James Carville says it's inevitable that Biden will resign. I don't agree. But it is inevitable that he will die. We all will! Yet we're all so terrified of it. Today I want to share Mark Twain's view of death after the death of his 3rd child.
Welcome to Politics by Faith, brought to you by the Patriot Gold Group. This week we're talking about getting old and dying. Geez, Slater, why on earth would I want, why are you doing that? A couple of reasons. First of all, it's been just a joy, politically, these last two weeks on the radio, on SiriusXM. Patriots, it's so much fun watching the Democrats implode.
And we did a quick little thought on, you know, Marjorie Taylor Greene is thinking about having the House Oversight Committee investigate and drag into a hearing Biden's doctor. And it's like, whoa, whoa, just let them do their thing. Let them implode on their own.
No need to get involved. And it's just been fantastic to watch from afar. So maybe I have this like need that I don't even realize to balance out the joy and giddiness that I'm having over here on the radio show, the political show with this podcast over here. Let's talk about death and despair. And we got to even out in the end, although really, hopefully my point through this week is, is not about despair, quite the opposite, actually. And I think I've been thinking about death too, because Joe Biden is very, very old and he's going to die soon. We played the clip of the Parkinson's expert on NBC News,
which was a segment that would never exist three weeks ago. If we had the same Parkinson's expert on the first TV, on my show on the first TV three weeks ago, put it on YouTube, we would have been demonetized for it. How dare you, what a crazy conspiracy theory. Now he's on NBC News saying,
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oh yeah, it's definitely Parkinson's. He said, I could have diagnosed him looking at him from across the mall. And the host is like, well, isn't Parkinson's very difficult to diagnose? And the guy's like, no, it's like really easy. I do it all day long. Every day.
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I got like 20 Joe Biden's walking in my office every single day. And he went through all the reasons why this is Parkinson's and we'll all know the truth very soon, right? Time, time will elapse and a couple of years at most we'll go by and we'll know. Oh yeah, he definitely had Parkinson's. He had signs of it at this time during his presidency and he passed away from it.
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Now, like we'll know all this. We're starting to now as the coverup crumbles. On the radio, we spent an hour talking about ambition and how ambition used to be seen as a vice. Going back to ancient Greece, early Christian writers, all the way to our founding grandfathers and founding fathers, they knew that ambition was a vice.
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But now it's seen as a as a positive thing. But that's why Biden, I don't believe, will give up his position. It's very unlikely because he has everything that the person in that Mark Twain story that we shared yesterday has. Biden has fame, love, although it's not real love. Obviously, look at his family, but, you know, adoration from the people.
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He goes to these rallies and they chant his name. So he has that kind of love, riches and pleasure. He won't give it up. Why would he give it up? He won't give it up till his death. So interesting thought about ambition.
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And maybe there's this Aristotelian mean of ambition where you can have a deficit of it and you can have too much of it. Sure, okay. But Biden certainly has too much of it and in all the wrong places. that Mark Twain story we shared yesterday. He said death is the only thing of value. This is the Mark Twain story that I wanted to share yesterday. Let's do it today. So Mark
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Twain, his son died when he was 19 months old. His daughter died at 24, then his wife died, and then his other daughter was visiting him at his house, and then she suddenly died on Christmas Eve. She had a heart attack. She had epilepsy. She had a heart attack and died in the bathtub. Mark Twain wrote this in his diary. First thing he said was, in capital letters, Gene is dead. He said, has anyone ever tried to put upon paper all the little happenings connected with a dear one? Happenings in the 24 hours
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preceding the sudden and unexpected death of that dear one. Would a book contain them? Would true books contain them? I think not. They pour into the mind in a flood. There are little things that they've always been happening every day and were always so unimportant and easily forgettable before, but now, now how different, how precious they are, how dear, how unforgettable, how pathetic. The word pathetic here, oh see it's funny you got a negative connotation to it. So did I. I had to look it up.
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The original definition of pathetic is affecting or moving the passions, particularly pity, sorrow, grief, or other tender emotions. So it's positive, it's like pathetic, it brings up emotion. How sacred, how clothed with dignity. Then he goes on, he tells stories of all these little things in life that he took for granted and how the night before they were talking about the recent travels they'd been on, and they were talking about the next day,
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around the dinner table, and they stayed up late talking about nothing. And then they went to bed and he kissed her hand and she kissed his hand. He says, then, with the usual gay, sleep well, dear, from both we parted.
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And when she found out that she died,
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he wrote, possibly I know now what the soldier feels when a bullet crashes through his heart. He wrote about a Christmas surprise that she was planning. He says all these little matters have happened in the last four days. Little, yes, then, but not now. Nothing she said or thought or did is little now.
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Such a beautiful entry, this whole diary entry. You can find it Burr News. I don't know what this website is but I found it a book but if you want to read it BurrNews.com. So if you search BurrNews.com Christmas Eve heartbreak then hopefully it'll pop up for you and you can read the whole thing. Things that he found of hers, things that she touched, things that she was going to give to him as a gift. It's just beautiful.
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But I bring it up here because in this diary entry he tells about someone else, a friend of his who passed away. When Clara met me at the station in New York and told me Mr. Rogers, his friend, had died suddenly that morning, my thought was, oh, favorite of fortune, fortunate all his long and lovely life, fortunate to his last moment. After he died, the reporter said there were tears of sorrow in my eyes.
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True, but they were there for me, not for him. He had suffered no loss. All the fortunes he ever made before were poverty compared with this one. What a way to view death. How different than we look at it now. Again, my main conclusion about our culture after COVID was that we are terrified of death. Mark
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Twain was not. His point is that the sadness of death is for us, not for the person who died. Christians who die are not mourning. Thinking of Jesus and Lazarus, and that's how I want to wrap up this week. We'll do more of this on Friday. Tomorrow I got the TV show so I'm probably not gonna have time to record a podcast. Maybe we can get one in. But the scene of Jesus weeping, Jesus wept, and him and Lazarus.
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The question is, why did Jesus weep? One reason, I think this is the most commonly believed reason, quote from John MacArthur, Jesus wept at the death of Lazarus because he was moved with a compassion. He was basically in all points tempted like as we are. He feels what we feel.
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He was weeping with those who weep. He wasn't weeping because of the end of Lazarus. Because the end of Lazarus was going to be the resurrection. I should say, that's probably the most common explanation. He was sad that his friend died. But that's not it.
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Because he knew that he was going to rise from the dead, like, right now. So why was he weeping? He was weeping it with compassion. He was weeping because of the sorrow of Mary and Martha. This is the empathy, the sympathy, the tenderness, the kindness of Christ manifesting itself in that setting. That's one reason. Charles Spurgeon did a
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sermon on this. He gave five reasons why Jesus wept. That empathy was one of them. But there's four other good ones and that's what we're gonna go over in our next episode. But my takeaway here today is that it's okay to weep at loss. It's okay to weep at death. It's okay to weep when sad. But the dead in heaven, they're not weeping. Weeping may stay for the night, but rejoicing comes in the morning. Mike Slater dot locals dot com. Transcript commercial but rejoicing comes in the morning. Mike Slater dot locals dot com. Transcript commercial free on the website Mike Slater dot locals dot com.