MikeSlater
Politics • Spirituality/Belief • Culture
As Christianity Wanes, Communism Grows
Politics By Faith, November 5, 2025
November 05, 2025

It is a mission of the Christian to fight Communism. Christians were Karl's number one enemy. And Communism is back in America.

Welcome to Politics by Faith. Thanks for being here. I would like to make the argument today that as Christianity wanes in a nation, communism necessarily will fill the void. Lots of things will fill the void. One of the things is communism and Islam. We saw both of those. 

There's a little foretaste of what could happen in this country with the election of Zohran Mamdani in New York City. There's two voting blocs that voted for Zohran, foreigners. And we went in great detail on my show today about South Asians in particular, like Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh. Countries like that, that Zoran himself is making a big deal of. Couldn't have won without him. So you have South Asians who come from a nation with zero Christian culture and Christian background at all. 

And they come to America with zero assimilation happening. And they either are communist, like literally like they're from Nepal and it's a communist country. And they come here and they're communist and they vote for the foreign communist, of course. Or they come here and they're easy converts to communism. So you have that voting bloc, which was massive for Zoran. And then you have young white women. 

just young women in general, among age and gender breakdowns, it was women 18 to 29, 81 % of them voted for Zoran. And you wonder, well, how could that be? Well, we actually just did a TV show. My opening monologue was about luxury beliefs and how for young women in New York city, many of them very wealthy, college educated. It's a sort of status symbol voting for Zoran. It's a luxury belief in the way that, uh, an expensive purse or skiing in the Alps is a way to prove that, uh, I'm better than you. 

So I explain that in more detail on the TV show. We just recorded it. We'll make it into a podcast here today or tomorrow or sometime here soon. But I want to talk about the relationship between Christianity and communism here for a minute. And Islam thrown in here as well. Communism and Islam have been strange bedfellows for a while. 

During the 20th century, the Soviets and Muslim countries joined forces a lot. And a lot of that was political reasons to ally against the Western nations. But they're also, at the beginning, anti -Christian. So of course they will unite. All you need to know about communism and Marxism, you can learn by studying Karl. We're going to do a segment on this on my radio show, and I'll do it here on the podcast too, about Karl. 

Karl was a wretched person, Karl Marx. Wretched, horrible person in every possible way. He, Karl, hated Christians. A lot of people think of Marxism as a critique of capitalism, and it is. But first and foremost, it is meant to attack Christianity. Karl Marx wrote the famous line that He says religion, so here the full sentence is, religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world and the soul of a soulless condition. 

It is the opium of the people. He's talking about Christianity. It says Christianity is the opium of the people. Why did he hate Christianity so much? Well, he had personal reasons, which we'll get to when we do a biography of Karl. That's why I call it Karlism. 

I don't call it Marxism. I call it Karlism. When you understand Karl and what a wretched person he was, it's like, well, of course he came up with a wretched philosophy of life. He's a terrible person. But he said that Christianity is the opium of the people and Christianity was the target of his attacks because Christianity caused people and causes people to not care as much about how oppressed they might be. And he hated that. 

He saw that Christianity, it was an opium. It caused people not to feel the pain of oppression as much. It acted as a sort of balm. keeping people asleep in their victimhood. And he couldn't have that. He wanted people to be revolutionaries. 

But instead, Christians are thinking about the kingdom of heaven. He's like, he hated that. He said, you people need to wake up to how oppressed you are. And his whole goal was to make people awake, dare I say woke. Not dare I say, that's what that is. I mean, that's why woke is, how do I word this nicely? You see where it comes from? 

Carl says, oh, we need people to be awake. We need people to wake up to the oppression that they're feeling. And then the modern ghetto slang took wake up and turned it into be woke. And that's the term we've been living with this last, I don't know, five years or so is be woke. But that's what this all is. So Carl wants everyone to be aggrieved and discontent about the conditions that they're in so that he can lead a revolution. 

And the first step is to take down Christianity. Only then will people be properly discontent and aggrieved and become the revolutionaries that Karl wanted. People think of communism, again, as an anti -capitalist system, and it is. It's secondary, though. Primarily, first step, take down Christianity. A major component of Christianity is the heavenly kingdom. 

We're strangers, just a passing through. 1 Peter 2 .11, Beloved, I urge you as sojourners and exiles to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soul. The world is not our home. It's the classic hymn, this world's not my home. I'm just a passing through. My treasures are laid up somewhere beyond the blue. 

The angels beckoned me from heaven's door, heaven's open door, and I can't feel at home in this world anymore. Carl hated that. Carl is a materialist. The only things that exist are material. see and touch, that's it. There's nothing in this world except motion and matter. 

Christians are other worldliness, and communists are this worldliness. Also, Karl had a God complex. Karl wanted to be worshipped himself, and you can't have Christians worshipping God. I mean, the rest of that hymn is, Oh Lord, you know I have no friend like you. If heaven's not my home, then Lord, what will I do? It's about Lord. 

Lordship. And Karl would obviously have nothing of that. Communism is a secular religion. Christians believe that God made the universe and he knows everything. This is our American tradition as well. From the first colonists, pilgrims who came here in the 1600s, all the way through our founding fathers, Ben Franklin, classically, when he was requesting that at the constitutional convention, we open every meeting with a prayer. 

He said, I've lived a long time and the longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth, that God governs in the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without his aid? So our founders, the beginning of our country, the foundations of our country all believed in God and that he was involved in the affairs of man. Communists don't believe in God. They worship themselves. I think this line from a 1954 novel or autobiography, excuse me, called The Invisible Writing was written by a Marxist about his experience as a member of the Communist Party. 

He was talking to Christians. He said, we are believers, not as you are. We do not believe either in God or in men. We manufacture gods and we transform men. We will create a universe in our image without weaknesses. See, Carl was so prideful that he thought being a Christian and humble and all that was weak. 

Thought that was weakness. So communists now, 100 years later, this is in 1954, the person who wrote this, same thing. And the same thing today with people in 2025, they see Christianity as weakness. So he says, we're gonna create a universe in our image without weaknesses, a universe in which man, rid of the old rags of Christianity, will attain his cosmic grandeur in the supreme culmination of the species. That's where evolution fits nicely into the communist worldview. as well. 

But it's about we people, the communism transforming man, not the Holy Spirit. Marxism is a religion. It fills a God -sized hole in people's hearts, oftentimes with the outcasts of a society, which communism, of course, appeals to. It's a shame that quote -unquote outcasts can't find a place in the church. The church is open for everyone who believes. It's not a cool kids club. 

But communism speaks to a lot of people who feel rejected from society. Antifa is the militant wing of the communist party in America. And if you look at all the Antifa mugshots, they're all rejects, pink hair, whole thing. And it's just such a shame that here we have these people who are rejected, feel discontent, grieved against the system. The system's not working for them. And it's not working for them because a whole host of reasons. 

But let me just take a very basic example of you make terrible life decisions. You have no self -control. You have no discipline. You don't show up to work. You have to eventually get some job for minimum wage that you hate. You hate it long enough that then you hate the system itself. 

You hate capitalism. This is all like Karl. This is literally Karl's life, I'm describing it. And you hate the system, and then you have no belief in a higher power or an afterlife. And this is all there is, and you hate it. So you're going to take it all down. 

Do you see how this appeals to someone? How communism appeals to someone who lives like that? Communism also has its own Eden. Marx, Karl talks about the period of time before tribal ownership of land. This is a time when there were no classes, no social classes, no state, no private property. This is when people lived in harmony with each other. 

That's beautiful. And then there was the fall, the introduction of capitalism. And we're now living in a fallen world, according to communists. And it will be fallen until We can bring heaven back to earth. If only the workers of the world would finally unite, darn it. Then we'll have utopia again. 

" Now, after the 1900s, 1940s or so attempt at communism, a lot of communists in Europe said, well, why didn't the workers of the world unite? And they realized, or their thesis is, that we tried to get the workers to unite over class issues. And that wasn't enough to get people to see how aggrieved they are and how oppressed they are. So we also need to come up with all these other ways that people are oppressed. And that's where all the race, sexual orientation, all these other factors come in. This is where the rest of critical, all the other critical theories, critical gender theory, critical race theory, all these other things come in just to tell people, to make sure everyone knows, here's all these other ways you are also oppressed. 

Be aggrieved. Now will you unite us? Not just workers of the world unite, but oppressed peoples everywhere in the world unite? And the communists believe that when that happens, there will be a sort of second coming, not of Karl himself. He's dead, but it will be a return to the garden. In the words of William Foster, he was the leader of the Communist Party in America from 1945 to 1957. 

He said, the hundreds of millions of workers and peasants striking off their age old chains of slavery. He's talking about Christianity, right? The apostles. talk about being a slave to Christ. So he's talking about slavery, he's talking about Christianity. Striking off their old chains of Christianity will construct a society of liberty and prosperity and intelligence. 

Communism will inaugurate a new era for the human race. There's the secular heaven that they're striving for. Our college campuses used to be seminaries, right? All the Ivy League schools were seminaries where they used to teach the word of God. They're all now seminaries of Carl. Nearly every single one of them are all teaching communism. 

Every department in these universities. There are seminaries to Karl, preaching and indoctrinating students with communism. And it's appealing because for someone to be a Christian, you have to realize the depravity of your sin. For someone to be a communist, you have to realize the depravity of everyone else's sin. To be a Christian, you have to deny your sinful nature, as in put it to death. To be a communist, you have to deny the existence of a sinful nature. 

Revel in your pride, which is an easier pitch. We're gonna do a lot more on this moving forward. I dedicate myself to figuring out something, because Zoran, to his credit, he was able to accurately touch on something that is real, and that is he calls it the affordability crisis in New York City, and it's true. And it's not just in New York City, it's across the country. This is a real problem. It's very easy for people who don't have capital to be anti -capitalist. 

It's very easy for young people who are now not that young anymore, 30s, 40s, who don't own anything, are just saddled in student debt, to hate the system. And capitalism is appealing to them. And then it'd be easier if they're not Christians. So I want to be able to speak to that. We need to solve that politically. It's a very, very big problem. 

So we will do more of that. But it is also our job as Christians to fight against communism in every way. I'll end with Pope Pius XI. He said of communism in 1937, he said, communism offers the world as the glad tidings of deliverance and salvation. Everything we've been talking about here. It is a system full of errors and sophisms. 

It's just silly. And it would be, it's, it's also silly. And it would be even sillier if it, if the fruit of it didn't result in the deaths of hundreds of millions of people in nations that have tried it. It is in opposition, both to reason and to divine revelation. It subverts the social order because it means the destruction of its foundations because it ignores the true origin and purpose of the state. because it denies the rights, dignity, and liberty of human personality. 

See to it, venerable brethren, that the faithful do not allow themselves to be deceived. Communism is intrinsically wrong, and no one who would save Christian civilization may collaborate with it in any undertaking whatsoever. Fight against communism. MikeSlater . Locals . com. 

Transcript commercially free on the website MikeSlater .

 

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The End Of All Things Is At Hand
Politics By Faith, December 2, 2025

Abraham Davenport was a member of the founding generation. When everyone around him thought Jesus was coming back, and I mean thought he was coming back that second, Davenport didn't change a thing. We should have a similar posture.

Welcome to Politics by Faith. Thanks for being here. I read 1 Peter 4 this morning, underlined a bunch. I was going to go over a bunch of different things here, but I can't really make it past this one sentence. 1 Peter 4, 7, but the end of all things is at hand. Therefore, be serious and watchful in your prayers. 

That's the ESV. I almost always quote ESV, but I do want to give NASB here. The end of all things is near. Therefore, be of sound judgment and sober spirit for the purpose of prayer. sound judgment, sober spirit, serious prayers, watchful of your prayers. John Calvin said it ought to be the chief concern of the believer to fix his mind constantly on Christ's second advent, his second coming. 

We should be thinking, we should be fixing our minds constantly on the second coming of Jesus. This is Christmas, so it's all about the first coming. That's great, but the second coming is quite important as well. Remember, Joy to the World is actually about the second coming, it's not really a Christmas song. So I was doing some research on that sentence because that stuck out to me so much. In my research, I came across this poem about a particular day in New England. 

Let me quote here from the newspaper in 1780. It says here, the Northern states wrapped in a dense black atmosphere for 15 hours. Again, this is 1780, the day of judgment supposed to have come. Cessation of labor. People stopped working. Religious devotions resorted to. 

The herds retire to their stalls, the fowls to their roosts, and the birds sing their evening songs at noonday. clips there was, it was crazy. All the crickets came out. Science at loss to account for the mysterious phenomenon. One of nature's marvels. Redness of the sun and moon. 

Approach of a thick vapor. Loud pearls of thunder. Sudden and strange darkness. Alarm of the inhabitants. End of the world looked for. Dismay at the brute creation. 

An intensely deep gloom. This is the newspaper in 1780. Difficulty in attending to business. lights burning in the houses, vast extent of the occurrence, condition of the barometer, change in the color of objects, quick motion of the clouds, birds suffocate and die, the sun's disk seen in some places, oily deposits on the waters, impenetrable darkness at night, incidents and anecdotes, ignorant whims and conjectures, an unsolved mystery. " That was in 1780. So this poem was written by James Whittier about Abraham Davenport. Abraham Davenport was the grandson of the founder of the New Haven colony, and he was a state rep. And I just want to read through the poem here that can give us some insight into how we should be acting every day. In light of 1 Peter 4, 7, the end of all things is at hand. Here is the poem. In the old days, a custom laid aside with britches and cocked hats. It's like the founders, their tricorn hats. The people sent their wisest men to make the public laws. And so from a brown homestead, where the sound drinks the small tribute of the Mayanas, waved over the woods by ripawoms, so in Connecticut, and hallowed by pure lives and tranquil deaths, Stamford sent up to the councils of the state wisdom and grace in Abraham Davenport." It's the people put forward 

Davenport and all his wisdom and grace. "'Twas on the May day of the far old year 1780 that there fell over the bloom and sweet life of the spring, over the fresh earth and the heaven of noon, a horror of great darkness, like the night and day of which the Norrland sagas tell, the twilight of the gods." It's " It's a reference to Norse mythology, end of the world. It was bad out there. The low -hung sky was black with ominous clouds, save where its rim was fringed with a dull glow, like that which climbs the crater sides from the red hell below, like a volcano. Birds ceased to sing and all the barnyard fowls roosted. The cattle at the pasture bars lowed and looked homeward. 

Bats on leathern wings flitted abroad. The sounds of labor died. So everyone stopped working. Men prayed. Women wept. All ears grew. 

Think about the state of people. where it goes dark for a while and everyone freaks out and starts praying and thinks it's the end of the world and that it's not the end of the world, second coming. I wanted to say like there's something like this that happened if people would think it was aliens or people's instinct would be like a nuclear attack or war or something like that. I wonder how many people would think second coming. That's what happened in 1780. Men prayed, women wept, all ears grew sharp to hear the doom blast of the trumpet shatter the black sky. 

That trumpet would be 1 Corinthians 15 -52, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed. So people were waiting to hear that doom blast, that the dreadful face of Christ might look down from the rent clouds, not as he looked, a little guest at Bethany, but stern as justice and an exorable law. Meanwhile, in the old state house, dim as ghosts, sat the lawgivers of Connecticut, trembling beneath their legislative robes. The state reps are freaking out. 

They're dim as ghosts, right? It is the Lord's great day. Let us adjourn. It's second coming. We're done. 

Bang the gavel. 

Let's get out of here. Some said, And then, as if with one accord, all eyes were turned to Abraham Davenport. He rose, slow, cleaving with a steady voice the intolerable hush. Here's what he said. This well may be the day of judgment which the world awaits, but be it so or not, I only know my present duty and my Lord's command to occupy till he come. So at the post where he has set me in his providence, I choose for one. 

to meet him face to face. No faithless servant frightened from my task, but ready when the Lord of the harvest calls. And therefore, with all reverence, I would say, let God do his work and we will see to ours. Bring in the candles. And they brought them in. Then by the flaring lights, the speaker read, albeit with husky voice and shaking hands, an act to amend, an act to regulate the shad and all why fisheries. 

So just take a dumb bill about fish. Whereupon wisely and well spake Abraham Davenport straight to the question. With no figures of speech, save the ten Arab signals, yet not without the shrewd dry humor now. to the man. So it's just like logical, no -nonsense, right to the point, but also witty and thoughtful. His awestruck colleagues listening while, by the way, the world's coming to an end. 

His awestruck colleagues listening all the while between the pauses of his argument to hear the thunder of the wrath of God break from the hollow trumpet of the cloud. And there he stands in memory to this day, erect, self -poised, a rugged face, half seen against the background of unnatural dark, a witness to the ages as they pass that simple duty hath no place to fear. JFK would sometimes use this story, this poem, as in his campaigns. He would say, I hope in a dark and uncertain period of our own country that we too may bring candles to help light our country's way and not hide, not be afraid. But I love his argument. He says, God put me here to do this work. 

I'm going to keep doing it. When he's, if he's coming down, this is, I want him to see me doing this, what he put me here to do, which of course means if you're not doing what God is calling you to do, we better get doing it. The end of things is at hand. Therefore be serious and watchful in your prayers and everything else. The sound judgment of first Peter four, seven, sound judgment, sober spirit, sound judgment is really interesting word. It means the Greek word here. 

It means saved mind. This word is used six times in the new Testament. Mark 5 15, I'll just give a couple. Mark 5 15, and they came to Jesus and observed the man who had been demon possessed, sitting down, clothed, and in his right mind. There it is. Luke 8 35, and the people went out to see what had happened. 

And they came to Jesus and found the man from whom the demons had gone out. sitting down at the feet of Jesus, clothed and in his right mind. If you're in your right mind, you would be at the feet of Jesus. Romans 12, for though the grace given to me, I say to every man among you not to think more highly of himself than he ought to think, but to think so as to have sound judgment as God has allotted to each a measure of faith. Sober judgment, a saved mind. It means you're sane, you're clear thinking, you have self -control. 

A self -control against earthly passions, earthly pleasures. William Barclay made a whole list of how Greeks, like ancient Greeks, used this word in a secular way. So Plato defined this word as the mastery over pleasure and desire. Aristotle said it's the power by which the pleasure of the body are used as law commands. Pythagoras said it is the foundation on which the soul rests. Euripides said that it is the fairest gift of God. 

This other Greek philosopher said it is the safeguard of the most excellent habits of life. So the idea is that someone with a sane mind is someone who knows and loves Jesus and therefore has serious prayers. You are serious about your prayers. You're watchful in your prayers. You have sound judgment and a sober spirit for the purpose of prayer and in doing what you're supposed to be doing all the time. And so Confident in that, that even when it looks like the world around you is coming to an end, when everyone else around you thinks the world is coming to an end, at this very moment, like it's pitch black outside in the middle of the day, the world's coming to an end, this is the second coming, even then, you'll say, well, I just need to keep doing what I'm doing. 

Let's be sane minded, save my life. Let's be doing what God would want us to be doing when he does come, because it's going to happen in a flash. Matthew 25, 27, as the lightning comes from the east and shines as far as the west, so will be the coming of the son of man. To drive it home one last time, if you're doing right now what you're not supposed to be doing, you better stop. The second coming could be right now. The end of all things is at hand. 

Mike Slater . locals . com for the transcript and commercial free. Mike Slater .

 

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Boasting Serves You Right
Politics By Faith, December 1, 2025

A sailor on the Mayflower, not one of the Pilgrims, boasted about his health and mocked the sickly Pilgrims. Then, he got what was coming to him. We must learn the lesson his fellow sailors learned: to thank God for all things.


Welcome to Politics by Faith. Thanks for being here. I hope you had a nice Thanksgiving. I have one final Thanksgiving message and then after that we'll move on to our one month long analysis of the movie It's a Wonderful Life, which we saw on Thanksgiving night. Last year was the first time we watched It's a Wonderful Life from start to finish. And if you asked me two years ago if I've ever seen It's a Wonderful Life, I'd be like, oh yeah, definitely. 

I've seen it because I've just seen bits and pieces my entire life. But that doesn't cut it. That's not the whole thing. Seeing bits and pieces of It's a Wonderful Life is not the same as seeing the movie It's a Wonderful Life. And it's my favorite movie, and it's incredible, and I want to encourage you to watch it now and not wait until Christmas. Because if you watch it on Christmas Eve, you kind of miss, you miss a whole month of opportunity to really reflect on it throughout all of Christmas. 

So go watch It's a Wonderful Life right now with the whole family. It's amazing, and we will do more It's a Wonderful Life analysis. I wasn't kidding, by the way. Not a month, of course, but I'll sprinkle it in now. But I have one final Thanksgiving message just about the pilgrims. We can talk about all the time, but what's going on here is some people sent some stuff from the old world to the new world and it didn't make it. 

So William Pierce wrote a letter back to the people who sent it and they said, we lost all your stuff. I don't know if we lost it or you lost it. It just got lost. Just the way it goes. So here's what he said. Dear friends, you may know that all your beaver and your books of your accounts are swallowed up in the sea. 

Your letters remain with me, and shall be delivered, if God bring me home. But what should I more say? Have we lost our outward estates? Yet a happy loss, if our souls may gain. There is yet more in the Lord Jehovah than ever we had yet in the world. Oh, that our foolish hearts could yet be waned from these thoughts. 

here below, which are vanity and vexation of spirit. And yet we foolishly catch after shadows that fly away and are gone in a moment. Would you have had that mentality if you were traveling to a new world with nothing but an ax and a Bible? God, well, all the stuff you sent over, it's gone. But anyway, it's great. It's a happy loss if our souls may gain. 

And if God has ever decided to bless you with any good things, which are all the things you have, you better not be boastful. William Bradford wrote this. He said, I may not omit here a special work of God's providence. There was a proud and very profane young man, one of the seamen. So remember there were 102 guys on the boat, but 61 of them were not Puritans or the separatists. They were the crew, 61, most of them. 

So one of the young men of a lusty, able body, which made him the more haughty. He would always be contempting the poor people in their sickness and cursing them daily with grievous execrations. It's an execration. Making fun of an angry denouncement or curse. Just making fun of the old sick people and did not let to tell them that he hoped to help to cast half of them overboard before they came to their journey's end. So he'd mock them for being sick and say, I can't wait to throw you overboard when you finally die. 

You're not going to make it. You're so weak. And to make merry with what they had. Stop complaining. Be strong like me. And if he were by any gently reproved, knock it off, he would curse and swear most of the time. 

But, okay, so you're with me on the scene here, right? You got 41 of these Puritans, these pilgrim separatists having a tough time, 66 days over the ocean and six more months off the coast, dying. This guy's making fun of them. But if it pleased God before they came half seas over to smite this young man with a grievous disease of which he died in a desperate manner, and he was himself the first to be thrown overboard, Thus his curses light on his own head, and it was an astonishment to all his fellows, for they noted it to be the just hand of God upon him. " So it's all the all the other not Puritans were like, oh, they're not be like that guy. I wonder if that's one of the reasons why they ultimately signed the Mayflower Compact. 

I'm like, well, these guys seem to have something special helping them out along the way. So I hope you brought the pilgrims into your Thanksgiving celebration. They're wonderful people. And this is who we came from. And we can't forget it. And I was reading Deuteronomy 8 the other day, and I thought of this story from William Bradford that we just shared. 

Deuteronomy 8 says, every commandment which I command you today, you must be careful to observe, that you may live and multiply and go in and possess the land of which the Lord swore to your fathers. And you shall remember that the Lord your God led you the way these 40 years in the wilderness to humble you and test to know what was in your heart, whether you would keep his commandments or not. So He humbled you, allowed you to hunger, and fed you with manna which you did not know, nor did your fathers know, that He might make you know what manna is. not that man shall not live by bread alone but man lives by every word that proceeded from the mouth of the lord your garments did not wear out on you nor did your foot swell these 40 years you know incredible that is 40 years of walking your sandals never wore out your feet never your knees never hurt Clothes didn't wear out. You should know in your heart that as a man chastens his son, so the Lord your God chastens you. Man shall not live by bread alone. 

There it is, Deuteronomy 8. Therefore, you shall keep the commandments of your Lord your God to walk in his ways and to fear him. Do we fear the Lord? For the Lord your God is bringing you into a good land, a land of brooks of water, fountains and springs that flow out of valleys and hills, a land of wheat and barley and vines and fig trees and pomegranates. I don't love pomegranates, but I guess if you were back then, pomegranate would be pretty special. A land of olive oil and honey. 

A land in which you will eat bread without scarcity. See Harry, here's how boastful I am. God's like, I will bring you to a land of pomegranates. I'm like, I don't really love. That's the kind of cuties. 

I love cuties. 

Cuties are good. 

I have cuties instead of pomegranates, the averils or whatever those things are. They're kind of like you chew them and you don't really get a lot of burst of flavor. And then it's kind of like, it's like a seed inside of it. It's not that impressive, but hey, whatever God, whatever you want to give me. A land of olive oil and honey, a land in which you will eat bread without scarcity in which you will lack nothing. A land whose stones are iron and out of whose hills you can dig copper. 

When you've eaten and are full, you shall bless the Lord your God for the good land which he has given you. " That's what's true for us today. When you are eaten and you are full, every time that God provides and everything you have is God providing, then you should bless the Lord your God for everything that he has given us. We should break down every line of Deuteronomy 8, but the point is everything comes from God. God will protect you, provide for you with manna. Everything you have is manna. 

What's manna? Manna is everything you have and everything you earned is because God gave you manna to earn it with. He gave you the ability to... earn it. This radio show I have, this is not from me. Well, I'm very good at the radio. 

If I ever do anything good, it's only because God gave me the ability to do a thing. But even if I do good, if no one listens to it, then that's, and that's not up to me. I can't decide if anyone, if you decide to listen to this right now, that's all God. Everything, it's entirely 100 % in every way, all God. And then if you lose it all, will you still praise God? That's the story of Job, and that was the story that I first shared here with the pilgrims. When they're like, ah, we lost our stuff. 

Yet it's a happy loss if our souls may gain. One last part of Deuteronomy 8 verse 11, beware that you do not forget the Lord your God by not keeping his commandments, his judgments, his statutes, which I command you today. Lest when you have eaten and are full, and you have built beautiful houses and dwell in them, and when your herds and your flocks multiply, and your silver and your gold are multiplied. Gosh, this is today. Did you eat a big Thanksgiving meal? Do you have a nice house that's safe? 

Do you have things, herds and flocks, nice TV, whatever, nice car, your silver and your gold are multiplied, your stock market's doing well, and all that you have is multiplied. When your heart is lifted up and you forget the Lord, your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, who brought you from the life of sin you were living in, from the house of bondage, who led you through that great and terrible wilderness in which were fiery serpents and scorpions and thirsty land where there was no water, who brought water for you out of the flinty rock, who fed you in the wilderness with manna, which your fathers did not know, that he might humble you and that he might test you to do good in the end. Then you say in your heart, my power and the might of my hand have gained me this wealth. It is wonderful to have wealth and flocks and health like the sailor on the maple leaf. 

had. 

But we better not boast that God had nothing to do with it, because he had everything. MikeSlater . Locals . com. For the transcript and commercial, free website, MikeSlater . Locals .com

 

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Thanksgiving Eve: Dust and Ashes
Politics By Faith, November 26, 2025

John Adams Thanksgiving Proclamation reads, "I HAVE therefore thought fit to recommend that Wednesday the Ninth Day of May next be observed throughout the United States, as a day of Solemn Humiliation, Fasting and Prayer". Humiliation? What is humiliation and why is this a part of Thanksgiving? 

Welcome to Politics by Faith. 

Morning. 

Just woke up, I'm still sleeping. Thanksgiving Eve morning. Billion things to do. Took like so much food, but it's great. Hope you have a nice Thanksgiving week. Want to share what I was just reading this morning. 

Luke 1 46. This is Mary after Gabriel told her that you're going to have a kid. Mary said, my soul magnifies the Lord and my spirit has rejoiced in God my Savior. For he has regarded the lowly state of his maidservant. For behold, henceforth, all generations will call me blessed. For he who is mighty has done great things for me. 

And holy is his name. And his mercy is on those who fear him from generation to generation. Would this be a good, would this be good to read at the Thanksgiving table? Reading the prayer of this girl praising God. This might be right. Uh, where did I leave off? 

Let's go here. 

And holy is his name. And his mercy is on those who fear him from generation to generation. He has shown strength with his arm. He has scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts. And he's put down the mighty from their thrones and exalted the lowly. He has filled the hungry with good things and the rich he has sent away empty. 

He has helped his servant Israel in remembrance of his mercy. And he spoke to our fathers, to Abraham and to his seed forever. So I'm going to relate this to our pilgrims because it's Thanksgiving Eve, but also to us because we're pilgrims. 

We're pilgrims. 

I live in Nashville, but Nashville is not my home. I'm just a passing through. My treasures are laid up somewhere beyond the blue. I think of that all the time. Just a passing through. I think about that a lot. 

The angels backing me from heaven's open door and I can't feel at home in this world anymore. This is not our home. So we're all pilgrims and our pilgrims from the old world to the new. They deeply understood that as well. My soul magnifies the Lord. Magnify is a great word, but it's an interesting word, magnify. 

Other translations have exalt. The Greek here means to deem or declare great. to esteem highly, to extol, laud, celebrate. " It wasn't about her, it was about God. God, my soul exalts you, esteem celebrates, declares great you. My spirit has rejoiced in God, my savior. 

She knew she needed a savior. Holy is his name. His mercy is on those who fear him from generation to generation. He has shown great strength with his arm, scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts, put down the mighty from their thrones and exalted the lowly. Our pilgrims so deeply understood being humbled and humility. Our founding fathers and generations after, they would call Thanksgiving a day of fasting and prayer, but also of humiliation. 

I know we've talked about this word in the past in this podcast a couple of times. A day of humiliation. It's like, well, what do you want me to do? Like go do embarrassing things? No, it's a day to really, truly, deeply recognize how nothing you are compared to the glory and power of God. and how you're capable of nothing, nothing on your own. 

To begin to understand how deeply our pilgrims knew this, let me quote from Jonathan Edwards. He was after the pilgrims. of course, but he was the leader of the Great Awakening in our country. He said, "...humility may be defined to be a habit of mind and heart corresponding to our comparative unworthiness and vileness before God, or a sense of our own comparative meanness." Meanness means like lowly state. You're in the lowest state. 

You're comparative meanness in his sight. This is a sermon he gave called The Spirit of Charity and Humble Spirit. "...humility may be Doth primarily and chiefly consist in a sense of our meanness as compared with God, or a sense of the infinite distance there is between God and ourselves. We are little, despicable creatures, even worms of the dust, and we should feel that we are as nothing and less than nothing, in comparison with the majesty of heaven and earth. Such a sense of his nothingness Abraham expressed when he said in Genesis 18 27, Behold, now I've taken upon me to speak unto the Lord, which am but dust and ashes. When I read that, I can feel within me, and perhaps you feel the same, like, oh, that's so dramatic. 

Dust and ashes. Abraham said it. It's in the Bible. But even now, it's like, no, I'm great and mighty. It's like, no, you're nothing. Without God, Jonathan Edwards said, there's no true humility without somewhat of this spirit. 

For however sensible we may be of our meanness as compared with some of our fellow creatures, we are not truly humble unless we have a sense of our nothingness as compared with God. Our pilgrims, when they traveled to the new world, They traveled there with complete humility, knowing that they were capable of nothing on their own. Therefore, why is this important? Therefore, all the glory goes to God. If you think you're great and something, if you think you're something and then good things happen, you're like, ah, God, thanks for the assist or man, I did a lot. I did a lot of good. 

work there. I'm really pretty great. And you see how that goes down the road. You need total, complete humility. Again, as our founders would say, humiliation, a day of humiliation, recognizing how lowly we are and how incredible God is. This is William Bradford. 

Well, yesterday we talked about Ezra 821, their total reliance upon God. The pilgrims, that's their pastor, talked about Ezra as they were embarking on the ship to head off. William Bradford, thus out of small beginnings, greater things have been produced by his hand that made all things out of nothing. Right? So God, he's so incredible. He can make something out of nothing and look at the great things he did with us all by his hand and, and gives being to all things that are, and as one small candle may light a thousand. 

So the light here kindled has shown unto many, yea, in some sort to our whole nation. Let the glorious name of Jehovah have all the praise. A psalm that our pilgrims do intimately. Praise the Lord. Psalm 112, 1. Praise the Lord. 

Blessed is the man who fears the Lord, who greatly delights in his commandments. His offspring will be mighty in the land. The generation of the upright will be blessed. Let's get back to Mary here. The ending. He has helped his servant Israel in remembrance of his mercy. 

As he spoke to our fathers, to Abraham and to his seed forever, God keeps his promises. God doesn't forget. God's mercy isn't because we're great. It's not our merit. We don't deserve it. Hence it being called grace. 

It only speaks to God's character, not ours. Only God made his covenant with Abraham. He put Abraham to sleep. This should give us incredible hope. Even Mary, Mary, when this happened, is like, oh, yes. 

First of all, she knew God's promises, and she praised God, trusted God. This should give us incredible hope as well. Trust Him. God loves you. I think of God protecting the pilgrims who made it here, and God saving me, and also protecting my marriage, my children. Whatever you're grateful for today and every day, thank God for it. 

It's only because of Him. Our souls magnify the Lord. Hope you have a great Thanksgiving tomorrow. MikeSlater . Locals . com. Transcript, commercial fee on the website. MikeSlater .

 

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