Live Free with Josh Howerton - 3 Megachurch Pastors Reveal Why They've Decided to Get "Political" | Live Free with Josh Howerton
Episode Date: May 13, 2026What if avoiding politics isn’t protecting the Church, but surrendering to the culture? In this LIVE FREE bonus episode, Pastors Josh Howerton, Ryan Visconti, and Josh McPherson tackle one of the... most pressing questions facing Christians today: Should the Church avoid politics, or is civic engagement part of biblical discipleship? Through a powerful conversation on the Great Commission, cultural leadership, and Christian statesmanship, they unpack why silence in the public square may actually hinder long-term flourishing for families, churches, and future generations. This episode challenges believers to think beyond partisan labels and embrace a comprehensive biblical worldview that applies God’s truth to every area of life—including government, policy, and culture. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why many pastors are rethinking political disengagement How policy impacts discipleship, family, and church health What Christian statesmanship means biblically Why the Great Commission includes cultural responsibility How to think about politics through a biblical worldview Why “If godly people won’t lead, godless people will” is a crucial warning Stand firm. Think biblically. Live free. For 50% off tickets to Freedom Con 26, go to https://www.freedomcon26.com and use LIVEFREE as the promo code. Follow the Hosts: Josh Howerton - @josh_howerton Josh McPherson - @pastorjoshmcpherson Ryan Visconti - @ryanvisconti 🧢 Want a Live Free hat of your own? Visit LiveFree.shop 📲 Looking to grow deeper in your faith? Check out the Lakepointe App to access our Discipleship Guide, daily Bible reading plan, and more. Text APP to 20411 to download
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Here's my big idea, man.
I care about the great commission and the future of the church
and the cultural inheritance that I'll hand my kids
more than I care about my reputation with you.
Christ may be our refuge, but Christianity is not escapism.
I think today we're going to have a lot of pastors get to the end of their life
and say, my greatest regret is not getting more involved.
That's right.
Well, hey, live free nation.
Before we jump into the episode, this podcast is recorded right here at Lake Point Church in Dallas, Texas.
But the live free nation is spread all over the country and all around the world.
So if you've been watching and thinking, man, I wish I could be part of something like this.
We want to invite you to take a simple next step and that is join us for church online.
Every weekend we stream our services live on YouTube, Facebook and our church online platform,
and it's more than just watching a service.
There are a live host in the chat, prayer teams ready to stand with you and people all around the world
worshiping together in real time.
And so whether you're exploring the faith, coming back to church,
or just looking for a place to start, church online is a great way to jump in.
and experience what God is doing here at Lake Point.
We would love to see you in the chat this weekend, and now enjoy the podcast.
Ryan and Josh, welcome to live free.
We're live, we're live, brothers.
Okay.
And we're going now.
We're going, dude.
Let's do it.
All right, so here's what's getting ready to happen.
You're about to, you know, as the catchy clickbaity kids title it, three megachurch pastors
discuss.
Two and a half.
Stop, man.
So here's what you get ready here.
there is a pretty seismic shift
I feel like is happening right now
with pastors and their relationship
to politics
and especially honestly
this is what we want to talk about
as that relates to the Great Commission.
Okay, so like, and this is honestly
a radical shift from how pastors
thought about things 30 years ago.
All of our churches are seeing these things.
I'll shoot you really straight.
I'll just be really honest.
There is probably nothing that, at least me,
probably you guess,
to have taken more bullets from
from other pastors
than this specific thing.
And we want to help pastors
get their heads around it,
and then a bunch of Christians
can listen and it's going to be awesome.
That's interesting to point out.
Not our parishioners, pastors.
No, no, actually,
church members in general are like,
thank you.
They're like, because that's what I live in.
Thank you for coming out of the tide-built bubble
to speak to the world I live in.
So that's helpful for pastors to note.
All right.
So seriously we're going to do for this listening.
This is going to be really interesting for everybody.
So first of all, let me introduce these guys.
Pastor Josh from me first,
and this guy's reaching,
thousands of dudes up in Washington State. We're going to talk about this in a second.
It ain't easy to plant a church and build a great church in Washington State. That's a good man.
That's a great dad. That's a great pastor. And he's a great friend. Amen.
So we're glad to have you, man. Good of here. Glad to have you. Bishop Brian Visconti.
These are the, you know, he's our military minister. And then after doing it,
I mean, you did a tour doing in Iraq? Yeah, just one. Yeah. And then and then passers.
It was a lot easier than being a pastor.
for real, would you say that?
Oh, yeah.
Seriously?
I felt way more stress coming into being a pastor than I felt when I was deployed having rockets and mortar shot at me every day.
At some point, I like, actually, want to talk to you about that.
That's a podcast by itself.
Okay.
Well, respect.
And we're thankful.
Thank you, absolutely.
But this guy, church is absolutely exploding in the Phoenix area.
You guys were like 10,000 on Easter.
Yeah.
Boom.
Bro.
And baptizing.
Wow.
I mean, it's like.
Thousands of people.
It's awesome.
Let's go.
It's the Jordan River out there at Generation Church.
River in the desert.
It's all the people we're sending down from Washington.
Thank you for that.
You're welcome.
Thank you.
Thank you for contributing to the cause.
All right.
And then we're all speaking in a conference.
I want to talk about that later.
We're all speaking at a conference together.
Freedom con.
Freedom con, man.
Which ties into a bunch of this stuff.
So let me just set the table on this.
This is for all Christians because we really want to talk about a lot of Christians also have an ick factor to like,
how do I apply my faith in the political?
realm. Shouldn't the church really avoid this? Aren't we supposed to be about the Great Commission?
And man, it's honestly, isn't this a distraction? So we want to talk about that. But then honestly,
all three of us in different seasons, like, we've realized like, oh man, I got to lead,
I got to leave my church in a new way because this is a new era. So dude, can I just,
let me just go right at it. Let's go. And then let's just start. All right. In the era in which
I was growing up in ministry and probably you guys do in some ways, here was kind of the
the vibe. It was like, hey man, pastors should not not get political. You should be neither right
nor left. The gospel is neither right nor left. It does two things if you get into that stuff.
One, it's probably going to hurt, you know, a lot of times just straight. This may feel awkward,
but I'm going to circle back to it. Man, it's going to hurt racial reconciliation. And if you go there,
and honestly, man, like, hey, everybody needs the gospel. And so if you start, you know, making applications
in the political realm, you're going to cut off half the people in the country from hearing your
message. You're not going to be baptized in anybody, Ryan, if you're doing this stuff. And so it was
kind of that kind of vibe. So honestly, let me just start right there. And then we'll roll the ball.
I just rolled a ball out. That's what we all grew up in ministry. Why are you thinking different now?
Living through the chaos of 2020 and the cultural upheaval, it revealed the problems with that thinking.
I thought I had a healthy unified church, but when the stress really came from COVID and from BLM, all of the fault lines started to crack.
And I realized, oh, we're not as healthy as I thought.
We're actually a lot more divided under the surface, but avoiding these topics that we're talking about today, it actually lets you have a false sense of peace and unity because you don't talk about the thing that exposes the division.
And so when BLM comes up, all these factions start happening.
within my church. And I'm like, what's happening? There's people here who I loved and had great
relationship with. And now we've got conflict. And they're asking me if I even love them and value them.
And it just made me realize my approach to leadership, the same kind of leadership that we were
mentored by and coached into, it wasn't actually right for this era. There were a lot of problems
with it. Okay. McPherson. Agree, disagree, additional comments. Totally disagree.
No, it was well said.
Well, I think, I mean, there's a lot of ways to go with this, but when people say if you get political,
you're going to short-circuit your ability to fulfill the great commission, there's like seven false premises in that sentence that are assuming things I wouldn't agree with.
And so, first of all, I don't get political.
I teach the Bible.
There you go.
I teach the Bible.
And so I want to teach how the Bible connects the devil.
the dots to all portions of life.
So, like, when we talk about it in my churches, I'm not going, I'm not running past
discipleship to do politics.
I'm walking out discipleship and showing people how it touches politics.
That's very different.
And so when someone or something says, you can't talk about this section of life that touches
all of us, if I agree to that, one, I'm agreeing to run the enemy's playbook to silence me
as the man of God to speak authoritatively from the Word of God, how my king is king over all of life.
When I think about the spheres of human sovereignty that God teaches us in the Word of God that
we're to address as pastors, you have individuals who are called to be responsible for their own actions,
and they're supposed to live according to the Word of God.
You have families that are responsible for educating the welfare of the children and caring for their own.
You have churches that are responsible to preach the gospel, faithfully administer the sacraments of Word and baptism.
and then you have government that God created government, by the way.
It's a good thing.
I'm not a scoff law.
I'm not a libertarian.
I'm not anti-no.
God actually, government is God's idea to organize large group of people in such a way that
they can flourish.
God's called the government to protect its borders and to reward good and punish evil.
Romans 13.
We're in immoral categories now.
So when I think about those different spheres of human sovereignty, if someone's saying, yeah,
you can't talk about the government sector or you're being political. I'm like, well, then I have to
stop being biblical. Because there's actually more biblical data to teach from in relationship to the
sphere of government than there is marriage, family, and individuals put together.
Well, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Say that again. That's a sentence that's easy to roll past.
What you just said is really significant. I want to see if we agree. So say what you just said
one more time. Well, if you were going to preach a sermon on marriage and you were going to preach a sermon on
parenting, and I was going to preach a sermon on God's ideas for government and how that's
Ephesians 5.
Yeah.
If you were preaching on marriage and you unparenting and me on government, I would have
50x the amount of biblical data to pull from than you would.
Because you're counting all the Old Testament law, all the way that got structured
Old Testament in Israel, and all that is stuff that we should be gleaning wisdom from.
So what you're saying.
For governance, is that what you're saying?
Well, you have entire books of the Bible in the Old Testament dedicated to set up government.
And then you have this really pesky command to do justly and love mercy.
Right?
And so almost all government legislation has to do with working out that government's definition
of justice and mercy.
Yeah.
And so many of Jesus' teachings was about, they were about the kingdom of God, which was a governance
that it was established by Jesus.
But Ryan, Jesus said, my kingdom is not of this world, Ryan.
Yeah.
He did.
What are you talking about?
Yeah.
It's crazy.
It's crazy.
What was I thinking?
You know, it's like it goes back to discipleship, making disciples.
when we teach people to receive Jesus as Lord and Savior, Jesus is Lord over every part of your life.
And that affects your relationships, marriage relationship, parenting relationships.
It affects your career, your finances, what happens in your bedroom.
But most of all, your identity.
And politics today is really about identity, more than anything.
So telling pastors to not talk about politics is telling them,
you can't disciple your people in a really significant part of their lives.
The truth is that politics affects people's lives more than many other things.
The policies that are established by politicians have real impact on people's lives.
So if we're going to love our neighbors, as Jesus said we should, then we have to do everything
that we can do to elect government officials who will enact policies that are loving towards
our neighbors.
are in an actual biblical way of thinking about what is love, right?
Love is not just affirming everybody and whatever they want to do.
It's actually helping to bring about what's in their best interest.
So if you're listening to this, you're kind of listening, this is kind of like insider baseball.
You're kind of listening in on like a conversation that's happening in every pastor group text in America in violently different ways, by the way.
I'll just say, you know, I don't know, I feel comfortable saying this.
this what we're talking about right here is what has gotten me uninvited from a decent number of
conferences oh yeah that is what has gotten me to lose out on you know honestly sometimes like
pretty lucrative potential teaching contracts um i've had well known guys uh recuse themselves
from speaking from appearing at conferences with me all because it's just like i just started
getting clear a few years ago like no like we actually have to apply the whole word of god to the
entire world. And that actually includes the political realm. Yeah. So it's like if you're listening,
you're about to listen in to, it's the insider conversation that pastors are having that is the
most hotly debated one in our culture right now. It's true. We need you. Now, let me, I want to riff
off something you said. And then at first, I want you to talk about this. So, dude, what you just said,
Ryan is like, hey man, like it or not, and it may give you an ick factor. But the policies radically affect
people, people matter to God. We're supposed to apply the whole word of the whole world.
And then we're going to get in this a second. I'm going to go ahead and give away my cards.
The mantra of pastor world for the last, I don't know how long, maybe 40 years, has been,
don't mess with politics because it distracts from the Great Commission.
What I want to talk, I don't want to go there yet because it's probably the most incendiary thing we'll talk about.
what we're saying, I think we're all saying this, that actually a long term, it nets out the opposite.
And I want you to talk about it because you're the one that actually experience it the most.
That actually long term, and I have data to show this because people lose their minds when I talk about this, is that actually a long term, actually, if you want to make the Great Commission really, really hard for the church, just like Christians sit out, politics.
And that's an easy way to do it.
Yeah.
So anyway, let me go to this.
And first, let me kick to you.
Because, dude, the guys, both Christians and pastors that oppose this convoy the most,
in my experience, I'm not trying to take anybody off.
It's either Red State pastors who they're kind of in the comfort of policies that end up being a wind at their back,
that they don't realize they're a wind at their back.
Yeah.
Or as Purple State guys who are still there and they're like, oh, this isn't too bad.
Like, I don't understand.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't understand.
What are you guys talking about?
about this isn't too bad. Or, and dude, I just want to be honestly, a lot of times it's like it's, it's
blue state pastors who really their fear, and I actually understand this. Yeah.
Is dude, man, I don't want to alienate the people I'm trying to reach. So like, let's just
cut the chase and I want to disabuse those three groups of people of what I believe, lovingly
would say this, is the dangerous illusion you are living in. Yeah. So Josh McPherson, can you just
talk really quick about like, hey man, you guys who are living in the shire,
wake up.
You guys who are living in the shire.
So here's what happens to Christian families and churches in Mordor.
In states like Washington, where you are, when secular progressive policies actually get
enacted.
So I'm, you take it away, bro.
Well, interrupt me when you want.
I'll just, I'll riff off stuff.
what you're pointing out the challenge of is
faithfully preaching the gospel in shepherding the church
and leading a church on mission is not just preaching the gospel.
I was talking to the guy yesterday and he's like,
churches shouldn't get involved in politely because the gospel's our haymaker, man.
And he listened off, we need to preach the truth, fill it with the spirit, get them saved.
And I was like, yes, yes, yes, and yes.
He's like, well, and then my answer was, and then what?
anybody. So they get to say, they have to go out and live life. And so what do you do then? And when Jesus
in the Great Commission, teach them to obey everything I have commanded you, there's a lot
included there, including Romans 13. Including Genesis. Including Genesis. And so as a, as a
Dominion mandate. Yeah. Yeah, let's keep going. Speaking to that,
one of the things we're doing the freedom conference because I got a small business with a buddy.
We build houses on the side. And it's become impossible, $163,000.
of every new house built in the state is directly connected to permitting and permission
you're getting from the government to build that house.
How much?
$162,000 of every house.
What?
There's another six and a half months of permitting process that adds about in our $30,000
in the process.
So we have this affordable housing crisis in our state, and it's 100% created through bureaucracy
and red tape.
Well, now that means that my son who just got married can't afford to buy a home.
And that means that my older relatives who have done well in their life can't afford to stay.
if you're young, you can't start, if you're old and established, you can't stay.
Because we have 64 different taxes on the books that hits people at every level.
So I'm looking out trying to pass a group of people who are unable to flourish because of the weight of bureaucracy and government on their back.
For instance, here's some examples.
We have like no Christian counselors in our town because a law was passed, political, political law policies, where if you're licensed by the state, which is every counselor in the state, if you're going to practice as a professional, you are not saying.
a guy comes in your practice. I'm married, but I'm struggling with desires for dudes. If you say,
let's keep you married, let's reject those desires. Those are wrong. Those are simple. Those are
biblical. And he turns you in, lose your license, fine, your jail time. Yeah. There goes your whole
career. There goes your whole career. And so now, because I live in a deeply blue progressive
state, I have almost none, if any, Christian counselors in my city. That drastically impacts my
ability to shepherd and pastor our people. Another example.
Talk about people moving out of state.
Yeah, the state passed a law that said it's illegal for teachers
to share with parents that a child in a state school is expressing gender confusion
or interest in their gender.
They are allowed to take that student off-site.
They are allowed to take them to a gender therapy center.
What they are allowed to do is say, hey, did you know that Hudson is blah, blah, but they can't do that.
And so I've had two families move to Montana because they both had mentally handling.
to get up children that they felt were being groomed in a state school.
And they were afraid if they stepped in and said, quit telling my son you think he's gay because
he's not.
Wow. They would take your son from him.
That's crazy.
My state just passed an income tax, millionaire income tax. It's camouflage for coming for
all more of your money. So in my state, when I started building my campus 10 years ago,
since I started that process in the last 10 years, I've just had my head down trying to build
the church. In the last 10 years, state revenue tax has doubled.
from 20 billion to 40 billion.
So the thing about that, in 10 years, it's doubled.
I put my head down to look up,
most regulated state in the union to build a home,
most regulated state in the union to build a commercial building.
So quite literally the state is inhibiting
and preventing men and businesses from being fruitful.
That's a dominion mandate that's almost impossible.
Worst state and union to start a business,
worst state and union to buy a new home,
worst state in union to start a family,
we're state and union to make money,
we're state and union to die.
No way.
So what's happened is,
48% of this, check this out.
They passed the income tax in this last legislative session.
Since they passed that, like less than a month and a half ago,
the Washington Association of Business took a survey.
48% of businesses in Washington said they will move out of Washington
in the next 16 months before the income tax goes into effect.
48%?
Now what pastors aren't paying attention to is what happens to your church
and your ability to hire staff, build, build,
leans, serve the poor, reach the lost, go to the church. What happens when half the men in your
church leave and take their business and resources with it? You die. When the business leaves and the men
leave, the church dies and the state dies. And so pastors aren't connecting the dots fast enough
because it's not in the heart of a man to just bend over and take it every day from the state.
They're going to stay and fight, which is almost impossible to fight, or they're going to leave to
go somewhere where the state doesn't make war on them as a man, but actually appreciates the
contribution they're making to the garden. Without giving away,
any identifying information. A pastor we know in your state had a majority of his church board members
say they're going to resign and leave the church because they need to leave the ridiculous tax
policies of the state. Think about what that does to a church, to have the church governance and
leadership undermined like that and just essentially disrupted, pulled out from under your feet.
When you're trying to minister to people, that's so disruptive to a church.
I talked to them last week, four out of five as board members. We love you. We love
this church. We can't stay. It wouldn't be good stewardship to say we're moving the next 16 months.
You need to get ready for that. Okay. So let me boil it. And that's happening everywhere,
by the way. So dude, I always shoot cards on the table. Like for a long time, I was the guy
that I described to the beginning of podcast. Yeah. Same. Norla. So do you know what changed me?
One, it was a relationship with you guys, but before that. And by the way, I am not speaking
on behalf of everybody in this network because I guarantee there's people who view it different
to me. It was when I started helping lead a church planning network that only plants churches in
secular progressive urban centers. And when I started watching what happens these guys, they come
into the city, they come in here for our national conference. And they will walk in and they start
telling me stories about how hard it is to plan a church, disciple families, and build buildings,
that kind of stuff. Honestly, dude, that's what made me start going like, wait, the accomplishment
of the Great Commission is connected to righteous governance.
This is like a big deal.
So let me bullet points some stuff that's connected to this.
Like, and then you guys chime in if I'm missing, because you've been around this.
All right.
So, so for pastors and Christians that are listening in, how does actual political policies
make the job of the church harder or could be a wind at your back?
Okay.
Well, in a state light years, most of this is Washington state stuff.
Number one, what we're talking about is taxation policies.
Okay.
Now, what I have grown up hearing and I have read my.
many books like this, even within the last year of pastors talking about how, ah, we really should
avoid this stuff. And pastors will typically say, man, actually things like tax, you know,
marginal tax rate, man, that's something that really the Bible doesn't speak to and really
just no, you know, well, actually, the Bible actually says a lot, you know, about wealth
redistribution and property rights. Property property ownership, stealing. Yeah, that kind of stuff.
Stealing is a big one.
Stealing kind of a big one. It's in the Ten Commandments.
By the way, this is the whole sermon. This whole sermon.
it is possible for governments to commit theft.
It is.
Just because you're committing theft and calling it taxation,
that doesn't make it not theft.
Right.
So that's a whole.
Yeah. Unrighteousness smeared with the language of law
doesn't make it not unrighteous.
Right.
So what you got is, here's what we know,
so what you were doing earlier for our listeners,
Josh is talking about, it's called Kipurian's Fear Sovereignty.
So what you got is, God has instituted three institutions in the scriptures,
the family, the church, and the state.
When they all stay in their lanes and function according to the scriptures,
society flourishes.
get out of their lanes, they start eating each other.
So what you're talking about right there is, hey, man,
Charlie Kirk actually started talking about this at the end of his life.
Is, man, actually, when the government gets really big, the church gets small.
Because the government has to take the resources people and churches would have used
because the church and Christian individuals are supposed to be ones helping the poor.
So when the government goes, actually, we're going to do it.
One, they're terrible at it.
Number two, they actually incentivize actions that lead to more poverty.
So anyway, I'm making this long.
What we're talking about is, number one, in states like yours, government gets bigger,
makes the church's job smaller because the resource is smaller.
Number two, to your point, it's little stuff, dude.
It's like, hey, man, you have this little phrase you'll say, in our state,
they don't make it illegal to build churches.
They just make it impossible.
Yes.
Okay?
So think about this.
Like, this is, I could copy and repeat this a million times stories I've heard,
is, hey, we're trying to build, we're a church trying to build a building.
but every time we try the entire city council
of people who hate Christians
because they're secular progressive people,
we can't get anything approved
or they're constantly
sticker shocking us
or making us do this in it.
So you got that.
You got situations like our,
I think I can say it, if I can't,
I'll edit it out later.
Our buddy Russ Johnson up there in Seattle
holds a worship rally
in the middle of Seattle.
And then you get people who have been trained
by secular progressive ideals,
government schools,
all the things.
to view Christians as the bad guys.
Immoral.
Pastors as Darth Vader.
And they roll up and they start throwing water balloons filled with urine at Christians
worshiping.
Violently attack them.
I think they put six people in the hospital if I remember, right?
And then the government, the mayor, actually says that Russ and his church, actually
you were the problem.
You instigated it.
So you got that.
You got the situation.
I know you're trying to solve this.
and when deep-inset-blue policies,
all of a sudden,
well, now the government schools,
they're actually reversed disciplining children
into moralities that are actually in direct opposition
of all these things.
So now, when you're trying to disciple your kids,
you're fighting all these things.
So anyway, this forms this little web of things
that begins making it really much harder
to make disciples.
build churches. What would you add? Yeah. So, and when we talk about being political, when pastors
think churches shouldn't be political, when Christians say pastors shouldn't be political, they're usually
not talking about foreign trade policy, right? They're talking about three big things that come up,
that get people fired up. These are the things that cause people to walk out of our church services,
angry sometimes, and they'll go on the internet and say, I don't want to go to that church, it's too
political. We're talking about sexuality and the identity that goes along with that, as well as
abortion, which will get labeled as reproductive rights, and DEI policies. Those are the things
that are most pressing in our current time that we need to speak to as pastors, but they get labeled
as you're being political. When you look at those issues, they're all connected to deeper heart
issues, right? Sexuality, identity, there's such sensitive heart issues. The concern that you brought
up that pastors have is if I get, you know, talking about politics, it's going to inhibit my ability to
reach lost people and fulfill the Great Commission. And then when I started to realize that was wrong
was when I was reading the Bible and started to pay attention to what, there's this book I read,
amazing book, bestseller of all times. I noticed a couple of
key things like that Jesus did when he was encountering seekers. There were a couple seekers who
he encountered. One was the woman at the well who asked, where can I get this living water? I mean,
that's a seeker if there ever has been one. She's like, I want to know more. And what does he do?
He says, go get your husband. And he pokes at her sexual sin issues. Like probably her core
issue, the core of her trauma, her pain. And he goes to the thing that is least sensitive
Because he knows that at the root of that, that's where there needs to be a transformation for her to experience salvation.
And then with the rich young ruler who asks, you know, what do I need to do?
He gives him this ridiculous, it seems ridiculous to us.
If we're like modern day secret sensitive pastors, we would say, you know, the modern day secret sensitive pastor would say, bro, you can belong before you believe.
Just come on.
But Jesus said, go sell everything you have.
Okay.
So, and then with both of these guys, he went to, like, core heart issues.
Money is a core.
I mean, it's where your treasure is.
Your heart is also.
So in those situations, one person went away, left, sad, the rich young ruler.
And then the woman at the well went and got her whole village and brought them to Jesus.
It shows us a couple things that reaching lost people does not require avoiding the thing that is sensitive in their life, even maybe the most sensitive in their life.
It also teaches us that just because we talk about things that cause people to walk away, angry and reject Jesus, that doesn't mean we fail as pastors or as Christians.
That means that we probably actually represented Jesus in a biblical way. And we just see the reality is some people are not going to receive him and some people are.
That's not ultimately our fault. That's the Holy Spirit's job to work on them and transform them and draw them.
But I've found that over the last couple of years, by being more clear on what the Bible says and how it relates to political issues, a couple things have happened.
People who are hard-hearted and they don't want to receive Jesus as their king.
Maybe they like Jesus as Savior, but not necessarily king.
They'll go away like the rich young ruler did.
And I don't want them to leave, but that's just the reality as they leave.
You could say, you know, this is biblical truth.
You could present it in the most loving way possible.
but there are people who will leave.
On the other hand,
your Christians who stay will grow.
They'll become more disciples,
which better equips them to carry out the mission
that Jesus gave us
and reach the people in their community
because we're not just reaching lost people
from me in the pulpit.
It's our people going out into the community.
If they're disciple,
they're going to do a lot better job reaching the lost.
And then additionally,
when you speak clearly to biblical truth,
the Holy Spirit, I think,
blesses that. There's a special anointing. But that's a fact. Yeah. When you represent God's
word in a way that's true to God's heart, God blesses it. And there's an anointing on that
kind of preaching. And what I have seen in my church is, even though I'm getting labeled sometimes
as being political, I don't really think I am. I think I'm teaching biblical truth. But we've had
more people getting saved each year than the year before. Now, you know, our church isn't as big as
yours, but we're getting to the point where it's over a thousand people a year getting saved.
Let me just pause.
It's like a megachurchy year.
Like just stop and think about that.
Say that one more time.
Yeah, we've got, I've seen a go, you know, 500 salvation.
Now we're up over 1,000, 1,200, you know, it's not hindered us reaching lost people.
What's happened is we're reaching more lost people than ever.
And the people who get saved and stay in our church are more unified.
We have a common, a love for scripture and for each other.
and we focus on first things first, what matters most.
And it's a joy to be with my church.
And it's a joy to be the pastor of my church.
I'm not having to walk on eggshells.
And when I get up to, you and you guys know what it's like five years ago
when we were going to preach on a controversial issue.
Man, I was like, you put your hat on, your cup, your cup.
You're like, who, here goes.
I literally made a preaching helmet.
I started bringing it out to warn people.
Yeah.
And honestly, now it's kind of like, this is going to be fun.
We're going to get down to some real talk.
And you don't get that overnight.
Because I know there are-
You do not.
We're going to talk about that and talk about how to do this.
Yeah.
But talking about the things that people label as political today, it does not hinder your ability to reach the loss.
It actually helps us accomplish what we all want to accomplish most.
All right.
So like, shoot me straight.
I didn't tell you I was going to ask you this.
But shoot me straight.
Because here's what I think a lot of,
especially pastors would say, of course, man. But you're just, you're just reaching a bunch of red guys.
Bubba. Yeah, you're just reaching a bunch of the people who already agreed with you. I mean,
honestly, true, false? What, what would you say? Well, I think today, there are a lot of conservatives who aren't Christians.
A lot. And that wasn't always the case. We used to just associate political conservatism with
Christianity. Hence the phrase cultural Christianity. Today, a lot of
conservatives are not Christians. They like God in a sense, like an, you know, ambiguous kind of sense.
They like freedom, trucks, football, barbecue. I believe in Jesus, NASCAR, and SEC football, you know.
And so, and then on the other hand, if we were to look back 30-40-
Which is a good combo. It's not bad.
So, well, today, you know, a lot of these people, they have these kind of like values that they
don't even realize are rooted in Christianity. Fact. And they don't have Christ. And they don't have
Christ. So it's like, these are people that I think Jesus would look at and say, you are not far from
the kingdom of God. They're not in it yet, but they are like flirting right on the border. And if we can
just, and this is what happened in my church. A couple years ago, Charlie, I brought Charlie Kirk in
to speak on at a men's night. And we just talked about a lot of things, you know, whatever. At the end of
the night, I just said really quickly, hey, if you, if you're a guest and if you love Charlie Kirk and what he
talks about and what he stands for. You need to just make sure you're clear on this, that Charlie's
ideology and his beliefs are rooted in the person of Jesus. And Charlie sitting right next to me,
amen. That's right. And I said, if you don't yet know Jesus, you need him. And we had dozens of people
receive Jesus that night. You know, at a church, at a night with Charlie Kirk. And you would think,
well, you're just trying to appeal to a bunch of people that already believe anyway. It's like,
there are a lot of conservatives who are going to these NASCAR races and pick up
truck, you know, whatever. These guys still need Jesus. And because of the way the Overton window has
shifted, people who are left today, nobody's beyond God's reach, right? Even the Saul can become Paul
with one encounter with the Holy Spirit. But today, the way that left ideology works and exists,
it leads to very hard heart, heartedness towards the Lord. So when we're just looking at, if we were
looking at the fields objectively as a farmer who wants to bring in the harvest, right? Where is the harvest
ripest? I've only got so many years of my life. I've only got so many hours in the day. I want to
bring in the harvest. I want to be a good and faithful servant. Where am I going? I'm going to the
ripest harvest fields. And if it so happens to be that those people are more, I'm not even trying to cater
my message to reach those people. I'm just teaching the biblical truth, straight down the middle of the
fairway and it happens to resonate with those people on the right sometimes more often because
the way that the world is today.
So like shoot me straight.
Do you think like true or, man, you may just say, yeah, man, actually it's true right now.
That's fine.
Like would you say, man, in general, what would you say to the guy that's like, yeah,
it is easy.
You're just kind of, you're just reaching a bunch of conservatives.
See, you're not reaching anybody else.
You're not reaching anybody.
Well, it's not true that we don't reach people that come from the left.
what I would say is true though is that if a guy comes to my church who's kind of conservative
and he's not yet a believer, it would be easy for him to sit in service for six months to a year
and just go, I kind of like all this. I don't know if I believe yet, but a lot of what this guy says
is straight talk and I appreciate it. If you're today, if you're like left wing and you come to
my church, we're going to have a decision point really quick. You know what I mean? If you
you come today to my church, you're going to be welcomed, you're going to be loved,
whoever you are. But if you have strong, left-wing political ideology,
you're either going to quickly repent of it, be convicted by the Holy Spirit,
receive Jesus. And we have that. We have people in our church who used to be trans,
and now they've detransitioned and they're living for Christ, getting married to, you know,
opposite sex and they're glorifying God. You're going to either get saved quickly or you're
going to get mad and leave quickly because you're hard-hearted. And if that's the case,
either way, it's better for it to happen sooner than later. It's better for the church.
This is interesting. I don't know as you say, it's not true for us at late point.
Maybe it's because of strategy, you know, we can talk about strategy a little bit in a minute,
but that, you know, there is a very wide, very wide range of person that gets saved here.
that has not hindered us in evangelism, Josh.
Nope.
Has it hindered us.
Josh what?
No, that's, yeah, you just answered.
Yeah, I mean, I guess one of things I would add, I agree with all that's very good.
If you're intentionally bending what you're saying in order to hopefully keep people that
are in the category of secular, godless, progressive, whatever you'd call it, at some point,
you're going to have to make decisions about compromise that just go too far to be,
to be considered being faithful.
Because to Ryan's point, there's going to be flashpoints very quickly in relationship
to the world that you're teaching.
And this is maybe what I would encourage pastors with is, is people are like, people have said,
like, man, you're getting so political recently.
I thought it used to be like the family guy and the marriage guy and the men's guy.
And I'm like, yeah, I am.
Yeah.
I still am.
I've just realized now at 47 that with a 20-year-old is trying to live on her own,
and of 19-year-old who's married and trying to buy a home,
and a 16-year-old was trying to get a job
and pay for car insurance she can't afford,
and I can't afford it as a grown man,
and a 14-year-old son was looking out and trying to get a job in the world,
I'm like, if I don't step into that noble role of statesman
where I'm caring for more than just my family,
but using my years of experience to draw from,
whatever wisdom I've gained,
to apply it to the broader community for the flourishing,
not just my family, but the broader community
through policies that are made and enacted
that are coming from a worldview
that have anchored in some morality are either going to hurt or cause the flourishing.
If I'm not involved in that, I'm actually being selfish.
I'm not being Christian.
And so part of it might be like a season of life thing where you don't have kids who
have kids are old enough to see how much bad politics bring about bad policies or hurt real people.
But when your kids are like trying to get married and start families and you realize they can't
because your state's on fire because of not just foolish, I'd even be okay with incompetent bureaucracy.
I mean, it would still drive me nuts.
Yeah. But I would be okay with it. But like objectively wicked bureaucracy, I have a moral obligation before God is a man.
Because people who aren't from states like yours, they don't even know what you're talking about.
Give like just rapid fire. Like when you say overtly evil legislation, like what are you talking about?
Well, I just, I just name some. It's illegal. So our attorney general and a head of OSPI, which is head of education for the state, state education, just came out and said, if a girl is old enough to get pregnant, she's,
old enough to make her own decisions, and her parents can butt out of her business.
Now, that's a violation of a very clear biblical principle that puts parents.
So she can kill their grandkids.
She can kill their grandkids if she gets pregnant at 16, 15.
Without their knowledge.
And the state will help.
And the state will like, so when the state says if you try to stop Johnny, your son from
becoming Susie, we're going to take Johnny from you.
Now, the only time the state can take a child from a home is if the state views that home as abusive,
which means the state in Washington has categorized classic orthodoxy Christian belief as abusive in the home.
Yeah, it's not easy.
No, that's immoral.
And it's happening at every level, government, education, it's everywhere.
But back to my original point, when people say, gosh, I thought you're the family guy, you're being the political guy.
What I'm saying is, if I don't get involved politically, one, I think I'm feeling to do my job as a statesman.
two, the job of the pastor is getting exponentially harder because, and this is what I'll say is,
I don't even like talking about politics.
I don't even like politics.
But what I'm realizing is...
None of us do.
None of us are like waking up geeking about it.
It's wild.
You care about our people.
I think it's the breach in the wall right now.
And Luther, someone made the quote where if you claim to defend Christ but fail to defend
the one breach in the wall that's currently the enemy's pouring through, then you're
not being a faithful defender of the gospel.
And what I'm saying is there is a massive breach in our biblical worldview in relationship to public civic duty as a Christian.
And so I'm saying, like, let's go there and patch the wall up because Christianity is not a one-dimensional sinner's prayer.
And now I'm in.
Christianity is a comprehensive worldview where we take the Word of God and we show how the king and his truth touches every factor of life.
And so I tell our church is, Christ may be our refuge, but Christianity is not a way.
escapeism. Yeah, it's not. That's good, Josh. We're not retreating into this cave and, like,
buttoning the hatches. We're joyfully and graciously. We're just exiles in Babylon. Let it stay Babylon.
A kingdom is not of this world. What would you say to that? We're exiles in Babylon,
Josh. Aren't we supposed to just retreat and Babylon's always going to be Babylon, right?
Here's what I would say. What does the word politics mean? Politica. Affairs of the City.
So what I would say is when you get involved in politics, it's as if you're caring to work for the
welfare of the city. I've heard a verse about that. And we've got a verse about that. And we've got a verse about
that that was spoken, who?
Tim Keller.
No, no, no.
Jeremiah wrote it.
I'm teasing.
I'm teasing.
Popularized it.
He popularized it.
He popularized.
Keep going.
Keep going.
You're trying to mess with my blood pressure.
No.
You were quoting like, like, we're supposed to be exiles.
That was a prophetic word from Jeremiah given to who?
People in exile.
The people in exile.
Yeah.
And so we have a system of government that I believe was set up in the context of an overtly
Christian worldview that was created.
And Christian Adventist was created by vocal, bold, courageous pastors who were preaching a very public theology.
They were saying, where the spirit of the Lord is there is freedom, and it starts in the individual, and it works itself out through all society.
And then they built a framework for a constitutional republic that we're getting the benefit of living in as this experiment in freedom that I believe was their best intent of working out a new covenant theocracy.
where there's a government that's built for the express purpose of benefiting the people
and causing their flourishing as submitted to a higher authority, namely God Almighty, in His Word.
And so when we fail to address these issues as pastors, I think we're selling our people short
to see the goodness and the beauty and the comprehensive nature of the Word of God and how it speaks
to all of life.
Let me add something to that.
Okay, let me, yeah, I'm coming to you.
So what I'll say, let me just put theological categories on what you just said.
So here's a massive light bulb moment for me.
So you take the Kuiperian spheres, family church state.
All right, well, there's this pattern to riff on a little driscoll thing and make it a little different.
Whatever God creates, Satan tries to commandeer.
So check this out.
All right.
No, I'm doing commandeer.
He does counterfeit.
I'm doing comedy.
Whatever God creates Satan tries to commandeer.
So watch this.
God creates the family in Genesis 2, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
So what you get is if the husband, Adam, refuses to lead his family.
and stands passively by.
Then Satan walks in and goes,
hey, you won't lead your family?
I'll be happy to.
Okay, I took care of that sphere.
Okay, well then God creates, you go church.
Okay, God creates church.
Obviously, Christ's church in Acts chapter two.
Go to Revelation chapter two and three.
Obviously you got letters to seven churches.
And remember there was one church in particular
that had passive elders that refused to lead the church.
And there was that one church, passive elders refused to lead.
And what does Jesus say?
He's like, this I have against you.
You tolerate that woman Jezebel
who sets herself up as a prophet
and leads and seduces my people to practice sexual immorality.
Here's the case and point.
If godly elders won't leave their church, Satan goes, I'd be happy to.
That's right.
Well, let's apply that in the third category.
Whenever Christians, who, by the way, have been given the historically unique privilege of living in a constitutional republic,
where we actually have been given fractional leadership of our nation, if godly people go, man, actually, I'm going to stay passive and they refuse to leave.
then guess what Satan does? He go, I'd be happy to. Yeah, 100%. So here's a big idea, man. If godly people
won't, godless people will. That's right. Yeah. Now, what were you going to say? There's actually,
a lot. Well, I was going to say there's a biblical text that speaks to that, but you've got a thought.
Well, a lot of Christians are going, you know, I just want to tell people that Jesus loves them
and focus on all the good that we, you know, we as Christians can do in our world. And I don't
want to talk about politics. What you were describing, Josh, as I became a dad. And I want my kids.
Bro, this changes everything.
So Proverbs says, a good man leaves an inheritance to his children's children.
That means we as Christians, as husbands, as dads, and as pastors.
We have a responsibility not just to leave our children money in the bank, but an inheritance
of a society where they can flourish and where the Church of Jesus Christ can do our job
without the government interfering with it.
That's the inheritance that we have a responsibility.
ability to leave our children's children as a good man. Not just U.S. dollars, but a U.S. society
where they can actually live their lives in freedom and love Jesus without the government
interfering with it. So here's what moved me. To parley off your point, Ryan, is there's something
my dad taught me when I was young. I'm sure your dad taught you and your dad taught you. And
then it's leave it better than you found it. Yeah. It started in my bedroom. It moved my dad's car.
borrowed my dad's car, brought it back with that gas tank half empty, and wrappers on the
floor, it was the wrath of God.
My dad was not happy with that.
Yeah, it just doesn't work.
It won't fly.
You don't bring the shotgun back dirty and muddy and jammed up.
You bring it better than you found it because that's what McPherson men do.
And when I realized that that little McPherson code was really springing from the garden mandate
to be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth to do it, to take what I've given you, to take the talent
I've given you, take one talent turn to five, take one talent turn to ten, take what I've given
you, and then we get to enter into the joy of joining the creator in creating, managing,
labeling, naming, building, growing, shaping.
It's just an incredible expression of God in the image of man.
We've been made in the image of God, right?
What I realized was, in a 47, and I think their trajectory is still going the wrong way,
there's a very good chance that in my lifetime, both my state and America would have
gotten objectively, measurably worse. And what I realized was history would look back and go,
hey, who are the pastors, who is the pastors in Washington State when it went to the dogs?
Who are the pastors in the country when they were mutilating children? Who are, like, was like,
huh, Josh McPherson, interesting. I wonder, did he do anything? And I was just overwhelmed with
this sense of like, dear God, if I don't do anything, there's a very good chance that this
incredible expression that is unique to history, this experiment freedom, we know it's this
constitutional republic, would have gotten objectively worse during my watch. And that's on me.
And there was just a sense of obligation where like, I have an obligation before God to do
whatever I can. And even if I lose, I want to go down fighting. So that the record would show,
well, he was trying. At least he tried. I don't know where it's going to go, but I want my voice
be so clear and so loud, I do not consent to wickedness being funded by tax dollars. I do not
consent to the most weakest and vulnerable among us being mutilated, manipulated, murdered.
I do not consent to good, hardworking men and women being punished, objectively punished
with tax laws that are tantamount to thievery. I do not consent to looking the other way.
I do not consent to bowing to the mob. I do not consent to cowardly pulpits. I do not consent to
the church abdicate its responsibility to be a nation's conscience. And so for me, it's become a
matter of like, I'm going to do whatever I can to leave it better than I found it. And it's not
looking good right now, but we're trying. We're in the game. And what I was going to say to your point
earlier, if godly men and women won't lead, Satan will step in and follow. There's this crazy
parable. I was talking to Tim Barton. He pointed this out to me. There's this crazy parable in
friend of the pod. Shout out. He's a good man. Tim and Dave are national treasures. Wall builders.
incredible. You got to go check them out. Judges chapter 9 is a parable. And it says the tree went to
the olive tree and said, would you come and plant your tree? And the olive tree said, why would I do that?
And said, no, he went to the vine and said, would you come plant? No, why did I do that? He went to
the fig tree. Would you come? No, why did I do that? He went to the briar patch. And the bramble patch
said, I'd love to plant my gardens. And so the analogy was, wow, I see where that's going.
Yeah, like the good trees refused to grow.
The bad trees were all more than happy.
We're thrilled.
Yeah.
And so he connects it to Patrick Henry.
Patrick Henry was governor for eight terms.
He only ran twice because the people kept Ryan his name in.
And he felt it was his moral obligation to sacrificially step into the civil magistrate
to serve his broader community, to draw in his years of wisdom experience, to help
love his neighbor through godly policy. He kept saying, literally, in several elections,
please stop voting for me. I want to go home to be with my family. I want to go home to be
a family. No more. No moss. No moss. But they kept voting for him, and he felt it was his
noble obligation to sacrificefully step into service. And that's what I want to hear Christians.
I want Christians to hear it and pastors to hear. What you're talking about is the theology of
Christian statesmanship. That's right. Christians. And by the way, this is something I think all of
they're feeling right now is hey man at least you know that's not something i have grown up and
pastor world hearing about is hey man calling men and women of god to be christian christian statesman
and christian stateswoman and then like now real quick dude you're actually doing something about it
and actually all of us are involved in this uh you're doing it actually it's it's one of the best little
lineups i've seen freedom so that you're doing this thing called freedom con
It's the first thing I've literally ever heard of like it.
And it might be meeting the most significant need in the church in our nation.
Coming up, it's Father's Day FreedomCon.
Tell me about it real quick.
By the way, strongly, if you're listening, if you can do this thing, you want to do this thing.
Yeah.
It's going to be incredible.
Friday, Saturday, Father's Day weekend, the Gorge Amphitheater in George Washington.
Which, by the way, I've heard is literally one of the most gorgeous places in America.
It's the most iconic outdoor venue.
It's like Live Nations, like number three.
producer all time. It's massive. You're looking over the Gorge. It's stunning. Dave Matthews,
this is his all-time favorite venue to play in. It's, it's legit. It's incredible. He does like a four-day
concert there every year. They got like 8,000 camping sites, 30,000 showers.
Dude, didn't he record an album there one time? Yeah. I had that album. Heck yeah, dude. I just clicked.
So we're doing it at the Gorge and we wanted to do something big for, it's a two and fifth
anniversary, bro. This is a big deal. I'm like, oh, I want to do something big. We have
have our annual Strong Madnation Conference.
That combined with the fact that our state is just in the toilet politically, thinking more
about what's wrong.
We went to Olympia, and I realized Olympia is just dark.
And Olympia is dark, not because Christians aren't waving their like magic, potion,
wand over it praying prayers.
No, Olympia is dark because the Spirit of God's not there.
And here's what I realized.
You don't pray the Spirit of God over a place like a wand.
You send men and women who carry the Spirit of God into darkness.
So if Olympia is going to shift from dark to light, we have to.
to send men and women who carry the Spirit of God into the dark places.
And that led to, like, Pastor Adam James, as you know, like, I'm feeling called to going to politics.
And so he's running for state representative now, which is a whole other story.
The point being is the whole conversation around Christian nationalism and like that boogeyman word that's just we've all jokes.
Nobody knows what it means.
Yeah, there's no definition.
But if they stick it on you, it's a scare label.
It can label you and write you off to which I respond.
If you're accusing me of being a Christian and love of my nation.
He loves their nation.
I'm in.
Guilty.
I'm in.
So sue me.
Sold.
Yeah.
But to move it away from like the boogeyman buzz phrase of Christian nationalism to Christian
statesmanship.
Because that is a noble, sacrificial endeavor that requires a man to draw from a lifetime
of wisdom experience to now then leverage it in generous, others-oriented service in the years
when he should be mailing it in and joining his wealth and retiring.
He's saying, no, I'm going to step into the fray.
And guys, that's going to get messy.
It's not fun. It is dark. It is corrupt. I literally had a pastor text me there today. Something happened in the White House, and he's like, this is exactly why Christian should be involved in politics. I was like, all due respect. This is exactly why we should be. How we can influence it? Where is the salt supposed to go? Oh, to the things that are rotting, right? Light goes to dark places. Salt goes to preserve, that's what's rotting. So I get it's going to be messy. It's corrupt. That's where God's calling us to go.
Imagine a government that wasn't corrupt.
Imagine a government that bowed its need to the sovereignty of God.
Imagine a government that aligned its policies with the principles of God.
Would that not work for the flourishing of your people?
Would you rather have a governor who prays, acknowledges Jesus as king,
and submits his life to the Word of God, or a government who doesn't?
There's no question because we believe the Christian worldview brings the most flourishing for the most people,
even those who don't believe it.
So you're doing this conference to essentially give a, like, it's a vision.
And honestly, dude, I've never even heard of that.
that before and it's like I'm in.
Rise of the statesmen.
So that's the conference.
Who's going to be there?
What's the deal?
So I've asked, I ask the greatest men
in the country I know to come and put their minds
this idea of Christian statesmen.
So it's Josh Howardton.
It's Nick Fratis. It's Nate Shatzline.
It's Ryan Viscani.
It's Russ Johnson.
It's, I got their names in here.
It's, who else?
Mark Driscoll.
Graham Allen.
Graham Allen.
Eric Mataxis, Chad Robesaw,
Tim Barton.
I mean, it's just this massive lineup of guys.
And I've asked them to, I want to talk about statesmanship historically, biblically,
theologically, personally, ecclesiologically, philosophically, and personally.
And so they're just going to take a different angle.
And we're just going to unpack this idea of Christian statesmanship,
because it's my hope to shape the conversation so that pastors and churches once again see
civic service as noble.
We used to call them civil servants, not politicians, because it was a noble act of
sacrifice and generosity and service, it was an expression of loving my neighbor as myself
in a broader sense. And so we kind of want to reignite the conversation around Christian
statesmanship because it was Christian statesmen who founded this nation and a Christian
statesmen who preserve it. Wow. Wow. Bro. It's going to be awesome. We'll stay, by the way,
if anybody's interested, we've heard there's a bunch of dudes from Lake Point that are gone.
You can stick, we'll stick the link to it in the show notes and in the, and in the
little sub right below the YouTube
video so you can get it there. And then is there
a website they can go to? There's a, it's a
FreedomCon26.com. It's got
trailers, info, media packets, explanations,
a whole nine yards. And today
my team just texted me for your listeners
if you use the promo code
live free. Come on, man. Come on man.
This is going to be good. Come on man.
50% off.
Ooh, yeah.
Hey! Let's go. All right, man.
It's going to be awesome. It's going to be epic.
Now, let me back up, Ryan, because
honestly, dude, I want to try to help
people who are listening and like, ah, I'm with them, but I got to hang up, man,
because I'm seeing a lot of bad things.
There's just some bad people on the right, too.
You guys are acting like everything's pure on one side.
And then it's all impure on the other side.
Let me just say this.
Some of the most corrupt, godless, lost people I have met have been at Republican conventions.
Okay, so let's talk about that.
Well, hey, guys, as you know, Lake Point Church is a movement for all people to know Christ,
live free and change the world for God's glory.
But here's the thing.
Movement by definition, move.
And so if you're not moving,
then the question is,
are you really being a part of the movement?
In fact, somebody once said
that too many churches are like football games,
22 people on the field in desperate need of rest,
being watched by thousands of people
in the stands in desperate need of exercise.
Hey, listen, we refuse to be a church like that.
And so if you call Lake Point Church your home church,
and if you have not yet joined a source,
serve team, I want to invite you to take your next step right now.
Text the word serve to 20411 and we'll help you find your spot where you can serve in person
or online on whichever serve team you are being called to serve.
Hey, thank you for being obedient to God's calling in your life.
And let's keep doing this together.
So I mean like crisis conservatism helps nobody.
That's right.
Helps nobody.
It's a big deal right here.
So honestly, man, this right here is what used to trip me up the most.
Ryan, honestly, you said something that made like 11 things click into place for me.
So, okay, for somebody that's listening, like, hey, dude, I'm with y'all.
But, man, there's, like, corrupt people, and I just see bad people and stuff on the right.
And then I see some, you know, seemingly kind and well-meaning people on the left.
You guys are making it sound like.
It's just, you know, what?
So, Ryan, what would you say to that person?
Like, you guys, it's not really.
Both sides bad.
Yeah, both sides.
Yeah, two wings of the same bird.
Yeah.
Right.
So we will readily admit that there are conservatives who are sinners.
All of us.
We're all sinners.
All of them.
Yeah.
There are conservatives and there are Republicans who do bad things, who do sinful things for
sure.
We know that.
But on the left, there is a sin and a commitment to wickedness codified in the Democratic Party
platform.
And so what am I talking about?
there's a big difference between on the right people who do bad things versus on the left
in the party's platform which is their written document which expresses what they're committed to
what their agenda is what they're trying to accomplish they have written out in their things
that are objectively no room for debate sinful and unbiblical that a Christian could not support
in good conscience and be faithful to Jesus at the same time so some of the
the big things would be like a commitment to abortion, funding abortion.
Max boosting it, by the way. Yeah, if you want to say it that way. Like cheering it as a positive
moral good. Chearing it, paying for it, using tax dollars to pay for it. The Hyde Amendment
essentially forces other countries to do the same as well if they want to get free trade and federal
tax dollars. Can I tell a story about that? Yeah, go ahead. All right, I'm sorry, I'm interjected.
So, dude, we had a, this is no joke.
We had the pastor of the largest church.
I think it was Peru.
Come and speak at Lake Pointe-Spaniel.
It was leading up to the 24 election.
And this is when a lot of these dominoes started clicking my head.
And he goes, hey, man, this whole conversation about USAID was coming up.
And he started explaining to me that in his, in his South American country, is a very traditional country.
Very traditional.
So traditional family, man, woman, marriage.
marriage, the trans stuff was like abhorrent to everybody.
Yeah.
And he was like, dude, you know what's happening is, uh, is our government schools all started
teaching that.
And he like, with kind of it was half joking, he was like, hey, dude, and it's because
of your country.
And I was like, what are you talking about?
And he started explaining that we give that country, I think it's billions.
Billions of dollars.
This was happening.
Mm-hmm.
We gave him billions in USAID.
And he said, what happened is that the previous administration literally
told them a prerequisite to you receiving our foreign aid is you have to align with these ideals
that are considered moral things for our administration. And they required the public schools in this
country who all the actual citizens hate and reject those ideas to start teaching all the LGBT
and all the things. And they were forcing it on the nation in order to receive public assistance.
And honestly, it was one of the first times in my whole life when I went, wait,
Are we the baddies?
Yeah.
Are we the...
You keep going.
So that's one.
So abortion is a huge one.
And then LGBT, what the Democratic Party platform expresses it's committed to is LGBT, quote-unquote, rights, transgender rights, things like same-sex marriage.
The Equality Act is really wild because it forces health providers to affirm gender, you know, gender affirming care and support that.
By the way, if you don't know, what he means by quote unquote gender affirming care is if somebody wants to self-identify as the opposite of gender, opposite gender, which by the way is a biological impossibility and it's a rebellion against God's created order.
Yes.
Then what you mean by that is that provider has to affirm them in that thing that will actually, we know, that destroys them.
Yes.
That destroys, dude, I get a motion.
That destroys you and your children.
That's right.
So that's what you mean by that for people who didn't know.
You keep going.
And they have policies that essentially make it impossible for Christians to object to those
ideologies as well. The Democratic Party platform also is firmly committed to critical race theory,
DEI, we call it, what they would call equality. But for example, some of the negative things that
come from that are things like prioritizing, appointing diverse, quote unquote, judges at all costs,
rather than the most qualified judges.
Which sound, I think for most Christians at first, they're like, well, isn't that good?
Isn't that nice?
I mean, honestly, it's right, good.
Yeah.
It's not, it's, it's unequal weights of measures.
So this is important.
So what Ryan's talking about right there, this is really important.
The biblical definition, so here's what Satan does.
The Bible says what Satan does, Father Eli's, is he's really good at calling good things evil and evil things good.
So what he does consistently is he packages evil things in good labels.
Okay. So what he does is he's going to package injustice under the label of justice. Why? Because he's a real good liar.
Yeah. So check this out. What Ryan's talking about is the biblical definition of justice, just if you're not a Bible nerd out for 10 seconds, and just go to a little website and Google the phrase equal weights and measures. That's consistently the Bible's definition of what's justice. Justice is, it's Martin Luther King Jr. I don't judge you by a color your skin.
but with that content of your character.
Yeah.
It's a good example of equal weights and measures.
Equal weights and measures.
I do not.
When you're applying for a college admission, I don't care what color you are.
I'm going to apply equal weights and measures.
That's what you're saying as far as those things are actually.
Some people, I think, are well-meaning but naive in supporting them,
and they don't realize, hey, you're actually supporting the advancement of injustice
that's being packaged as justice.
It's true.
I mean, I was at the White House a few weeks ago and talking with the administration
and things they were uncovering under the Obama and Biden administrations.
And one of the things they found was all of the medical schools that were getting dollars from the U.S. government were requiring their medical students to perform an abortion in order to move through their clinicals.
That's like a blood ritual.
Yeah.
Holy Moses.
What they found was all of these Christians were hitting year three, year four of their clinicals and like, wait, I got to do what?
you got an abortion. I like to op out, you know, conscientious and objector. Yeah, you can't. And so now
it's forcing Christian medical students to either, A, violate their conscience and perform
abortion or watch this, get out of the medical field. Right. So it's an, bro, that's sinister.
So think about it. Over time, it screens out a Christian. So you put 10, 15, 20 years on that.
That's why. The only people you have in the medical field are godless people that have no problem
with their conscience murdering a baby. That's wild. And so this administration,
any school that was taking the money, boom, remove the money, remove the mandate, and that's
been shifting now. But there's thousands of things like that that can happen at a policy level
that can filter, shape, and change entire landscapes of cultures. And pastors are like, wait, wait,
what happened? Yeah, that's wild. We keep giving commentary. That's okay. One more thing would be like,
in the Democratic Party platform, it talks about religion and a separation of church and state.
Like it'll use a phrase like that, which you would read on the surface.
And a lot of naive people would just go like, oh, that sounds good.
But when you actually get down into what they say in their platform, they actually want to oppose policies that would allow our religious beliefs to override their anti-discrimination laws.
Meaning, you know, we think of things like a Christian school should have the option to not hire a teacher who, for example, is gay.
And a Christian school should be able to say, hey, you go do you, but we can't hire you to teach our kids because your lifestyle doesn't align with our values.
The Democrats, when they talk about separation of church and state, they actually want to take away a church or a Christian school's rights to object to unbiblical practices based on their faith.
So all that kind of stuff that we talked about being said, abortion, LGBT, DEI, those things are.
enshrined. They are codified in the Democratic Party platform. And Democrats on the website, on their
website, it's not, you can go read it yourself. It's their website. Like, Democrats align with the party
platform. If they want to get funding, if they want to have any kind of, you know, success in coalition
building, they have to tow the line. So they, they very rarely, if ever, deviate from the objectives of
the party platform. You can think of the party platform as like, this is our, you know, this is our,
team are our team's mission statement basically. And in their mission statement, they've got,
we are committed to sin. So when a Christian votes for a Democrat, they are voting for
abortion, LGBT, critical race theory. They're voting for those things and the advancement of those
ideas. Now, on the other side of the aisle, on the right, there are no, last I checked,
you know, this could change someday in the future, but right now, there are no policy.
in the Republicans Party platform that would objectively be sin according to the Bible.
Some people could maybe debate some fine-tune things, but it's not the same on the right.
So yes, there are people on the right who do wrong things where we as Christians go,
hey, that's not good, that's not right.
You shouldn't have done that.
But on the left, like the institution is wired and committed to doing what God calls wicked.
So we are not dealing with two wings of the same bird here at all.
This is not two sides of the same coin.
Today, this wasn't the case 30 years ago.
You know, my grandpa voted for-
This is important what you're about to say.
This is important what you're about saying.
My grandpa voted for a Democrat.
And my dad and my grandpa would sit around having like good nature debate about some
of their policy differences.
But these realities did not exist.
Back then, you could be a faithful Christian, a godly man.
And you could vote for a Democrat in good.
conscience, but the Democratic Party moved further to the left. So today, the way that things stand,
a Christian cannot in good conscience be faithful to God and vote for a Democrat. Now, that doesn't
mean that we is a very strong statement, but it's, I would say it's indisputable. On the other hand,
I think as pastors, we should be careful how far we take our guidance. I think one of the things we
have to be careful about is, you know, I don't know if as a pastor, I want to get into like,
endorsing candidates and I'm not going to go. I don't. I don't want to do that. I don't want to do that.
I don't want to go to campaign for a guy necessarily or I would maybe do it with exceptions,
but not necessarily as a rule. We don't want our churches to feel like this is a constant,
overwhelming theme coming from the pulpit. Actually, can I pause? I want you to keep going.
For anybody that doesn't listen to our preaching, like, I'm not joking. And honestly, this, I actually may have
failed in what I'm about to say. In my entire preaching ministry, I've used the words
Republican or Democrat in one sermon ever. And it was my 2024 election sermon. So if anybody's
listening to like, dude, this is all these guys talk about. You simply don't know what you're
talking about. Like when I stand up on the weekend, I'm preaching verse by verse through books
of the Bible. Yeah. I mean, I've been preaching for 12 years now. I've probably done seven or eight
sermons that are related to politics in 12 years. And then a whole lot that aren't. There you know.
So you were, sorry, I interrupted.
You're just like, hey man, don't, we're not talking about making it a disproportionate emphasis.
This is, we talk about this, you know, an episode like this, because this is the thing that a lot of pastors are hung up on.
This is a lot of Christians have just been kind of indoctrinated into a wrong way of thinking.
Like we were, when we were younger, that, hey, those things are kind of like, oh, Christians shouldn't go there.
Kind of cringe.
It's a distraction.
It's going to hurt our ability to reach the loss.
it's going to split my church and cause problems.
So if I talk about that stuff, it's going to cause a lot of pain.
But in reality, avoiding these issues ends up causing more pain.
More pain for the church, for the families in the church, and for the society that the church is supposed to be in as salt and light making better.
Now, so here's my objection to everything you just said.
Yeah.
Well, here's an objection to.
Yeah, do it.
All right. So this is a little sentence that was like an anchor axiom in pastor world for a very
long time. Anchor axiom. Ryan and Josh, the gospel is neither right nor left. And that is evidenced by
the life of the early church. Here's what I mean, Ryan and Josh. The early church did not map
onto a political party. Think about this. I won't say who I'm getting this from. The early
Church cared about sexual fidelity and the definition of marriage, and they opposed abortion
and infanticide. Those things sound right, but politically right. But then Ryan and Josh,
they also opposed racism and cared deeply for the poor. Those things map political left today.
So Josh and Ryan, see, obviously the gospel is neither right nor left. And the church, you know,
it just doesn't map onto a political party.
It's a false framework, is what I would say.
We as Christians, we should do both and all of the above.
We should care about the poor.
We should also care about the unborn.
We should care about loving our neighbors, and we should care about the definition of marriage.
So I wouldn't let someone frame those issues as being only right or left, but then I would disagree, you would disagree too, with the premise that the left actually does have policies that are in the best interest of the right or left.
But then I would disagree, you would disagree too, with the premise that the left actually does have policies that are in the best interest of the poor.
I think the left's policies are actually designed to keep the poor poor and keep them voting for people who will help them stay poor.
That's a big deal.
So I'll tell you how I respond to that.
And then you can riff on it if you want to, man.
How I always respond to that is, hey man, that's a very unfair framing of only one.
side. So for instance, if you go to a person, a progressive person that aligns with their publicly
stated policies and you say, hey, ma'am, are you for the redefinition of marriage to include
quote unquote gay marriage? And are you for abortion? They're going to say yes. If you go to
somebody that's conservative, you say, are you for racism? And do you oppose caring for the poor?
Obviously we're going to be like, what the heck are you talking about? Of course not. Yeah. Of course
not. Further, I would just
do gently say this, but if you
accept that framing, I think
you radically need to investigate
your assumptions. Because very
frankly, to what you said, Thomas Sol
would constantly say this. Actually, it's Milton
Friedman. He said, you do not
judge a policy. Do not judge
a policy by its intentions. You judge
policies by their outcomes. Yes. And when
you start talking about, there are
legitimate, I just want to acknowledge this. There are some
people that they lean
left, genuinely
because they care for the poor and they I think very mistakenly they genuinely think this this cares for
poor more but very frankly as I've heard it said the best argument against progressive policies is
progressive cities amen and all of notice this I just want if you disagree with what I'm saying
right now just pause and think all of the cities and states because you can get some stats on
this that they throw millions and billions of dollars to
to quote unquote solving homelessness,
have you ever paused to think about,
why are those the cities and states
that end up with, oh, wait, the most homelessness?
Because you're not solving the problem,
you're incentivizing the problem.
That's exactly right.
Which is why, First Thesslonians says,
hey man, what's the policy God puts in place?
If a man will not work?
It's not to eat.
You want to eat, you got to work.
You want to eat?
So God understood the way that humans are wired
is incentives.
I would also say that man, honestly, dude,
The data simply shows that people identify as politically conservative give three times more of their personal income to help the poor than people identify as progressive three times more.
Right.
So what I was, this is just simply, I love the person who said this.
I radically disagree with them.
It's simply a false framing.
Well, it's a false framing which creates a false premise, which gives you wrong outcomes.
And so I agree with everything you guys have said.
And I would only add that the last.
left tries to solve legitimate problems with the wrong jurisdiction.
Oh, this is good, Josh.
Right?
Tees it out.
This is good.
Well, that's all I want to say, other than the fact that it's not that conservatives
don't care about poor people.
They want to create as much possibility for opportunity for any poor person to work
and earn so they can make their own living.
That's actually a biblical response to the problem of poverty, as opposed to the
unbiblical solution and property, which is, let me punish the productive man and forcibly take
from you, steal from you, and give it to the man who's lazy. It's back to what he said earlier.
It's taking that which is good and calling it bad and taking that which is bad and calling it
good. It's taking that which is good and saying you work hard and so you, I'm not talking about
you, but I mean, you know, like if you work hard and you make money, we're going to take it
from you to give to those who aren't willing to work and because they have not. And so the
And just as a caveat, we all know there are people who legitimately need welfare.
We're all for a legitimate safety net.
We're talking about people that abuse the system because of incentives.
Well, in Driscoll's categories are super helpful, righteous poor and unrighteous poor.
Righteous, rich and unrighteous rich.
So those who are rich who are unrighteous with it, they've gained it illegally or inscrrupulously.
They're those who are righteously rich who've earned it through wise investment and hard work.
There's those who are righteously poor, catastrophic events beyond their control,
and there are those who are unrighteously poor and willing to work.
So I had a guy running for commission of my town.
He went down to all the druggies and the homeless folks under the bridge in my town.
Ask every one of them.
Every one of them have family trying to help them.
Many of them had owned homes or jobs.
And to the man, their answer was, I like it better down here.
I want to be here.
I get free food.
I get free drugs.
The city gives me needles.
Why would I want to leave?
Does the city literally get a needle?
Yeah, that's unrighteous.
Seattle?
Yeah.
Are you kidding me?
Seattle's a hand and stuff out like candy.
Yeah.
The state of Washington has six times more homeless people than New York City.
Jeez.
It's insane.
It's insane.
So to your point is I would say the left's solution to a legitimate problem exacerbates the problem.
It does not solve the problem.
And that's part of the nature of bureaucracy.
Roll around on the problem, not fix the problem.
Because you fix the problem, you have no reason to be.
Right? And so if we keep the problem going, then I can legitimize me being here because I'm needed. And so there's all sorts of problems with the framing of that, the categorizations there that create false premises, wrong outcomes, and bad thinking in the church.
let me rapid fire some objections to what we're saying and then let's land the plan on practicals okay so number one and i'll be i'll just use
sure i don't know how to do this without it it is it is emotional it is emotional there's no way for it not to be
emotional but one of the things that you kind of get i've gotten this with dudes i love uh hey josh man
when you start making clear political applications man you're really hurting you're really hurting racial reconciliation
efforts because, man, you're marginalizing minority communities that largely, man, a lot of those
minority communities, they largely vote the other way. And so you're hurting, you're hurting
the racial reconciliation efforts of the church. What would you say? Yeah, there are certain.
Do you want me to respond to you? I think there are certain, you going, that doesn't make sense to me.
I guess what would you say to that? Because it makes no logical sense.
Oh, you started. I'll start. Yeah. I think there are certain groups who,
have unbiblical, ungodly allegiances to the Democratic Party. And they've been conditioned to believe
that that's the party that's for you. And that's your only option is to vote left. And in all
honestly, that's what really is a political idol, is voting for this Democratic Party on the left,
even though it promotes wickedness. You're placing.
a political desire and affinity above your identity in Christ, if that's the case.
So if that hurts what someone would call an effort, racial reconciliation, or I would just say,
so be it. So be it. Yeah. So first of all, this is, you know, how would you answer it?
Well, you'd probably got a better answer. I don't know. I'd like to hear you think, because I don't
understand it. Yeah. Well, what I would say is anytime I had this conversation with somebody,
I feel like it's more awkward for them than me,
just because of my family.
You know, everybody to know,
I got two African-American kids.
Pretty reconciled.
Yeah, yeah.
It's pretty reconciled to me.
Well, and honestly, dude,
it's like every conversation that makes,
you know, you're kind of your normal white guy,
like squirm,
like I have those conversations every night at dinner.
Like, it is, whatever is the weirdness and awkwardness around that,
I don't got it anymore.
So it's just not awkward for me anymore.
You know, what I would say is,
hey, ma'am, we don't just,
judge the righteousness or truth of an assertion by the racial makeup of who supports it.
We don't do it.
We just judge truth from error.
That's right.
And so what I would gently say to somebody is, you know, what I would say to somebody
is, hey, man, man, if 90% of white people in Georgia or South Carolina in the 1700s were pro-slavery, does that...
Then they're all wrong.
Then I would say, well, then they're all wrong.
Yeah, every one of them.
And if in 1790, somebody said, well, yeah, but Josh, that hurts racial reconciliation.
I would say, I don't care.
Who cares?
So be it.
They're wrong.
Yeah, I don't care.
So what I would say is, race bows the truth.
Yeah.
Let God be true, and 90% of white people in Georgia in 1790 be a liar.
That's right.
We have verses for that.
That's right.
And, man, you apply that to today.
Man, honestly, I'm just like, man, I feel like it's honestly a bit of an, a bit of an, I'll
just say it, like, a bit of an immature, emotional manipulation tool.
to keep people from just, dude, let's just be Christian men and women and go, man, we have a higher
allegiance than anything else in our life to Jesus Christ. He saved me. It's like, dude, I really don't
care what percent of people who look a certain way do something? It's just like, what's true
and righteous? I'm for that. That's how I think about it. Not only that, it's all my black
buddies, it's insulting to them. They're like, why would you, why would you think, because of the color
my skin, I have to think a certain way. I'm submitting my race to the king. Because my worldview
isn't driven by the color of my skin. My worldview is driven by what Jesus says is true.
Yeah. That's the way it should be. Yeah. All right, let me wrap fire a couple others. I'm going to
make y'all disagree with Billy Graham. I'm going to go, I'm going to bounce back and forth and
you got to do it fast. Okay? I'm going to bounce back and forth, you got to do it fast. I'm going to
give you Billy Graham quotes. I'm going to assume that I'm wrong. If I disagree with Billy Graham,
Obviously, I'm not seeing something here.
All right.
Ryan, I'm going to start with you.
Oh, good.
Billy Graham, preachers can't be closely identified with any particular party or person.
We have to stand in the middle and preach to all people right and left.
I'm going to identify with whoever, whatever political leader is going to best represent Jesus and my faith and bring about the worldview that's most biblical.
that's more important than keeping myself in the middle.
The problem is trying to stay in the middle, neither right nor left,
is that the window keeps moving to the left.
That's right.
So if you try to stay in the middle, neither right nor left,
the window keeps moving left.
And in order to stay in the middle,
you have to keep moving left with it.
And that's one of the reasons why so many churches have become apostate
and so many pastors have gone woke and so many Christians have deconstructed.
It started with a good, you know, a well-intentioned desire to just,
be neutral and stay in the middle.
I'll add one thing, because I'm allowed to do that as the moderator.
Yeah, do it.
I'll add one thing.
When Billy Graham said that, that was probably true.
I was just going to say, in 1960.
Yeah, exactly.
Actually, I heard this from you on a little reel, one of those dumb little reels that we do,
is that, hey, man, it used to be that the differences between the parties were like tier,
tier two and three issues.
You know, that kind of thing.
How many roads are we going to build?
You know, that kind of thing.
Now, they're like moral, doctrinal.
Tier 1 issues. So what I would say is when Billy Graham said this,
might have been true. It's a little different now. Josh, let me do another one.
Billy Graham at the end of his life had a personal regret. He said, if I had to do it over again,
I would avoid any semblance of involvement in partisan politics. What do you say?
I don't know. That's how we got here today. Oh, what? There's a lot of pastors who did that,
and that's how we got here today. Wow. Okay. I mean, it's tough to comment on a man's quote
without knowing the context, because I have a great amount of respect for Billy Graham.
Of course.
By the way, the man's alleged.
Arguably the greatest preacher of American history.
If anybody is interpreting this as us being down on Billy Graham, you're wrong.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
The reason I'm doing this is because of his statesmanship and his influence, man, those are
things that it's like they've imbibed themselves because of our respect for him.
They've imbibed themselves and they're like, man, I can't, you know, I can't disagree with.
that. That's why I'm doing this. I can tell us to make it uncomfortable.
Well, not uncomfortable. I just, like, I got to be in the eastern
of the White House at lunch with POTUS like a month ago, and Billy Graham's son
came in and laid a hand on our president and prayed for him and, like, took a picture.
I'm like, I feel better about the world when there's a Graham praying for my president.
Yeah. And so, like, I'm not sure what I meant by that, but I'm like, I disagree.
Whatever you, like, thank you for being involved in every president's life. Thank you for coming to
the White House every time they called.
Thank you for praying for them. Thank you for pastoring them. Thank you for speaking the gospel of them.
So I'm not what sure what he means by being less partisan. But like Mike, that guy was like the least
partisan guy. No, he would pray for any president. He would meet with them. So I'm like, I'm grateful
for his life. And I think that's like the earlier quote I think I would probably agree with
because we don't primarily identify with a political party. Yes, important. We identify with King Jesus.
That's right. And King Jesus calls all political parties and all governments and all magistrates
to bow their knee.
And my beef is with any magistrate, no matter what they call themselves, who wants to make me violate my Christian conscience to obey their law as if they're higher than Jesus.
And they're not.
Whenever a government starts acting as if they're God, I have a prophetic responsibility to remind them that they're not God.
That Jesus is the king of all kings.
That's great.
And, dude.
Go ahead.
No, it's just a storyline of the Bible is government trying to replace God as God.
And so when governments forget that there is a God who they're submitted to, they start acting like a God.
And that's bad for everyone.
And so I wouldn't say I'm partisan.
I wouldn't say I align right or left.
Like I align with the kings.
And I'll align with anyone who bows there to any of the king.
Or slows societal decay the most to use your language.
I think today we're going to have a lot of pastors get to the end of their life and say, my greatest regret is not getting more involved.
That's right.
Wow.
Dude, honestly, this click for me, and then I'm going to move on the last one.
is honestly, man, if you're listening to this and you're a little out on it, especially if you're younger,
honestly, dude, this changed for me when I had kids.
Because all of a sudden, I'm like, I have a duty and responsibility as a man to hand my children.
Lead things better than you found it.
The best cultural inherits, I can possibly hand them.
And I have a duty as a Christian to leave the future church in America the best possible conditions for disciple making the accomplishment of the Great Commission.
That's right.
I humily can't.
Let me throw one last one at you, Ryan.
Billy Graham, he warned that aligning faith with any with politics often leads to manipulation
and damages the credibility of the gospel. What do you think? Yeah, I think it could,
but I do think that the answer is similar to the last point, which is we're not trying to
align faith with politics. We're recognizing, you know, God's word is our true north,
and we can look at God's word and what it says about right and wrong, and we can
objectively say, hey, you know, today one party, one of the two major parties is imperfect and
flawed, and the other major party is absolutely wicked. So now taking God's word, what do we do? We teach
Christians to apply God's word to their everyday lives. And that affects how they raise their kids
and how they handle money and how they vote. That's what we're doing. We're not trying to get a certain
party in power. We're trying to teach Christians to be faithful disciples and live every part of their
life as if Jesus is their king and their worldview is shaped by that reality.
Last one for all of us.
Your normal pastor or maybe church member, they hear's that and they're like, dude,
honestly, okay, fine, the penny's dropping.
All right, I get it.
You're right.
But they're like, dude, I don't know what the heck to do.
And honestly, if I did what he did, I did what he did, I blow my church up.
And what would you say to that guy?
Well, I would say it's probably false fear because I think if you do it in a wise way,
in a biblical way, in a gentle way, in a clear way, in a biblical and practical and spirit-filled
way, the only people that you would drive away are the people that don't want that.
Most people, I think, are looking for it.
Would you help me know how to think about this?
Because if you don't help them think about it, Tucker Carlson is going to help them think about it.
and fill in the blank with these talking bobbleheads out there that may or may not be helpful.
Yeah.
And so because of the access to podcasts and information, there's more of a, there's a more pressing responsibility for shepherds to protect their flock, not just from keeping things from, because you can't, but by equipping them and arming them with truth so they know how to think about everything in their life.
And that's why it's coming back to it.
like there is so much in the Word of God, truth, goodness, and beauty that applies to every
sector and sphere of society that's beautiful and incredible and amazing. Let's do the hard work
of taking Christianity out of this one-dimensional flat sinner's prayer and apply it to the three-dimensional
world we all live in, a relationship to family and church and, yes, politics. Because for me,
like, I go out my door and I want to do the most good for the most people in loving my neighbor as myself,
and I immediately run into policy.
And I immediately run into legislation.
And I immediately run into politics that are hurting people.
And so I don't wake up going, I want to be political today.
I wake up and going, I want to be a faithful disciple of Jesus,
working for the most good for the most people.
And there's wicked legislation and policy that are hurting people.
So I guess I got to get up there and address it.
And so that's how I think about it.
And I would just encourage pastors, I bet you'd be shocked.
how many people would say thank you that was so helpful i've been wrestling with how to think about
that and if you don't answer it for them someone else will yeah i've got two practical pieces of
guidance first one is for christians second is for pastors for christians what do i do with this
when it comes to voting i would just say to make it very simple just look at candidates and what is
their view on abortion and then also look at what is their view on sexuality and marriage those are
the most easy to identify issues where there is no dispute about how a Christian should think
and how a Christian should vote. For a pastor who would say, hey, man, if I started talking about
these things, I'm going to lose half my church and it's going to be a total nightmare. I would say,
first off, I'm really sympathetic to that guy's situation as a pastor. But I think the first thing
you've got to do is really stop and think about if your church would be disrupted by clear biblical
teaching, that is a problem. You have to first ask, what caused that problem and who caused that
problem? The thing that caused that lack of unity was unclear teaching, a lack of clarity,
a loud division to grow. And the person who's responsible for that is the Bible teacher.
So the thing to do is not to justify it. It's to repent of that failure. And I believe that
God honors humbling ourselves. He said, if you humble yourself, I will lift you up.
humble yourself and just like I admit I look back on some of my sermons from five years ago even when
I thought I was starting to get this and I'm like I disagree with a lot of this now like I was
terrible I was still like really wrong and how I was describing these things but if you'll repent of where
you have failed to do your duty and you stop fearing man in your preaching stop thinking about what people
is this teaching going to upset and start thinking about how can I teach the Bible in a way that will
please the Lord stop teaching with the fear of man start teaching
with the fear of God, lead your people towards what's actually best for them, and trust God
with the outcome. What you'll find is you lose the people who, honestly, the people that you
lose, it'll be addition by subtraction. But what you'll gain is he'll gain a church that is hungry
for God's word that loves Jesus, that's unified, and that's a joy to worship with. Trust God
with the outcome for your church. Good, buddy. All right, I'll finish it. I'll give two little
practicals. One, just make sure the penny drops for you all the way. So,
Trinity, I'm going to run through that data real quick.
So, man, if the last however many minutes, 90 minutes or whatever has not helped you get there,
hey, God bless your heart.
I don't know, you know.
That's the Texas way saying you're a moron.
But it bless your heart.
But seriously, like, I just want to, if that won't do it, let me just run through some data real quick.
Okay, this is Ryan Burge.
These are just researchers.
I'm just going to read it.
People who go to religious services more often are less likely to identify as liberal.
I know this is awkward to talk about.
It's just like, dude, reality is undefeated.
Let's just be honest about reality.
This is a fundamental fact of American religion and politics.
It's not just white people.
It's every single racial group.
Higher attendance, less liberal.
It is a basic data fact that the more that somebody attends church,
the less that, the more they move away from those policies.
Go to the next one.
Why is that?
Ryan Bird, share of liberal college students who attend a House of Worship Weekly.
8% for liberals.
Share of conservative college students who attend a House of Worship Weekly,
32%.
So it's a 4x.
60% of liberals attend less than once a year, only 25% of conservatives.
So you should start seeing a correlation, which should make you go,
huh, I wonder what the causation is.
Basically, what I'm trying to do is help you go, man, honestly,
I have to bury my head in the sand to pretend there is not a correlation between these things.
That's right.
Let's keep going.
Go to the next one.
Ryan Bird said this.
Again, this is an impartial data researcher.
If I were to guess someone's religious affiliation, and I only get one question,
it would be, what's your political ideology?
12% of political conservatives, ID is non-religious, compared to 50% of political liberals.
So the data is starting to stack up.
And let me explain, I won't deep dive this.
What happens is this is not just political ideology, it's competing worldviews.
It is the competition of worldviews.
And what modern progressivism does is it installs a plausibility structure that teaches people and emotionally
calibrates them to view many good things as actually evil.
and many evil things is actually good,
which over time makes them view the church,
Jesus, the gospel, and Christianity as bad guys and bad things.
If you allow that to progress wherever you are,
listen, I love you,
you are actively aiding the advance of things
that will make the advance of the gospel harder.
That's right.
Wherever you are.
Go to the next one.
Okay.
Now, Ryan Burge, I know this dude via X.
We've interacted.
So I asked him, I privately messaged him.
Hey man, but which way does the causation go?
Yes.
Because maybe Ryan is actually just, it's not that progressivism leads to lack of faith.
Maybe it's just that lack of faith leads to progressivism.
Yeah, chicken or egg.
He says, I can't, I'm summarizing this.
Ryan says, I'm going to quote it right here, there's a raft of social science research
that points to the fact that religion is downstream of politics.
So I know this is really weird and it's counterintuitive.
Here's why.
because those political ideologies, again, they're installing plausibility structures that either make the gospel easier to believe and morally intuitive for a person or make the gospel way harder to believe and morally oppositional to a person. Repulsive to a person.
So the last thing I'd say, because man, I'm not an idiot. If you're a pastor listening to this and you're like, Josh is unselfaware. No, no, I'm very self-aware. I know exactly that I've been uninvited from conferences. I know that. I know that.
what I've been sent screenshots
what people say about me
in pastor group texts.
I know the guys who have said,
man, I can't appear with Josh at conferences anymore
because he gets too political.
I'm not an idiot. I know all these things.
But here's my big idea, man.
I care about the great commission
and the future of the church
and the cultural inheritance that I'll hand my kids
more than I care about my reputation with you.
That's right.
And here's the big idea, man,
is if you're gone, that guy's crazy,
I would every pastor in America
and especially church planters, you know this.
Show me a map of the states and cities
with the least churches and the least Christians,
and then show me a map of the bluest cities and the bluest states.
It's the same map.
That's right.
It's the same map.
So, man, as uncomfortable as it is for us,
reality is undefeated.
And reality is, if you want making disciples
and the accomplishment of the Great Commission
and building churches to get much, much harder
in your region and for your children in the future,
all you got to do is let it go blue.
That's all you got to do.
That's right.
You got to get to another podcast.
We're done here.
Peace.
We're out.
