104 afleveringen

So much time is spent "in the fight" that it is easy to forget what we are supposed to be fighting for. To answer that, join Michael Quinn Sullivan each week as he puts the continuing fight for life and liberty in historical, biblical, and personal context.

Reflections on Life & Liberty Texas Scorecard

    • Nieuws

So much time is spent "in the fight" that it is easy to forget what we are supposed to be fighting for. To answer that, join Michael Quinn Sullivan each week as he puts the continuing fight for life and liberty in historical, biblical, and personal context.

    Tempting us with Power

    Tempting us with Power

    Do we want to be a Christian nation in name or in practice? 

    • 6 min.
    Tempting us with our Ego

    Tempting us with our Ego

    I think we can be honest with each other… There is no feeling quite like being on the receiving end of an audience’s praise. It can be intoxicating. All of us want the approval of others. The only real question is whose approval we are ultimately seeking.
    The temptation to get another person clapping, one more standing ovation, a few more chuckles… a couple of clicks and likes and shares and follows… It can drive even strong men to do silly, debasing things. Just consider the stunts local TV and radio personalities will perform during ratings week!
    None of this new. It is why, after spending 40 days alone in the wilderness, Jesus was offered the chance to receive the admiration and acclaim of thousands through a flashy performance. The temptation to be “loved” by the world is a sin common to all men. In the Gospel of Matthew, we find that the tempter took Jesus to the top of the pinnacle and urged him to jump off. Satan then cited a couple of passages from Psalm 91: “For he will command his angels concerning you to guard you in all your ways; they will lift you up in their hands, so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.”
    That alone is a pretty cool thought, but we have to understand the deeper cut. In the popular culture of the time, there was a belief that the conquering warrior-messiah would make himself known by floating to the ground at the temple with angels. Jesus would have been aware of that messianic caricature.
    He, therefore, had to have known how the crowds in Jerusalem would have reacted if they saw him floating to the ground, aided by angels. In succumbing to the temptation, Jesus would have used His divine power for His exaltation. He knew that exultation was coming, but not now and not like this.
    Jesus would have none of it. He quoted a line from Deuteronomy: “You shall not put the LORD your God to the test.”
    Yet, consider just how often we allow our soul to be tested as we seek the applause of men.
    In the world of political engagement, there is no shortage of opportunities to receive ego-stroking praise. Most politicians go bad not because they are bribed or bullied, as many want to believe, but because they get addicted to the adoration.
    I have seen time and again, the cheerleading squad of lobbyists and advisors turn an otherwise right-thinking legislator inside out. First, they tell them how smart they are. Then, they suggest that only a smart man would be able to see the principled wisdom of doing that which they know to be wrong. This is followed by loud cheers when the politician does it. Selling out starts not with money, but praise. The cash comes after the fact to reaffirm the deal.
    The Apostle Paul understood this temptation. In his letter to the Galatians, he wrote, “For am I now seeking the approval of man, or of God? Or am I trying to please man? If I were still trying to please man, I would not be a servant of Christ.”
    We should look to Jesus. He sought the approval of the Father, not the masses who might cheer a raucous display of divinity.
    As the citizen-leaders of our self-governing republic, we need to set aside the temptation to be applauded in the here-and-now. Our desire should not be for the faint praise of men but the loving embrace of God.

    • 4 min.
    Tempting us in our Needs

    Tempting us in our Needs

    It’s terrifying what we are capable of doing, of what we will agree to, when we are trying to meet our most basic needs. A common method of torture and manipulation is literal starvation. From sadists terrorizing a single prisoner to dictators exercising control over a country, history has shown that when people are starving, they will cast aside reason and morals to stave off hunger.
    This is why that very first temptation that Satan dangled before Jesus in the wilderness was so important. He had been without food for 40 days, the Bible tells us, when Satan appeared to remind Him of His own power. The tempter said, “tell these stones to become bread.”
    What an easy choice that would have been, right? Jesus did not take the bait, quoting Deuteronomy 8:3, “man does not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord.”
    In the United States, we’re not so easily tempted out of the scarcity of food. Even the poorest of Americans are obese. The free market has removed the most basic of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs from the grip of politicians seeking to manipulate the citizenry. Until now.
    Washington’s corrupt spending practices have gamed our fiat currency to the extent that rampant inflation has made a casual trip to the grocery store an exercise in fiscal terror. How long until, in exchange for a little more obedience from the population, the government promises a program to lower those prices by dictate? Some fresh government eggs? A nice slice of government cheese?
    But that’s still to come if we allow it. If we give in to it.
    We certainly have indicated a willingness to give in to that temptation. Politicians got us hooked on the allure of a tax-subsidized retirement and now regularly manufacture reasons to take it away.
    Government retirement plans. Government health care. Government housing. So, why not government food?
    Yes, sure, man does not live on bread alone. But, if some politician will stick someone else with my tab…?
    The problem is that we are allowing ourselves to be tempted into bad behaviors by corrupt individuals who steal from others.
    The government only has to give us what it first took from us. Satan did not want Jesus fed any more than the politicians wanted your retirement or housing secured. The goal is our acquiescence to their agenda by appealing to our “needs.”
    Let us instead follow Jesus. We must have the faithful fortitude to reject manipulated pleas to our needs, knowing God will provide for us.

    • 3 min.
    Read News from Texas Scorecard

    Read News from Texas Scorecard

    • 12 sec.
    Not. A. Democracy.

    Not. A. Democracy.

    Monarchy and democracy are two sides of the same coin upon which tyrannies had been built for eons.

    • 4 min.
    Fearing Correctly

    Fearing Correctly

    As citizens, we have failed to inspire sufficient fear in our elected servants.

    • 3 min.

Top-podcasts in Nieuws

Vandaag Inside Oranje
Vandaag Inside Oranje
Maarten van Rossem - De Podcast
Tom Jessen en Maarten van Rossem / Streamy Media
Boekestijn en De Wijk
BNR Nieuwsradio
de Volkskrant Elke Dag
de Volkskrant
De Stemming van Vullings en Van der Wulp
NPO Radio 1 / NOS / EenVandaag
Weer een dag
Marcel van Roosmalen & Gijs Groenteman

Suggesties voor jou

Daily Headlines
Texas Scorecard
Texas Minute
Texas Scorecard
The Luke Macias Show
Texas Scorecard
Texas Tomorrow
Texas Scorecard
Exposed
Texas Scorecard
The Salcedo Storm Podcast
Chris Salcedo

Meer van Texas Scorecard