Live Free with Josh Howerton - 3 Megachurch Pastors Discuss Charlie Kirk’s Martyrdom & Church Revival | Live Free with Josh Howerton
Episode Date: September 18, 2025In this bonus roundtable episode, Pastors Josh Howerton, Josh McPherson, and Ryan Visconti reflect on a weekend marked by salvations, record church attendance, and a deep spiritual hunger following Ch...arlie Kirk’s assassination. They emphasize that this moment in history is more spiritual than it is political, urging pastors to preach the truth boldly, call for repentance, and lead with courage. Honoring Kirk as a martyr grounded in Scripture, the pastors share how church leaders can discern the times, raise spiritual urgency of the Gospel, and faithfully steward the influx of seekers turning to the Church. 👍 Like, Comment, & Subscribe for more life-changing podcasts! 🔔 Turn on notifications so you never miss an update! 👇 DON’T MISS OUT! Ready to say "YES" to Jesus? Take your next step of faith and text LIFE to 20411: https://lakepointe.church/baptism/ Life change happens in community! Want more info on ROOTED groups? Check out the link: https://lakepointe.church/rooted/ ⛪ ABOUT LAKEPOINTE CHURCH:We believe that Lakepointe is a movement for all people to Know God, Find Freedom, Discover their Calling, and Make a Difference. With 7 DFW locations and programs for all ages, there's something for everyone. 🤝 Support this ministry and help us reach more people with the Gospel: https://lakepointe.church/give STAY CONNECTED:🌐 Website: https://lakepointe.church/👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lpconnect/📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lpconnect 🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@lakepointechurch 🎧 LISTEN ON THE GO! ▶️ Live Free on Spotify / https://open.spotify.com/show/353ryGdZNlebaiqkCcy3Yc▶️ Live Free on Apple Podcasts / https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/live-free-with-josh-howerton/id1669321198 #CharlieKirk #JoshHowerton #JoshMcPherson #RyanVisconti #Martyr #LakepointeChurch #ThereIsMore #LiveFree #Revival
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Welcome to Live Free with Pastor Josh Howardton.
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Now, let's dive into today's episode.
Okay, guys, welcome to a bonus episode, the first ever bonus episode of Live Free, right after.
We just got Visconti on last week.
I've had McPherson on before, and now the family's together.
We're together again.
What an honor.
Hoodlums for Christ.
Okay.
Here's what we're going to do.
There is something really amazing that's happening in churches right now.
And the three of us are in tons of text threads with other pastors.
And it's like, dude, something's happening right now in our churches and in the nation.
It's raising a bunch of questions.
And it's like, what do we do right now?
So here's what this is.
We're primarily talking to other pastors.
But this is for anybody that loves the Church of Jesus Christ, anybody that's a leader of any kind.
and we're going to talk about everything surrounding
what just happened in our churches.
So let me just kind of tell by where we're going to kind of go.
We're going to talk about what's happening
in our churches, what we're seeing.
I want to ask you guys the question,
is the word martyr appropriate for what happened?
Charlie Kirk, why, why not?
I want to, you know, a lot of people are doing this thing
are hearing, hey, if your pastor didn't preach
on the assassination of Charlie this week,
you need to find a new church.
Do we agree with that or not?
There's actually there's a whole bunch of stuff that I want to hit and I want to hit last time the three of us talked about our White House visit.
People online called us Maga Church pastors instead of mega church pastors and I would like to respond to that.
So anyway, let me just jump right in.
Like, I don't know about you guys.
I finished this Sunday and like I honestly went home.
I took a walk and wept in joy.
I was just, McPherson, why don't you start?
Ryan, I'd love to hear from you.
What happened to your church this week?
It's hard to put into words.
I mean, Easter-level attendance,
highest non-Easter event attendance
in the history of our church.
Highest non-Easter event response to salvation
in the history of our church.
People came hungry, people came hurting,
people came with questions.
We had people come, I had a guy come up to me afterwards,
big guy, strong guy, strapping dude,
never been to church.
a family member invited him, knew he needed to go, looking for answers.
They didn't even know who Charlie was until he saw the news.
People so deeply impacted across all different spectrums of life
by the tragedy of the event, by the witness of Charlie's own words.
And so we just saw just an outpouring of the spirit of God,
just a flood of people coming down to pray for the Kirk family,
to pray for our nation, to respond in repentance and faith.
I was just with our college group this morning.
we have a college here on campus.
And one of the guys, freshman here at our college,
texted 10 of his unbelieving friends from high school.
All 10 showed up for church on Sunday.
So just a remarkable outpouring the spirit of God.
And more than anything,
a level of spiritual hunger that I personally have never witnessed in my life.
I mean, Easter gets close,
but I've never experienced the level of spiritual hunger,
spiritual questioning and spiritual hurting that we witnessed on Sunday.
Ryan.
Yeah.
I mean,
I think even the spiritual atmosphere at church on Sunday was even higher than it is sometimes on Easter,
where just all day worshiping as hard as people could.
I could barely get through a sermon some services because people just wanted to clap and affirm every point.
But, yeah, attendance was just insane.
We had every chair being used, every overflow.
space was full. We had a line of cars down the street waiting to get in. People were walking a
half mile, a mile to the building because they had to park so far away. It was almost as much
as we had on Easter this year, but with three less services at our largest campus.
Jesus. People invited. What were you at Ryan? We were at 7200 on Sunday. On Easter, we had 7,900.
So it was crazy. Pretty close. Bro, that's stupid. That is it was crazy.
And for a frame of reference, we've been averaging like 5, 5,500 the last month or so.
So it's incredible.
A mega church worth of extra people on Sunday at a church.
Our size is crazy.
Just hundreds, 200 people saved almost.
Jeez.
Unbelievable.
Just hundreds of guests, almost 100 first time families check their kids in the kids' ministry.
And here's what I heard over and over again like you guys, people who hadn't been to church in a decade or 20 years or ever.
I'm going to church this Sunday.
I think one of the most surprising things, and I don't know if this gets ahead of us here,
but multiple people said that they were in church at another church,
and their church wasn't saying anything about what happened to Charlie,
and they were just so frustrated and upset that they got up,
left their church, and drove to my church.
And I think that is just a reflection of people were so hurting, shocked,
and grieved at what happened, that they just desperately on a soul level needed to be ministered to
in that moment. And that's not a normal, like, church hopper, consumeristic, you know, type of
decision to get up and leave a church service like that. That's not somebody that was offended
over a difficult biblical truth. That's just a reflection of people really needed to be ministered to
on Sunday, and that is why they came to church in such record numbers. What about you, Josh? What did you see?
Dude, it was the same.
I'll get the, I'll finish.
So our reports, because of the campus, you know, structure, our reports usually settle
over like the 48 hours after the weekend.
So it'll settle at the end of, as of this morning, I think we'll end up with 5,000 more people
at church this week than the same week last year.
That's wild.
And same as you, Ryan.
Like, we had probably way more than this.
that indicated, you know, I always do an invitation where I ask people to raise her hand
publicly to indicate a first time decision for Christ.
Way more than this, like, indicated a first time decision.
But we had 400 people that actually, like, texted in, took the step, signed up for like,
I just got saved. I want to be baptized next week.
It's like 400 people.
And then I'm going to, can we toss that picture up real quick, Trinity?
So like, you guys probably saw this same thing.
somebody, this is what our services look like. Can you do it? Yeah, yeah. This is what our services
look like. Somebody took this picture in one of them. So what that is, is the service was full.
Those are a bunch of college, dude, I'll get weepy talking about it. Those are a bunch of college
students that just were like, there's no seats, but I got to hear something. And so they're just like
covering the stairs in all the services just to hear Bible teaching, man. And just like you guys, dude,
It was like just watching people during the services,
like probably more weeping during the service than I remember in a very long...
It was interesting.
Like both more weeping and more like, ah!
Like applause, like, let's go!
It was like weeping and charged the battlefield was the vibe at the same time.
It's like the events of the week cast all of the,
truths of the gospel about heaven, hell, death, life, forgiveness, the covering of the blood of Jesus,
the possibility of a new life. The events of the week just cast the good news of the gospel in
such a bright light to contrast hopelessness without the gospel that like every word in every
song like it meant something more. And so just the intensity of the morning was to what Ryan's already
said it was at levels I've just never seen before. Same. So let me pivot because we want to start
talking about like, man, if you're a pastor, like how do I handle the moment? How do I steward a moment?
If the Lord is beginning, if this is the cloud the size of a man's hand and a downpour is coming,
how do we seize the moment and steward it? I want to talk about that here in a second.
So like, can we just zoom out, Ryan? I'm curious what you think. Like, I don't, I have almost not
talk to a pastor who didn't have, like, record attendance? Like, what do you think, and you're seeing
like these vigils all over the country, like, like, lost college students coming to these vigils
and, like, praying? Like, I'm curious what you think, like, what do you think's happening
spiritually? Well, you guys have talked a lot in the past about what pastors need to do to build a
healthy church culture and lead through our cultural moment in negative world. And if pastors have been
doing that over the last three to four years, then they have essentially put themselves in position
to catch the wind that is blowing right now. There is a spiritual awakening, I think, that is
happening in people's hearts. I mean, it's too soon to know if it's something of historic proportions,
but our prayer is that it is. And you see all across America, any church where they have essentially
done the work to create a healthy culture that is committed to biblical truth, people know that
they can come to that church in times like this and be ministered to and be encouraged and receive
hope. So we see it at college campuses. Here in Arizona, this is where Turning Points headquarters
is at nationally. So in church services, we had a lot of senior turning point staff this last
week, people who worked with Charlie every day and knew him and were close to him. And so they're
seeing at the college campuses, they're seeing thousands, tens of thousands of new chapter requests
to open a turning point chapter. I mean, it's going to, it's just going to backfire on the
enemy. It's going to backfire in a big way. And I believe Erica Kirk, God's going to use her
in great ways as well. But this would be a word that I have for any church that would say,
we didn't see a big attendance day or it didn't feel incredible at our church. That would be a
warning sign that there are some real problems that you might need to start addressing.
right now.
Do you mind me, so I'm like, do you mind me asking, like, click on that for me?
Yeah.
So I have gotten some responses on X and from some friends that, hey, it's not been a great
week for our church.
We had leaders leave.
We had people get mad that I even posted about what happened to Charlie Kirk pastors
have said.
And I think that is honestly a reflection of leading up to this moment.
Pastors have not done what was necessary to put a,
a flag in the ground and say, we are for life.
We are standing against abortion.
We are for unity.
We are not going to play the DEI game.
We are for God's definition of marriage.
We are not going to peddle around.
We're not going to tippy toe around the sexuality issue.
And if pastors have been clear on these issues,
instead of trying to build a church by catering their message to progressive-leaning people,
then they've had a great week.
But if they haven't done that, it's, it's, it's,
brought things to the surface that were already there,
a disunity over truth in what matters most.
Josh, agree, disagree additional comments?
No, I completely agree.
I counted it when we were talking earlier this week, Josh.
I'm on text threads with 48 different pastors.
And all but one or two who haven't stepped into this moment
experienced the same thing we're talking about.
So this isn't us getting on the phone to say, look awesome, our churches.
As part of the motivation we had for this was to signal to the people listening
because they don't have access to talk to 50 pastors and to know what's going on.
So part of this is we're not trying to manufacture something that's not there.
We're trying to highlight what God is doing across the nation.
And what I'm saying is 48 pastors, one after the other after the other,
are jumping on these threads and saying Easter-level attendance,
Easter-level salvations, never seen anything like it.
I mean, the universal response from pastors that we know
who are in the game addressing cultural issues,
acting with boldness and courage and clarity in this cultural moment,
are seeing the winds of revival blow through their church.
And the pastors who aren't addressing these issues
aren't seeing the winds of the spirit of revival,
blow through their church. And so it's not so much that I want to jump on and say,
if you're not talking about it, you're a coward. I don't know why you're not talking about it.
My encouragement is consider why you're not talking about it. Consider if it might be a fear of man
driving your silence and reflect on whether or not that reflects faithful shepherding.
Because here's the deal. Every single human being that comes into your church is asking,
how do I think about this and what do I do.
And I believe it's a part of the shepherd's job,
if they're going to be faithful,
to open the Word of God and give them answers.
I'm not saying what to say or how to say it,
but I'm simply saying to ignore addressing this moment
feels to me like you're sticking your head in the sand
and pretending that life isn't happening.
Everyone else in our church has to live in the real world,
and it's part of our job as Shepherds to address what's happening
with the Word of God to frame the events of the,
world we're living through so they understand what's happening in the context of the bigger
context of the kingdom of God. So then like, so I'll just, I'll ask you guys the question.
I think a lot of pastors, and I, you know, I know what I think. And but, okay, so what do you say
to the guy and, you know, either you guys who jump in here? What do you say to the guy who honestly,
it might not be, maybe, here's how he would frame it and I'm going to frame it that way.
He would say, dude, honestly, it's not cowardice. It's like,
It's evangelism. I'm trying to become all things to all people. I live in a progressive city.
I got a ton of progressive leaning people in my church. Or men, the people in my church are
inundated by progressive media outlets. So they've only ever heard negative things about Charlie Gert.
So if I had gone in real clear, I would have just alienated half my church. So they'd be going,
man, it's not cowardice. It's an evangelism strategy response.
Yeah, I mean, I think at a certain point a pastor has to ask himself, what kind of church do I want to be the pastor of?
Do I want to be the pastor of a church where there is division over such clear matters like this?
Do I want to be the pastor of a church where I have to tippy toe around, walk on eggshells when something like this happens?
Or do I want to pastor a church where people are passionate about God's Word and the truth?
A few years ago, I just decided I'm going to lead the church I want, not the church that I have.
I'm going to preach to the church that I want, not to the church that I have.
And over time, God is going to develop people in the way that I think honors him and I think is pleasing to him.
And you posted about this so well yesterday, Josh Howerton, on your stories, the little insider baseball for pastors.
When pastors cater their message to progressives, they're going to find that over time it's like the body becomes anemic and you cannot be healthy and you cannot grow strong.
with spiritually malnourished and divided people.
And this is just a,
I'm just going to say it for you in a blunt way.
Like the healthiest and strongest Christians in your church
are going to leave if you lead with weakness.
And over time,
your church will get weaker and weaker and less effective
at reaching the lost because they're under-discipled
and under-discipled people don't reach the lost.
So you got to decide what kind of,
this is just the thing.
It's going to keep happening,
whether it's an election cycle, a tragedy, or whatever.
Like, every time that happens, it's like shaking the church.
And anyone that is not, anything that's not healthy is going to come to the surface.
And it's going to keep exposing these problems.
So a pastor has to ask, like, am I going to rip the Band-Aid off and just start leading with
courage so that my church can become strong and bold and healthy?
Or am I going to keep doing this for the rest of my ministry career and suffer and not reach as many people as I actually could?
So let me give an example of what you.
you mean, Ryan, by like ripping the band-aid off because we were all friends.
We're Ryan, you and me were friends when I did this.
And then, Josh, I'm going to say something.
And then, Josh, I want to come back to you and say, here's the question I'm going to ask you in 30 seconds.
So Ryan's like, hey, man, if you cater, you're preaching to progressives, your church will become anemic.
Here in 30 seconds, Josh, I'm going to ask you the question.
Somebody might be watching and say, yeah, but you got, you're just doing the opposite.
You're catering your message to conservatives.
and what would you say to that?
So in 30 seconds, I'm going to ask you that, Josh.
Ryan, this is what, so to give an example of what you're talking about,
very frankly, this is what I used to do.
I used to kind of go like, all right, man, you know,
I don't want to alienate anybody that's part of my church,
and some people have these political innings,
and some people have these political innings.
And so if something was politically divisive,
I would just generally try to downplay it, avoid it,
or like super massage the language
so that maybe we can get everybody to come along together.
And then I started noticing exactly what you said, Ryan.
One, I noticed like, oh, dude, I'm not attacking some of the ideologies.
The New Testament literally tells us it says,
we destroy arguments in every idea that sets itself up against the knowledge of God.
And I started noticing, dang, because I'm not confront,
those things head on, my people are actually getting sucked into these things. So then it was in
2021, you can probably still find the sermon. I had a sermon where it was a height of BLM riots. And I was
finally like, you know what, ripped the band-aid off. And I knew, I'm not an idiot. In a church
our size, I knew what would happen. And I just put up the BLM vision statement. And I walked through it
word by word. We are trained Marxists. We are.
We want to deconstruct the Western prescribed nuclear family.
We are queer affirming.
You know, all of it.
And I just walked through it.
Which they took down by the way later.
Yeah, that's right.
They got so much attention.
They tried to hide it.
Not that they took it out of a mission statement.
They just tried to memory hole it.
So I still have screen grabs of that website.
That's right.
And, you know, honestly, that was a rough two weeks here.
Where it was like, okay, there's a little.
But here's what I figured out.
it's that Proverbs thing of what we want to do as pastors is build up the wise,
correct the foolish, and drive out the evil.
And there were a lot of humble Christians who they struggled with it at first,
but the more they thought about it, they were like, you know what, my pastor's right.
And they repented and they changed.
And then there were some people who were so emotionally committed to what was an evil organization's cause
that they left.
And honestly, my church got stronger and more unified.
And as a result, this week, there was no division in my church at all, just unified celebrating.
Ryan, and then let me go back to Josh.
And let me just spell out for people, like, what happens if you don't do that in a moment?
Ryan, can you eat your mic?
For some reason, your volume's a little low.
Yeah, yeah.
Is that better?
Here's what happens if you don't do what Josh just described in a moment like what we just experienced yesterday.
The strongest Christians in your church who are really resolute in their faith, they
just become frustrated and they lose confidence in your leadership. The good-hearted Christians who are maybe
a little less spiritually mature, they just become confused and they go, now I don't really know what to
think because my pastor is not giving me clear guidance. And then there are like evil people in your
church who intend to do harm. And if you don't correct them, they will spread their toxicity.
they will spread their lies to other Christians through life groups, through relationships,
and the problems in your church will just become more complicated and more dangerous.
Josh, let me go back to you. First of all, agree. Josh, let me go back to you. So,
you know, Ryan said, hey man, if you try to cater your preaching to progresses, the church can
get anemic. What do you say to the person who points to you and goes, yeah, but you're just doing
the same thing the opposite way. You're just catering your message.
to conservatives.
In the spirit of Charlie Kirk,
I would just flip it on them
and say, why do you think it is
that when I open the Bible and preach Bible verses,
it aligns with the party you call conservative?
So, I mean, I mean, and they may not be convincing for some,
but I'm like, I'm not up in the pulpit
using political language
in sociological categories for people.
I'm preaching the Bible.
I'm a verse by verse guy through the Bible.
And it just so happens that verses in the Bible are lining up with the values that are currently
being held by those who would call themselves a conservative political party.
And so I look at it and I go, bro, it's just a damning, it's a damning admission that
the progressive secular party has nothing to do with a biblical worldview.
So when I talk to people about, or when guys will ask me, if I preach that, I'll lose it.
I just, I tell them, look at the example of Jesus.
Jesus had zero concern for saying things that would cause people to go, to be driven away.
And so I just, I oftentimes find myself cautioning pastors don't work so hard to have a higher
attention in your preaching than Jesus did.
Jesus spoke the word of.
That's good. Keep going.
Jesus spoke the truth.
and it wasn't 50% truth, 50% grace, it was 100% truth, full of 100% grace,
and it drove some people away, and Jesus didn't chase them.
He didn't say, okay, did that offend you?
Let me water it down.
Are you still interested?
Oh, you're not yet.
Let me water it down more.
Are you still interested?
He just laid the truth out there.
And I think oftentimes his pastor's getting trouble,
when instead of being the man who delivers the message, they tried to be the one.
who convicts people of the message.
That's the work of the Holy Spirit.
That's not our job.
But when we neuter the message, when we edit the message, when we water down the message,
we actually inhibit the ability of the Holy Spirit to do anything.
And I want pastors to hear.
I have LGBTQ people come to our church.
I got handed a book yesterday by a woman who is very, very high up in a very public
corporation that everyone participates in or buys product from almost every day in this country.
She's at the very top of the C-suite of this organization.
She was a flaming liberal feminist, showed up at my church.
Her first Sunday, after three years of being invited, she shows up to our church, and I'm
preaching on wives submitting to their husbands.
And her friends were like, oh, my gosh, we can't believe we brought her.
the Holy Spirit convicted her that morning, and a year and a half later, she hands me a book
that she wrote on the toxic lies of feminism that led her to throw away the first 35 years of her life.
And so my encouragement to pastors is, do not hold back the word of God, the truth of God,
and stop doing calculations in your mind on how you think it's going to land.
The calculation you run is, what is God going to think about what I say?
stop fearing men,
stop doing the calculus of how many will stay,
get in your closet,
seek the Lord,
walk in the power of the spirit,
and deliver the goods,
and let the chips fall.
Amen.
Yeah, it's like,
I just want to keep pointing that out.
Like, hey, man,
I think all of us would say this.
Like, we have not,
it's not a thing
where pastors should accept the GOP
into their heart and just like,
oh, man, you know,
I'm, you know, it's like,
we're just on Team Jesus.
and the way that things align right now, it just so happens,
that there is one party that is openly,
in their publicly stated policies,
they are openly for active rebellion against God
in five or six very significant areas,
and there's one party that's not.
And so it's not about political parties for us,
it's about Team Jesus for us,
and then there's the secondary thing of which parties
more closely aligned.
Is that a good way to say it, Ryan?
Yeah, and it could change over time.
It has changed over the last decades.
The way that the Democratic Party looked, it used to not be in this state of overt rebellion against God.
And there was room to disagree and be a Christian, but maybe lean more Democrat when it comes to social policies or tax policy or foreign policy.
But today, as you said, it's very true.
The Democratic Party has enshrined in their party platform.
That is their manifesto.
That is their commitment stated publicly for the record, what they are pursuing and what
their agenda is. It is rebellion against God. And there is not really a lot of room within the party
to differ from the platform and to go a different way. So really, that's why you see
all Democrats really aligned around the same causes and very, very little people, very
little varying from that. But we're not getting up to preach from gop.com on Sundays.
We're opening our Bibles. And people have associated biblical truth with
maga or conservatism in recent years and it's like okay if you want to draw that connection then okay
i'm not making that connection on sundays you're not doing that either people make that connection
because they are there is a connection between biblical truth and what this republican party
tends to stand for today well i don't think we should i don't think we should sorry go ahead josh
no i was gonna based on what ryan said because i think it's tangential so like last time we hopped on a pod
together. You know, we talked about, we debriefed our White House visit and some things we were seeing
out of the White House faith office that were like crazy encouraging. Yeah. And, you know, like that we had
some of that stuff like went a little viral. And then, you know, what, you know, what some guys were like,
these guys aren't mega church pastors. They're Maga church pastors. Josh McPherson, I reject that label.
But Josh McPherson, what do you say? Hey, the shoe feds. No, I'm totally kidding.
Josh is like, let me change hats real quick.
Yeah.
Where is that thing?
Yeah.
I just think, I just, I think the tactic of the enemy is to accuse and label.
And so I just, I just, I just, I just, like, what an immature way to have a dialogue.
Let's look at the substance of our life and the substance of our conversation.
And then I don't think it's, it's off, or it's out of bounds to, to say out loud things like,
our president is saying publicly consistently, he wants our nation to come back to God.
He gave more of a clear gospel presentation on Easter from the White House than I've heard
some pastors give. I just, I don't know why we're not celebrating that and talking about it more.
And it's like, it's like, oh, we can't say this. Say what you want about us past.
Right now in this moment, this man is leaning into desiring a nation that aligns with the moral law of God.
and I don't know why we can't celebrate that.
That's not selling out our souls.
I mean, dear Lord, read the entire Old Testament.
It's about prophets and priests speaking into the life of the king
so that he could make laws and lead and conduct a nation
in line with the moral laws of God.
And we have a president who is asking pastors to pray,
who is asking pastors to the White House to speak into his wife.
I've heard 300 times from members of the people,
of this White House saying, you have a voice in this White House. You have a seat at the table.
What's been done in the name of politics and power is egregious. The amount of examples of
anti-Christian discrimination are rampant that they're uncovering and exposing. And what they're saying
is, we want you to have a seat at the table to reestablish our nation as one nation under God.
And it's not political to cheer that. You know, my buddy Adam, Josh, you and Ryan both know him.
one of my pastor buddies here, one of my dearest friends,
made the observation yesterday, I thought was so powerful.
When we read Paul's exhortation to take every thought captive,
he gives that charge in the context of doing spiritual warfare in the public square.
And the observation Adam made was,
I've always applied that personally.
Take every thought captive.
There is also an application sociologically, right?
when we hear ideas and ideology that is counter to the Word of God, it is our job as prophets.
It is our job as shepherds to take that thought captive, to say, no, that is not right,
that is not true, that is not from the light, that is not from heaven, that is not from God.
That is a lie and to expose it through the power of the Spirit with the Word of God.
That is our prophetic call to do.
and when we go silent on lies of our day that are capturing people's minds and hearts and then
ruining them by leading them down roads of destruction, we are failing to do our job as shepherds.
And so I just put that out there for pastors to consider it is your job to not just take
every thought captive in your mind.
It is your job to take captive those thoughts and ideas that are not from heaven,
but rather from hell, and are in the public place and gaining momentum.
and Charlie did that possibly better than any other person I know.
He was going into the public square.
He was going into the marketplace.
And he was actively, winsomely, graciously, patiently, lovingly, taking captive
every thought that sets itself up against the kingdom of God.
And most people have just watched clips of Charlie.
I would encourage every person out there to not listen to what people say about what Charlie said,
but to go watch an actual hour and a half engagement.
because very few people have watched an entire engagement.
If you watch an hour and a half clip of him at a college, he's laughing, he's inviting people to talk.
He's letting people argue with him and make cases again.
He's not interrupting them, cutting them off.
What you see in the clips is him responding to them.
What you don't see is the 15 minutes he let them talk before then, asking questions, understanding their story, engaging in their curiosity.
he was a remarkable example of taking every thought captive,
and I'm not ashamed of him.
Dude, so I watch the, I think Ryan may have turned me on to it,
the All-In podcast with Chimoth and Jason.
So Jason is the dude on the All-In podcast.
These are like four San Francisco tech billionaires.
Jason is the guy on that podcast that's the most progressive.
Jason, he tweeted this this morning, to your point, Josh.
Basically, his original response was like, I hate that guy.
And he had just, you know, racist, said the civil rights was bad, said black women don't have the mental processing.
Like he had heard all the little snippets where people, you know, take and twist.
And then this morning he tweeted, okay, I've watched 40 Charlie Kirk videos now at this point.
And not one of them was outrageous.
His opinions were the exact same as the Catholics.
I grew up one.
I used to be one.
I disagree with many of those traditional beliefs.
but nothing he said is shocking.
In fact, they're extremely predictable for a Catholic.
And I'm actually seeing it's all the little sound bites.
Like, we won't go into it right here.
This is for a different podcast.
But it's like, I literally saw it going, like, almost viral.
Charlie Kirk called an Asian woman a racial slur.
He said chink in the, and then you go watch the video.
And he's literally talking to a Muslim man whose name is chink yugar,
Sink Yugar.
And he's, but it's like, so people, like literally, this was like,
like massive viral. Yeah. And then you go watch it. And so to your point, Josh,
and so let me transition. So that dynamic creates a tough spot. If you're a pastor in like a
super progressive city and your people, Ryan, I've heard you say before, you can have,
you can have real feelings based on wrong thinking. And if your people have only ever heard
the selectively edited twisted clips, and so they actually think, they have real
feelings based on wrong thinking. They actually think, oh, dude was totally racist and hated.
And you're like, man, if I go in, I'm going to alienate half my church because they have real
feelings based on wrong thinking. Ryan, what do they, what's that pastor do?
Yeah. Well, can let me say one thing first to follow up on what Pearson just said, because I think
this is important for any pastor that would listen. When we get called MAGA church pastors or
some label like that, okay, that is a label used against us.
misrepresenting reality in an attempt to steer us.
The hope is that we will pull back from what we were saying because, oh, I don't want to be
labeled that way, and we will start to act differently.
So it's an attempt to manipulate and control.
I know all of you guys very well on a personal level, and I can say for all of us, our first
love is Jesus Christ.
Our second is our families.
Our third is our church.
And then comes our country.
every decision we make and everything we preach flows downstream from that order of love.
Okay.
So don't let other people control you.
Then what I would say to pastors who are dealing with that reality, my people think this.
My people think, okay, I just want to point out, one of the Ten Commandments is not actually,
it doesn't actually say do not lie.
It says, do not bear false witness.
Yes.
That's good, right.
Okay.
That's good.
So to spread and repeat and act as if,
a false accusation is true is directly breaking one of the 10 commandments.
That's right, bro.
If you are claiming to be a Christian, and here's Charlie Kirk, who is a professing believer in
Jesus, and he was a real Christian, he loved Jesus.
Quick little anecdote.
When Charlie visited my church about a year ago for a men's night, when he got there, I was
like, hey, what do you want to talk about tonight?
Is there anything you don't want to talk about?
And he's like, I don't really want to talk about politics.
He's like, I want to talk about the church.
I want to talk about Jesus.
I want to talk about men rising up to lead their families with boldness.
I'm like, let's go.
He's just such a loving, kind, gracious, respectful, humble guy.
I don't know if I've ever met someone who had that much influence in the world and was that humble.
This guy had the president and vice president of the United States calling him on his cell phone on a regular basis.
All right.
That's beside the point.
All right.
But this guy loved Jesus, right?
And we do too. When someone in your church believes a lie, even if it's emotionally difficult for them to hear the truth, as a pastor, you know that knowing the truth sets them free from bondage. And I believe that when you tell someone, when you tell someone the truth, when you actually love them in your heart, in their spirit, if they're regenerate, they can sense that, that this pastor is speaking truth, that he loves me. It might be hard to hear. It might be
uncomfortable. But if the truth is shared clearly with love and conviction, it pierces the soul.
And so pastors, you got to tell your people the truth because you love them. That's right.
Well, hey guys, one of the reasons we are intentional in creating these kind of podcast episodes is
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How would you respond to that?
Oh, you're just mega pastors and Charlie was it racist.
What would you do with someone like that in the church?
I completely, I completely, it's, I totally agree with what you guys said.
I think it's a labels are almost always a manipulation tactic.
Yes.
Label and dismiss.
That's honestly, that's what Satan does.
Label and dismiss.
If I can label you and dismiss you, I don't actually even have to engage.
in dialogue with you and refute what you're saying.
That's right.
So that's number one.
I think it's like usually a tactic by more progressive leaning pastors to like not have
to actually engage with the biblical arguments.
That's right.
So one, I just reject it.
No, no, I'm on Team Jesus.
And if right now biblical convictions just so happen to more map on to modern conservatism
than modern progressivism, okay, that's great.
Then I'm going to be very clear about that.
And if that were to ever change, I would be very clear.
about that. So I just completely reject what you're saying. And then I totally agree with what Ryan
said. In fact, I'm doing it. The live free podcast that'll release later this week is I'm going
through the primary lies or misunderstandings that people are saying about Charlie. And then like,
okay, let me show the actual clip. This is what he actually said. And either show it's a lie and it's
misleading or then I'll say, actually, you know, what he said, what he said? What?
right and here's why, even if it's unpopular.
Or, honestly, I would want to call balls and strikes.
If I disagree with something he said, I would say, hey, I disagree with that.
And that's okay.
Let me ask you guys the question.
I used the word martyr in my sermon this week, but let me present, quote, unquote, the other
side.
A lot of people are like pushing back on that term.
So Ryan or Josh, whoever wants to go first, here's the objection.
Man, it's actually, I know he was a Christian,
but it's actually inappropriate to call him a martyr
because he was actually killed more for political beliefs
than for his religious beliefs.
So, yeah, I can jump in here, Ryan, you can catch up with,
or you can fill him.
I think it's using the term martyr
to describe Charlie Kirk is 100% accurate
because that's what he was.
He was not shot because of his political views.
He was not shot because of his big personality.
He was not shot because he offended some people.
He was murdered because he was effectively reaching a generation for Jesus Christ.
He was not shot because he was talking.
He was shot because hundreds of thousands upon millions of young people were listening to what he was saying.
and at the heart of Charlie Kirsch message was the good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
He was not primarily a political animal.
He was first and foremost a son of God who felt his mission to win as many souls to Jesus as possible.
In one clip I watched this week, he said the most important thing is to win as many souls to Christ as possible.
And the second most important thing is to secure religious freedom so we can continue doing the first.
Yeah, there you go.
And so he was on the record, explicitly so, repeatedly so, as saying his sole mission
was to win as many souls to Jesus Christ as possible.
And he gave witness to Jesus Christ everywhere he went.
Two minutes before he was assassinated, he's talking about the finished work of the cross
in the man Jesus Christ to a crowd of largely Mormons.
He's answering their questions.
He's inviting them.
them to ask questions. And then he's declaring the man Jesus Christ over a crowd full of Mormons.
He was very clear on who Jesus was. He was very clear on the gospel. And what Charlie Kirk did
was he had the audacity to believe that the word of God is authoritative over all of life,
from our sexuality to our relationships, to the marketplace and to, yes, even politics. And so in Charlie
Kirk, I see a man who was committed primarily and foremost to proclaiming the good news of Jesus Christ
and people were listening to him and that's why he was murdered. Before Ryan responds, I'm going to read
some of his final words to your point, Josh. These were some of Charlie Kirk's final words.
It's not just intrabiblical evidence, but extra biblical evidence that Jesus Christ was a real person.
He lived a perfect life. He was crucified. I'm getting emotional reading it. He was crucified, died,
rose on the third day, and he is Lord and God overall. That's right. That's right. What a stud.
What a stud. And we have to recognize that what's happening before us is spiritual, right?
This was a demonic attack in the physical realm on a servant of Jesus Christ. And I say that because
the proof is in the response, right? If this was just merely a political assassination, there'd be
cities burning and parties arguing, but because I believe it was primarily a spiritual warfare attack
in the heavenly realms that spilled over into the physical realm, what we're seeing is what
always happens when someone is martyred. And that is increased supernatural, spirit-born hunger
for the things of God. That is what always happens, which is why it's not cliche to say
the blood of the martyr waters revival in the heart of the church.
And so I think the outpouring of almost universal global response to this assassination
is increased spiritual hunger and increased spiritual harvest.
I think that is the defined apologetic to how we should think about Charlie's life.
I'm going to, Ryan, I want you to give your riff on whether martyr's right or not.
But Josh, you just said something I have not thought about.
that, hey, the response to it proves the reality of it.
That's right.
Because it's two things.
You're seeing two things.
One, you're seeing the blood of the martyrs is the seat of the church.
That's tertulians quote.
And it's like massive spiritual outpouring,
highest church attendance, people flocking, you know, to the things of God.
And then on the other hand, you're seeing demons rejoicing.
That's right.
And so it's like, dude, the response to it maybe proves the reality of it.
Now, Ryan, agree or disagree on the word martyr.
and why. It starts with the fact that all of Charlie's worldview is shaped by the Bible and that he was a
committed Christian. And as you said McPherson, he believed that God's word was authoritative. And he said that
out loud. And people who know him know that he was about to become even more focused on evangelism in the
years ahead than he has been in the past. And he's already been a great evangelist. Then I would point this out,
he might be not just a martyr, but perhaps the greatest American martyr in history in that he didn't
die in a far off jungle. He died on American soil, killed by an American, trying to reach Americans
with truth that is founded in God's word because he spoke the truth. Look who killed him. It was somebody
who was steeped in transgender ideology. And there might not be any more demonic ideology on the
earth today than transgender ideology, which rebels against the created order of God,
starts with confusion and keeps leading to destruction in a very public way, not just hurting people,
but shedding the blood of the most innocent people. And we've seen these shootings happen with
schools and children and people being killed just because they are sharing ideas that really
the devil doesn't like. And so he is a martyr. And pastors should be clear on that.
Yeah. The reason I use, it's what you said, right? The reason I like unequivocally used that,
word in the sermon is that all of his people are like well you know yes he said some things about
jesus and was explicit about the gospel but man it was really like some of his views on transgenderism
that he was that he maybe was killed for and part of it as what i would say is well hey where do you
think he got those views right from from the bible so it's like we're talking about somebody who to
ryan's point dude he was actually killed for biblical beliefs oh by the way
that he explicitly rooted in the scriptures.
So I totally think it's appropriate.
I agree. Sorry not to cut you off.
If you listen to the discreeting cuts of him,
because he talks to LGBTQ crowds,
he talks to people who come up.
And when they, if he's talking to some like random white,
woke professor, he would get very aggressive.
If he was talking to someone who came up
who was genuinely wrestling with it,
he was very tender.
Yes.
He was very kind.
And that speaks to me of a man filled
the Spirit of God. When he was talking to someone who was aggressively pandering lies, he responded
with equal aggression. When he was talking to someone who had been captured by those lies,
he was gentle and tender and loving and clear and firm and kind. And it's interesting,
kind of like Jesus. It's like when Jesus was dealing with the Pharisees who were pandering lies,
he was aggressive. When he was dealing with people who were captured by those lies, he was
tender, loving, and kind. And I think it just speaks to the nature of his ethos and his character.
I mean, anyone criticizing Charlie, it's like until you set up a table and given anyone
permission to come and say whatever they think about you and then respond to love,
you have nothing to say. We will never, we will never fully comprehend the courage of that man
week in and week out to go to the darkest places, set up a table, and with no notes,
a conversation about the things that matter most. And Josh, if I could just say something about
the gospel being the center, not a boundary, our conversation isn't that before. When pastors
think about the gospel, they need to think of it in these terms. Josh, can I set up what you're
about to say? Yes. Let me, I'm going to set up what you're about to say.
Or take a new direction. This is especially in the team that like me and Josh kind of came out of,
It was kind of, hey, this is the gospel-centered movement.
And in the gospel-centered movement, it was kind of like, hey, man, really what it means to be gospel-centered is we focus on the gospel, and by gospel, we kind of meant justification by faith alone and penal substitutionary atonement.
And sometimes in the crowd that we came from, it was like, man, if anybody veered into like social, social, cultural, or political applications of the gospel, people would be like, whoa, you're not being gospel-centered anymore.
more. Actually, you're like abandoning the gospel. We should stay gospel-centered and that kind of
thing. So that's what you're talking about, Josh. This is like super pastor nerd niche stuff.
Yeah, so that with people having that in mind, say what you were going to say, Josh.
Okay. John Frame pointed this out and helped me think about this. There's two ways to view
the gospel. Gospel as center or gospel as boundary. And the irony is the gospel center. The gospel
centered crowd had turned the gospel into a boundary. Meaning to be gospel centered, you could only
talk about those things that make up the gospel, grace, repentance, faith, those kind of things.
And what that does then, it walls off what a pastor can address or talk about. And so a pastor
ends up just kind of saying the same things every week from a different perspective. So every
sermon is about salvation by grace through faith alone in Christ. Every sermon is about justification
and even conversations about sanctification become oddly about justification. It's just kind of this
weird gospel echo chamber where the gospel never gets out. And so what John framed, the profound
theologian, 800 page systematic theology who's thought about this deeply, what he says was the
gospel is not a boundary, it's to center. Meaning the gospel touches all of life. Therefore,
we not only have the right, but the obligation to show how the gospel touches every part of life,
from our relationships to our sexuality, to our finances, and yes, to our politics. And that's the
difference. So when a pastor is using the Word of God, like Charlie did quite frankly, to address
social issues of the day, he's not being extra biblical, he's being gospel-centered, and that
he's showing the staggering, stunning, timeless relevance of the good news of the gospel and the
Word of God to all of life. Because when in the name of being gospel-centered, we wall off what we allow
ourselves to address with the Word of God. What we're inadvertently and maybe unintentionally teaching
our people is that Bible doesn't apply to most of the real life that we live in. But when we open
the Word of God and show how the gospel is the center of all reality and how it touches every
layer of our life, we're showing people the profound relevance of the Word of God to all of life.
That's great, Josh. Yeah. All right. Let me pivot, Ryan. We just had high attendance weekends,
massive spiritual momentum. It seems like something is happening in the hearts of the people of our
nation. What do you do? Let's talk to pastors. What do we do to seize the moment? What is it like
do this right now. Yeah, with so many people being stirred on a spiritual level right now,
I do think we need to recognize that there's a unique opportunity. And we're also going to
face a unique level of opposition. And, you know, when McPherson was talking about how genuinely,
this was a martyr. We have Bible verses for that. Yeah. This is a genuine, uh,
what happened speaks to what it was, as you said McPherson. And the outporn. And the outporn.
of God's spirit at church on Sunday. But at the same time, the demons are rejoicing. And I don't think
any of us are surprised that we're going to see increased opposition. One of our close pastor friends
is dealing with death threats. I mean, out of my close pastor friends, I think like more than
half of them now are dealing with legitimate death threats and have been in contact with the FBI
and with police. And, you know, as you said on Sunday, Josh, and I talked about it as well, you
inspired me is just like we have to look in the mirror and ask, am I willing to die for this and recognize
that like there is an element of human fear that is normal to wrestle with. I mean, I deployed to a
combat zone and on my first mission, it really hit me like, I could get blown up and wake up in heaven
or I could have my male genitalia blown off by a roadside bomb. And that's not pleasant to think
about. And it caused me to kind of fear, not to be graphic. Sorry to the ladies.
Which one would be worse?
The latter or the genitalia being blown off.
1,000%.
I'd first rather be with Jesus.
Take me, Lord.
And like that hit me at a young age.
And it's just, it's crazy how that is getting more and more relevant in ministry to think
like, man, if I say some of the things that Charlie was killed for saying, like, I could be hurt.
So pastors, it's time to do like, you know, a bit of a gut check and ask yourself, like,
am I willing to die for the gospel?
or am I just a pastor because it sounded cool?
And then like expect opposition in your church.
Expect the enemy not to go quietly.
There will be people in your church who cause dissension, who cause problems.
And those are schemes of the enemy.
Don't let that disruption cause you to question what you know is right.
When the enemy starts to scream and shoot flack your way, that just means that you're over the target.
So keep pouring it on.
That's good, man.
Josh.
what's the question again bro what to do from here i'm sorry yeah it's like if you're if you're
you're a pastor you're going hey dude something just happened in my church this week there's spiritual
momentum in the nation what should i do right now um i would say step into it capture it ask the
spirit of god to give you wisdom i mean i i like i'll just say what we've done we scrapped our
fall plan and i'm not saying we always do that but but for us we're looking at it going this
is this is such a massive cultural moment that to move on as if nothing had happened seems kind
of weird. So Josh, you told the story of, I don't want to steal your thunder, Wednesday morning
at 939, or whenever you showed me the text, I forget whenever it was. It was nuts, dude. That
has not happened to me very often. Yeah, you go ahead. So what happens to me is, is, you know,
God speaks to the sons differently. Some are here, some are feelers, some are seers. I don't hear the voice
of God so much as I see the work of God. And so that's how like my visionary brain works. And for the last
three months, I could not see this fall. I couldn't see where to go. I couldn't see what to preach.
Josh, you and I've talked about, you know, your calendar is your, is your Michael Driver system,
blah, blah, blah, I could not see it. I could not get it. I had three different sermon series that
I had sketched out. I was not excited about them. I could not, I just couldn't get behind it.
It was the weirdest. It was frustrating. I was praying. I was fasting. I'm like, Lord, what the
It wasn't the world.
15 minutes after Charlie was shot, I had 12 weeks outlined in my mind.
There it is.
Spirit just gave it to you.
And so I took that as the Spirit of God.
He'd been saying, I have something different for you.
Wait, and I'll give it to you when you're ready.
And so we've sketched out a three-part sermon series, Turning Point USA,
and four weeks on what revival looks like and what the Spirit of God is doing in our nation.
We're not addressing political things.
We're addressing spiritual issues.
and then we're doing four weeks on the unseen realm
because I believe this is primarily a spiritual war,
not a physical one.
And the third series is a four-part series on the art of war,
waking you up to the battle you didn't know you were in.
And so I would just encourage pastors,
always view your plans as in pencil,
and God can erase them and rewrite them at any time.
And so I'm not saying throw away your plan,
and I'm not saying that.
But what I am saying is be open to God leading and directing and moving you.
and if we can't be the kind of men who discern the times and respond,
then what are we doing?
We're not here to play church.
We're not here to run a program.
We're not here to organize a social club.
We're here to mobilize the active presence of,
we're here to mobilize the Church of Jesus Christ being filled with the active presence
of God in response to what's going on in the world.
And I'll just tell a pastor, like, hey, just so you know,
never before my lifetime, have I seen one event,
result in the Blue Angels flying and missing man formation
on the day after it happened.
Yankee Stadium stopping and pausing
and putting the man's picture on the board in a moment of silence.
Dallas Cowboys Stadium being filled
for the precise purpose of memorializing this man.
The Chicago Cubs holding a moment of silence.
Three million people marching in London streets.
The Polish parliament holding a moment of silence.
I don't even know Poland had a parliament.
I'm like, what?
like the Polish Parliament, the President of the United States going on Fox News to announce
personally that the killer had been seized. Air Force 2 being dispatched to bring his body home.
Erica Kirk, his wife's address being the largest viewed event in the last 10 years online.
And on and on it goes from South Korea to Chicago.
The outpouring in response is something globally like I have never seen.
And what we're hearing is people who don't know Jesus,
Don't go to church, being so marked by the man's life of gentle engagement with people who disagree with them,
that they're like, I can't shake it. Why was he murdered? This is wrong. And they're showing up at our churches.
Men, we have, I won't say obligation. We have opportunity to open up the Word of God and to give them Jesus.
And so my expectations would just be open to the Spirit of God leading and directing you to respond in a way.
way that capitalizes on the moment. And I don't mean that in a mercenary way, but I'm telling you,
Charlie would want us to capitalize on this moment. And I'm not going to let Stephen get martyred
in my presence on my watch and not say something about it.
Preach, man. Brian. I mean, I would just say this to pastors as a brother in Christ and man to man
because I love you and want the best for you in your church. If the Yankees are more bold about the
truth than you are, that's a problem.
That's right. That's right. We should not allow secular institutions like sports teams be more clear and more bold about what's right than the Church of Jesus Christ.
That's right.
So we've got to step up and do what is required of us.
That's right.
On that note, let me ask, there's something I want to say about what to do right now,
but on what you just said, Ryan, I do want to ask you guys a question.
Honestly, you guys may disagree with me.
You're not hurt my feelings at all.
We love each other.
We're big boys.
You know, you're seeing a lot of the, man, if your pastor didn't preach on the assassination,
Charlie Kirk, leave your church.
I want to know what you guys think.
here's what I would say. I disagree with that. What I would say is that pastor didn't necessarily do something wrong.
What I would say, at the very least, he missed an opportunity. That's what I would say. The reason I would say that, the reason I would say that is I'm just very sensitive to the fact that managed a difference between prophets and shepherds.
prophets tend to walk in, drop a truth bomb, and walk away.
Shepherds lead you in paths of righteousness for his namesake.
And so what a shepherd's got to do is go, okay, my sheep are here.
I need to get them over there.
And today I can get them from here to here.
And I'm okay with that.
So I got a lot of grace for that.
So I would not, I personally would not do the thing of, man, if your pastor didn't
specifically preach on this thing, leave your church, I would say this.
And, you know, some people, you know, may hate this.
I would say, man, if you're a pastor and after the death of George Floyd, you insisted,
you absolutely insisted that your church grieve it.
And you preached a pointed message about how this must be addressed and, you know,
silence is violence.
Silence is violence.
But this week, what we did silence after violence.
And we equivocated and, oh, man, whether we were.
were three, you know, there were three tragedies in our nation this week, both sides. Like,
if you're a pastor that did that, I do think you need to pause, look yourself in the mirror
and ask, are my principles driving me to places that are displeasing to the living God?
Yeah, I'll jump in on that. We both feel similar about this that I don't like using that phrase a
lot. You know, hey, if your pastor didn't say this or if your pastor didn't do this, then you
should leave the church because who am I to judge another man's servant is what Paul says in Romans.
And I'm not responsible for every other church and what every other pastor is dealing with.
So I hesitate normally to use phrases like that. And I think it's also a type of manipulation
that gets used among conservatives and in certain circles. If you don't talk about this,
just like liberals do it too. If you don't talk about this. And the thing is like, man, I'm not going to be,
I'm not going to be forced into addressing every news event or every,
tragedy, I have a different agenda than what's happening in the local news. But I will say this. If a pastor
was not willing to address this issue and not willing to address it clearly, it is at the very
least a pretty big red flag. And there are two potential problems there. Either one, he does not
discern the times and what is happening and what his people need ministerially in support. Or two,
he is afraid of man and afraid of potential backlash and not willing to face it.
Any other calculation like, well, man, my people are like this demographically or I don't
know how far I can get them or like it's probably more one of the two things I just listed.
Josh.
I would agree with all of that.
I think that's very well said.
Here's a perspective that's helpful.
I've talked to several pastors this week and they were like, I was out of
town and I had my intern.
That sucks. I'll just be honest.
What a horrible moment to have to be out of town.
Yeah. And I mean, the guys I talked to, they were planting another church in another city.
I mean, they were on mission for, they weren't like on vacation, sipping mitis on a beach somewhere.
They were, they were on mission in another town and they felt the moment so big that they
didn't want to put the weight of that on their associate pastor or on the intern that was covering
from them while they were gone.
And so they said, hey, hold off on it.
we'll address it when I get back.
And Monday morning, they're, like, racked with guilt, like,
our people need to be to address us and I didn't.
I mean, oh, my goodness, brother, so much grace.
Not a single person in that church should be judging that guy or running,
giving him the riot act.
He's trying his best.
And there are a lot of dynamics that go into the calculus of deciding what to address
from the pulpit in the life of a church.
And so I've got zero issue with that.
And so that's one scenario,
just to put out there.
That's great, Josh.
Yeah, the other scenario, oh, sorry, the other scenario is, you know,
if your pastor didn't address it, you know, should you leave?
Well, again, I get really uncomfortable just making blanket statements about that.
And so I think what Ryan said is very good.
There could be two issues going on, lack of discernment or lack of courage.
Here's why I think the coward word could be appropriate in some scenarios.
and I get pushed back from this from some folks.
And so I want to be very clear.
I don't think the word coward should be used quickly or without thought.
And I do think it is a word that appropriately describes some pastors.
And cowardice is not a small thing.
In the book of Revelation,
we're told that cowards will not inherit the kingdom of God.
And so it's a big deal.
And so it's like when we think about shepherds,
we tend to think of them in kind of the pale palette of paintings
where they're there with a harp
and they're just petting this cute little soft sheep.
We need to think of shepherds in terms of the modern day,
or I should say the modern day,
not we shouldn't say modern day.
We need to think of shepherds in terms of the U.S. cowboy, right?
The ones that pioneered the West, they slept out outside by themselves,
they could fight off bandits and animals.
These are tough dudes.
And if a shepherd sits and watches his sheep get eaten by wolves, that's not honorable.
That's cowardice.
Or he just doesn't know how to do his job.
And so here's how I would define cowardly.
And this thing, I think is helpful.
If a pastor genuinely believed with deep conviction he had an obligation before God
not to address this issue, he's not a coward.
I think he's missing it.
I think he could be clueless.
I think he has a really bad paradigm for thinking through how to shepherd his people,
but he's not a coward.
If a man, however, was wrestling with whether or not he should address it,
if a pastor was wrestling with whether or not he should address it,
and felt like he should, but started running the calculus of what will my board say,
what will people say, what will a big donor say, what will the Internet say,
and because of that calculus chose to violate his conscience by not say anything,
that is by definition cowardice
because you felt convicted to do something
but chose not to out of fear.
And I think if that's the reality of it,
that that could stick.
And so I'm not into like pushing people away from churches,
but here's what I experienced during COVID.
And then I'll get back to you, Josh.
During COVID, or before COVID,
we used to say,
we want to see more people meet love and follow Jesus.
That does not mean rearranging the same sheep
in different pens behind the curtains.
That means reaching,
lost sheep that are not yet in the fold.
After COVID, we started seeing our church
flooded with people who had been in a church
for weeks, months, or even years
that didn't reopen, that wasn't preaching the gospel,
and for eight months, because I'm in Washington,
so it's Mordor here.
It was a misdemeanor for months and months and months
to leave your home,
unless you were getting food,
going to a strip club, getting an abortion,
or buying marijuana.
I'm not making this up.
I'm not making this up.
And so people came to our church because they were starved
to meet with the church, worship Jesus,
and be into the Word of God.
And I changed my paradigm.
And so their paradigm used to be,
we don't want to rearrange sheep in new pens.
We want to reach lost sheep to bring them into the fold.
My new paradigm is,
unless you're a sheep who's been abandoned
or starved by your shepherd,
then you're welcome.
And that's what we experienced on Sunday.
It's like,
my pastor hasn't been addressing issues for years.
I can't take it anymore.
I need help knowing how to think about the world I actually live in.
I have sympathy for that.
Okay, I hate to do this, guys.
I got to wrap this up here in the next two, three minutes.
Let me just say, I'm going to say maybe,
how about let's just do closing thoughts.
If there's anything that didn't get covered,
you're like, man, this needs to get covered.
And again, I'm so sorry, but I got a jet.
And so if we could keep it kind of succinct, that'd be good.
I'll just say one last thing.
I didn't, these guys, you guys shared a little bit about what you think pastors should be doing right now.
I'll just, I'll dovetail what they said.
One, I think what you really don't want to do is awkwardly ignore what's happening in our nation spiritually.
So like, you know, man, I'm not saying, I don't think a guy needs to like, you know, pull the rip cord on his sermon series and do a four-week thing.
on turning point, whatever.
If you do that, okay, I don't think you need to do that.
But what you definitely don't need to do
is make it feel like you're awkwardly ignoring
the spiritual moment.
So like, you know, it's like, you know,
you just don't want to look ridiculous.
Like if you're doing a four-week cute topical series
on Instagram, I don't know, whatever it is, you know,
it's like maybe not the moment.
If I'm you, what I'm doing is increasing the spiritual
intensity of my preaching. I am very much. There's going to be aggressive invitations to repent and
come to Jesus every week because it feels like we have an open heaven right now. And what I'm not
going to do is stand before God and him go, hey man, I gave you every opportunity in the world
and you didn't even give him a chance to come to Jesus. That's right. So I'm going to be very
aggressive on that. And then to what Ryan said, I think you would be very, very foolish if you
increase the spiritual intensity and charged battlefield, you'd be very foolish not to expect
increased opposition. It's interesting in the scriptures, there's multiple times where
the demon doesn't start to shriek until the moment that Jesus casts it out. That's right.
And then the moment that Jesus begins to cast it out, it shrieks and it starts raising hell.
I think a little bit of what's happening right now as you're seeing like some righteous things
begin to advance in our nation,
the demons are going to begin to shriek.
And the same thing will happen in and around your church.
So I think, like, dude, you be prayed up.
You gather people around you who are like Pentecostal-ish,
believe in the actual power of the Holy Spirit.
Get through charismatic friends, man.
Get them quick.
Yeah, whatever that thing is y'all do, will you do it for me?
I'll be your friend.
If you can pray in tongues, do it now.
Do it now, brother.
Do it now, brother.
your point is just to encourage pastors, there is an elephant in the nation. That's a great way to
say it. If you ignore the elephant in the nation, you're going to look kind of silly and out of touch.
And so what I would encourage, again, I'm not saying pastors have to rewrite their sermons.
I'm just telling you what I experienced. But what I am telling you is just exactly what you've
said, what I know for sure is people are going to come with questions and there is an increased
spiritual hunger across the nation right now, preach the gospel, and call for repentance,
and it'll shock you. And we have a verse for this. A great door of effective work has opened before me,
and many oppose me. And so I'm just going to be totally honest. We had threats to us this week
online from the same crowd that shot Charlie, and SWAT team hit their home there in jail over the
weekend. They had bail hearing yesterday. And I had to sit in my house, and I had to run the
calculus again, am I willing to die for Jesus? And bro, I'm telling you like, should I wear a bulletproof vest?
Should I even stand up? I mean, I mean, I'm not typically a fearful person. And I had to work,
and I'm just trying to be vulnerable here. I had to work at corraling my imagination this weekend.
Same. And ask myself again, and people don't think about this, but we have standing no contact
owners. We have trespass people from our property. We regularly have lies spread about us online
that take things we said out of context to mean something we don't,
and they're stirring up the same crowd that shot Charlie,
and you have to go, I'm saying the same things, do I want to keep doing this?
And I'm telling you for me, that wasn't just, what am I trying to say here?
That wasn't just a given this week.
I had to re-up personally.
I had to take a walk, like you said, and go, am I willing to lay down my life for this?
And you wrestle with it, and then you come back and you're like,
what's the inevitable response? No.
Better to live a short life as a courageous faithful man than a long life as an unfaithful coward.
And so I'm just telling you, for people listening, I'm not walking around just like,
Ra, Ra, Ra, Ra, Ra, Ra.
Josh, I got to stop this week and go, Lord am I in on this again.
Yeah.
That's right.
I'm sorry.
I'm trying to, Ryan, you want to close this out?
Yeah, I'll just quickly.
I want to just say, reframe this in this way.
A lot of the older generation that mentored us when we were young pastors,
tended to not address these types of moments,
and they had the mindset of like,
I'm going to be above the fray as a leader.
And they were actually kind of respected for that a lot of times
by their church and by other pastors.
But today, it's not being above the fray.
It's more not addressing a moment like this
is more being out of touch.
And when all these people online are saying,
I'm going to church for the first time in my life
or for the first time in 10 years,
they're not coming into the doors of our church
to not have this spiritual moment be addressed.
And if you don't as a leader address these moments,
you're about to experience the parable of the talent
where the opportunity that might have been given to you
will be taken away and given to a faithful servant instead.
Wow. We're going to finish right there.
Gentlemen, I love you, and I'm really proud to be your friend.
Amen.
Thank you.
Same. Love you guys.
Thanks for tuning in to live free with Pastor Josh Howardton.
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