Anti-Trump people will often say, "How could you vote for such a terrible person like Trump?" This question comes from the greatest difference between conservatives and progressives: is man born good or sinful?
Hey, welcome to Politics by Faith, brought to you by the Patriot Gold Group. I just saw this clip of Trump on Dr. Phil's show, or Dr. Phil, I guess, has got some TV network now. So he does different shows. I think he's going to run for governor, Dr. Phil, governor of California. So he's getting more in the political world. Anyway, this is the most I've heard Trump talk about God in light of him getting shot in the head.
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How do you answer that? Why were you spared so there had to be some great power because you just can't say millions to one millions or a used to say a million to one so much more than that because again
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you have to pull down the signed after it has to be a reason to go right and and never go right there's no reason and not only go right it's for about an eighth of a second. It's not just right. It's out of all the time that we're on this planet, it's one eighth of a second, right?
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So I shouldn't be with you. So is there a purpose? Well, there are a reason you think you were spared. I mean, the only thing I can think is that God loves our country and he thinks we're going to bring our country back. He wants to bring it back. It's so bad right now what's happening when you look at the crime, the horrible things that are happening inside our country, and it can be solved. It can be solved fairly quickly. It has to be God. I mean, how can you say it's luck when it's, you know, 20 million to one? Okay. I mean, it's just not possible that I was in that position.
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It's the only position where that bullet could have missed.
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And you believe in God?
I do. I do.
You believe God's hand was in this that day?
I believe so, yeah. I do.
And you talk about the country. You believe you have more to do. You weren't done. You were spared for a reason.
Well, God believes that, I guess. We'll have to see. I don't get critical of Trump speaking about religion because I see my dad a lot in Trump's religion as well. Growing up we went to church twice a year Christmas and Easter we were Christers and we get dressed up wear a suit and tie that's what you wore to church went to the Presbyterian Church in town and I had no idea what was going on but the collection plate would go around and my dad would put $20 in it and that was it. I just see Trump
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Speaking the same way that my dad spoke of religion and God And not having any other vocabulary beyond just the most basics of just the cultural thing You're supposed to do and I didn't learn any of this stuff until I became a Christian really started studying the Bible I For some reason I thought of when I saw that clip of Trump, the people who say,
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Oh, how could you? How could you vote for such an evil person? The root of that is how could you vote for such an evil person unlike me who's great? Trump's terrible compared to me. I'm wonderful and perfect. It's like, no, no, no. We're all sinners. We are all way off the mark. A lot of people say all sins are the same. That's not true. The Bible speaks of some
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sins being worse than other sins. But it's also true that all sins keep you very, very far away from God. I heard it many years ago that Jesus is here. Jesus is perfect. He's way up here. And you are way, way, way, way, way down here. And we can talk about the different kinds of sins, but you're here. This other sinner's here. This person who did the worst sin you can think of is here.
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And then a little bit here. It's all like, we're all like hovering right around here. And we can nitpick over those differences, but know that Jesus is way over there when it comes to perfection. It's really, really important to know that. I think this is one of the biggest differences between conservatives and progressives or people with a biblical worldview and a non-biblical worldview is this idea of human nature.
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And are you born good or are you born sinful? This is the difference. Everything comes from this. How you view about this changes everything. And I think that's why a lot of people on the left who can't understand why you would support such an evil monster like this.
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It's like, oh, you think you're so great? I don't even think I'm great. So, yeah, I'm not going to judge this guy over here for these things that, by the way, have nothing to do with being commander-in-chief. But also, you think you're so great that you can play this game? Oh that's right, you think people are born good. I don't. I guess I'll end with this point. Blessed are those who are poor in spirit. The poor in spirit is the person who recognizes that all good things come
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from God and that you are unable to earn God's grace on your own in any way whatsoever. You are completely spiritually bankrupt before God. You have nothing of worth to offer Him. There's nothing you can do to pick yourself up out of spiritual depravity. Just like you can't pick yourself up off the ground. Like if you're standing here, I'm sitting here right now, I can't pick myself up.
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Like you can't do it. And that's true with your spiritual life. You can't just pick yourself up yourself. It is all God. We did an episode on this a while back. We went through the Beatitudes. Martin Lloyd-Jones, he said, blessed are the poor in spirit. What's poor in spirit?
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It means a complete absence of pride, a complete absence of self-assurance and of self-reliance. Even Jesus, even just when he was a man on earth, he said, I can do nothing of myself. I can do nothing of myself, but my Father that dwells in me. He does the work. I can do nothing. I'm utterly dependent on Him.
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That's it. And Martin Lloyd Judd says, if you look at his prayer life, it is as you watch him praying and realize the hours he spent in prayer that you see his poverty of spirit and Jesus, his reliance upon God. But the people today, they're like, I'm born good, I'm fine, I got it on my own. It's like, oh, you have no idea.
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Let me quote this from Martin Lloyd-Jones, he's so brilliant. He said, it means that if we are truly Christian, we shall not rely upon our natural birth. We shall not rely upon the fact that we belong to certain families. We shall not boast that we belong to certain nations or nationalities. We shall not build upon our natural temperament. We shall not believe and rely on our natural positions of life or any powers that may have been given to us.
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We shall not rely upon money or any wealth we may have. The thing about which we shall boast will not be the education we received, or the particular school or college to which we have been. All this is what Paul came to regard as dung and a hindrance to the greater things, because it tended to master and control him. We shall not rely on any gifts like that of natural personality, or intelligence, or general
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social ability. We shall not rely upon our own morality and conduct and good behavior. I'm better than that guy. We shall not bank to the slightest extent on the life we have lived or trying to live. No, we shall regard all as Paul regarded it. That is poverty of spirit. There must be a complete deliverance from an absence of all that. I say again, it is to feel that we are
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nothing, that we have nothing, and that we look to God in utter submission to Him and in utter dependence upon Him and His grace and mercy. It is, I say, to experience to some extent what Isaiah experienced when having seen the vision he said, Woe is me! I am a man of unclean lips. That is poverty of spirit.
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And we find ourselves in competition with other men in this world. We say, I am a match for them. Well, that may be all right in this realm, if you like, but when a man has some conception of God, he of necessity feels as one dead, as did the Apostle John in the Isle of Patmos. And we must feel like that in the presence of God. Any natural spirit that is in us goes out, because it is not only exposed in its smallness
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and weakness, but its sinfulness and foulness become apparent at the same time. The people who say, oh, how could you? Because he is sinful. It's like, oh, you have no idea.
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You have no idea.
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You have no idea about you. You have no idea about me. I don't even fully understand my own depravity. Here's an example of someone who does understand his depravity. William Carey, the great missionary, we met him the other day. He was asked what he wants spoken at his funeral. He was really sick.
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They're like, hey, so if you die from this, what do you want us to do? He said, oh, I feel that such a poor, sinful creature, speaking of himself, is unworthy to have anything said about him. But if a sermon must be preached, let it be from the words, have mercy upon me, O God, according to your loving kindness, according unto the multitude of your tender mercies blot out my transgressions."
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That's the opening of Psalm 51. William Carey wanted his gravestone to say, William Carey, born here, died here, a wretched, poor, and helpless worm. On thy kind arms I fall. It's such a good Psalm, 51, please read it. 51A says, Let me hear joy and gladness. Let the bones that you have broken rejoice. These are not literal broken bones.
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David is feeling the weight of his sin. It feels like broken, crushed bones. This is the same Psalm that says, Against you, you only, have I sinned. But in his sin, David turned to God. He couldn't lift himself up. He knew that God was his only way out. Jesus is our only way out. I heard someone say yesterday how much
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he was telling this guy was telling an audience of people he said how much do I have to hate you to not tell you that Jesus is the only way to heaven. have to hate you to not tell you that Jesus is the only way to heaven. that Jesus is the only way to heaven.