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Donald Trump is the leading Republican presidential candidate by nearly two-to-one. He is clearly dominating the agenda for tomorrow night's debate. Why?
According to David Brooks,
Trump is a product of our cultural chaos. A columnist for The New York
Times, Brooks is one of the most insightful commentators of our day. I
think he's spot-on: "The times are perfect for Donald Trump. He's an
outsider, which appeals to the alienated. He's confrontational, which
appeals to the frustrated. And, in a unique 21st-century wrinkle, he's a
narcissist who thinks he can solve every problem, which appeals to
people who in challenging times don't feel confident in their
understanding of their surroundings and who crave leaders who seem to
be."
Brooks notes that only 29 percent of Americans think the nation is on
the right track. Just three in 10 Americans believe their views are
represented in Washington. He concludes: "Never before have we
experienced a moment with so much public alienation and so much private,
assertive and fragile self-esteem. Trump is the perfect confluence of
these trends…. He is deeply rooted in the currents of our time."
Popular leaders reflect their times. Transformational leaders redeem them. (Tweet this)
In The Jesus Agenda,
Albert Reyes challenges Christians to be "agents of redemption," people
of "courage, compassion and conviction on mission with Jesus to turn
what was intended for harm into good." (For my review of Dr. Reyes'
excellent book, go here.)
After narrating the stories of Zacchaeus, the Samaritan woman at the
well, and the Philippian jailer, he notes that each responded to grace
by sharing grace. Zacchaeus made restitution to those he had harmed;
the Samaritan woman brought her village to Jesus; the Philippian jailer
led his family to faith. Each became agents of the redemption they
experienced.
Years ago, Frederick Buechner taught me that only what happens to us can
happen through us. We must experience the gospel before we can give it
to others. But Dr. Reyes taught me that the opposite is also true: in
giving away the gospel we experience it more fully ourselves.
Think of the last great movie you saw or book you read. Did you
immediately recommend it to others? Why? How did sharing your
experience enhance it? The Apostle John told his readers, "We are
writing these things so that our joy may be complete" (1 John 1:4). The
more we share Jesus, the more we know Jesus.
Is your faith vibrant and joyful today, or routine and complacent? (Tweet this)
Buechner warned, "We are in constant danger of being not actors in the
drama of our lives but reactors, to go where the world takes us, to
drift with whatever current happens to be running the strongest." To
find joy in Jesus, serve Jesus. To experience his love, share his
love. To embrace his redemption, be an agent of redemption.
You can reflect your times, or you can choose to redeem them. And you
will know the answer to Buechner's question: "Is the truth beyond all
truths, beyond the stars, just this: that to live without him is the
real death, that to die with him the only life?" | | | | | |
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