay the Jizya, then they can be put to death. So it's written right in the
Quran, Surah 929. So as long as that's there, Islam can never be compatible with the freedom of our
Western world, that Christianity built. The Jizya, for folks that may not know, is a tax that the infidels, those that are not
Muslim would have to pay. And exorbitant tax. What is Andrew Rappaport doing?
This might be the most brilliantly insane concept on the internet. Yeah. I'm talking about the apologetics live podcast.
Okay. Here's the premise. A live stream on Thursdays from eight to 10 PM Eastern standard time, where you can jump in and ask any
Bible or theology question you have, and Andrew Rappaport will answer it. But here, listen, it gets even better.
You can debate him live and he doesn't even know the topic. There's been guys who have been prepared for weeks who come on the live stream and you get to watch
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Striving for Eternity would love to come to your church to spend two days with your folks, teaching them biblical hermeneutics.
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to host a Bible interpretation made easy seminar in your area. Basically the purpose of that is to bankrupt those that are not
Muslim. It's an economic force. So they understand that in America, we believe in independent freedom.
And in Islam, the word Islam has its root in the meaning to submit.
A Muslim has the root in one who submits. So Islam is about submission.
Americanism is about freedom. They're not the same and Islam will use many ways.
I mean, yes, I know that people go to the early parts of the Quran and the
Quran is not in a chronological order. It's in an order laid out by size, except for the first chapter or surah.
When you look at a chronologically, you can actually see the shift where he used to talk about peace to talking about warfare when he had to feed a lot of And so it changed.
And one of the things you end up seeing is that, yes, they talk about working within, they are about migration because they, they migrate and take over.
And the Jirzah is about an economic enforcement where basically you can't afford to live in a
Muslim country unless you become Muslim. And when they first move into a culture, they lay in wait, they don't just come out and say, yeah, we were here to impose
Sharia law on you because there's a principle called Takiyah where you are allowed to essentially lie to achieve an end, the end justifies the means.
So they won't necessarily disclose everything that the Quran says about Sharia law.
I remember when I was at Montclair state university doing a debate with an Imam and someone asked a question.
And the Imam had realized from the way I had spoken for the last three hours that I understood
Islam. He like quickly puts his hand out. He goes, don't ask that. Don't ask, you know,
I'm like, oh no, I want to ask. I want to answer this. And so I just turned to a person. I said, are you practicing
Takiyah right now? And the guy's face just went white. And he's like, you understand that?
And the Imam's like, I told you. I wish I had that recorded. There was no recording of that. But man, the look on his face, as I said that just, he went completely white because he thought it was like,
I'm going to deceive this infidel, but this infidel actually read the Quran, you know, taking your message, now your message on Sunday wasn't directed toward Islam so much as society.
But I think this is now where the big thing that we're going to be addressing. So what should be in, let's take the case of whether it's social justice.
If you want to address the antisemitism or if you want to address Islam, because I think that's the next thing, the next truth war that's going to be coming down the pike.
What should be a Christian pastor's responsibility? And then what about the Christian in the pew, our responsibility to the culture?
Should we just sit back and say, well, if this is God's will, should we just say,
Hey, well, I voted and that's my responsibility. I got a job to do. I got family to raise, or is there something else we should be doing?
Yeah. So here in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, they proclaimed Ramadan and officially recognized and honored holiday.
And especially Eid al -Fitr, which is the breaking of Ramadan. So they had to do this through a township council proclamation.
So when they proclaim that at the end of the meeting, not as they were doing it, they just did it, but at the end of the meeting, they left an opening for questions and answers to stand accountable to people of the town.
So myself and some people from Cornerstone Church stood up and challenged what they just affirmed.
And we did it by reading verses from the Quran and showing that this is incompatible with Americanism.
So not even necessarily a religious argument, but derivatively it was. So we talked about polygamy.
We talked about wife beating. Which is right in the Quran. So I read a passage on beating your wife to discipline her.
Also a child bride. We gave the age right out of the Hadith from, I think it's 31, 54.
It's Sahih al -Bukhari has a Hadith that recounts that Aisha was six years old when
Muhammad married her and nine years old when they consummated the marriage. So yeah, we read that and then told them that this is the kind of thing that's still going on all around the world in Pakistan, child brides, there's just another little girl who died of internal bleeding because the husband, an old man married her as a nine -year -old, which is allowed under Sharia because Muhammad is the example and the girl died from internal bleeding after that wedding night.
So it is despicable. And when you honor that in the United States of America, where are the pastors?
Where are the preachers and the Christians in the pews going to the town council to say, this is what you just affirmed.
Yeah. I mean, it's funny that in Islam, there was this rule that you couldn't have more than three wives because at the time
Muhammad had three wives, Aisha being the one you just mentioned being the third. And then
Muhammad goes to his adopted son's place and his adopted son wasn't home, but he got a look at his adopted son's wife and suddenly, amazingly,
God spoke to him and he can have a fourth wife. Amazing.
It's interesting because when you read Aisha's comment about it, she says, you're such a prophet of God, God always gives you what you want.
And the Muslims read that as like, see, that's proof that he's a prophet of God because God gives him what he wants in convincing his son to divorce his wife so that Muhammad can marry her and add her as another wife.
I really think that the way Aisha said that was very sarcastic. If you study into Islamic history, like I think she was like, oh yeah,
Muhammad. It's just amazing how God always gives you what you want. Yes. And what's so hilarious, if you ever just go read
Surah 33, the way Muhammad couches this quote unquote revelation from God, he does it as if it's for other people, not for himself.
He says, in case you ever wanted to marry the wife of your adopted son, and you think that might be haram or whatever, you know, just outlawed,
God has given me this revelation that it's okay to marry the divorced wife of your adopted son.
And he therefore commanded me to go ahead and do it so that you guys would know your freedom to go ahead and do it.
So he actually says, I'm doing this for you. It's, I don't really want to have to do it. And the crazy thing about the
Quran too, is that it's presented as if it's a dictation from God. Like it was already in heaven and it's not even brought through the instrumentation of Muhammad.
He's just like quoting recitation. It means recitation. The Surahs are recitation.
He's just getting these direct words that he's receiving. The interesting thing is Muhammad is all over the place in the book.
You can see this is totally about his life, him justifying himself as a prophet. And his favorite thing to do is to use the old covenant prophets as a way to justify himself.
So he recasts their stories as if they're really about him and leading to him.
You know, it's amazing. Cause that's something we see with like all the cults. I mean, Mormonism does that, you know,
I would argue the Roman Catholic church did that when they created their whole priesthood. Oh, look, we're like Israel.
We're Israel. We got priesthoods and everyone wants to mimic Israel. It's kind of funny. Cause now today, like you have people that now want to bash
Israel saying that, you know, the church is Israel. There is no Israel and yet they still copy everything.
Like try to steal from Israel. Okay. So let's start with pastors. What should pastors be doing in these different issues, whether it's social justice, antisemitism,
Islam, or whatever else we see in culture, right? I mean, Marxism, we can, there's a whole lot of things we could address.
What is the pastor's role within the congregation and beyond? So like, what role does he have to his congregation with these issues?
And then does he have a responsibility outside? Yeah, I would say it does include the pulpit.
We live in a culture that denigrates anybody for bringing an illustration that's true to life.
That actually matters in the public square. So a preacher can stand in the pulpit and talk about secretariat, the horse who back in however many decades ago had a heart that was three times larger than the average horse.
And everybody after the sermon will cheer for that and say, you know, pastor, that was a great illustration. What a big heart secretariat had because that illustration does not hurt anybody's feelings.
But as soon as a pastor stands in the pulpit and brings up an issue that not everybody's going to agree with, all of a sudden he will be vilified for it.
I'll give you a great example of this. Just a couple of nights ago, I watched a sermon from the Coram Deo conference.
It's a great conference. I'm sure mostly very much agrees with us. It's reformed, just solid people.
But one of the speakers did an entire presentation on Jay Gratia, Macon, Machen and Carl McIntyre.
And these two giants of the faith that were big in the 1930s through 50s took a slightly different approach to politics.
As Carl McIntyre went along, he became much more active, just fighting communism because he thought it was the great threat of the day, which it was.
And millions of people tuned into his radio broadcasts and read his magazines and filled the sanctuary where he would preach the gospel and exposit the text.
But he would also give illustrations relating to the culture. He would tie it to communism and how these dangers.
Well, at this conference, it was very clear that the speaker, first of all, he himself was not just expositing a passage of the text and saying nothing more.
He was delving into these matters to criticize Carl McIntyre and to say he was too active in politics.
He had lost the script. He had become the problem in this presentation. So it was very ironic because he devoted an entire talk at the
Coram Deo conference to proving how bad Carl McIntyre was for talking about politics.
But it was actually McIntyre that was helping to keep a country from going off the cliff.
And the fact of the matter is America won the cold war and Jerry Falwell and Carl McIntyre and Bob Jones and some of these culture warriors, whatever warts they have, they were the fighters that helped us win that cold war.
Because they were willing to talk about these things. Now it doesn't have to be the predominant message, right?
When we're expositing a passage, we're following the train of thought, but when you're going to make application to culture, you are allowed to talk about what actually matters in our country today.
And in fact, it's better to do that. That's my argument. And outside the church, your church is an example. Are you tired of pillows that go flat or every couple of years you, they smell bad and what are you going to do with them?
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S F E. You went to your local township meeting with the church to address the issues that they were doing that you see as a threat to, well,
Christianity primarily, but also to the country. Amen. It's not only preachers in the pulpit who need to talk about some of these things.
We need to talk about abortion often in the pulpit, because as long as these babies are being slaughtered, how can we be silent?
We have to talk about it, but it's not just the preacher in the pulpit. All of the church has a role in this.
So we've been involved with a group called Love Life that goes out in front of the abortion clinic and we just pray and we call out to women to not kill their babies, but plead with them that we could help them.
Let us throw a party for this baby and provide all the diapers you're going to need and that kind of thing.
We did see one woman turn away from going in, but in the years that we did that, we stopped in about 2023 for various reasons, and hopefully we'll resume.
We still support Love Life as a ministry. We'll get back out there, but it's a lot of hard work for a little visible fruit, and yet it needs to be done.
So that would be an example of what a whole church can do. You can go pray in front of an abortion clinic. Another example is when
Mount Laurel tried to pass this book sanctuary thing at the town council, we showed up.
It was to protect books, so -called, right? Because they were casting it as Christians are trying to ban books and we are opposed to learning.
So they would say, look, they're trying to block catcher in the rye or some fiddle around the roof or whatever.
But the truth of the matter was they had LGBTQIA plus books that introduced this to children.
It's grooming. It's grooming. It's a hundred percent what it was. We went in and called that out and said, we don't want a book sanctuary to protect these books.
And we actually opened some of those books and it was disturbing to read in front of adults at a town council meeting.
Did they cut you off like they do with so many others? Where they say you can't read it? Yeah. And they let me read it. My whole speech was like three minutes and then, you know, next man up.
But the problem for them was the next man up was also a cornerstone guy. Going like that, we had more than half the room.
See, and that they have to address. Right. And so if you do want to check out lovelife .org, we've had my friend,
Brian Ottenberger here. Brian was on, he's, he was a pastor. He's now working with Love Life.
So if you go back to when Brian was on, you could check out that and learn more about them and what they're doing.
Brian is a great guy. Brian Ottenberger. Yeah. He's the one we support here at Cornerstone. He is very worthy of support because he's the one that's getting more workers out there.
He's the multiplier. Yep. So we've got to, we should get behind him. Another one that we're connected with there is
Juan Riesco, who, if you've never seen his documentary that John Harris made for him, it is paint the wall black.
Oh, okay. Yes. Gotta go watch that. Yes. Remarkable. I have that on my list to watch.
John's brother, David told me about that. You just can encourage me to go to watch. Yeah, it's worth it.
It's a great watch. So what are some ideas? I mean, you gave a good, powerful message to really get people to see the need for us not to just sit in a pew, but to do something.
Just quickly give some of the points. Why should we as Christians take on the culture war?
Should we just be about the gospel? This is the big thing we hear. We should just be about the gospel. Why is that not the right thing to do?
Why do we have a, shall we say requirement to reach into the culture with,
I mean, the gospel, yes, I don't think anyone's going to, well, people accuse me of everything, but there's got to be more than just the gospel, comes down to some people who say, well, we should just give food to the poor and give clothing to the poor and it's the social works with no gospel and they feel better about doing that, they feel good inside.
Because no one hated them for it, but people are taking advantage of them for it. And then we have the people that just say, oh, well, let's, it's just the gospel, which
I always find funny because those very people we mentioned, gospel coalition, they say just the gospel, and then they're more than happy to talk about politics for the
Marxists, right? What is the biblical position and what are some of the warnings or challenges that you had for us?
So a couple of examples, I might've used both of these in the sermon, but one of them is John Witherspoon.
He wrote a sermon and delivered it pre -revolutionary war called the dominion of providence over the passions of men.
And he exposits from one of the Psalms where it says, the wrath of man shall praise you, and he talks about how even the wrath of man, war, is part of God's providence, and there's a time for war.
And the same way Muhlenberg did the same thing, the result of being willing to fight, even to engage to the level of taking up arms, imagine that that ever would be the case, would
Christians be too soft now to ever take up arms if there was a threat at that level? Tyranny, absolute tyranny.
In the declaration of independence, that was the bar. You don't just sever ties with a governing authority for trivial matters.
It's when you have an absolute despot who is preventing you from worshiping God, right, you take up arms.
And so that example would be one, we are the children of the Reformation and of the American Revolution.
How much do we appreciate what our forefathers did? The second example I gave in my sermon was when
America got involved in the Korean War. In the Korean War, the North ended up, it became kind of a stalemate, but the
North that followed the more communist totalitarian regime is almost devoid of Christians today.
There are some, but they're missionaries in hiding. And it's a very underground movement, maybe a hundred thousand out of millions of people.
But in the South, if you go across that border and that no -go zone, South Korea has 30 million evangelical
Christians. So don't tell me politics doesn't matter to the gospel. The pious sounding, you know, just preach the gospel makes it sound like you're taking the higher road.
It's all about the spiritual. You're not concerned with the earthly. Well, guess what? The earthly also affects the spiritual.
This is how God's world works. So when America helped the South hold off the incursion of communism, the result is freedom.
Pyongyang in North Korea used to be the Jerusalem of the East. It was the most
Christian city in the far East. And now it's darkness because of political realities.
So in the same way, if there are issues like that in our day, who are we to keep silent?
We have a responsibility to fight in these truth wars. I agree. I think one of the issues you bring up having guns, would
Christians be willing to take up arms? You know, in America, the argument was always that the government couldn't have, we couldn't have a tyranny because all the people that have the guns there's too many masses of people that are conservative that have the guns.
The left has heard that message. If you just listen to, I mean, I don't encourage you to go to blue sky, but you can just go on X and see the liberals.
They're openly saying that they're recognizing that, oh, the second amendment isn't about guns for hunting.
Suddenly they know the purpose of guns because they're saying that all of the leftist, the ones who are burning down cities and causing violence, they're the ones saying they need guns to stop the tyranny of Trump and conservatism.
And so they're encouraging all of these wacky people who you now see trying to assassinate and are assassinating people like Charlie Kirk.
They're willing to now get the guns. Now, when that becomes an even playing field and you have guns in the hands of both the radical left and the conservative right, now that becomes the stalemate, now the government can, with the help of the radical, because they're using these leftists in the cities.
For those who think that we could sit on the sidelines, the reality is, is that they're openly saying that they need to arrest or eliminate anyone who voted for Trump when they get power.
And they're going and buying the guns to carry it out. Now the government won't maybe enforce it, but what are they going to do?
Well, what they're doing now, they're just going to foam up the rhetoric and let people run wild and have a double standard of justice where,
Oh, you know, they were just trying, they weren't trying to make a political statement or cause an insurrection.
They just had a bad upbringing. And you're seeing this where these random beatings and killings, where you have a group of people that know, well, we're not going to get charged with it.
We can get away with it. What are you going to do, Pastor, as you just sit at your pulpit and say, well,
I just, my job is for my congregation. You talked a lot, Jeff, about the reformation and what was happening with the reformation.
And this is something that what you went through, what I went through during COVID, right, where you had organizations that say,
Oh no, we're, we are going to decide your fate without a trial or a fair trial, right, you ended up having one where you showed up and they wouldn't let you talk in your defense because they already had the conclusion, right?
Right. This is what we end up seeing is going on and it's going to continue. And if pastors think, well, you know, when it gets bad, then
I can stand up. Then it's too late. Right. If people don't stand up for truth when it's easy, are they really going to stand up for truth when it's hard?
Right. And are the men of the church ready to stand up against one of these radical leftists that might come charging in guns blazing?
Will the church men be conceal carry permitted by the state?
You know, we're not going to be vigilantes, but doing what's lawful and able to defend the flock.
Do you have men like that in your church? If you don't, you really should. You need to talk to the men because the men will step up if told that this is what is good and godly.
But if preachers are soft and subtle and mild and suave, they'll never tell men that that's part of their responsibility to be protectors.
What if a pastor has the sword of the spirit in front of him on the pulpit and a gun under his clothes with the conceal carry permit, just in case something happens and he sees it go down.
There are some pastors that do that. I think that's good. But see, if we're going to have some kind of major,
I don't know, civil war in this country, if it gets to that point, it's not going to be a group of Christians with their 12 friends banding together like a vigilante band to resist it, it's going to be a, let's say the pendulum swings all the way back to where it was in 2020 and when
Biden got into office and we saw all of the huge government incursion, let's say in 2029, it swings back that way and you have all of a sudden they pack the court and there's 13 justices and they make
Puerto Rico and DC new states so that they can always win the Senate and the
House. Well, there's going to be governors of red states, the lesser magistrates in a sense, well, really it's not even lesser because in federalism, the states are are like little sovereigns themselves.
So there'll be some governors who will stand up and entire states will refuse to implement what comes down from that leftist government and what are the
Christians going to do at that point? Are we going to stand on the doctrine of the lesser magistrates?
Like was it true? Hella who wrote that book? You familiar with that book? I'm not familiar with which book you're talking about.
I know Joe Boone has lesser magistrates. I thought that was Joe Boone wrote one on that, but it could be probably several that wrote on it.
But yeah, that kind of principle. Well, they didn't invent it. They were going back to Alvin. Was it Matthew Truella?
Yeah, yeah. That's him. I know he's written on that, but I forget the title of his book. Yeah. So Christians need to understand these things and be prepared if it goes that way, but as it is,
I feel like we're taking ground these days, we're driving trans people out of women's sports and closing the bathrooms and fix things.
We're not doing it with violence. We're not doing it with guns. We're doing it kind of the same way.
Charlie Kirk did with words. Yes. Right. And, and their response is violence as they say that we're the ones doing the violence.
Amen. That's exactly right. And that's really my message is that we got to all be a million Charlie Kirks. Yeah, because I mean, the reality is, is that there is a spiritual war going on as much as what we see in the culture.
That's the solution. The solution is not to defeat them at the ballot box, though we should.
The solution is the gospel. It always boggles my mind that the Marxist will partner with the
Muslims. It boggles my mind that you have like queers for Palestine. I always think about the
New York city girl who she went to Gaza to support the Palestinian movement with her queers for Palestine sign and they beat her.
For not having a Jihad for having the, the being clothed and she couldn't believe it.
She's like, but I'm supporting you. And as they're beating her and getting her out of there, out of their land.
Right. And yet she probably still supports the left movement. Like she doesn't get it somehow.
Christianity is the wicked group. The Muslims want to kill the homosexuals, throw them off of buildings.
We want them to be converted to Christ and not by force. Like the Muslims will want to do.
You either submit to them or pay a huge tax or die. And we say, come to Christ and live.
Amen. And they want to go to the, I mean, they're willing to work with anyone that just pushes their demonic agenda.
Yeah. The red green Alliance is so fake and ridiculous. The red communists and the green Islam. They're only bedfellows as long as they need to fight us.
Yeah. They think once they've conquered us and obviously Islam plans to conquer the liberals, cause as far as worldviews go, they're more opposed than Christianity and Islam, but they're totalitarian and they don't believe in freedom.
Yeah. So what I would say is like, you see a group of Muslims walking around an old church building of some liberal
PC USA or United Methodist church, and they've died out and they need to sell their building, the
Muslims want to turn it into a mosque. My point is, where are the Christians that are saying,
Hey, pastors, elders, deacons, let's put in a church plant. Let's buy it ourselves. Let's find a way to buy it.
Let's take that ground and hold it, put a conservative church there and grow it.
We need to be taking ground in the truth war and stop backing off and acting like the threats are no big deal.
And we just need to be silent and accepting of everything in the culture. No, we need to go win. We have to go win the culture war.
And it's not winning as if like, that's our goal. I often think about this, like with abortion, who's killing their babies.
The liberals are killing their own babies. We don't kill our babies. None of the conservative babies are at danger.
Even if you know, there's fornication among conservatives. I don't know of any that even consider killing the baby.
So what we're saying is we're not just trying to win. Otherwise we'd say, yeah, yeah. Go kill your babies because we want to win.
Your numbers will be dwindling. No, we want to save your babies. We realize liberal, you're probably going to raise that kid liberal.
But we love that baby because that baby's made in the image of God. It's not about winning for us.
It's about the truth and love and life, liberty. We have true transcendent principles that we stand on and the left doesn't understand that.
They're just trying to win. They just hate Trump, like Trump derangement syndrome. And they hate Christians, but they haven't really considered and thought through the foundation of these matters.
And if anyone wants to deny that you look at Greta Thunberg, perfect example.
She's all about, we got to end oil. We got to end oil. We got to end oil. And then what ends up happening?
Oh, now we need Iran. We need oil. We need, wait, what?
They'll throw out anything just because if Trump had the solution to cancer, they would be arguing.
We need to keep cancer safe. Yep. You know, it's amazing, but you're right for the left.
It is about power for themselves, not the people, but those in office, those in higher office for us as Christians, it's about the kingdom.
Amen. It's not this life. It's the next. And we want to see those people that want us killed and murdered because we don't agree with them.
We want to see them in heaven. Amen. I mean, look, the Marxist left does have something in common with Islam.
They are all about submission to them and they'll use any means necessary.
If that sounds familiar, if you follow politics, Jeffers, who's the head of the minority, the
Democrats in the house, that's exactly the language he used and what they have to do once they get power back, any means necessary to prevent
Republicans or conservatives from ever getting power again, take them at their word, just like you take
Muslims at their word, but what we want is not the same thing, right?
We want these people to come to Christ and have eternal life. Amen. Pastor Jeff, any closing comments you have?
Brothers and sisters, let's go fight for the cause of truth, even at great personal cost.
Even if people will ridicule you and say that you're a fundamentalist or you're a Christian nationalist. That was the big charge that they brought against me in the free church for saying these kinds of things.
They mean it to deride you, but where any derision as an honor that we could suffer shame for the sake of the name of Jesus and don't back down.
And you could check out Pastor Jeff's podcast. It is Tearing Down the High Places. It is where he deals with cultural issues.
You can also check us out at thetruthfellowship .org. Maybe you want to consider joining the
Truth Fellowship. We're a big part of what we're doing. If you are a young man who is thinking you may want to get into ministry, well, you want to stand for truth.
The Truth Fellowship is here to help disciple you and to come alongside you. That's one of the things that we're going to be looking to do is to, as Pastor Jeff said, to multiply, to duplicate men who are willing to stand on the truth.
We are looking for young men who want to be discipled. We just had our national conference not too long ago.
We had four young men who stepped up and we're, as a board, we're all saying, okay, how do we pour into these different men?
And so next year in May, if you want to come, we don't have the location nailed down yet between two different places we're looking at, but we're going to have our national conference, encourage you guys to start checking out what the
Truth Fellowship conference is going to be so you can join and say, hey, yeah, I want to be discipled. So some resources for you.
And with that, that's a wrap. This podcast is part of the Striving for Eternity ministry. For more content or to request a speaker or seminar to your church, go to strivingforeternity .org.