Sunday, May 24, 2026

To The Household of Faith: Look Up Redemption Draws Near

 To the beloved brethren and faithful saints scattered abroad, who stand in the midst of trial, affliction, and reproach for the name of our Lord Jesus Christ:

Grace be unto you, and peace, from God our Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ.

I thank my God upon every remembrance of you, making mention of you always in my prayers, hearing of your steadfast faith in Christ and the love which ye continue to show one toward another, even in difficult times. Though many miles separate us in body, yet are we joined together in one Spirit, one faith, one Lord, and one eternal hope.

Beloved, be not discouraged because of the fiery trials which surround you, as though some strange thing hath happened unto you. Our Lord Himself was despised and rejected of men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. The servant is not greater than his Lord. If the world hated Him, it shall also hate those who walk in His truth.

Yet remember this, dear brethren: your labor is not forgotten before God. Every prayer uttered in secret, every tear shed in loneliness, every fearful night, every quiet gathering in hidden places, every whispered hymn of praise, and every faithful witness borne before men is known unto the Lord.

Many here remember you daily before the throne of grace. We pray that the Lord would strengthen your hearts with might by His Spirit in the inner man; that He would place His holy angels round about you for protection; that He would give boldness unto your pastors and leaders; and that He would fill your homes with His peace which passeth all understanding.

We have heard of your faithfulness and are greatly encouraged by your testimony. In lands where darkness grows heavy, your light shines even brighter. In times when many grow cold and fearful, your courage reminds the Church throughout the world that Christ is worthy of all devotion.

Be steadfast therefore, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord. Hold fast the profession of your faith without wavering. The sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.

Though earthly kingdoms rage and the hearts of men fail them for fear, yet our King still reigneth upon His throne. The kingdoms of this world shall pass away, but the Kingdom of our God shall endure forever.

Remember the words of our blessed Savior:

“Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom.” (Luke 12:32)

And again:

“In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33)

Brethren, faint not. The Lord is near unto them that are of a broken heart. He shall never leave thee nor forsake thee. The day is coming when every prison door shall be opened, every burden laid down, every tear wiped away, and the saints of God from every nation, tongue, and people shall stand together before the throne clothed in white robes, singing praises unto the Lamb forevermore.

Until that glorious appearing of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ, continue in prayer, continue in love, continue in holiness, and continue in hope.

Now the God of all grace, who hath called us unto His eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after that ye have suffered awhile, make you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you.

The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.

Amen.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Armor of Light and the Light Within

 There are times when science discovers something that causes us to pause and remember that the Bible has been speaking about deeper realities all along.

Researchers have found that living cells—including human DNA—can emit extremely weak light particles called biophotons. These tiny emissions are not visible to the naked eye, but sensitive instruments can detect them. Scientists believe these faint light emissions are connected to cellular communication, metabolism, and biological activity.

Now let us be careful here.

Science is not proving salvation.

Researchers are not discovering the “soul” inside DNA.

And the Bible was not teaching molecular biology when it spoke about light.

But I do find it fascinating that life itself is associated with light.

The deeper science looks into creation, the more it discovers order, design, communication, rhythm, and illumination woven throughout the human body.

The Scripture says:

“In him was life; and the life was the light of men.”
— John 1:4 KJV

And again:

“That was the true Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world.”
— John 1:9 KJV

John was not talking about physical photons or biological light emissions. He was speaking of something far greater.

He was speaking of Christ.

The eternal Light.

The divine revelation of God reaching into the darkness of fallen humanity.

Yet perhaps these physical realities remind us of spiritual truths.

Creation often reflects its Creator.

The sun gives physical light to the earth.

Christ gives spiritual light to the soul.

Without sunlight, life withers physically.

Without Christ, man lives in spiritual darkness.

Paul wrote in Romans:

“The night is far spent, the day is at hand: let us therefore cast off the works of darkness, and let us put on the armour of light.”
— Romans 13:12 KJV

What a phrase:
“The armour of light.”

Darkness in Scripture represents:

  • sin,

  • deception,

  • rebellion,

  • confusion,

  • spiritual blindness.

Light represents:

  • truth,

  • holiness,

  • revelation,

  • righteousness,

  • and the presence of God.

When Adam sinned, mankind fell into darkness.

Not merely intellectual darkness.

Spiritual darkness.

Man became separated from God.

The mind became clouded.

The heart became corrupted.

Fear entered the human race.

Death entered the human race.

And ever since Eden, God has been calling fallen man back toward the Light.

The Light Still Calls to Man

One of the remarkable things about humanity is this:
even fallen men still search for meaning.

Why?

Because somewhere deep inside man remains the imprint of his Creator.

Ecclesiastes says:

“He hath set the world in their heart.”
— Ecclesiastes 3:11 KJV

There is something within man that longs for eternity.

The atheist tries to suppress it.

The sinner tries to drown it.

The materialist tries to replace it.

But the hunger remains.

Man was made for God.

Augustine once said:
“Our hearts are restless until they rest in Thee.”

That restlessness is the cry of a fallen creation seeking its Maker.

Could Physical Light Reflect Spiritual Truth?

Now some people take discoveries about DNA light emissions and run too far with them, claiming human beings are divine energy beings or that salvation is hidden inside genetics. The Bible teaches no such thing.

Sin is not repaired through biology.

Salvation does not come through human DNA.

We are saved through Jesus Christ alone.

Yet the existence of light within living systems can serve as a beautiful illustration.

The God who created light in Genesis also designed life itself with astonishing complexity.

From galaxies to nerve cells, creation bears witness to divine wisdom.

David wrote:

“I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.”
— Psalm 139:14 KJV

And perhaps those faint lights within living cells remind us symbolically of a greater spiritual truth:
man was created to live in fellowship with God.

Jesus: The True Light

John makes it clear that Christ is the true Light.

Not religion.

Not philosophy.

Not science.

Christ.

The world today is flooded with information yet drowning in darkness.

We have brighter screens than any generation in history while souls grow darker by the hour.

Knowledge increases while wisdom decreases.

Technology advances while morality collapses.

Why?

Because intellectual light cannot replace spiritual light.

Only Christ can illuminate the soul.

Jesus said:

“I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life.”
— John 8:12 KJV

Notice that phrase:
“the light of life.”

Not merely existence.

Life.

Real life.

Eternal life.

The Armor of Light

Paul said believers are to “put on the armour of light.”

Armor protects a soldier in battle.

And friend, we are in a spiritual battle.

Darkness attacks constantly:

  • fear,

  • lust,

  • bitterness,

  • deception,

  • despair,

  • hatred,

  • confusion.

The enemy works in darkness because darkness hides corruption.

But light exposes.

That is why many people hate truth.

Jesus said:

“And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light.”
— John 3:19 KJV

Men love darkness because darkness allows sin to hide.

But when Christ shines into the heart, hidden things are exposed.

Conviction comes.

Repentance comes.

Transformation begins.

The Old Lantern Illustration

I remember hearing old preachers talk about carrying kerosene lanterns down country roads at night.

That lantern did not remove the whole darkness of the world.

It simply gave enough light for the next step.

That is how the Lord often works.

He may not show you the entire journey at once.

But He gives enough light for the next step of obedience.

“Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.”
— Psalm 119:105 KJV

The Final Invitation

One day this world of darkness will end.

The Bible says of Heaven:

“And there shall be no night there.”
— Revelation 21:25 KJV

No darkness.

No fear.

No death.

No sorrow.

Because the Lamb Himself is the Light.

Until then, every believer is called to walk in that Light and reflect it into a darkened world.

Maybe the faint lights scientists discover within living cells are only tiny reminders written into creation itself—that humanity was never meant for darkness.

We were created for the presence of God.

And the same God who said:

“Let there be light”
— Genesis 1:3 KJV

still shines into dark hearts today.

When Blood Cries Out

 There are moments when modern science brushes up against truths the Bible has spoken for thousands of years. Researchers today study the rhythms of the heart, the signals carried through the nervous system, and even the harmonics found in blood flow. They tell us the body gives off measurable patterns, vibrations, and signals that reveal health and disease.

The deeper science looks into the human body, the more mysterious and wonderful it appears.

And yet long before laboratories, computers, and medical scanners, the Word of God declared:

“For the life of the flesh is in the blood.”
— Leviticus 17:11 KJV

Now let me be careful before we go too far down the road. The Bible is not a medical textbook, and researchers studying harmonics in blood flow are not proving spiritual doctrines. We ought to be cautious not to twist science into theology or theology into science.

But sometimes scientific discoveries remind us just how deep the wisdom of God truly is.

One verse has stayed in my thoughts lately.

After Cain murdered his brother Abel, the Lord said:

“What hast thou done? the voice of thy brother's blood crieth unto me from the ground.”
— Genesis 4:10 KJV

Think about that for a moment.

Cain heard silence.

The field was quiet.

No witnesses stood nearby.

No court was convened.

No evidence was presented before men.

But God said Abel’s blood cried out from the ground.

What a terrifying thought.

The blood of innocence testified before heaven itself.

Now some have wondered if there could be some connection between the “harmonics” researchers speak about and these Scriptures about blood crying out. Scientifically speaking, there is no evidence that spilled blood literally emits a supernatural cry for justice through physical frequencies or vibrations. The researchers are talking about measurable biological wave patterns in circulation and physiology—not moral guilt or spiritual testimony.

Yet I believe the imagery God uses is intentional and powerful.

Blood represents life.

And when innocent life is violently taken, heaven takes notice.

Modern man believes hidden sins stay buried. God says otherwise.

The blood cries out.

The tears cry out.

The suffering cries out.

The brokenness cries out.

Every act of cruelty, every injustice, every abuse of the innocent rises before a holy God.

America may legalize evil.

Governments may protect corruption.

Courts may fail.

The media may ignore truth.

But heaven keeps perfect records.

The old country preacher in me believes one of the greatest delusions of our generation is the belief that nobody sees.

But God sees.

He saw Abel lying in the field.

He saw Naboth murdered for his vineyard.

He saw the children sacrificed to idols.

He saw the blood running through the streets of Jerusalem when the prophets were slain.

And He still sees today.

One of the most sobering verses in the Bible is found in Numbers:

“Be sure your sin will find you out.”
— Numbers 32:23 KJV

You may fool the preacher.

You may fool the church.

You may fool your family.

You may even fool yourself.

But you cannot fool God.

The blood still cries out.

Yet thank the Lord the story does not end there.

The book of Hebrews gives us one of the greatest contrasts in all Scripture. It says:

“And to Jesus the mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of Abel.”
— Hebrews 12:24 KJV

Abel’s blood cried for justice.

Christ’s blood cries for mercy.

Oh my, what a thought.

Abel’s blood testified against sin.

Jesus’ blood atones for sin.

Abel’s blood condemned the murderer.

Christ’s blood can forgive the murderer.

The cross is where justice and mercy met together.

At Calvary, God did not ignore sin—He judged it in His Son.

That precious blood shed on the cross still speaks today.

It speaks hope to the guilty.

It speaks pardon to the sinner.

It speaks cleansing to the broken.

It speaks peace to the troubled heart.

There are things science can measure.

It can measure pulse rates.

It can study brain waves.

It can analyze blood flow and electrical signals.

But science cannot measure the weight of guilt.

It cannot measure conviction.

It cannot measure holiness.

And it cannot fully explain why a sinner kneeling at an altar suddenly rises with peace in his soul.

That is something only God can do.

David wrote:

“Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me.”
— Psalm 51:10 KJV

And friend, that prayer still works.

One day every hidden thing will be brought into the light.

Every injustice will be answered.

Every drop of innocent blood will be accounted for.

But for those who have come to Christ, there is another voice speaking louder than condemnation.

The blood of Jesus still speaks mercy.

Transformed Heart and Mind

 

Romans 12:2 • Ezekiel 36:26 • Proverbs 4:23 • 2 Corinthians 5:17

Several years ago I find this research group called HeartMath. I found their research showed how salvation transforms the physical heart. Let me share this with you.

There are some things science discovers that old country Christians already knew from sitting on a church pew, praying beside a bed at midnight, or kneeling at an altar with tears running down their face.

Now researchers are talking about the connection between the heart and the mind. They tell us the heart sends signals to the brain. They speak about stress, fear, peace, and coherence. They tell us anger and fear throw the body into confusion, but peace and gratitude bring stability.

Well, friend, the Bible said something like that a long time ago.

The Word of God has always placed great importance on the heart.

Not just the muscle beating in your chest, but the inner man—the center of desire, affection, conscience, will, and spiritual life.

The world tries to change behavior from the outside in.

God changes a man from the inside out.

You can educate the mind and still have a wicked heart.

You can dress religion on the outside and still be lost.

But when Jesus saves a man, He changes the heart first. Then the mind begins to change. Then the life begins to change.

That is salvation.

The Problem Was Never Just the Mind

The modern world believes man’s biggest problem is ignorance.

God says man’s biggest problem is sin.

Education cannot cure sin.

Government cannot cure sin.

Money cannot cure sin.

Psychology cannot cure sin.

The problem is deeper than thoughts alone.

The problem is the heart.

Jeremiah said:

“The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?”
— Jeremiah 17:9 KJV

Now listen carefully.

The Bible does not say the heart is slightly damaged.

It says desperately wicked.

That means fallen man does not naturally move toward God.

We naturally move toward selfishness, pride, lust, fear, bitterness, anger, and rebellion.

That is why even intelligent people can destroy their own lives.

A man can have degrees on the wall and chaos in his soul.

A nation can have technology and still be morally collapsing.

The issue is not merely intelligence.

The issue is spiritual death.

The Heart Controls the Direction of Life

Solomon wrote:

“Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.”
— Proverbs 4:23 KJV

The word “issues” means the springs or sources of life.

In other words, what is in the heart eventually flows outward.

If bitterness is in the heart, bitterness will appear in speech.

If lust is in the heart, lust will appear in conduct.

If anger is in the heart, anger will poison relationships.

But if Christ rules the heart, peace begins to flow outward.

Love begins to flow outward.

Mercy begins to flow outward.

Forgiveness begins to flow outward.

The heart determines the direction of the life.

That is why salvation must begin deeper than behavior.

Religion says:
“Clean up your actions.”

Jesus says:
“Give Me your heart.”

God Promised a New Heart

Ezekiel gave one of the greatest promises in all the Bible:

“A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you.”
— Ezekiel 36:26 KJV

Notice God did not say:
“I will repair the old heart.”

He said:
“I will give you a new heart.”

Salvation is not self-improvement.

It is transformation.

A lost man does not merely need advice.

He needs resurrection.

That is why Jesus told Nicodemus:

“Ye must be born again.”
— John 3:7 KJV

Not educated again.

Not reformed again.

Not entertained again.

Born again.

Illustration — The Old Farm Pump

I remember hearing old-timers talk about hand pumps out on the farm.

Sometimes the water would stop flowing.

You could paint the pump.

Oil the handle.

Polish the metal.

But none of that fixed the problem.

The problem was down inside.

The well had become clogged.

That is humanity.

We polish the outside while the inside is dying.

But when Jesus comes, He cleans the well.

Then living water begins to flow again.

The Mind Follows the Heart

Romans 12:2 says:

“And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind.”
— Romans 12:2 KJV

Notice the order.

God changes the heart, then renews the mind.

The world tries to force transformation from external pressure.

God transforms from internal regeneration.

Before salvation, the mind is darkened by sin.

Fear dominates.

Pride dominates.

Self dominates.

But when Christ enters the heart, the mind begins changing.

Thought patterns change.

Desires change.

Convictions change.

Even emotional responses begin changing.

A man who once loved darkness begins loving truth.

A man who once hated conviction begins seeking holiness.

Why?

Because the heart has been changed.

The Heart and Peace

Modern researchers now speak about how fear, anger, and anxiety create disorder in the body.

The Bible has taught that for centuries.

Isaiah said:

“Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee.”
— Isaiah 26:3 KJV

Did you catch that?

Peace affects the mind.

Faith affects the body.

Fear affects the body.

Bitterness affects the body.

Worry affects the body.

Many people are physically exhausted because spiritually they are carrying burdens they were never meant to carry.

Some people are eaten alive by resentment.

Some by guilt.

Some by fear.

Some by anger.

Their body is living under constant strain.

But salvation brings reconciliation with God.

The warfare inside begins to settle.

The sinner who comes to Christ finds peace not merely emotionally, but spiritually.

Illustration — The Old Mule

An old farmer once had a mule that was wild and nervous all the time.

Every sound startled him.

Every movement frightened him.

The farmer finally said,
“That mule acts like he expects trouble every minute.”

That is how many people live.

Always anxious.

Always fearful.

Always worried.

Always troubled.

But when a soul truly learns to trust Christ, something changes.

The burden lifts.

The fear loosens.

The striving settles down.

The soul finally finds rest.

Jesus said:

“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
— Matthew 11:28 KJV

Salvation Produces Coherence

The world calls it emotional coherence.

The Bible calls it peace with God.

When the heart is surrendered to Christ, life begins aligning properly.

The spirit comes under God’s authority.

The mind begins renewing.

The emotions become steadier.

The conscience becomes cleaner.

The life gains direction.

That does not mean Christians never struggle.

But it means there is now an anchor inside.

Before salvation, everything inside fights against itself.

The flesh wars against conviction.

The conscience wars against sin.

Fear wars against hope.

But Christ brings order to the storm.

The Battle Still Continues

Now let me say this carefully.

Even after salvation, the believer still fights battles.

Paul said:

“For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh.”
— Galatians 5:17 KJV

That old nature still tries to rise up.

That is why we must continually:

  • Pray

  • Read Scripture

  • Worship

  • Fellowship

  • Guard the heart

Whatever controls the heart eventually shapes the mind.

If you fill your heart with bitterness, your mind will become dark.

If you fill your heart with fear, your thoughts will become troubled.

If you fill your heart with Christ, peace begins growing.

Illustration — Tuning the Radio

Years ago, old radios had to be tuned carefully.

If you were slightly off frequency, all you heard was static.

A lot of Christians are living in spiritual static.

Too much world.

Too much noise.

Too much fear.

Too much anger.

Too much distraction.

But when the heart gets tuned back toward God, clarity returns.

Peace returns.

Direction returns.

Joy returns.

A New Creature

Paul declared:

“Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature.”
— 2 Corinthians 5:17 KJV

Not patched up.

Not repaired.

New.

That means salvation changes:

  • What you love

  • What you hate

  • What troubles you

  • What comforts you

  • What brings peace

  • What brings conviction

A changed life is evidence of a changed heart.

The Greatest Heart Surgery

Doctors can replace valves.

They can implant pacemakers.

They can perform bypass surgery.

But only God can remove a heart of stone.

Only God can forgive sin.

Only God can give spiritual life.

Only Christ can calm the storm inside a human soul.

And the wonderful thing is this:

The Lord still changes hearts today.

He changes addicts.

He changes angry men.

He changes bitter women.

He changes fearful souls.

He changes proud sinners.

He changes broken people.

And when the heart changes, the mind begins renewing, and the whole direction of life changes.

Invitation

Maybe somebody listening today feels exhausted inside.

You have tried carrying burdens yourself.

You have tried fixing yourself.

You have tried masking the pain.

But friend, Christ did not come merely to improve your life.

He came to save your soul.

He came to give you a new heart.

He came to bring peace with God.

And the same Jesus who calmed the storm on Galilee can calm the storm inside you.

“Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me.”
— Psalm 51:10 KJV

That prayer still works.

And God still answers it.

Friday, May 22, 2026

“This Is Peanuts”?

 There are some statements that reveal just how far removed leaders can become from the everyday struggles of ordinary people.

When a man living comfortably behind gates, security, wealth, and power tells struggling Americans that rising prices are “peanuts,” it says something about how disconnected Washington has become from Main Street America.

For millions of Americans, these rising costs are not peanuts.

Not to the widow living on Social Security.
Not to the farmer filling diesel tanks.
Not to the truck driver trying to stay on the road.
Not to the young family already stretched to the breaking point.
Not to the elderly couple choosing between medicine and groceries.

A man who earns millions may barely notice another dollar at the gas pump.

But for the working man living paycheck to paycheck, every increase matters.

Gas prices affect everything:

  • food prices,

  • medicine delivery,

  • farm production,

  • trucking,

  • heating,

  • manufacturing,

  • and jobs.

When fuel rises, everything rises.

The people making these decisions often travel in motorcades, fly on government aircraft, and live insulated from the pain their policies create. But ordinary Americans do not live in insulated worlds.

They live in the real world.

The Bible repeatedly warns leaders not to become blind to the burdens carried by the people.

“He shall judge the poor of the people, he shall save the children of the needy…” — Psalm 72:4 (KJV)

A ruler who cannot understand the struggles of common people will eventually make decisions that crush them.

Now let me be clear: concerns about nuclear weapons and world conflict are serious matters. No sane person wants war or the spread of weapons capable of massive destruction. Nations do have legitimate security concerns.

But leadership also requires wisdom, restraint, and compassion.

A president should never speak as though the economic suffering of his own people is insignificant.

Because to a family barely surviving, these struggles are not theoretical debates discussed in television studios or foreign policy meetings.

They are daily realities.

The mother buying less groceries.
The father working overtime.
The retiree praying the air conditioner does not break down.
The farmer wondering if he can afford another season.

Those are not “peanuts.”

There was a time when Americans were told the world could not survive if:

  • Russia had nuclear weapons,

  • China gained nuclear capability,

  • or North Korea entered the nuclear club.

Fear has been the constant language of governments for generations.

Yet today multiple nations possess nuclear weapons, and the world still continues forward under what feels like a permanent state of fear and endless war mentality.

Every generation is told:
“This is the ultimate threat.”
“This is the war we cannot avoid.”
“This is the enemy we must confront at any cost.”

And still the wars continue.

Still the debt grows.
Still the graves fill.
Still ordinary families suffer.

At some point nations must ask themselves whether fear itself has become a tool used to justify never-ending conflict and expanding power.

The Bible warns repeatedly about rulers stirring fear and pride among nations.

“For all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword.” — Matthew 26:52 (KJV)

Human government often believes peace can only come through greater threats, greater weapons, and greater power. Yet history shows that fear rarely produces lasting peace. More often it produces suspicion, division, arms races, and suffering.

Sometimes I think the political class forgets who carries the nation on their backs.

It is not celebrities.
It is not billionaires.
It is not television commentators.

It is ordinary people:

  • workers,

  • truckers,

  • mechanics,

  • nurses,

  • farmers,

  • teachers,

  • small business owners,

  • and elderly Americans who spent decades building this country.

The Bible says:

“Better is the poor that walketh in his integrity, than he that is perverse in his lips, and is a fool.” — Proverbs 19:1 (KJV)

This old country preacher still believes leaders ought to speak carefully when people are hurting.

Because when leaders begin treating the struggles of ordinary citizens as small and insignificant, they reveal something dangerous:

They may no longer truly understand the people they were elected to serve.

Who Matters Most?

 When I first heard the statement that a president could boast about having “99% approval” in another country while attacking one of the few independent voices in his own party, I shook my head and thought:

What about the American people?

Does their approval no longer matter?

Now before someone misunderstands me, let me say plainly: there is nothing wrong with having allies. Nations have always formed alliances for trade, defense, and diplomacy. But there is something deeply troubling when an American leader appears more concerned about praise from foreign interests than the growing concerns of his own struggling citizens.

Working families are hurting.

Food prices are high.
Debt is crushing households.
Young people cannot afford homes.
Farmers are squeezed.
Veterans are forgotten.
Churches are emptying.
Communities are divided.

Yet much of Washington seems consumed with foreign wars, foreign borders, foreign conflicts, and foreign interests while many Americans feel abandoned in their own land.

That frustration is real.

And when leaders mock, insult, or politically destroy those who ask hard questions about foreign policy, many citizens begin to wonder:

Who exactly is being represented?

The Bible warns us what happens when rulers become consumed with pride and power.

“When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice: but when the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn.” — Proverbs 29:2 (KJV)

A godly leader should never fear honest questions. A wise ruler listens even to uncomfortable voices. But foolish leadership surrounds itself with applause and attacks anyone who refuses to bow.

“Fools despise wisdom and instruction.” — Proverbs 1:7 (KJV)

America was never supposed to be built around blind loyalty to one man. Our system was designed with debate, disagreement, and checks on power because the founders understood something Scripture already taught long ago:

All men are flawed.

Even chosen leaders can become fools.

The danger begins when politics turns into personal worship. Some people now defend leaders no matter what they say, what they support, or who they attack. Truth becomes secondary to tribal loyalty.

That is dangerous for any nation.

Our loyalty as Christians must never belong first to politicians, parties, or movements. It belongs to the Lord Jesus Christ.

“Put not your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help.” — Psalm 146:3 (KJV)

A nation declines when leaders crave praise more than truth.

And a people decline when they stop asking questions because they fear being mocked, attacked, or cast out for speaking honestly.

This old country preacher still believes America’s leaders should care more about:

  • the American worker than foreign applause,

  • the American family than political revenge,

  • and the needs of their own people before the ambitions of the world.

Because if the voice of ordinary Americans no longer matters in America, then something precious has already begun slipping away.

When a Leader Becomes a Fool

 There was a time in America when wisdom was valued more than noise.

A man did not have to shout to be heard.
He did not have to insult everybody in the room to prove he was strong.
Character mattered. Humility mattered. Truth mattered.

But somewhere along the road we began confusing confidence with wisdom and power with righteousness.

The Bible has a great deal to say about fools.

Not fools because they lacked education.
Not fools because they were poor.
Not fools because they lacked talent or ability.

The fool in Scripture is often a man of influence.

He may be wealthy.
He may be applauded.
He may sit in high places and command great crowds.

Yet God still calls him a fool.

“The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.” — Psalm 14:1 (KJV)

The fool lives as though he answers to no one but himself. Pride becomes his counselor and anger becomes his companion.

“He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool…” — Proverbs 28:26 (KJV)

One of the marks of a fool is that he cannot receive correction.

“Fools despise wisdom and instruction.” — Proverbs 1:7 (KJV)

Tell a wise man the truth and he will stop and examine himself. Tell a fool the truth and he will attack you for saying it.

A fool must always be right.

He cannot endure disagreement.
He surrounds himself with those who praise him and casts aside those who challenge him. He mistakes stubbornness for strength and loudness for leadership.

The Bible warns us about the tongue of a fool.

“A fool's mouth is his destruction, and his lips are the snare of his soul.” — Proverbs 18:7 (KJV)

“A fool uttereth all his mind: but a wise man keepeth it in till afterwards.” — Proverbs 29:11 (KJV)

How much trouble in this world has started because men in power could not control their words?

How many wars have been fueled by pride?
How many families destroyed by anger?
How many churches divided because somebody had to win an argument instead of seeking peace?

Now let me say something that many people do not want to hear today:

Just because a man or woman is a chosen leader does not mean they are wise.

A president can be a fool.
A senator can be a fool.
A preacher can be a fool.
A church member can be a fool.

Being elected by people does not mean approved by God.

Israel once demanded a king and received Saul. The people shouted while heaven grieved. Leadership chosen by crowds is not always leadership guided by wisdom.

Some folks treat political leaders almost like messiahs now. They defend everything said, everything done, every insult, every outburst, every act of pride. But the child of God must remember this:

Our loyalty belongs first to Christ, not to political parties or personalities.

“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom…” — Proverbs 9:10 (KJV)

That is where wisdom starts.

Not in Washington.
Not in television studios.
Not on social media.
Not in applause from crowds.

Wisdom begins when a man bows his knee before God and realizes he is not the center of the universe.

The wise man listens.
The fool rages.

The wise man seeks peace.
The fool stirs division.

The wise man receives correction.
The fool despises it.

The wise man controls his tongue.
The fool is controlled by his tongue.

One of the saddest verses in all the Bible says:

“As a dog returneth to his vomit, so a fool returneth to his folly.” — Proverbs 26:11 (KJV)

Without humility and repentance, a fool keeps repeating the same destruction over and over again.

America does not simply need stronger leaders.
America needs wiser leaders.

And wisdom will never come until men once again fear God more than they fear losing elections, followers, influence, or power.

This old country preacher has lived long enough to know something:

A nation can survive weak leaders for a while.
But no nation survives proud and foolish leadership forever.