We had a caller today who was hopeless. Being hopeless is not good. Depression is not good. But lamenting the brokenness around us is very good. It's a form of worship. It's necessary. So let's do some of that right now. Lamenting brokenness might seem like a form of hopelessness, but it's not, because you're appealing to God.
Welcome to Politics by Faith, brought to you by the Patriot Gold Club. Thanks for being here. I've got to hit the road here in a minute to get to that funeral that I was speaking of the other day. And I had enough time to do everything this morning and do a proper podcast, but as soon as the radio show was over, the kids opened up, came in the studio here, and said that they opened up their own restaurant downstairs. And they had their aprons on, and the table was all set, so I needed to go downstairs and have a delicious breakfast made by my seven, six, and four year old. So now I don't have time to do what this topic fully deserves. We'll do more of it on Monday, but here's what needs to happen.
We gotta talk about lament. We had Doug called in today, this morning. And Doug said, things are terrible, things are awful. We're trillions of dollars in debt. People can't scrounge together any money for savings, barely making ends meet and it's hopeless.
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Goodbye. And he hung up. I said, whoa, whoa, whoa, Doug, we got some stuff to talk about here, man. And then a bunch of other people called in and we spent an hour talking about how things are really hard, things are really tough. And it was so important because as much as I wanted to change the topic and get back
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to what I was going to talk about. It's like, oh, no, let's just let this sit because maybe we've lost the plot a bit or it's easy to lose the plot and be like, oh, we got to win the election. It's like, well, why? Why? What's the problem exactly?
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So it's worth taking time to reflect on how hard it is right now in a lot of ways, not just economically, but just in a lot of ways. There's a lot of despair, a lot of hopelessness, which is not good. Can't be hopeless. I also think there's a healthy amount of compassion
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that's happening. We had some callers call in who are, it was one guy called, he owns a business, and he said, just this last week, I had five people come to me asking for help, pay for groceries, things like that.
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And he's like, I just feel blessed that I'm in a situation where I can do that. That's great compassion. Compassion means to suffer alongside someone. Calm, it means with. Passion, like passion of the Christ, means to suffer. So you're suffering with someone.
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There's been a lot of that, and that's great. We also need to lament. I could feel this pull in the radio from people wanting me to end the segment or end the hour with hope. It's going to be all right. And I want to do that too.
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That's my natural status to go there. But I didn't want to do it on today's show, Friday's show, because I think it's good to just sit in the lament for a while. Lament is good. Lament is praise. Lament and depression are not the same thing.
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Depression is bad. Depression spirals down. Lament spirals up. But you have to sit in the lament for a while. Two-thirds of the Psalms are laments. But there's a difference between complaining and lamenting.
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When the Israelites were complaining about God's not providing for us, then that brought them away from God. It assumed the worst of God. But lament brings you closer to God. I like this from N.T. Wright. He said, a complaint is an accusation against God that maligns his character. No good. But a lament is an
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appeal to God based on confidence in his character that he is good. If you're lamenting to God, then it proves that you think he's real, that you love him, that you have a relationship with him. You're not gonna go beg some stranger on the street. You don't have a relationship with that person. But if you're lamenting to God, it means you have a relationship with him. That's a good thing. And there's another good thing about the Psalms too, and the lamenting in the Psalms, is you may read
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up one of the lamenting songs in Psalms and it may not relate to you right now. And that's great, but there's plenty of people that it does. So when David said he feels like he's drowning and it's hopeless and all is lost. You may not feel that right now but there are there's someone who just got a cancer diagnosis or there's someone whose child just died or something that's someone that's going through a horrible thing right now. And he writes that lament is not only for
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the suffering it's for solidarity with the suffering. I think of the lament as a way to worship. Looks different but it's worship. You know it's not life. That's not life. C.S. Lewis said we were promised sufferings. They were part of the program. We were even told, blessed are they that mourn.
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And I accept it. I've got nothing that I hadn't bargained for. Of course, it's different when the thing happens to oneself, not to others. And when it happens in reality, not in imagination.
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Life is hard. There's not enough money.
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Major health problems. Maybe no end in sight. Remember that clip we played the other day? Of, did we play it here? I don't know if we played it here. The woman in Minneapolis during the George Floyd riots.
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Actually, let me find it, I have it here. It's one of those moments when I realize this is not a live radio show. I could press pause and come back with it much better, but might as well do yours. So this is Minneapolis during the George Floyd riots. How was last night?
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Scary.
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I live in the high rise right back here and I seen them as they came down Lake Street, but then they turned and started coming over here and I'm sitting out looking in my window. And they went straight to Office Max, the dollar store and every store over here that I go to. I have nowhere to go now. I have no way to get there because the buses are running. These people did this for no reason. It's not gonna bring George back here.
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George is in a better place than we are. Last night, I'm gonna be honest, I wish I was where George was because this is ridiculous. These people are tearing up our livelihood. This is the only place I could go to shop. Stop, parents.
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That last part there, now I don't know if George Floyd is in a better place. I don't know. I don't know if George Floyd ever repented for his sins and gave his life to Jesus. I don't know where George Floyd is. But what I want to focus on there is this woman's lamenting for the brokenness around her, the injustices that are occurring around her, the fear that she had for her life, and this
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And this longing for the afterlife, that is such a healthy posture. This longing for heaven, longing for the place where nothing is broken. That is good. Now in the meantime, we have work to do here, just like Paul said. And I'm grateful for that work. Let's take this weekend to lament things that are broken and use that to bring us closer to God. We'll come back on Monday
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and we'll use that as a springboard to hope. But I don't think you can get as high as we need to be if we don't first take the time to fully lament the brokenness that is around us. So let's do that this weekend. Mike Slater dot locals dot com. Transcript of commercial free website, Transcript of commercial free website, Mike Slater dot locals dot com.