The media is using all of their tricks to make you feel bad for fired federal employees. And the truth is, I do feel bad for a lot of them. So should we not cut the size of the government? How should we think about this?
Welcome to Politics by Faith. Thanks for being here.
I will admit today I'm struggling. It's not the right word. That's a too strong a word. I'm going back and forth trying to make sense of the noble desire for a streamlined government, which is obviously, which is obviously, which I believe is the proper thing to do. And also, I don't like it when people get fired.
That's not good for a person. Getting fired stinks. I don't like that for anyone. No fun. I want compassion for people. I want to have it.
And I do have it. But then I hear, well there's a couple of different types of stories. We played on the air some videos of scientists at college campuses who were doing the most insane research projects imaginable. They're getting these huge grants that you work to pay for, and then 70% of it goes to the university so that they can hire more DEI administrators to indoctrinate our kids
to hate the country. The research project is terrible anyway. So, I don't feel bad for you now, actually. You should have been fired a long time ago. You should have never gotten a grant the first time. And then there's a bucket of people who are crying on CNN
about how Elon is making them write five bullet points about what you did this week. Geez, New York Magazine, one federal employee told New York it was traumatizing.
Well,
I usually fired like I don't I don't feel bad. I got started with compassion. And then there's people who are crying, picking up their phones, crying into their phones, and then adding a caption and making sure the lighting is right. And posting it up on Tick Tock for the whole world to see who are you what are you doing?
And then there's the media weaponizing our empathy against us. One story in Houston, they found a federal employee who for a couple months, because almost everyone fired so far
has been just a probationary employee,
so they've been employed for less than a year. This guy had his dream job of being a tax-exempt, not-for-profit, IRS-compliant agent. You're like, dream job. But I just can't imagine that being a dream job. It could be a job. It could be a paying job.
It could be a fine job. A dream job? Just this new category of dreamers. So you have this guy, he's crying. He's crying to the reporter on the TV about how he loved his job.
And if you fall for that weaponized empathy, you're like, oh, you can keep your job. And then everyone keeps their job. And then the bureaucracy continues to grow when this is a once in a lifetime opportunity to get it back down to size. And it's all being sabotaged by the left of the media. So I resist that.
It is time that we look at all of these issues from the government, from the perspective of the taxpayer, and no longer the tax recipient.
So I take a hard stand,
but then I do feel bad for some people. So I'm kind of bouncing all over the place. I don't care for this feeling much. On the radio tomorrow, we're gonna talk to a guy who wrote a book called The Sin of Empathy, which is all about this weaponized empathy,
and he writes it from a Christian perspective, so I really look forward to talking to him. Maybe we could put some of the interview here when we're done. But here's, so that's all the political stuff. And we'll do much more of this on the radio show tomorrow.
But here's what I want to put on this podcast. This podcast is about thumping the Bible. So let's Bible thump. Here's what I know we're missing as a people, as a culture. We're missing the Christian perspective.
Now I'm not gonna go into a whole thing
about the Christian perspective on work. We've talked about that a lot. I just wanna talk about the Christian perspective on life. We're actually preparing a special, we're gonna record it tomorrow on the first TV, about ancient civilizations and where did they go?
And I like looking back in thousands of years increments because it all gets so vague because we can only know so much about people who are around thousands of years ago, so it all gets very vague. And then I kind of like daydream,
and then I start thinking about the future. And I start thinking about eternity in the future. And then I think about what we need to do now to make sure we get to spend that eternity in heaven. Because in the meantime, until we get, we can't go back. I want to live in heaven forever.
How do I get there?
Great, did it. Well, in the meantime, we're in these earthly bodies in this broken place we call the world. And one of the things about this broken world is there's no such thing as a guaranteed job forever. No one has that. It's not real life.
No one has it. Some people are more risk-adverse than others, and some can handle uncertainty better than others. Those who are not risk-adverse and those who don't like uncertainty will gravitate more towards government jobs. In the past, government jobs have been more secure.
Now we're putting in a bit of uncertainty, and those people don't like that. They don't handle it well. A lot of people, that's why they're there in the first place. They're freaking out. But I think a Christian perspective can help. Now this Christian perspective won't pay the electrical bill, but it can help you get a proper attitude that I think
will lead to a paying job. Let's go to 2nd Corinthians 5. Actually, let's start a little bit more. Let's go to the end of chapter 4. Paul says, Therefore we do not lose heart, even though our outward man is perishing, yet the inward man is being renewed day by day. For our light affliction, which is but for a moment—some translations have a light momentary affliction—is working for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory, while we do not look at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen.
For the things which are seen are temporary, the things which are not seen are eternal. How beautiful is that section? All the struggles, and this applies to everything, not just losing a job, all these struggles are light and momentary. Now, easy for you to say, Slater, things are going well for you. I know.
I know. They are right now. This is not something I would tell someone who's in the middle of a traumatic moment.
Certainly not.
But it's good for us to know if you happen to be in a moment where you're chugging along, know that whatever struggles to come, it is light and momentary. And Paul says we need to focus on the unseen things, the things that are eternal. And you say, well, it's easy for you to say well I didn't say it Paul said it yeah well easy for you to say Paul actually no you're not the physical sufferings of all went to I found a nice list here Paul went through beatings prisons
stoned shipwrecked robbed in perils of my own countrymen in perils of the Gentiles the city the wilderness the sea false brethren weariness and toil, sleeplessness, hunger, thirst, fasting, cold, nakedness, and these are just the physical sufferings, nothing to say about the spiritual attacks that he constantly faced.
Check out this line.
"'Our affliction is light.'"
No, it's not, Schleider.
Mine's heavy.
I got it, I got it.
But listen, listen. "'Our affliction is light compared to what we deserve. And our affliction is light compared to what Jesus suffered for us. Pause on that for a second. Next chapter. For we know, Paul says, that if our earthly house, this tent, is destroyed.
We have a building from God, a house not made from hands, eternal in the heavens. I love this idea that our earthly house is merely a tent. It's a tent. It's temporary. And then once it's destroyed, we have a mansion,
we have a place in heaven. Spurgeon says many people are in a great fright about the future. Yet here is Paul viewing the worst thing that could happen to him with such complacency that he likens it to nothing worse than the pulling down of a tent in which he was just using it to reside for a little season anyway. Therefore we make it our aim, whether present or absent, to be
well-pleasing to him. So this is what we do now. So we know it's in the future. Right now it's just temporary. We want eternity in the future. Right now this is temporary. Okay, so what do we do? Some people will say, well, who cares about the temporary anyway? I'm just going to live my life however I want. It doesn't matter. No. Paul says, therefore we make it our aim to be well pleasing to Him, capital H, God, for we must all appear before the judgment
seat of Christ, that each one may receive the things done in the body according to what he has done, whether good or bad." Alexander McLaren, 1800s, he said, you report to headquarters. Never mind what anybody else thinks of you. Your business is to please Christ. And the less you trouble yourselves about pleasing men, the more you will succeed in
doing it. Don't worry about pleasing other people. Don't worry about these light momentary afflictions. Your business is to please Christ. You report to headquarters. Such a good line.
I could keep going, let me stop there. The point is, you may lose your job, I may lose my job. We're all, we're all, we're going to lose our job. I told a story on the radio the other day, it was the first year on radio that I made actual money. My first job on radio, I made $24,000 a year I think.
So when I moved to San Diego, I got paid more than that. And the first year I had to pay taxes, I called my dad because the tax bill was ridiculous. It's insane, I was like, where'd all the money go? And my dad said, oh, you're not a man yet because, he said, you're not a man because
you haven't lost all your money yet. And I found out years later that my dad's business went bankrupt, I think twice, and they went through a lot of financial sufferings and moving across the country for jobs. And there was one period when my dad,
we lived in Colorado. I was very little, I was just born and born. We lived in Colorado and my dad would live, he lived in Atlanta. And then would come back home on weekends. And he was traveling a lot
and trying to build a new business and eventually moved over. But we moved to a bunch of different places because just his different businesses where he's trying to start and some were successful and some I didn't realize weren't.
Things like that are gonna happen in life. There's gonna be lots of sufferings.
We're talking about jobs here, but health as well. I'm healthy right now, so I just need to tell myself this, that it's true, that this is not your home. The old hymn, this world is not my home, I'm just a passing through, my treasures are laid up somewhere beyond the blue. The angels beckon me from heaven's open door and I can't feel at home in this world anymore. We're called to do the best we can while we're here.
Make the most of it. Serve Him. Love others. Nothing in this world is guaranteed but your salvation, I can be assured.
And that's what matters the most.
Mike Slater dot Locals dot com. Mike Slater dot Locals dot com. Transcripts, commercials, and pre-order books at Mike Slater dot Locals dot com.