Saturday, March 24, 2018

House Divided X

... the radiance of your holy Name.

 - From Canticle 13

If I've been beating around the bush in this "House Divided" series, I wish not to do so anymore. I need to make the statement clearly.

Our creator has directed us to be unified. His Son prayed, with tears so intense they turned into blood . . . that we be united. 

We don't have any business participating in divisive activities like political parties and denominations. We should not choose sides in politics, against others in our church. We should not turn our backs on family, out of a political impulse. 

Consider the throne of God. It's above anything we will ever know in this life. You won't see people gathered around God's throne, holding up placards of their group, like people do at a political convention. There won't be a Baptist section . . . a Presbyterian section . . . and definitely not a Republican or Democrat section. I can, however, entertain the notion that people gather around into family groups. 

Our differences are insignificance in God's presence. None is greater, or more important, than the other. We drop our divisions, when in His presence.

If you can't focus on the Church United, because He demands it, then perhaps you will do so because it's the only thing you can do, in His presence. 

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

House Divided IX

Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness?

 - From Numbers 21

I am a musician, and have been in several rock bands in my life. They all worked hard, to get to the point where they were good. And it's always at the very instant that they realize they are on to something, some one or two members will start to complain, or quit, or just generally create friction that topples everything and those that remain have to start all over.

Just when they could have started making some money sharing their gift with their community.

It's the same way with marriage. Studies show that one divorce in your life will cost you a total of one million dollars, over the course of your life. Why do people do it, then? I have spoken to any number of people that affirm that, by the time their spouse announced a desire to divorce, they had reconciled themselves to the problems and had committed to making things better . . . for their spouse . . . from now on.

Political parties are basically borne out of someone complaining. If people generally were content . . or if they knew how to make themselves content (like the Apostle Paul) they would not be interested in the aggressive ire that goes with being political.

And of course, there's the problem of dissension in the Church. If it's going poorly, they stir themselves up against the pastor, until he or she is fired and they can start all over. If it's going well . . . then the pastor has to master a balancing act to keep a sect from forming that could split the church in two. People love a piece of success.

I often advise children: If you don't like your teacher, act as if she were your favorite teacher ever. How would you treat him or her?

Same with employees: Don't like your manager? Strive even more diligently, to make him or her successful. What if we all selflessly worked to make whatever team we're on (be it a family, community, business, or church) as successful as it can be, regardless of the personalities or feelings we bring to the table? I'll bet such a society would even prevent the rise of a Hitler.

Parties and factions start with a complaint. But most complaints need not be uttered. Parties can become quarreling factions, that can build up to regional blocs of political power. And from there things can escalate to civil war.

Churches that split over trivia (or egos) are a laughing stock . . . they make the grace of Christ a mockery. And if they split over secular politics, well . . . what a waste. What an evil waste.

Keep your brother's back, no matter what. Hold the line in the face of temporal political pressure. Make the Body of Christ unbreakable. And then watch magic happen to the concerns you had, that made politics appealing in the first place.

Friday, March 16, 2018

House Divided VIII

He did not wish to go about in Judea because the Jews were looking for an opportunity to kill him. 

 - From John 7

Even the Son of God . . . whose fame was on the increase, had to be careful about going out and about. He was not "affiliated" with the mob of people that were out to get Him, which put Him at great risk. 

And it puts us at great risk, too, today. If you're not in the right sect, or denomination, or party, or family . . . . it can actually be dangerous to go out on your own, exposed to the whims of the mob.

And really, that's what parties and denominations are. They're mobs. They're one group of people that have ganged up on all the others, in order to create leverage for its members. Yes, I know there are economies of scale that help larger groups cut costs and build up a greater pile of resources. I know that churches and non-profits and service clubs do a lot of good. I run a non-profit myself. I'm a member of a local church. But you're still either with us, or not. And if you're on the outside . . . well, you're just going to be different. Your effectiveness is limited, because you're divided. And does Christ really want our effectiveness limited?

Jesus, when He was back in his home town, found Himself in the wrong group. And His family, and friends, and acquaintances, that knew Him best, were not rallying around Him, as families and community members should. 

This was the first expression of Christian denominationalism in history: the people from Christ's own orbit, that broke with him, in order to keep themselves in some good standing with . . . whoever.

Unity requires us to take care of each other. It's not happening today. True, we may not have torture . . . yet . . . but when a person is afraid to articulate a moral, theological, or political point because of what may happened to them . . . then what difference is it, really, whether or not they endure physical torture? The effect is the same. 

Even the Master of Time and space avoided the partisan crowd. 

But there shouldn't be a partisan crowd, to begin with.  

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

House Divided VII

You open wide your hand and satisfy the needs of every living creature.

 - From Psalm 145

God takes care of all of us, whether we want it, or not. Even people that do not believe in Him, get what they need.

But what about an atheist living in impoverished squalor? 

Yes . . . even that person. All of your basic needs are fulfilled . . . but sometimes, humanity itself gets in the way. 

How can a loving God permit hunger?

How do we permit hunger?

We have everything we need, to solve every problem: disease, hunger, poverty, environmental threats, loneliness, rage, hate. It's all right there. 

God's hand is wide open. But we are so busy fighting off each other, that we never get to God's widening hand. We act like there's a limit to what God can supply We think that by dividing ourselves into cliques, denominations, parties, nations, etc., that we will be able to get what's ours.

Scripture says that God satisfies the needs of every living creature. If we really believed that, we would work together. We'd listen to each other. We'd do whatever it takes to ensure that everybody gets those needs fulfilled. 

If every living creature is to be satisfied . . . then we need to start treating every living creature as though they mattered. It takes all of us. 

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

House Divided VI

... and everything will live where the river goes.

 - From Ezekiel 47

My family has a tradition about living near water. But not the glamorous water; not a sunny beach and a lot of retired people. Our family waters are better water than undrinkable salt water. They have chosen flowing water as a centerpiece of their homes.

My brother's property is bordered by the Mill Creek near Dexter, Michigan. From there it flows into the Huron River, and then out to Lake Erie, ultimately emptying into the St Lawrence Seaway and to the Atlantic Ocean.

My sister lives adjacent to a marshy, swampy area - home to a variety of wildlife and lush woods. These wetlands drain into the Huron River system.

My other brother has a drainage pond on his family's shared land. Fresh water runoff from miles around, ends up finding it's way into an oasis in the hilly country of Oklahoma.

My parents settled on property that has a creek on its western boundary. The creek, which is rarely dry, flows into Dexter's Mill Creek.

My Dad's father lived in the Delhi Village of Michigan, which sets on the edge of the Huron River.

His father, Roscoe Darr, bought a home that overlooked the Mississippi River, in Illinois. Roscoe's mother, Elizabeth, grew up on a farm through which flows the Plum River. Roscoe's father, Henry, was raised in West Newton, Pennsylvania, within view of the Youghiogheny River.

Ezekiel was being shown an example of life-giving water. We are all familiar with the symbolism of water, in all cultures. It is the most essential requirement for life. The small portion of water that we receive in baptism, represents water that flows on, it joins other water and soon causes an entire region to be teeming with life. 

A single raindrop is part of a system that emerges in vast oceans. The water cycle is a complex but sensitive system that gives harmony and energy to the planet.

Small, dry creek, no matter what . . . soon becomes an overwhelming deluge. The trend, for water, is to become more water, and to make life.

But humans have it backwards. Our trend is towards separation, enmity, and death. Daniel's image shows a man who starts out at the head . . . where the mind controls everything, with order and logic. But as you move away from the head, you separate into limbs, and then digits . . . the human process is confusion and decay.

If we would follow the example of water . . . and work ourselves together, as a small river flowing into a larger river, and the large river into the ocean; instead of so defiantly away from others, which means away from God . . . We would have unity, symbolized by the ocean.

And everything will live, where the river goes . . . . 

Monday, March 12, 2018

House Divided V

...for Jesus himself had testified that a prophet has no honor in the prophet’s own country.

 - From John 4

Jesus couldn't do much in his hometown. He was "too close." They knew Him too well . . . His family, and all of their dysfunctionalities and idiosyncrasies, were known by everybody. 

In other words, the people that knew Jesus best, that were his blood relatives and neighbors, acted like children.

How might His ministry have changed; how might history have changed, if Jesus' own neighbors and kinsmen given Him a chance?

How might history have changed, if Cain weren't so jealous of Abel, to the point of hate?

What if Joseph's brothers gave him a chance?

What if antebellum Americans had realized that the slaves in their community were their kinspeople, their brothers and sisters, if not neighbors, and acted accordingly?

What if family and friends during Adolph Hitler's formative years, had affirmed and promoted his positive qualities, rather than rejected him?

Unity starts at home. It begins in our block; our school, our neighborhood. It is in our family trees and in our church membership rolls. 

But we can't even promote the good ideas of people we know the best. We won't purchase their creative works; do our business with them, invest in them. It doesn't occur to us to contribute to the 501(c)3s launched by our own relatives. 

And Jesus' own kinsmen and neighbors rejected him first, and decisively. 

Elvis had to go to Memphis; and the Beatles had to go to Hamburg, before anyone would pay attention.

This is the beginning of the House Divided. You want the world to be a better place? You want peace, and freedom, and wealth? 

Then start by putting family ahead of employer; Put your kin ahead of pride. Put the poor person ahead of the wealthy. Put your community ahead of your denomination. And put the Body of Christ ahead of your political party.

It works. Like magic.

Sunday, March 11, 2018

House Divided IV

But God . . . made us alive together with Christ.

 - From Ephesians 2

The whole point is that we're in this together. We started out together, and we are supposed to finish, together.

Don't you love the starting point of things? Everyone feels so unified and purposeful. I never felt closer to my cousins, than during the weeks following our Grandpa's death, and going through his funeral and the aftermath, together. In moments like this, vows are made, and commitments hardened. 

Or the start of a marriage, or a new business venture . . . or the beginning of a new coach, or teacher, or career.

We're so resolved, at the beginning, to make it great.

But over the course of time, we drift. And the thing that seems to unravel the most, is our relationship to each other. Think about this: the great things, and the best moments, have us in unity. And everything is always going so well . . . until the relationship frays. And it's going to fray.

But God, like any parent, wants us all there, together. In the end, parents really don't care who'e right, who'r wrong, who started it, who touched whom . . . . they just want their kids to get along. It is such a joy to a parent, to see their kids laughing and enjoying one another. 

God did it all for us . . . together.

And so, earlier on in Ephesians 10, there's a list of qualities of people that don't seem to be in it, with the rest of us. Let me extend the thought just a little bit, and make this a list of what is happening in the hearts of people that break our unity:


  • Dead
  • Sinful
  • Trespasser 
  • Worldly
  • Fleshly
  • Driven by "what feels good"
And to wrap it all up - people that are out of control. They are the ones that end up breaking our bonds of unity.  

Let's get together now, and not wait for God to force it upon us at the last day.



Saturday, March 10, 2018

House Divided III

... and rebuild the walls of Jerusalem.

 - From Psalm 51

Abraham Lincoln nice famously projected that the US could not be defeated by an outside invader. When and if we fall, it will be from the inside; because we could not hold our unity. He was willing to send hundreds of thousands of lives to certain death, in order to keep American united.

Benjamin Franklin said, to the Continental Congress, when deliberating our separation from England: "We have to hang together . . . or we will certainly hang separately."

Israel's twelve tribes could not hold it together, and piece by piece they fell. Gods chosen was easy prey . . . with no physical wall, and no spiritual wall based on unity, any aggressor could just waltz right in and take whatever he wanted. 

But the United States do not need walls. We don't even need national unity. The two parties can carp and bicker all they want; a unified Church of Christ is sufficient to hold together the fabric of any culture. 

It's almost like . . . the Christian Left wouldn't have to worry about President Trump's wall, if they took seriously Christ's plea that His Church stay united. 

How many Christians does it take to keep a society safe, prosperous, just, merciful, and virtuous? Probably not many; like, maybe only about ten percent of the Church.

But we can't manage that. Believers, all the time, today, proudly proclaim their separation from other believers in the name of politics and party. No wonder God doesn't care about our "thoughts and prayers."

Unity is essential.

And then maybe families would get the point that you don't turn your back on brethren. And then we will be well on our way to solving our most troubling threats. 

Jerusalem needed a wall. We need a wall. And unity builds it. 

Friday, March 9, 2018

House Divided II

I will be like the dew to Israel;  he shall blossom like the lily... they shall blossom like the vine,  their fragrance shall be like the wine of Lebanon.

 - From Hosea 14

There's a little sequence of beautiful illustrations nestled in the middle of Hosea 14, framed by the lines quoted above. It compares Israel to a lily, to a growing vine with roots that spread out, and shoots that become full and fragrant. 

Hosea 14 is a chapter of great encouragement. God says He will even heal Israel's disloyalty.

"Disloyalty" is portrayed as a sickness, a disease that must be healed. And, that it is. It's one thing to be disloyal to someone that has not earned your trust or disloyalty. But far different it is, to be disloyal to your Creator, your Protector, your Guide and Master. 

God wants our individuality. He longs for us to put forth our branches and become something unique and special. He is the only Being that wants us to be who we really are . . . but who He made us to be; not the person we think we are, or think we want to be. 

We want to be different because we just want to be different. But God wants us to be different because that's how He made us. Unique, and distinct.

He deals with us all individually. He meets with us one-on-one. He walks with us in His garden. He loves to commune, to be present; to laugh and listen. And then as our individuality emerges, we look and see that we have actually grown into something much bigger than ourselves. We become part of a greater Body: we see that we are actually part of a family; or nation; or Church. 

And in that regard our uniqueness must become connected to the others. We are greater than the sum of our parts. He look around and see that, if we are a leaf, that we are surrounded by countless other leaves, or by branches that connect us together; or to a trunk. Some of us give forth a fragrance. Some of us flower in the spring. But we are all part of the same bush. 

We have to have a common purpose. Otherwise, that which makes us special will die.

And the world loses the chance to enjoy me, and you.

The passage in Hosea begins with God describing the wonderful things He will do for "him," for Israel. He will be like dew "to him."

But by the end of the passage, God is talking about "them." They shall blossom. 

The narrative has gone from the one, to the many.

And the many are connected. There are many eaves, many branches. But only one bush. 

So that, you can be who you really are. But if you get too far out there, you can no longer connect to the rest of the bush. You lose your lifeline. You wither and die. 

No person is an island.

God built a great nation. He makes beautiful families. And He built His Church.

But we must be united. For better or worse . . . we must cling to one another.

Even when it gets awkward, or hard.

God made families, and nations, and churches . . . so that we could practice unconditional love. 

We might as well get good at it. We'll be doing it, forever. 

Thursday, March 8, 2018

House Divided I

Every kingdom divided against itself becomes a desert, and house falls on house.

 - From Luke 11

I can condense the wisdom that I have internalized, in my life, into about a dozen or so precepts. These are sayings, or books, or concepts, that were so impactful upon me, that I will never forget them. They define the parameters of my values and worldview.

My own proclivities are probably "conservative", although I would gladly lock arms with Liberals in some areas, if they weren't so wont to insult good people.

The most defining value of my life (that is, one that sets me apart from most others) is the concept of unity. My friend, Steve Jones, in the late 1980s, prevailed upon me to give up the idea of denominationalism in Christianity. This is a principle that I now hold passionately. It amazes me how few others see the importance of unity in the Body of Christ. They cling to their local Church, and denomination, as though their lives depended on it. 

On the night that Christ was betrayed, he prayed that His Church would be unified. He was so passionate about this, that He was physically affected by it. Blood came forth, instead of sweat. Christ obviously knew how important it was, He knew how unlikely it was, and He knew how dangerous it would be, for His people to be divided. 

When the Lord prays with tears, and begs the Father for something . . . it should become our priority. 

It isn't.

Today, we have Christians taking sides with a political party, against their brethren in the Church. 

This is wrong. It's more than wrong . . . but I am not ready to call it what it is. Not yet. 

Billy Graham spent his declining years in prayer for a spiritual awakening in America. Nice thought, that.

It won't happen, as along as people define themselves as Democrat or Republican, before defining themselves as Christian.

Oh, they have their excuses:

"If a Church person has evil views, then I am not on their side."

"I go with the Party that does what Jesus would do."

Blah, blah.

When you stand publicly, against a fellow believer, over politics . . . then you have committed a grave wrong. You mock the Church in the eyes of a world that hates the Church. You have made spiritual awakening less likely. You have even hurt your own political cause, by marginalizing your party's opponent, thus empowering and giving life to him.

I start a new ten-part theme now:

"House Divided."

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Thoughts and Prayers X

That the generations to come might know, and the children yet unborn;  that they in their turn might tell it to their children;

 - From Psalm 78

In our times, we have reaped what happens when we don't teach our children. It's the result of being disengaged from the schools, the teachers, and the kids.

An ancient philosopher, I think Socrates, said "The questions are: Who is teaching the children, and what are they teaching them?"

I think its a valid question: Does God answer prayer? And then, all of it's corollaries - How does God answer prayer? What should we pray for? Should we pray for victims? Survivors? Shooters? Teachers? Law Enforcement? Safety? Healing? Justice? Vengeance?

Parents? Extended families? Churches?

Politicians? Celebrities? The NRA?

Others? You? Me? 

For Christ to hurry up and return?

I think people miss the point of prayer. The fact is . . . we want people thinking and praying. And if all they do is just talk about doing it, but don't actually think and pray . . . then we still want them talking about it. It's a good thing. 

A tragedy refocuses us on the important things. And even it it is only for a moment, at least in that, we get a moment of positive energy and of empathy. What doesn't do any good, is criticizing anybody's response to tragedy or grief. How does that help, really? 

So: think and pray.

These negative reactions are coming from people with heavy influence over our kids.

Teachers. Pop singers. Professional athletes. Celebrities. 

The Thoughts and Prayers Deniers have the advantage. They are on their toes. They're organized and motivated. And they are making kids feel like the superstars of our generation. Where's the counter-force? Where's The Other Viewpoint? Doesn't creativity flourish where minds are open and ideas are uninhibited?

Our "Bully Culture", and it's sibling, our "Gang Culture" have conspired to knock out the one thing we really need:

Thoughts and Prayers.

Stop. Reflect. Listen. Speak quietly. Listen some more. Reflect some more. Meditate. Create. Think. Listen.

Pray.

And get your kids in on it.

 . . . . . .

This is the last in my series on "Thoughts and Prayers." It is the middle of Lent.

The next time someone says "Thoughts and Prayers don't work," then I urge you: Stop what you're doing.

Go think.

And pray.

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Thoughts and Prayers IX

For we, O Lord, have become fewer than any other nation . . . 

- From the apocryphal "Song of the Three Young Men"

One of the reasons that people that think and pray about others are mocked, is because of the sense that their numbers are thinning. 

I don't know whether immature humans gang up on others because it's fun, or fulfilling to do so; or if they gang up on others because they are afraid of being placed in with the victims, if they choose the wrong side.

The fact is, that, once a gang starts forming, it tends to grow and lose its sense of self-control and purpose, until a counter-force comes along, that can vanquish it. And then fence-sitters can choose the new overwhelming gang, either because it's fun, or better for one's own safety.

Whether or not the people that think and pray are actually decreasing in number, there is a sense of inevitability in their decline. It seems like they are losing influence, becoming a minority. And this just empowers those that have any reason at all to resent them. 

Joining up with an emerging gang is no better than being the neighborhood bully. Yet smart people do it all the time, in 2018.

Take the popular teacher that can't wait to publicly proclaim her judgment upon those that are losing their status in society: #thoughtsandprayersdontwork. Yet, 25% . . . 30% . . . . 45% of her students believe in "thoughts and prayers." Is this kind? Loving? Is it even ethical? How dare teachers use their authority to marginalize any students in their charge?

But it's the same anywhere. Right now, it's popular, or at least, safe, to attack people that "think and pray." 

The three young men in the furnace: Shadrach, Mesech and Abednego" were "Thoughts and Prayers" guys. They were part of a very small minority, in an occupying nation. They were hauled off to the nation's capital, away from their home, to serve the conquering race. And they refused to give up their thoughts about God, and their prayers for the safety of God's people.

How did they get in such a subservient and pathetic state? Did "Thoughts and Prayers" work for them? Where was their God, when their homes were being sacked, families separated, and their national identity violently ripped from them? I'm sure the Assyrians, and then the Persians had a lot of fun scorning the thoughts and prayers of the Hebrews.

But still they thought. And still they prayed. And in the end . . . the very end . . . it saved them.

Are people mocking your thoughts and prayers? Good. You're in good company.


Monday, March 5, 2018

Thoughts and Prayers VIII

Doubtless you will quote to me this proverb . . . 

 - From Luke 4

Jesus got snarky.

He walked into a synagogue in Nazareth, and saw the Scribes and Pharisees, and said: "So now you'll start quoting Scripture to Me . . . "

The Scribes and Pharisees of Jesus' day are history's prototypes of hypocrisy. They weren't just hypocritical from time to time (like all of us): they were hypocrites. They weren't believers . . . . This needs to be repeated - they were not believers. They might as well have been agnostics, or even atheists. But they were learned, and they knew Hebrew scripture. They used it to try to trip up the Master. 

The Thoughts-and-Prayers-Don't-Work People are the educated ones. The smirk on their face (you can almost see it in their social media comments) is the accompaniment to their predicable hashtag #thoughtsandprayersdontwork. They're like the Edward G. Robinson character in The Ten Commandments: "Where's your messiah now?"

The Scribes and Pharisees used Scripture to try to trap Jesus into proving Himself a hypocrite. They tried to use His own words against Him. But He turned it on them and illuminated their own projection of hypocrisy.

1) They knew Scripture; 2) They were highly educated; 3) They looked down on others that were not as sophisticated as they; 4) They used Scripture against believers; 5) They loved calling other people "hypocrites." 

Is it any wonder why Jesus made hypocrisy the theme of every sermon targeted at the Scribes and Pharisees?

It is tempting to side-up with the smart and popular people that, without much creativity, proclaim "Thoughts and Prayers don't work." It's predictable. It's mean-spirited. It seems designed more to draw attention to the speaker (or writer) than to any real wrong-doing anywhere. 

"Where's you Messiah now?"

"Thoughts and Prayers don't work!"

"I know what you're going to say."

Sunday, March 4, 2018

Thoughts and Prayers VII

Who can tell how often he offends?

 - From Psalm 19

The 19th Psalm is about as deep as a Psalm can get. It also is one of the more poetic. It addresses the human condition with humility and candor, while affirming all that we hold dear, and everything we hope for. 

It talks about the secret thoughts of sinners, meaning us. It suggests that there are things wrong with us, things that happen in our minds and hearts, that we don't even know about. 

In 2018, "offensive" is a big word. Nobody wants to be offended, and you'd better not offend me, or you will pay. 

But the 19th Psalm says "I offend people all the time, and don't even know it. Lord, clean up my thoughts."

If I offer my "thoughts and prayers" to others that are hurting, let my prayer include the desire that I be fixed. "My prayer for you, is that I will be a better person."

Ahhh . . . that's good. And if you want to turn things around on the scoffers, make this your petition to the Lord. They think they're making fun of you . . . but you're actually praying that you acknowledge the very thing they say is wrong with you, and that God remove it. 

Serves them right. 

Saturday, March 3, 2018

Thoughts and Prayers VI

...he delights in showing clemency.

 - From Micah 7

So what do they expect, anyway, these people that love to deride the idea of "thoughts and prayers"? How much time do they allow, before a prayer should be answered, that they don't believe is going to be answered, anyway? How exactly do they expect prayers to  be answered?

When a believer says "You have my thoughts and prayers," to a survivor of an attack, what do the scoffers think it means? For it to "work," what would that look like? Does that mean that the survivors will feel a sense of not being alone? That the edge of pain and grief will be softened somewhat, but the gentle hand of God? When a person is undergoing unspeakable tragedy and grief, should not think of them? Should we not pray for them? Yes, we can visit them . . . but what if we don't known them, and we live across the country?

Perhaps the scoffer thinks the "thoughts and prayers" or for the victims? Those injured or worse of all, those that lost their lives? Should the injured be sped up in their recovery? Do they have to recover fully? Or perhaps we should not think or pray for them at all . . . if that's all we have for them?

What if we offered prayers for the criminals in these horrible acts of rage and terror? After they have completed their monstrous task? Should we pray that the criminal be dealt justice? How about the emotional, spiritual, and mental healing of the criminal? Or maybe we shouldn't pray at all, for the person that, had God intervened . . . may have been hindered in completing the job. But in that case, we have to pray before the fact, that God stops them cold. 

Or maybe we should pray for society. But here is when prayers for society do not work, at all: When scoffers see to it that they don't work, by refusing to communicate, collaborate, and listen, to those of us with an attentive ear and eye to the spiritual forces at play. Is the problem not serious enough for that? The scoffers first refuse to offer positive focus with other Americans with a different perspective. This prevents creative forces from coming into play . . . and prayer seems not to have worked. 

God does not require a lot. He loves to give us clemency. There is nothing in the last generation or two, that would put us into special favor with God . . . that is . . . as a nation. When you go out of balance with the fulcrum of the universe, expect bad things to happen. We know to respect other laws of nature, like not to pick up a glowing log in a fire; and not to jump off tall buildings. Perhaps we should observe all laws of nature!

But even so . . . we do not have to do everything that the scoffer requires. Just have faith. God wants to make it right for us.