As someone who follows politics, this is an amazing time to be alive. As a conservative, seeing the other party in freefall is a delight. But watching Biden decline and cling to power is sad. There are some life lessons to learn here. We'll bring in Mark Twain and Jesus this week, but let's start this week with some Shakespeare.
Welcome to Politics by Faith, brought to you by the Patriot Gold Group. Thank you for being here. What a time, politically, to be alive. It's very exciting, very fun, very interesting, changing every day. It's going to be a wild ride. So please join us over on SiriusXM Patriot every day, and let's do that together.
But this week I want to embark upon an adventure talking about age, and being old and getting old and death. I've been thinking about Joe Biden being old, probably having Parkinson's. Apparently the leading Parkinson's expert in DC has come to the White House for multiple visits over the last year. And putting politics and all this aside, it's sad because disease is sad when people lose their health. I like to exercise. We have a Peloton bike.
We love it. I'm not ashamed of it anymore. I used to be ashamed to admit I have a Peloton. I'm not ashamed. I enjoy it very much. And Jess Sims, she often says it is a privilege to exercise.
And it is. But eventually I won't be able to do it and I won't be able to lift anything and maybe I won't be able to use my mind anymore and that's all sad that's sad and it's okay to be sad about that so this week I want to spend some time talking about old age and dying I want to bring in some Shakespeare Mark Twain has written a lot about this he has lived through many tragedies in his life I want to bring in some Charles Spurgeon and of course Jesus and
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hopefully we can make some thoughts that are helpful to you and your family. Let's start with Shakespeare. I take great comfort in the reality that there's nothing new under the sun. The Shakespeare play King Lear. It's about a King Lear is getting old and he decides to divvy up his kingdom between his three daughters. But he says, I'll give the largest share to the daughter who declares her love for me the greatest. And the first comes
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and does her flattery and, oh, you're the best, blah, blah, blah. And he's like, oh, that's wonderful. And then the second daughter comes and does the whole flattery thing and she refuses to play along. She says, I love you as a daughter should, no more, no less, and half of my love is reserved for my future husband. He hates this, although it's true.
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It's true and good, too, but he hates it. He wants the flattery. So she gets nothing. She gets cut out of the will. So King Lear divides his kingdom between the two daughters. But he clings to it still.
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He still wants all the, everything good that comes with being king. He wants all the authority. He wants all the trappings that comes with being king. But he doesn't want any of the responsibilities of being king. And if I may, I feel that's not unlike the Bidens. They want all the trappings that come with being president. They want the state dinners and the honor and the esteem and
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the power and perhaps the criminal connections that come with being president. But he is not able to be president. He's not able to function as President of the United States. Still wants all the trappings, but is unable to have any of the responsibility. But they're gonna cling to it for as long as they possibly can. So the king, King Lear, then goes to visit his first daughter and they turn on him. She refuses to take him in. So then he goes to his second daughter and she pretty much does the same. This is Act 2, Scene 4, if you want to read and follow along.
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So he's talking to the second sister, or daughter, and he calls the first daughter a vulture. And the sister says, you know, calm down dad. She says, oh sir, you are old. Nature in you stands on the very verge of his confine. Like you're just about to die. And he gets angry.
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He says, you nimble lightnings, dart your blinding flames into her scornful eyes. He's calling on lightning to strike his daughters, infect her beauty. You fen-sucked fogs drawn by the powerful sun to fall and blister. He's calling on lightning to strike his daughters and make them ugly. And his daughter says, I pray you, Father, being weak seems so. Meaning let go.
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Stop pretending to be strong. You are weak. You are pathetic. Stop pretending like you're something. Stop pretending like you're still the king. Just give up already.
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This is not a loving daughter, by the way. There's a place, which we'll get to, where a loving child will help their aging parents to see reality as it is. Very, very difficult. That's not what this is. This is just die already.
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You horrible man. So just to bring it to Joe, Joe Biden, a loving family would tell them that it's time to to move on. Now the difference between the Bidens and the Leers is the Biden, the Leers want the king to give up so that they can be fully in charge.
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The Bidens need Joe to stay in power or else their entire family business crumbles around them. So they're begging father to being weak, get strong, hurry up, pretend better that you're strong. But with Joe, he won't get strong. He can't get strong. It's not possible. It's not that he's a cold. It's not going to get well. He may go mad, though. That's what King Lear did. He went mad. And this is this is the part, the climax of him going crazy. He says, You see me here, you gods, a poor old man,
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As full of grief as age, wretched in both. If it be that you stir these daughters' hearts against their father, Fool me not so much to bear it tamely, Now touch me with noble anger, And let not women's weapons, water drops, stain my man's cheeks. Don't cry about it. No, you unnatural hags. I will have such revenge on you both that all the world shall.
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I will do such things, but they are yet I know not. But they shall be the terrors of the earth. I'm going to do such horrible things and seek revenge on you both. I don't know what they are yet, but they'll be bad. You think I'll weep? No, I'll not weep.
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And then lightning strike. I shall, I have full cause of weeping, but this heart shall break into a hundred thousand flaws or before I weep, oh fool, I shall go mad. And then he does. Coming up later in the week, we'll talk about Jesus weeping. So here's King Lear refusing to weep.
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Cause them women's weapons, water drops shall not stain my man cheeks." But Jesus wept. So we'll talk about that later. But the point here is that King Lear refused to give up. He refused to call it a day. He refused to give up his power and the trappings, just like old Joe's doing right now. Will Joe go mad? I don't know. He may forget who he is before he has the chance to go mad, but Politico has an article, AIDS scared blankless out of Joe Biden.
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Talking about giving him briefings, and this person says, it's like, you can't include that in the briefing, that will set him off. I'll put that in, he likes that. It's a Rorschach test, not a briefing,
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because he's not a pleasant person to be around when he's being briefed. It's very difficult and people are scared blankless of him. So in behind doors with people around him, he's gone mad. Now should we feel bad for ambitious people like this when they fall on their faces? No, I don't. It's their own doing. It's just life.
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This terrible daughter at the end of this scene says, Oh sir, to willful men, the injuries that they themselves procure must be their schoolmasters. They'll only learn if they make the mistakes themselves, and make the mistakes they will. Shut up your doors. He is attended with a desperate train, the people who still follow the king.
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And what they may incense him to, being apt to have his ear abused, wisdom bids fear. So, he's old, he's senile, he's deranged, he's mad, and he can be easily deceived by the people around him. I found those parallels noteworthy. So this is the first point I want to make in our series here on aging.
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The first lesson is it's okay, it's good to be aware of your limitations. I know it can be hard for someone to give up driving in their old age, hand over the keys, hand over their independence, for instance. There's many examples of this but that's a good metaphor. Might I suggest that even in this difficulty that there could be beauty and grace in saying goodbye to things that one could once do. Let me say
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like this just to prove it via the opposite. King Lear went mad, wanted to keep his power. And look how pathetic it is to see Joe hanging in there, this form of elder abuse from Jill as he clings to power. Let's not be like that. Now, we are not kings and presidents, but we all have things that we cling to.
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Let's not cling to it and go mad in the process. So let's take inspiration here and let go when it's appropriate to let go and take great Comfort in God's grace and heaven where there's no more pain or crying or mourning or death. And maybe that's part of the letting go of things is we think that that's the end. But death is not the end. And that's going to be the overall theme of this entire week.
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Death is not the end. If it's true that God made us to slowly learn new things and take on new responsibilities in the beginning of life. Could it also be that God made it for us to slowly let go of things and responsibilities near the end of life as well until we go to heaven and we're released from all of it. True freedom in heaven. Tomorrow we'll bring in some Mark Twain to this discussion. He lost a lot of very important people in his life, including
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multiple children. And then we'll relate this back to Jesus weeping. Mike Slater, dot locals dot com, transcript, commercial free. Mike Slater, dot locals dot Mike Slater, dot locals dot com, transcript, commercial free. Mike Slater, dot locals dot. com.