The Daily Signal - Churches May Be Closed, but This Pastor Says We Have Reason to Hope
Episode Date: November 23, 2020The Rev. Samuel Rodriguez says he came face to face with the fear and anxiety created by COVID-19 when his own daughter contracted the virus over the summer after giving birth to a beautiful baby girl.... The pastor's daughter, 29, ended up in an intensive care unit fighting for her life. The challenging lessons learned by Rodriguez, founder and president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, are part of his new book “From Survive to Thrive: Live a Holy, Healed, Healthy, Happy, Humble, Hungry, and Honoring Life.” Rodriguez, who pastors a church in California, joins the show to explain that all of us are “failing, surviving, or thriving.” He says he hopes his book will serve as a practical guide for anyone who desires to thrive in this season, even as government lockdowns close church buildings and the virus continues to affect our lives. Also on today’s show, we read your letters to the editor and share a good news story about a generous young man who is using his dog treat business to fight canine cancer. (You may purchase Lily’s Barkery treats here.) Enjoy the show! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Monday, November 23rd.
I'm Robert Blewey.
And I'm Virginia Allen.
On today's show, Rob talks with Reverend Samuel Rodriguez about his new book,
From Survive to Thrive, Live a holy, healed, healthy, happy, humble, hungry, and honoring life.
Rodriguez offers some practical tools for how we can find hope amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
We also share your letters to the editor and a good news story about.
a generous young man who is using his dog treat business to fight canine cancer.
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We are joined on the Daily Signal podcast today by Reverend Samuel Rodriguez.
He's president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference
and the author of a new book called From Survive to Thrive.
Reverend Rodriguez, it's great to welcome you back to the Daily Signal podcast.
Thanks for joining us today.
Thank you for having me.
Absolutely.
Well, your new book is out at a time when millions of people are struggling from COVID-19.
This pandemic has wreaked havoc on so many people.
across the globe, some who may have contracted the virus, others who have lost loved ones from it.
Your book, From Survive to Thrive, offers a message of hope for overcoming some of the challenges
that we face in life today. Can you tell us more about it?
Oh, without a doubt. It's a biblically substantiated prescription for these troubled times,
in full disclosure. A great impetus in writing the book emerged out of an experience within our family
regarding COVID-19. My 29-year-old daughter, after giving birth to my wonderful Camila,
my granddaughter, ended up with COVID-19, first week of July. And because her immune system
was suppressed, unfortunately, my daughter ended up in critical conditions in the ICU
with the help of the ventilator to breathe. We've never been down this road before. So
praise be God, prayers work. They really do. And my daughter,
is now completely healed and fine, but it served as a motivating factor on pushing back on the
idea of a perpetual survival mode. The idea is to remove the lid of despair, angsternation,
anxiety, depression. How do we remove the lids that somehow quench, deter, obstruct the fullness of
peace or joy in our respective lives? That's why we wrote the book Survive to Thrive,
and it's a personal testimony of our journey,
but again, a biblically substantiated prescription
for these very troubled and unique times indeed.
Well, Reverend Rodriguez, I love how you organize the book.
Each chapter, from Survive to Thrive,
has practical steps that readers can take.
Things like, and titles chapter titles like,
Holy Quarantine, Reboot, Recharge, Restart, Humble Pie,
serve before you slice,
and the one I like best,
alive to thrive, refuse to settle for less,
than God's best. What do you want your readers to take away from the book as they go through it?
Every single person on the planet as we speak today, they can find themselves in one of the
following three respective categories. Without a doubt, every single person is either failing,
surviving, or thriving. Every individual, you're either failing, surviving, or thriving.
If I were to engage a biblical narrative as a metaphor, every single person is either in Egypt,
the desert, or the promised land. And many people,
people unfortunately never truly enter the promised land a life where they are living to their fullest
where all their god-given abilities and giftings are in full activation and manifestation where you're
changing the world around you for the greater good when very few people ever reach that point many people
somehow end up in the desert of perpetual survival moment some people end up in the desert of perpetual
victimization. And we permit our past, our circumstances in perpetuity to define us. I want this book
to give you the biblically substantiated Christ-centered prescription to remove the lid, to remove the lid
that stops you from living a John 1010 lateral portion of the verse, an abundant life in Christ,
not just in eternity, but on this side of eternity. So hopefully and prayerfully, the reader will
obtain it and understand that there are lids. Some of them are self-enclosed. Some of them are placed
on us by life itself. The moment we remove the lid, we live life without a lid and we change
the world around us. And as you and your family went through this personal experience with COVID-19,
what was your message to them? How did you, obviously that sounds like I had no idea that your
daughter was in critical condition, but there must have been times when your family itself
was struggling and asking questions. What was your message of hope to them?
The message of hope was one that said, listen, in our journey, even in our faith journey,
as Christians, as followers of Jesus, there's a false gospel teaching out there.
It's completely false. That teaches that as Christians, we will not suffer pain and we should
not be suffering pain. That's just totally outrageous. No, there is suffering on this side of
eternity. We go through things, be it infirmity, be it economic may be.
be it unrest, be it relational issues. We go through things. But the guarantee in scripture you asked
about what message did I convey. It was the message of the apostle Paul to those in the book of Romans.
All things work together for the good of those who believe. They really do. He makes all things.
He meaning God makes all things work together. Even the most difficult moments, one of my favorite
passages in scripture. One of my favorite passages is the fact that Psalm 65-11, he will crown the year
with a bountiful harvest. And even your hard pathways of difficulties will overflow with abundance.
That's God's promise. And that's the message I convey to my family in a very difficult time
indeed. And Reverend Rodriguez, what can we as Christians do to help those who may have lost faith
or blame God for the suffering from this pandemic? Do you have advice? Do you have advice?
for our listeners and the things that they can do in their own personal lives.
Right.
We as human beings, it's natural to play the blame game.
And we usually blame three groups of individuals.
We blame others.
We blame the enemy.
There's a lot of the devil did it.
There are things that the enemy could probably sue us for defamation of character
that he probably says, I never had anything to do with that.
But there are things that he's responsible for.
And then sometimes we blame God.
At the end of the day, we should sue.
sway away from the blame and just recognize that in life we will go to trials and tribulations.
There are moments of angst. There are pandemics. But in the midst of it all, there is a sovereign,
mighty, loving, grace-filled, merciful God who loves us and who has a purpose for us that
cannot and will not be denied. Again, the purpose of this book is to push people out of failure,
out of perpetual survival mode and equip them, biblically speaking, not just to love. And we're
live, but the thrive. And for each person to become a blessing. Let me give you one final example.
People that are surviving pray like this. Lord, answer my prayer and please bless me. Thrivers,
this is how they pray. Lord, make me an answer to someone else's prayer and make me a blessing
to everyone I know. Radical transformation. It certainly is. Again, we're talking to the Reverend
Samuel Rodriguez. The title of his book is from survive to thrive.
Reverend Rodriguez, a follow-up question to that.
Those parents out there are grandparents who have young children,
what are some of the ways that you can help them understand
what we're going through right now with this pandemic?
And what's your advice to maybe elementary
or even high school-age kids who are struggling?
Yes, it's important for us to be able to contextualize this
within a macro worldview that is biblically substantiated,
meaning, ladies and gentlemen, Dorothy, we may not be in Kansas anymore,
but we've been in Kansas before.
This is not the first pandemic.
Throughout the course of human history,
humanity has confronted a number of very serious diseases,
pestilence, illnesses, pandemics across the board, plagues, actually.
So many things, and yet here we are as humanity, we're still standing.
God has a plan for his children, meaning us collectively,
as a human race created in the image of God.
That should be sort of the macro-metonarrative conveyed to children,
at the elementary level, all the way to high school.
Let not your heart be troubled.
One day, you should even tell them one day you're going to write about this,
or you're going to read about it.
And people are going to reference 2020 and the season of COVID and the season of a pandemic.
And what should you say?
And you should say that we saw the grace of God, that we held on to faith,
that we kept on loving and caring about others.
That's what we took out of the COVID pandemic.
That God is with us in the good times and in the bad time.
The same God of the mountaintop is the same God of the valley.
That should be the message conveyed.
Thank you.
That's great advice.
You and I had the pleasure of working together.
I really truly feel blessed to have worked with so many talented people earlier this year
with the Heritage Foundation's National Coronavirus Recovery Commission.
What did that experience teach you about the virus and how we could successfully recover from it?
All about a doubt.
And to me, it's one of the highlights of this year and maybe my lifetime, just working with you,
the entire team.
What a blessing indeed.
Again, we could be, let me use biblical terms, forgive me, I'm a pastor.
We could be both prophetic and practical.
We don't have to be either or, and we could occupy that space of common sense of reason and faith.
A little Thomas Aquinas there, faith and reason.
We can be both and because the virus, as I alluded to previously, is real.
My family was personally impacted by this virus.
So it is real.
We could be practical.
We can take every single measure.
personally speaking, take that personal onus and responsibility to protect the most vulnerable
amongst us at the same time simultaneously, not to get political, but to be very affirming to our
current reality, maybe to push back on some of the most restrictive measures, there is mental
health. There is mental health, there is community health, there is health, especially communities
that are impacted egregiously by the lockdowns. I have seen a very measurable uptake in the
communities that we serve regarding the child abuse, domestic abuse, depression at the highest
numbers we have ever seen, the call out for health, alcohol abuse, drug abuse, all because of the
restrictive lockdowns. And sometimes the remedy is actually more egregious than the actual disease
itself. So I pray that we find a happy medium where we can both keep people safe, those that are
most vulnerable amongst us in our various communities, while simultaneously living life to the fullest,
within the reality of our current day and age.
And I don't think it should be either or it should be both ends.
Thank you for raising that.
I think that that is something of great concern to so many people.
And as we've seen the virus again have the surge,
we've seen more and more political leaders resort to lockdowns
and other restrictive measures.
And one of the areas where you've been outspoken and served as a leader
is in terms of how religious organizations or churches can continue
to spread the good news and interact with their congregations.
What are some of the ways that you've seen churches in particular react and carry on that
message of God and in Jesus in ways that are doing so responsibly while at the same time
being realistic about what we're facing?
My smirk is not sarcastic.
My smirk emerges out of my current reality in California.
That's why I'm smirking.
my governmental authorities here, the powers that be in California have deemed through executive
the ath and decrees while not necessarily living up to these decrees and fiatts in their
personal lives, lifestyles and activities that churches are not essential. And it's not only troublesome
because churches are completely essential. Churches are doing an incredible job in ministering
to the mental angst right now, the spiritual angst, the spiritual well-being of
individual of an individual is completely essential. It impacts the mental, emotional. It impacts
even the family life of so many individuals, so many communities. So spirituality is essential.
Church is essential. Here's one of my phrases, the governor recently. Liquor stores can continue to be
open and can be visited, of course. Churches have to be shut down. He shut down churches again.
And my response was, in essence, you're telling me that Jack Daniels is essential, but Jesus Christ is not.
Absolutely not.
Absolutely not.
Listen, we're big boys and girls.
We can do this.
In our church, for example, we do temperature checking.
We wear masks.
We CDC distance by family.
We do everything by the book.
Everything by the book.
Everything you do at Target and Walmart at a liquor store, at a cannabis store here in California.
So we do all of that.
So you're telling me that I have to shut down.
There is without, and again, don't want to be political,
but I find it to be discriminatory.
I find it to be an active discrimination without a doubt when you identify a church and just
determine that churches are not essential elements within your state government apparatus.
Unfortunately, it is the reality.
I hope and pray churches will continue to shine the light of Christ, provide services,
call up every individual, every church member, every family, especially the elderly and the most
vulnerable in these difficult times.
This is when people need to be connected to God and to each other by faith through Christ,
in hope that this will come to an end and it will. And on the other side of this unprecedented chapter,
we will see our harvest. I couldn't agree more with you. I can tell you from my own personal
experience, the church that our family has been attending for about 12 years has decided to go all
virtual. And starting in March, we would have Sunday service over Zoom. And in the beginning,
certainly understood some of the restrictions that were in place. We're still learning a lot about
the virus. But as the months went on, I saw reluctance to go back to in-person services. So we've
actually made the decision to find another church where, as cold as it is here in Virginia on
Sunday mornings at 8 a.m. We take the family out so we can celebrate. Together, we can have the
Holy Eucharist. And I think you're absolutely right. It is so meaningful to be there in a safe
environment, outdoors, where we can have that service. And so I hope that other churches think
creatively about how to make this happen. I do think that there are measures in place. And it really,
it really hurts me that when schools and churches are told that they can't open and you see bars
and liquor stores be permitted to continue doing their business, it does send, I think,
the entirely wrong message to the American people. It's incohering. There's a lack of continuity.
It's discriminatory because it's not equal application of the law, without a doubt. And again,
And in hindsight, when we revisit what took place from COVID-19 and what can we learn as Americans,
to a great degree, we discovered that our God-given rights, our God-given rights, not the rights
given to us by one another.
This is not 1789 France.
This is America.
Our Constitution, our Bill of Rights, Declaration of Independence, our founding fathers,
were wise enough to understand that our rights are given to us by God.
These rights are in jeopardy.
And for whatever reason, in times of a crisis, it seems that the government has the right to obstruct, to hinder, to quench, to stifle my God-given right.
And that is not what the Constitution says.
We need to build a firewall in the future.
This cannot happen again.
Our rights do not die in the face of a pandemic.
They do not die.
In a matter of fact, we need our rights more than ever in difficult times.
We certainly do. I want to ask you one question about the recently completed presidential contest, which obviously we know is still being challenged in courtrooms and states are still debating certifications and having recounts. It's left a lot of Americans divided. Families maybe not talking to each other, neighbors no longer communicating. What is your message as we move on from 2020 from a political standpoint and how perhaps we can come together and find a,
some common ground with our neighbors in this time.
Your political affiliation should never cancel your prophetic assignment.
Your political affiliation should never cancel your family assignment.
And your political affiliation should never cancel.
Let me speak to the Christians now.
Your Christian assignment.
Love your neighbor.
Love your neighbor.
Love your Republican neighbor, your Democrat neighbor, your independent neighbor.
Love the neighbor that voted for Trump and love the neighbor that voted for Biden.
Love the neighbor that doesn't look like you and those that look like you.
Just love your neighbor.
That's what we're called to do.
I am so committed, not to advancing the agenda of the donkey or the elephant,
but to elevating the agenda of the Lamb, who is the lion of the tribe of Judah, who is Jesus.
So I have my values, and I both believe, advance, and hopefully try to convince others
to align themselves with values that I do believe are biblically substantiated.
Life, religious liberty, and biblical justice.
Psalm 89, 14, righteousness and justice, truth, and love.
Can you imagine a government that operates like that?
Righteousness and justice, truth, and love?
That would be just amazing.
In the words of millennials, that would be fire.
So here it is.
But I hope and pray that people come together for such a time as this.
And I do believe that as Christians, we have a mandate to help somehow facilitate
peacemakers, repairs of the breach, unity, a united church.
can heal a divided nation. A divided church can't do absolutely anything, but a united church can
heal a divided nation. That's so true. Thank you. And finally, Reverend Rodriguez, are there any
closing words you'd like to share with our listeners about the book, from Survive to Thrive,
or anything else that you've been working on? We're living in very difficult times. I do believe
that we're a depressive is of an amazing, multi-ethnic, multi-generational movement in America.
Really. And we're going to see a movement that will reconcile Billy Graham's message of Dr. King's March.
Get ready for that. It's going to be beautiful, let not your heart be troubled. Don't drink the Kool-Aid
of perpetual depression and ang's consternation and that this thing is just in a slippery slope
without any end whatsoever. There are individuals out there fully committed to being light in the
midst of darkness. And every single time light stands next to darkness, light always wins.
Reverend Sammy Rodriguez, the book is called from Survive to Thrive.
Encourage our listeners to pick up a copy.
We appreciate you joining us on The Daily Signal.
And thanks for writing it.
I couldn't come at a better time.
We appreciate it.
Thank you for having me.
I'm Amy Swearer.
And I'm Giancarlo Canaparo.
And if you want to understand what's happening at the Supreme Court,
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We take a look at the cases, the personalities, and the
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person discovers the name of a registered voter and attempts to use it. And Nadra Enzi of New Orleans
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friends reached out and said they're worried about America. Me too. I'm worried because the two major
parties have ceased being coalitions that merely use different methods to achieve the same goals.
I told my friends that it looks like we're in a fight. Whether we like it or not, and regardless
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I'm Michelle Cordero.
I'm Tim Desher, and every week on the Heritage Explains podcast, we break down a hot-button policy issue in the news at a 101 level.
Through an entertaining mix of personal stories, media clips, music, and internet.
reviews. We help you actually understand the issues. So do this. Subscribe to Heritage
Explains on iTunes, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcast today. Virginia, you have a good
news story to share with us today. Over to you. Well, thanks so much, Rob. And thank you for
passing this good news story along to me. Because every once in a while when reporting good news
stories, you discover one that it just kind of makes you step back and reevaluate what is really important
in life, and I think today is one of those stories.
Connor's den is a 10-year-old entrepreneur and a dog lover.
Connor started his own small business baking and selling all-natural dog treats on Etsy
two years ago and named the business Lily's barkery after his dog, Lily.
One day I came home from school, and I asked my parents, can I start a cupcake business
because I love cupcakes. My parents said, how about I can make some healthy things for our dogs?
This holiday season, Connor is baking dog treats for Fetch a Cure, a nonprofit organization
that works with vets and pet owners to further pet cancer awareness, education, and treatment.
The treats are for the nonprofit's annual fundraising campaign called Holiday Bone Treats,
designed to raise awareness about a specific type of canine cancer.
Sponsors to the Fetri-Cure campaign will receive some of Connor's delicious homemade dog treats for their own pet.
For Connor and his mom, Krista, supporting Fetri-Cure is more than just a nice thing to do.
It's a way to give back and support the organization that helps save the life of their own pet, Lily.
I was home petting her and noticed a mask on her left front leg.
Got it checked out by the vet and found that she has soft tissue.
sarcoma. The oncologist that we were working with referred us to fetch a cure for the
possibility of applying for a grant to help her with her surgery. So we were lucky enough.
Fetch a cure gave us a grant that paid for her surgery and she is now recovering from her
cancer. Of course, a grant for a pet's life-saving operation is significant for any animal
But for Krista and her son, Connor, it was a huge gift of hope this summer when they faced another cancer battle in their family.
My husband, Connor's dad, was diagnosed with cancer, a very rare, aggressive cancer at the end of June.
And it was June 23rd on July 3rd was when I found the mass on Lily's leg.
and then my husband passed on July 9th.
So emotionally, we were having an incredibly difficult time.
So the help that we received from the vet that took care of Lily,
the help that we received from Fetch was invaluable.
My heart just so goes out to Connor and his mom, Krista,
for their loss this year.
But I truly am blown away by their strength
and hope as a family. They've had an incredibly hard year in an already really challenging time,
and yet they're still taking the opportunity to give back by baking these dog treats for such a
worthy cause. And Rob, I know that this story is personal to you because you know the Stann family
quite well and had the honor of knowing Connor's dad before he passed.
I do, and know their pets well, too. So thank you, Virginia, for sharing this.
uplifting story about Connor and Krista. Coach Mike, as we as we know him, was my son Ben's baseball coach,
his first baseball coach in Little League many years ago. And we got to know the family quite well.
I coached alongside Mike and our families, kids went to the same school. So it was obviously a shock
to all of us when Mike got sick this summer. And it's just really uplifting to see that Connor is doing
such a great service here in terms of these donations and what he's been able to to overcome.
So our thoughts and prayers are with the Sten family for sure.
And they'll always be cherished in our life.
And we're grateful to have known such a wonderful man in Mike.
Yeah.
No, it just seems like an absolutely incredible family.
And it is amazing to see a young man like Connor really just be so, so driven.
And to continue, as he said, just running after his dream.
It's really incredible.
That's so true.
Well, Virginia, thanks again for bringing us that story today.
We're going to leave it there for the Daily Signal podcast.
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