I Don't Have Enough FAITH to Be an ATHEIST

Can You REALLY Follow Jesus and Stay Silent on Politics? with Pastor Josh McPherson

50 min
Apr 10, 20269 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Pastor Josh McPherson discusses why Christians should be politically engaged in all areas of life, not just church. He argues that Christian silence on politics creates a vacuum filled by evil, and shares his experience suing Washington's governor during COVID and advising the Trump administration on religious freedom issues.

Insights
  • Christian political disengagement during COVID revealed how institutional power vacuums get filled by hostile ideologies; churches that remained silent lost moral authority and cultural influence
  • The distinction between theocracy and constitutional republic is critical: America's founders built on biblical moral law principles without mandating Christian belief, creating space for religious freedom that other worldviews wouldn't reciprocate
  • Government overreach into theological domains (defining marriage, gender, childhood) represents the real 'politicization'—Christians responding to government theology isn't the church becoming political, it's the church reclaiming its jurisdictional lane
  • Pastors historically led civic resistance (Black Robe Regiment) and can do so again through democratic processes; strategic political engagement prevents the need for violent resistance later
  • Religious freedom protections require Christian participation in governance; without Christian moral framework informing law, governments default to either tribalism or globalist centralization
Trends
Rise of 'Christian nationalism' framing as pastors increasingly view political engagement as spiritual duty rather than compromiseEvangelical leadership recognizing COVID as inflection point where institutional silence cost churches generational influence and membershipWhite House Faith Office elevation signals administration prioritization of religious liberty as domestic policy centerpiece with direct pastoral advisory accessDocumented pattern of selective government enforcement against Christian institutions (colleges, nonprofits, pro-life activists) while funding ideologically aligned organizationsGenerational shift in pastoral messaging from 'separation of church and state' to 'jurisdictional clarity' as theological framework for political engagementLarge-scale men's conferences (20,000+ attendance) emerging as organizing infrastructure for Christian political mobilization around 'statesman' identityReframing of political engagement as neighbor-love and child protection rather than partisan activism to overcome evangelical hesitation about politics
Companies
Planned Parenthood
Mentioned as recipient of hundreds of millions in federal funding that Trump administration redirected to family-frie...
Liberty University
Cited as prominent Christian college subjected to DOJ lawfare and millions in fines during Biden administration
Grand Canyon University
Referenced as Christian institution facing tens of millions in legal costs from government discrimination
Costco
Example of box store allowed to remain open during COVID lockdowns while small businesses were forcibly closed
Seattle Seahawks
Used as example of sports venue permitted 50,000 spectators while churches were prohibited from gathering during COVID
People
Josh McPherson
Guest discussing Christian political engagement, COVID response, and White House advisory role on religious freedom
Frank Turek
Podcast host conducting interview and providing theological framework for Christian political engagement discussion
Paula White
White House official credited with elevating faith office to West Wing and facilitating pastor access to Trump admini...
Donald Trump
Referenced for establishing White House Faith Office, pardoning pro-life activists, and prioritizing religious freedo...
Josh Howerton
Referenced for podcast collaboration with McPherson on church-government jurisdictional distinctions
Charlie
Referenced as advocate for Christian political engagement; appears to be Charlie Kirk based on context
Eric Metaxas
Announced as speaker at upcoming American Congress of Christian Men conference on Father's Day
Rob Schneider
Announced as co-speaker with Turek at Freedom House Church event in Charlotte
David Englehart
NYC church pastor hosting Turek for Sunday services and speaking engagement
Skip Heitzik
Albuquerque pastor co-hosting Turek speaking event on May 6
C.S. Lewis
Referenced for argument that democracy requires biblical belief in human sinfulness and need for power distribution
Greg McPherson
Josh McPherson's father, cited as primary influence on his character and pastoral calling
Candy McPherson
Josh McPherson's mother, described as remarkable woman and primary discipler
Quotes
"You can choose not to be involved in politics if you want. Politics is going to be involved with you."
Josh McPherson~25:00
"When the church pulls back and disengages, the vacuum they create is filled with the unrighteous and filled with wickedness and evil."
Josh McPherson~26:00
"Our Constitution is inadequate for anything other than a moral and religious people."
Frank Turek (quoting John Adams)~60:00
"The government has started anointing itself to make proclamations on things that God gave the church to be the authoritative voice on."
Josh McPherson~75:00
"Long before it gets to bullets, let's do it with the ballots."
Josh McPherson~110:00
Full Transcript
Ladies and gentlemen, what would you say about a man who was married? But he was only married when he was at home. He wasn't married when he was at work. He wasn't married when he was online. He wasn't married when he was out with his buddies. He was only married when he was at home. You would say, well, this man is not really committed to marriage then. He's trying to do something to his wife that he shouldn't be doing. He's not really devoted to her, obviously. Well, ladies and gentlemen, why do we as Christians think we just need to be Christians maybe just in church, maybe at home, but we're not going to be Christians at work. We're not going to be Christians online. We're not going to be Christians in the voting booth. We're not going to be Christians out there in our community. We're only going to be Christians at church and at home. Would that be a real devotion to Jesus? I mean, what area of your life should not be run by Jesus and the apostles? Or what area of your life should you not follow Jesus and the apostles? That's what we're going to talk about today with a brand new friend of mine who I've seen on so many podcasts, and I just admire the guy so much because he's a leader among men. He is the great Josh, not MacPherson. There's no fear in MacPherson. He is the great Josh MacPherson all the way from the middle of Washington State, ladies and gentlemen. All right, enough. Where he has this huge church, Josh, you're not supposed to have a huge church in the middle of Washington State. What's going on? How did this happen? Who are you? I love you, Frank. I've never met anybody like you, bro. This is fun. This is fun. What was your question? I loved your introduction. Well, I want to know how you are a pastor, an evangelical Bible believer in the Bible's inerrant pastor with a big church in the middle of the People's Republic of Washington. You're in some town in the middle of Washington. I can't pronounce the name. It's an Indian name. What is the what is the town? Wenashi Wenashi Wenashi. Wenashi. Wenashi. You're like two and a half hours east of Seattle, right? Yep. Not nearly far enough. Now, we're one gas tank away from the crazies. So we got it. We got to stay awake and stay alert. Stay awake and stay alert. Now, tell me, how did this come to be that you are essentially a megachurch pastor in a non-megachurch state? What happened? Yeah, it's a crazy story of God's grace. Lots of different ways I can answer that. But I was born to the two most remarkable people in the planet and they happen to be my mom and my dad. I was reading a biography of the Wright brothers and someone asked him, what would you tell someone if they wanted to follow in the path of your success? And the oldest Wright brother said, well, you need to be born and they named his hometown. And then you would need to be born too. And they named his mom and dad. And basically what he was saying was he took no credit for his life because of the providence of grace of God in his life. So when I look at where I'm at, it starts with my mom and dad, my heroes, the greatest people I know. I want to be like my dad when I grow up and there's no one on the planet like my mom. She's just a remarkable woman. How they have loved me, shepherded me, discipled me, embraced my wife, discipled us, launched us. It's just remarkable. So I was born to Greg and Candy McPherson, huge heart for marriage and family and men. I was born in Wenatchee, Washington. And I am by nature a homebody. I live at just a few miles from where I was born. I have no interest in ever moving. And most of the guys I know who pastor churches are on their second, third, fourth or fifth church and they're multiple towns away from where they were born. I am living. I am building my family and I'm growing my church in the town I was born in. I love my hometown and I'm a homebody. I didn't want to move. And they washed into greatest state in the union, hunt, fish, hike, boat, be outdoors, chop, firewood, experience, you know, agriculture, farm country, farm life. And yeah. And so about 20 years ago, we thought we'd plan a church and it started very humbly and living with some folks with a vision for calling men to step up and lead and calling families to take seriously their responsibility as shepherd children and launch them into the world with their hair on fire for Jesus sake and a vision for what it would look like if we had a church built around unapologetic proclamation of the good news of the gospel where we actually believe it's good news. So many guys apologize for it. Like it's not good news. I mean, I literally hear pastor say things like, right, you know, I really wish it didn't say this and then they're apologizing for what God has declared to be good, true and beautiful. And so an unapologetic pulpit, strong men, flourishing women, happy children, prioritized household in the context underneath the jurisdiction of the church, boldly, courageously, unapologetically, without hesitation or fear, engaged in the culture. Like what would happen? And so we were just growing about a hundred a year, pretty modest and then COVID hit and the whole world changed. Our state went crazy. Our governor lost his mind. He declared a state of emergency, took over all executive powers, took power away from the legislative branch, basically pretended there wasn't a judicial branch of all the judges were in his pocket anyways and started legislating from press conference every Friday about what businesses could and couldn't do. What families couldn't do. What churches couldn't do. What individuals couldn't do. It was a it was a gross misdemeanor for almost five months to leave your home for reasons other than shopping or getting an abortion. And so, bro, it just woke me up. I'm like, what in the world is going on? And the most disappointing thing for me, Frank, was not evil men who acted wickedly. It was Christians who acted cowardly. Yes. And by and large, pastors roll over and by and large, pastors just quoting Romans 13 wildly out of context said, whatever the government says we're going to do. And I'm like, the government just said to close your church. The government just said that you can't sing on a Sunday. Simultaneously, the Seahawks are still playing and 50,000 people are cheering their favorite player and abortion clinics are open and liquor stores are open and strip clubs are open, but churches are closed and small businesses are closed. Furthermore, the small mama pop brick and mortar businesses were forcibly closed, but box stores stayed open. Costco had a had a banner quarter after quarter. And so it just began opening my eyes to the fact that the church had been unengaged publicly and politically so that when tragedy struck, we had no voice and no authority. And so we appealed to the governor. We appealed to business owners. We wrote letters. We tried to meet with him. He wouldn't meet with us. And so we finally ended up taking a legal route. We sued the governor because we want to make very clear that we're not scoff laws, Frank. We believe in the rule of law. And so we're going to use the levers afforded us by our constitution to entreat our government to to cease and to assist their tyrannical legislation and rule. Because, you know, and I just why I learned during COVID and all over the maps to interrupt me whenever you want. What separates third world countries from first world countries is consistent application of rule of law. The reason businesses don't invest in African nations is because they don't they don't know who's going to be in power next week. Right. They don't know who's going to take and what rules will change. And so we essentially became a third world country in Washington because the rule of law was being declared as executive order and it was changing every week. Literally every Friday, he would have a press conference, our governor, and he would change the rule of law. So we decided to acknowledge that he was an illegitimate governor who had illegal and illegitimate taken control of away from local politics and local elected officials. And so we we legally rejected his authority. We legally sued him for the right. But our lawsuit wasn't built around COVID at all. Our lawsuit was built around local politics. Give our local elected officials the right to make decisions about who elected them in office. Don't centralize power and Olympia and then control the whole state. So 42 people in a class section lawsuit. We got to the very last ruling and and just lost by a by a hair's breath. It was one volunteer attorney fighting six state funded tax funded attorneys. And we had a local health district director who wrote us a letter saying that he would step up in the day of court. He didn't show. And so they could ruin our favor because he wasn't there. Long story short, that woke us up. We doubled that year and haven't looked back. And so what I found was you asked how have we grown? What I found was I always said I never wanted to grow the church by rearranging already found sheep in already established pens. I wanted I wanted to find new sheep, lost sheep, reach the lost, preach the gospel. I hear of make disciples as an evangelistic call. We got to go reach the lost, right? And so my my my philosophy changed during COVID. Because during COVID, I realized many sheep had been abandoned by their shepherds. They had not been fed. They were not being led. And so we decided to open our pen and bro, they all came. And it's amazing what's going on now. And we have so much more with pastor, Josh McPherson, all the way from the middle of Washington state. And you're not going to believe what he's up to this Father's Day. We're going to unpack that. We're also going to talk about that little analogy I gave about marriage right after the break. Don't go anywhere. You're listening to I don't have enough faith to be an atheist with me. Frank Turrick back in just a couple of minutes. Ladies and gentlemen, should Christians be Christians in every area of life? Or just when they're at church or just when they're at home? Shouldn't they be Christians online? Shouldn't they be Christians at work? Shouldn't they be Christians in their community? Shouldn't they be Christians in the voting booth? Shouldn't they follow Jesus and the apostles wherever they are in whatever they're doing? The answer is, of course, yes. And my newfound friend, Josh McPherson, is with us. Pastor of Grace City Church in Wenatchee. Did I get that right, Josh? Nailed it. Wenatchee Washington. And he is doing some amazing things to advance the kingdom, including being involved being involved politically. Josh, you're not supposed to be involved in politics. Christians are supposed to stay out of politics. We're only supposed to be married when we're at home. Josh, what do you say to all this? It's a brilliant analogy and I couldn't believe I couldn't agree that more. The reality that Christians need to wake up to, Frank, is you can choose not to be involved in politics if you want. Politics is going to be involved with you. And sooner or later, you're going to have a crisis of conscience, where you are forced to make a decision, bow to the politics demanding allegiance or stand against the politics because of your allegiance to Jesus. And so my knowledge of history tells me that whenever the church pulls back and disengages, the vacuum they create is filled with the unrighteous and filled with wickedness and evil. And when the Bible says when the unrighteous rule, the innocent people are grown, they grow and righteousness rules, the righteous rejoice. And so I am increasingly viewing politics. I think this is what your dear friend, Charlie, was so crystal clear on. And he was helping a generation understand that one of the most profound ways you can love your neighbor is to be involved in this experiment and freedom we call the United States of America. There is so much poor exegesis when it comes to the Bible and applying it to Christians involved in politics, not recognizing that the political structure of the day that the biblical authors were living in and writing in is so categorically different from from where we are at today. We are in a constitutional republic founded largely on biblical concepts and ideas and principles. And in that republic, we've been given both the privilege and responsibility and mandate to be engaged and be involved, which means if we don't like what's happening, if we don't like who's in power, we have no one to blame but ourselves because we've been given and afforded the opportunity to make change. And if the church steps away from the public square, I see it akin to the church ceasing to be the salt. When the church pulls away from public dialogue, when the church pulls away from public policy, when the church pulls away from public office, we're taking our salt shakers and we're going home. Jesus said the church is to be the salt of the earth. And so for me, it's and I'm getting older, right? In 46, and I'm realizing I'm in a very, very dark blue state. I'm realizing that if I don't get involved politically, there's no hope for the church because there's no future for families and all the strong men leave, all the youth are gone, the churches die, the state takes the place of God and everyone suffers. So for me, it's all connected. And I always ask people back in the 1800s, the mid 1800s, should Christians have gotten involved politically to outlaw slavery? And I've never had a Christian say, no, they shouldn't have done that. They'll say, well, of course we should outlaw slavery. Welcome to politics, ladies and gentlemen. If Christians are going to love their neighbors, they have to ensure that laws are put in place to protect their neighbors from evil. That's what you're supposed to do as a government is punish wrongdoers. And unfortunately, in in modern times, our government has punished people doing doing right things, righteous people. And and for those of you that are just tuning in, we're talking to Josh MacPherson, who is the pastor of Grace City Church up in Washington state. And Josh, you in recent months have been in the White House on at least 11 occasions. You talk to President Trump yourself about certain issues. How has this come about and what kind of influence do you think you and other pastors are having in the policies that the current administration is getting behind? Yeah, it's just a ton of grace. There are a lot of remarkable people in the White House working for the good of our nation. And it began with Paula White in the White House Faith Office. And maybe people don't understand what Trump has done in establishing the White House Faith Office. It's an historic office and appointing Paula White as the director of it and then pulling the White House Faith Office into the West Wing. Essentially, what that's done is it's given it's given influence because of proximity. So for people who don't know, the executive office building at the White House grounds there is where the executive hosts all of their employees. It's this Secret Service and it's the first ladies team. It's where everyone does all the work. The West Wing is very small, very high value real estate. It's very limited. It's limited mostly to folks in the Situation Room and folks who are cabinet members and secretaries, things like that. This is all common civic knowledge here. When President Trump pulled the White House Faith Office into the West Wing, it was essentially saying proximity is power. I want you here. I want you speaking and everything we're doing. Pastor Paula White is a senior advisor to the president. What people may not know is President Trump has a huge heart for religious freedom or religious liberty for the church and for pastors. He always has. And his three priorities are bringing religious back. He calls it bringing religion back to America, faith, family and opportunity. He wants families to be strong, churches to thrive and for people to have the same opportunities that he was afforded as a young man to build wealth and to build culture and to be fruitful multiply. And so in doing so, he has charged the White House Faith Office with rooting out any discrimination they see in our nation institutionally and then codifying into law those laws that will protect Christianity in particular, but religious freedoms in general for our nation. And when I've been at the White House and had to afford the opportunity to listen to high ranking administration officials talk of what they uncovered during the Biden Obama years, it was egregious, Frank, egregious, the kind of discrimination that was being intentionally wielded against Christianity and Christians from Christian colleges to Christian leaders to Christian nonprofits. So they've they've been uncovering that and then trying to undo that. And then to codify into law, really those values that are at the foundation of our nation, allowing people to express freely their their religion. And of course, we believe that America is a Christian nation, distinctly Christian nation that had branches of Judaism and Catholicism grafted into it. But the foundation is distinctly Christian. And I believe President Trump understands that and is working toward that. And so he's invited pastors to be at the table. And I don't want to misrepresent to anybody here. I'm not like an advisor to the president. We've had two conversations in the Oval Office, and they were fairly brief, right? Just got to encourage him to share some things with him. He's not like calling me asking for advice on a day to day. But what I see him doing is inviting pastors to the White House, not for photo ops, but he's asking, what are you seeing? What are you hearing? What can I do to help? What do you need? What's going on in America? What could I do to help you do your job better? And for the first time, he's a politician, a position of power that I have seen objectively take clear steps to shrink the size of government so as to expand the influence of the private sector. Because when all the money is going to government programs, guess who has no money left to do their job? The church. And so he's trying to funnel resources back into the church to take the government out of the equation to let the church be the church, which I deeply appreciate. Now, I know that some people listen and will go, Paula White, isn't she a prosperity gospel person? OK, yeah, we might not agree. And I know you don't you don't necessarily agree with every theological position somebody might hold, but that doesn't mean you couldn't work with them on these domestic policy issues. Correct? Yeah, absolutely. And I've actually had quite a few private conversations with Paula and just opportunity to clarify here. She has a great disdain for the prosperity gospel. And there are things that have been said and done that she has said that have been taken and twisted, blah, blah, blah. Also say I have a deep admiration for Paula and I appreciate it. One of the things, Frank, that won me over was was her relentless work ethic for religious freedom and liberty, even fighting for those people who hate her, run her down, malign her online. She loves him. She responds in grace and forgiveness. And she's like, that's OK. I've done lots of crazy things in my life. She's not proud of a lot of her story. She shares it openly. Lots of hard things there. And she's still working for them, which I find admirable. But yeah, I mean, having said that, I don't agree with myself half the time. And so, yeah. So what I see in her is someone who loves our nation, who loves Jesus genuinely, who I believe providentially has been put in Donald Trump's life to serve him, pastor him, speak life into him. And so I see her as a great gatekeeper and her heart. I'll put this way. DC runs on power and power comes through relationships. And what I've learned in my short time, there is very few people give those relationships away. That's how that's how they keep power. Paula is just the opposite. She gives those relationships away. Here's a cell phone number. Here's a relationship. Here's a contact call that reached out to them. She'll make connections with me of people in high positions of influence. And then she steps out of the out of the equation so we can connect and run. She's trying to actually get things done and produce results for the American people that gave President Trump this mandate. And that that that leaves me with a high major respect for compared to the guy who blogs and criticizes, but never actually does anything. Right. Ladies and gentlemen, the political 10 is much bigger than our maybe theological 10 is when it comes to our church, because first of all, evangelicals don't have the political power to to completely do everything we think ought to be done. We're going to have to lay eyes on with people that don't agree with us on every issue in order to in order for the greater good. That's what politics is supposed to be about. Correct. Seeking the greater good. Now, I know the Biden administration was actually harassing and even prosecuting pro-lifers who are praying outside of abortion clinics. I know pro-life homes have been raided in the middle of the night. And some of those people that were in prison, literally in prison under the Biden administration, President Trump pardoned. Correct. That's exactly right. There when President Trump was elected in office, there were people in prison in America who were put there because they went to pray outside an abortion clinic. It's hard to wrap your mind around, but that was reality. He pardoned them. He set them free. Hundreds of millions of tax-funded dollars going to Planned Parenthood that President Trump canceled and redirecting to family-friendly fatherhood initiatives. Grand Canyon University, Liberty University were under lawfare for the tunes of tens of millions of dollars. So hundreds of millions of taxpayers dollars going to woke institutions and colleges, conversely, the two most prominent Christian colleges, maybe in our country, under lawfare from the DOJ, under millions of dollars of fines. The corruption just went on and on and on and on and on. All this is being uncovered and it wasn't by accident. It was an intentional lawfare against Christians, churches, nonprofits to mute their voice, to cripple them. People wonder where the Black Lives Matter come from. It came because it was funded by hundreds of millions of taxpayers dollars, while simultaneously Christian organizations were being starved to death. A lot more with Pastor Josh McPherson all the way from the People's Republic of Washington. And there is an event coming up there on Father's Day that you're going to want to hear about. Josh is really stepping out to do this. It could be as many as 20,000 people there will talk more about it after the break. Don't go anywhere. You're listening to I don't have enough faith to be an atheist on the American Family Radio Network and other stations around the country. I'm Frank Turrick back right after the break. Students across America are more open to the truth of Christianity than ever before. And Dr. Frank Turrick is taking the powerful evidence for God to campuses like UC Berkeley, the University of Georgia, Ohio State and Alabama, reaching thousands in person and millions more online. But every event now requires costly security to keep students safe. And cross-examine never charges students to attend. That's why we urgently need your support. The culture is dark, but hearts are open. Help keep the light of truth shining by donating today at crossexamine.org. That's cross-examine with a D on the end dot org. You know, friends, sometimes I have people write me and say, oh, your show talks about politics. I'm out. Maybe you could be a little patient because we think that politics matters. Theology matters. We think everything matters. We think Christians ought to be involved in every area of life, including politics. Before we talk a little bit more about that, I want to mention that this Sunday, Lord willing, that's going to be April 12th. I'll be in New York City. Forget about it. I'll be with my friend David Englehart in his church. That's called King's Church. It's somewhere around 31st Street on the west side around eighth. Anyway, the details are in our on our website, crossexamine.org. I'll be speaking at the Sunday morning services there. Then the next day, Regent University, the make heaven crowded tour. I'll be there with the great TPUSA folks. Continue to pray for TPUSA and Erica. If you haven't seen my visit back to the Utah Valley University, where Charlie was murdered, it's on our YouTube channel. We both have the entire event on the YouTube channel and also the questions isolated. It's getting a lot of attention. Thanks for your prayers for that, by the way. Then I want to point out that the following week, Lord willing, that's going to be April 21st to 23rd, albeit the Faith Forward pastor summit that's through TPUSA. It's in Great Vine, Texas, right near the DFW airport. The following week after that, we're going to be at the University of Tennessee. On the 30th of April, oh, I forgot to tell you, on the 27th of April, we'll be right here in Charlotte with Rob Schneider, the great Rob Schneider. We're going to be at Freedom House Church in Cornelius. That's going to be packed out. It's going to be at 730. But if you're not in the Charlotte area, you can actually watch it streaming live on our YouTube channel. And then we're going to be University of New Mexico on the 5th of May and Calvary Church in Albuquerque with my friend Skip Heitzik on the 6th of May. Much more on our website there. Check all that out. Also, if you're going to sign up for online CAA, we may only have one or two seats left. You might want to go to crossexamine.org right now and click on online courses. You'll see it there. Let me go back to my friend, the great Josh McPherson. There's no fear in McPherson. Here he is, ladies and gentlemen. Hey, we've got to unpack a few things because there's always objections when Christians say or when anyone says, you know, Christians ought to be involved politically in all this, Josh, tell us, first of all, the difference between, say, a theocracy and a constitutional republic that we have here. Well, you should. You just gave me a great definition of it off the air. What did I say? It's well, you were talking about, OK, a theocracy is really good. A theocracy is when you're imposing religious rights and rituals that aren't part of the natural law like Sharia law would be a theocracy. You know, the Muslims want to put Sharia law in place. They want to take away natural rights that we all have freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, those kind of things. And they want to impose, they want to take those away. And then they want to impose their their own religious rights and rituals like women can't, you know, leave the home without a man and they there's totally subservient to a man and they got to wear the hajib and all this. Those are religious rights and rituals that are not part of the natural law. All laws legislate morality. The only question is, where do you get your moral standard from? And maybe you could speak to that. Maybe you could speak to where we get our moral standard from. Well, we were joking offline. I think I'm becoming more of a theocratist by the day. And we know what I mean when I say that. But part of what I say that is is when we make the statement natural law or moral law, we have to ask the question says who? Yeah. And where does it come from? And so what we're saying is fundamentally, is he a theocracy or its or its demons? Because because it's from God's word that we come to understand there is such a thing as natural law, that there is such a thing as a moral law. If we take away God's word, then who's to say what the Islamists are enforcing on people around the world is wrong. And so when I look at Islam, Islam is a religion of imposition, convert or die. Christianity is a religion of invitation. All are welcome who would repent of their sins. And there is room in that understanding for, I believe, a nation to exercise a moral rule of law that aligns with the word of God. So when Christians say that that Christians shouldn't be involved politically or that it's not biblical at all, they just haven't read the Bible, or at least with the right lens. The one of the main metanarratives of the entire Bible, I believe, Frank, is the story of God clashing with governments. Oh, yeah, governments have one one choice, either submit to the to the to the rule of God or become the rule of God themselves. There's no middle ground. And so when Paul writes in Romans 13, it outlines the very limited scope of government. He's laying out, I believe, kind of like a kind period, jurisdictional understanding of humanity in terms of responsibilities and authority God gives to individuals, families, the church and the state. When Paul is laying out that out in Romans 13, he says that their job is to reward good and punish evil. Well, right there, we're into a moral conversation. Who gets to define what is good and what is evil? And so you can't even have a functioning, legitimate government unless you have some form of theocracy that identifies God as the source of all truth and God as the starting place for all reality and God's word as the foundation that we're called to build our lives on. And so you can't have a functioning government unless they have a source to call balls and strikes on what's right and wrong. And so you look at the Bible, there's an entire book in the Old Testament, Frank, that is designed to set up a government that functions under the reign of God, Deuteronomy. And so to say that Christianity shouldn't be political or the Bible isn't political is just a very narrow, a very modern, I would say, modern, narrow, naive reading of the Bible and application of Christianity. Yeah, let me let me draw one caveat or put one caveat on that. Jefferson and our founders founded the country on the moral law, but they were informed on the moral law from scripture because they in their writings quoted Deuteronomy more than any other section of any book, not just the Bible. But what we're saying here is you don't have to be a Christian to be an American. And Christianity was put in place or let me put it another way. Christianity described what our country was built upon, but it didn't prescribe that you had to be a Christian in order to be an American. And the First Amendment gives freedom of religion, but it doesn't give one religion the freedom of religion to take away everyone's else rights or freedom of religion. And that's what Islam wants to do. It's not a self defeating amendment, in other words. That's right. And so Christianity provides the freedoms that no other world religion would do. Islam is not going to give it to you. Hinduism, they got a caste system. Atheism is not going to do it. They don't have the Theo, as you said, they don't have a grounding like we have here. We hold these truths to be self evident. So I think that people too often don't make the proper distinctions. And they think that what we're trying to do as Christians is say, impose every aspect of the Old Testament law on people, including all the penalties. And that's not what I'm advocating. That's not what you're advocating. Correct? No, that's just people who haven't read the Bible and understand the nature of the Old New Covenants. And so when they get, they pull out the gotcha verse from Leviticus, it's like, it's like, yeah, it's a very simplistic naive. It's a disingenuous reading of the Bible that's not taking the Bible on its own terms in terms of the totality of the teaching of Christ. And I will add a caveat to your cabinet or just continue to clarify this for people. You don't have to be a Christian to be an American. And so that's very so being an American does not make you a Christian. Right. Right. That's very important to say. And I will say, I do believe the founders did not think the government they set up would work for anything other than a moral people. True, they said that. That's what John Adams said. Our Constitution is inadequate for anything other than a moral and religious people. Yeah, that's right. And so it is the moral constraint and the moral clarity that Christianity brings that allows people to enjoy freedom. Without that, it will always devolve into tribalism and chaos, or it will centralize into globalism and elitism. So the unique with the unique contribution of Christianity is that it teaches us fundamental truths about humanity and the world we live in. The world we live in is stained by sin. Humanity is not to be trusted left to its own devices because ultimate power corrupts ultimately. And so I think you'll see us, Lewis, said he believes in a democracy because he believes in the Bible and that no one man can be trusted with ultimate power in this fallen state. And so you have to create this three branch check and balance system to keep men in check and then to give a voice to the people, which is what makes the electoral the electoral college so brilliant. Yes, and it has worked for 250 years. That's right. But I will say this as well. We both know that the best, most efficient form of government would be power centralized in one man. That's who was ultimately trustworthy. Haven't found that guy yet. That's right. Thanks be to God. Heaven won't be a constitutional republic. Heaven will be a monarchy, right? Where the one perfect king will rule authoritatively and perfectly over his people and there will be joy in the land forever. That's going to be a good day. Until then, we work with our constitutional republic. By the way, anyone listening to us right now, if you're thinking, oh, no, that's immoral to impose anything Christian on people. Where are you getting that moral standard from? That's a standard right there. If you're saying it's wrong to impose morality, you're imposing a morality right then and there. And when people say, don't impose your morality on me, often say, first of all, why not? Would that be immoral? I mean, where are you coming up with that standard? You're imposing your morality on me right now. And then secondly, these aren't my morals. I didn't make up the fact that murder is wrong, that abortion is wrong, that mutilating children is wrong, that men were made for women and women were made for men. I didn't make any of this stuff up. It's not my morality. It's not your morality. It happens to be the morality, the one Jefferson said with self-evident. Go ahead, go ahead, Josh. No, I couldn't agree more. And I think that passers-need to understand that point you're saying right there, Frank and Christians do as well, is there is an intrinsic Christian, a self-righteous Christian is an oxymoronic Christian. Now they exist and Jesus confronted them and mocked them relentlessly. But if you understand the nature of Christianity, it inherently cultivates a kind of deep humility in you because to become a Christian is to fundamentally acknowledge, I suck, I'm a sinner, I failed, I don't have what it takes. I need to be full scale rescued and saved. And so to get into the Christian life is a deep acknowledgement of humility through repentance. And then that doesn't get us in the door and we leave it. We should be growing in our humility as our recognition of all that God has done for us in Christ, all he has rescued and saved us from all he has will and continue to forgive us from. And so this isn't to be a smarmy, self-righteous Christian. Our way is better to your point exactly. It is the arrogant, narcissistic worldview that considers themselves and their perspective as seeing all things, knowing all things, having taken in all the information for all time and amalgamated it in a perfect worldview and now forcing it on others. That's the height of arrogance. Christianity says, I don't think I'm that smart. And so I'm submitting my will to a time tested and timely word that is eternal, given to us by a God outside of time that I'm submitting to. That's the authority of Christianity. Not that we show up with our own ideas, right, but that we show up proclaiming his truth. Well said. Well said. Josh McPherson. There's no fear in McPherson, ladies and gentlemen, as you can tell. And you're probably thinking, but wait a minute, Frank, there are other distinctions that you're not making here. And like one of them, why has the church gotten so political in recent years? Isn't that wrong? We're going to cover that right after the break. And then this amazing conference coming up on Father's Day. You're not going to want to miss. Don't go anywhere. You're listening to I Don't Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist. Back after the break. Ladies and gentlemen, has the church gotten too political or has the government gotten too theological? Oh, what do you mean by that? Well, my friend, Josh McPherson, in concert with my other friend, Josh Howerton, have talked about this at length. There's some amazing podcasts that the two Josh's have done. And that that's one of the reasons we're having this conversation right now, because I learned about Josh McPherson from that podcast that you did with Josh Howerton, the two Josh's. And it was such an eyeopening podcast series of podcasts you did. What is the difference between the church getting political and the government getting theological? Explain that difference. Well, it's a fundamental misunderstanding of the jurisdictional lanes of God's authority and responsibilities. He's a staffer for humanity. And so you got to ask the question, did God create humanity? And if your answer is yes, then, OK, did he create purposes for the different jurisdictions of human relationships? And we would say, yes. So individuals have certain responsibilities that we hold them to. If you make decisions, you're responsible for those. The family has certain jurisdictional authority to exercise a husband with a wife and a father and a mother with their children so that the parents have been given a job by God and children have been given a job by God. God says that children are to obey their parents. And that's the first commandment of the promise. The inference unspoken is this as well. Parents will be held accountable for what they do or do not require their children to obey. So families have jobs. Then you get to the church, of course, Word and sacrament, and then you get to government. And so when we think about the church, we need to think of the church in terms of stewarding, preaching and proclamation of the gospel, organizing, strengthening and equipping the body of Christ to make disciples to strengthen individual humans who go into all the different spheres of society with with the light of Christ, with the hope of the gospel, with the spirit and character of Christ to make all those places better. When we get to government, the government, too, is God's idea. I don't think government is fundamentally bad. Government is an idea that God designed for how to collectively organize humanity in a way that causes the most flourishing. So we reject globalism, where power is centralized, we reject tribalism, where power dissipates to the ones with the biggest spears. And we embrace nationalism as a means by which God has given large groups of humanity to organize themselves in an orderly manner that brings the most flourishing. So when, you know, when we get accused of Christian nationalism, I just kind of chuckle and I go, well, what's what's the alternative? Atheistic globalism? I mean, I mean, like this is crazy. Like, like we need nations to flourish and we want that nation to be founded on a moral worldview and we think Christianity is the superior moral worldview because it came from heaven, not from man. So when we say, when I've said the phrase that the church isn't getting more political, that the government is getting more theological, what I'm saying is the government has started anointing itself to make proclamations on things that God gave the church to be the authoritative voice on. And so I believe God calls the church to be the moral conscience of a people, both government, families and individuals. And when the church self silences themselves, that community, that nation, that people group loses its moral compass, loses its moral conscience and loses its moral bearing. And that's what we've seen. And so my passion is to encourage and to strengthen and then to help show pastors how they can find their voice again, their God given voice to speak into the public specter so that the word of God is the most dominant shaping influence in any society. And then governments are born out of that. Politicians lead from that. Families flourish under that. And I believe we start working our way back toward what God intended in the garden. Yeah, you've said this before, you and Josh and I have said that when the government was all about issuing drivers licenses and building roads and ensuring we had adequate police and adequate military, that was fine. But when the government starts veering into the theological in the sense that they're telling us what marriage is, telling us what a woman is, telling us what that children can be transitioned that, you know, they're not really girls. You can make them boys if you want. And vice versa. When they start doing that, now they're out of their lane completely. And if Christians don't speak up, then we are not being salt and light. We're not protecting innocent people from evil. That's right. It's not that that Christians haven't moved. Rightly understood. We've always said that marriage between a man and a woman. We've always said that men are men and women are women. We've always said that you ought not mutilate children. We've always said you ought not kill children. It's the government that has come in and it's really the people through the government have done this because Christians have been silent. And now that there appears to be this culture war that the Christians really didn't start, it's that the Christians had laid down their weapons long ago, laid down their salt and light responsibilities long ago. And all of this is taken over. Tell us a little bit about the black robe regiment in our history, Josh, before we start talking about the conference you're going to have coming up. Yeah. One thing about what we just said. While Christians didn't start it, I think we're part responsible for it. Yes, because our silence created the vacuum that evil has stepped into. And meanwhile, we've been congratulating ourselves on how winsome we are as the country is going to hell. Right. So well said. So there's nothing. There's nothing to be proud about being silent and letting evil speak. Right. So when I think of jurisdictions, I think of individuals as a car, families as a minivan, the church as a bus and the government as a semi. The government is the biggest, but it's being driven by a few people. The bus is full of a ton of people. The minivan has a family and the motorbike has one guy. We're all in our lanes. If we stand in our lanes, everyone's happy. If the government starts to swerve, it's incumbent upon the bus to put itself between that and the other vehicles and honk the horn. Nice. And rub paint if necessary to keep the government in its lane. Because if the bus hits the brakes like we've done, there's no one standing between that semi and the family in the minivan or that individual on the bike. And so when the when the when the church pulls out and this transitions to the Black Road Regiment, this is something that was understood when our nation was founded. The Black Road Regiment was a negative connotation or label given to the pastors of the colonial era of Americas because Britain realized that it was the pastors causing those problems. So when you think about George Washington, who was an incredible leader, a remarkable man, to be sure, there's about 800 skirmishes in the War for Independence, about 250 that were documented. General Washington was only involved in 17 of those. He only won six. So you got asked the question, well, where was the battle won? Well, the battle was won in the hundreds of undocumented skirmishes when the British would run into local militia defending their own hometowns. Because the British would go in to a community and they would burn one building. And that building was the signification of community, of power, of unity in that town. And it wasn't the school. It wasn't the local mercantiles. It was the church. They burned down the church because the church was the center of that community. And the pastor was the most influential man in the community. So when you ask yourself how did we win the war? The answer is we won it because of the militia fighting to defend their own hometowns everywhere the British showed up. And the question then rises, well, who organized and led the militia? And the question, the answer is uniform in its clarity and objectivity. It was the pastors, the local pastors were not just preaching. They were demonstrating courage and leading local militia. And so there's a great story of the pastor. He gets up and says, I will not send our young men to die for our country. And not and not be willing to go myself. He takes off his robe. He recruits men for an hour. He leaves the church with 300 men and they organize a resistance against the British and ignites his fire. So the Black Road Regiment became to symbolize pastors who not only preach truth, but we're willing to fight for and defend truth in real time with real bullets and real battle. And my heart is to see the Black Road Regiment rise again, bro. Two hundred fifty years. We're not advocating violence just to be clear. We're not saying we're going to overthrow the government. We're saying that we're going to reform the government through the democratic process that we have just to be clear. Yeah. Yeah. The Black Road Regiment. Well, it's interesting. You read the Declaration of Independence. Everyone's got to read it once a year. It's a man. Yeah. It's a stunning work of intellectual expression. But but in there, it's it's and this is this is kind of crazy. I don't think we should give the American government a pass and say there would never be a time where we might not have to resist physically. Sure. Crazy idea to say, right? Yeah. Yeah. But it's like it's like I told I told some friends here today. We shouldn't assume the world of a nation in one hundred years. Probably shouldn't assume that because because we might not have a world in one hundred years. Yeah. History tells just the opposite story. Right. Yeah. The more natural assumption would be it caves. So the question is what are we willing to fight and defend for and defend? And right now we have this amazing experiment of freedom called this constitutional republic that allows us and affords us nonviolent means of protest and nonviolent means of bringing about change. And if we give those a pass, there will come a time where we're forced to either compromise or stand and fight. So what I'm saying is long before it gets to bullets, let's do it with the ballots. That's right. Long before it gets to violence and physically contested but wars, let's win in the realm of ideas and let's win in the realm of politics and civic engagement. And if we stay fighting there with the with the tools of truth, it will prevent it from going to other places where we don't want to think about. All right, Josh, we got one day, bro. Yeah, we got to do this. We got one minute. Yeah. Tell us about the men's conference coming up and where they can sign up. We're going to put all this in the show notes, but tell us about it quickly. Yeah, Freedom Conference, Rise of the Statesmen, where we're going to call men into the glorious and noble role of a statesman in their city, in their town, their state, in their country. We're calling it the American Congress of Christian Men. It was an American Congress that founded this nation 250 years ago. And I believe it'll be an American Congress of men that will save this nation. 250 years later, we're gathering, we're hoping it's going to be the largest gathering of Christian men in the nation on this 250th anniversary. And we're going to do it in a little town called George, Washington. And for us, it's a moment of destiny. We're calling the men of our country to a town named after our founding president to call the men of our nation to stand up, show up, speak up for the founding values that made America so great. And it's go to strongermannation.com. There'll be a link to that conference there. You're going to want to be a part of it. I might be there. Eric Metaxas will be there. Josh McPherson will be there. Many others, you don't want to miss it, Josh. It's great having you on. We got to do this again. I look forward to it. Thank you, Frank. The great Josh McPherson. There's no fear in McPherson. McPherson, as you can see, check out strongermannation.com. Be there Father's Day weekend. It's going to be amazing. Hope to see you there. And Lord Willem will see her next time. God bless. Dr. Frank Turrick is bringing powerful evidence for God to campuses like UC Berkeley, the University of Georgia and Ohio State, reaching thousands in person and millions online. But each event now requires costly security. Your gift helps the light of truth pierce the darkness. Give today at crossexamined.org.