Every Monday on Sirius/XM, we start the week with Gratitude Monday. People call in and say what they're grateful for. We received a call today from someone who told a story that brought him, and many listeners, to tears. I pray we can all have a moment like this caller experienced.
Welcome to Politics by Faith. Thank you for being here. On my SiriusXM show, every Monday at 6 o'clock we started this segment a little over a year ago called Gratitude Monday. People just call in with amazing stories of things that they're grateful for. It's been a great way to start the week. There's been times when there's been
a lot of pressure to skip it because we have a really important political story to hit. And there's one time I did right before the election, maybe like a week or two before the election and I skipped it. I was like, Oh, we got to cover this instead. I got this email. I wish I could find it. Someone sent it to my Breitbart email, slater at breitbart.com and that goes to Outlook and Outlook, like forget it. I'll search for something and it's like, do you mean this? It's like, no, I'm not even close.
What are you talking about? So I can't find this email, but this person said, Slater, you can't skip gratitude Monday. We got to get our heart right. If our hearts aren't in the right place, and I love that email so much. If you want hard politics at 6am on a Monday, East Coast time, which probably my bosses would prefer I do, then I don't know, that's just not what we do anymore. Because the politics don't have a context if you don't start with gratitude first. Because who cares about anything?
If you're not grateful for life, if you're not grateful for this country, what does the news matter then? Why are we fighting or caring about anything? So setting our hearts right every Monday at six o'clock puts everything else in the proper context that it actually needs.
Anyway, we had a great caller today. I believe his name was Ed, North Carolina. And he told the story and he told it beautifully. I'll do the very quick version. He was walking to a Starbucks to get some stuff for his family
and he saw a homeless man crossing the street at the same time and he was trying to stay away from the homeless guy. The homeless guy was also maybe going to Starbucks too and they were gonna meet at the same time and he didn't want that to happen
so he started going faster, but then the guy was going to beat him. So then he went really slow to try to avoid him and he stood in a place in line that he didn't have to talk to. But then he felt this nudge. He called it a nudge of God. What did he say? He didn't say nudge.
I like the word nudge. Same idea, that he should start a conversation with this man and he so badly didn't wanna do it. He so desperately did not want to interact with this person in any way at all, but the Holy Spirit told him he should and he did. They had a little conversation and the homeless man said that you are a breath of fresh air.
And the caller, Ed, got emotional on the radio because I think it was because he was confronted with his selfishness and his not wanting to see this homeless man as a person, instead to see him as a nuisance. And then when they actually had a conversation,
it was this actually beautiful moment. And that made him feel even worse. The guilt he felt for looking at this homeless person as a thing to avoid. I believe that's what was so profound about this interaction.
And what was so meaningful to the caller that he was emotional on the radio. And I wasn't prepared to comment on it at the time. I got a bunch of emails about it but I wasn't prepared to say anything. He was so beautifully told I didn't know what to say. And I'm not, I don't really know what to say about it now either but I told him I would. So the thing that comes to mind is we are all wretched, selfish, horrible sinners.
That's it. And when there's a moment when you're confronted with that reality, it hurts and it should. You know, most people in America think we're great and we're good people and we're all good people. Every once in a while, you'll hear someone say,
no, we're all sinners. But even that isn't close, right? Because even that comes across as like, well, you know, we all make mistakes. That's what it sounds like and that's what it feels like. It doesn't match the depth of what that means,
like what it means to be a sinner, what the consequences are of being a sinner. It's like, oh yeah, we're all sinners. No, no, no. And I think Ed, the caller had a poll moment in Romans, Romans 7, 18 says, for I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out. For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep doing. Now, if I do what I do not want, it is no longer I who do it, but the sin that dwells within me. So I find it to be a law
that when I have to do the right thing, excuse me, that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand. For I delight in the law of God and my inner being, but I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. Wretched
man am I. Who will deliver me from this body of death?" Martloin Jones said, the Christian is not a good man. He is a vile wretch who's been saved by the grace of God. See that's the key at the end. Who's been saved by the grace of God, but the vile wretch. Vile is a good word. Wretch, wretch is like it's in silent, not silent night. It's in a wretch like me, but it's an amazing grace. It's an amazing grace. Right? So we know it, we know the word, but vile is a great qualifier on that. What kind of wretch are you? You are a vile wretch, but saved by the grace of God. Revelation 3 is about the church of Laodicea. This verse right here,
For you say, because you say, I am rich, this is God talking of the church, so because you church say, I am rich, have become wealthy God talking of the church. So because you church say I am rich, have become wealthy and have need of nothing and do not know that you are wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked. Uh oh. So the church is like, you know, the church is like the listener, Ed, going to Starbucks. Feeling good, feeling great. Got my money, got my clothes, got, going to Starbucks. I'm feeling good, feeling great. Got my money, got my clothes, got a thing to do,
got a family, I'm heading off to Starbucks. I am wealthy. But he was in that moment confronted by his spiritual poverty. He saw a man who was physically wretched, miserable, poor, blind and naked, homeless, but then realized
that it's actually me, spiritually, who is wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked. I think that's what hit him so hard. But we all are, and we must realize it. Verse 18 of Revelation 3, therefore be zealous, be hot, and repent. Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come into him and dine with him and he with me.
How wonderful is that? Charles Spurgeon said, when you and I shall be stretched upon our dying beds, I think we shall have to regret above everything else, our coldness of heart. Among the many sins, perhaps this will lie the heaviest upon our heart and conscience.
I did not live as I ought to have done. I was not as earnest in my Lord's cause as I should have been. Then will our cold sermons like she did ghosts march before our eyes and dread array. Then will our neglected days
start up, each one seeming to wave its hair as though it were one of the seven furies and to look right into our hearts and make our very blood curdle in our veins.
Those are the regrets. I should have done this. I was too cold. I was too even lukewarm. That's what the Lydus a church. You're lukewarm That was would be our our biggest regrets but great news we can repent You can repent you just open the door
What does that mean open the door repent of your, repent of your self-sufficiency, repent of your human wisdom, repent of your lukewarmness. What a terrifying assessment all this is, but what a beautiful conclusion. You just gotta take it, just gotta open the door.
We should all weep every day like this call or did and how far the differences between well, God and us, but even between what we know we should do and who we should be and who we actually are. That difference should make us weep. And then you open the door and you make Jesus the Lord of your life.
And he paid the price for your sins. And I love that's what Paul says in Romans, who will rescue me from this body of death? Wretched man that I am, who will rescue me? And then he answers it, the next sentence, thanks be to God through Jesus Christ, our Lord.
I pray you and I, everyone we know, has many of these moments that Ed, our caller, had that he told us about this morning. I hope we have many of these moments where we are confronted with what wretched, vile sinners we actually are. Thanks be to God, through Jesus Christ our Lord, who can deliver us from this body of death. MikeSlater.Locals.com is my website. We put it up a little bit before everywhere else and transcripted no commercials. MikeSlater.Locals.com is my website. We put it up a little bit before everywhere else. And transcript to no commercials. MikeSlater.Locals.com