It’s Not About Gun Law, Stupid, It’s About Moral Law

  1. Share
16 8

It’s hard to stop looking at the photo: a dad and his daughter. She was gunned down while in school in Nashville this week. Nine years old. A horrible tragedy that I can’t get out of my mind. Not only because of what the parents are going through, but the stupidity of our culture.

I know that it is bad form today to use the word stupid. The Bible doesn’t shy from this:

Pay heed, you senseless among the people; And when will you understand, stupid ones? Psalm 94:8 NASB

Other translations use the word ‘fool’. This word, too, would today cause horrified, self-righteous gasps. In a world of “homo deus”, where we are commanded to affirm one another, it is offensive to speak of stupidity and foolishness.

But if we do not stop being stupid and foolish, then we will soon find our path leads only to destruction… to weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth.

No one, and I mean not one of the media articles about this murderous rampage in Nashville, nor any of the others in recent memory, talk about the lack of moral values in the perpetrators or in our culture.

One side of the aisle, as the President did, immediately presume the problem stems from inadequate gun laws. The other side immediately presumes inadequate security at the schools and inadequate prosecution of criminals. No one presumes an inadequate teaching of absolute moral laws. Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers today implored the confiscation of guns rather than suggesting that maybe teachers should return to teaching that we are accountable to a Creator who has given us absolute moral laws about the sanctity of life.

How does God see this?

Do you think God is thinking we need better gun laws? Do you think He is thinking that we need more security?

No, God is looking at the moral decay in our culture. He is looking at the sinful heart of man.

The most awkward element of this for the media has been whether to call the shooter a “she” or “he”. Many media outlets are apologizing because they initially went with the police report that this was a woman (which is what they found) and are now horrified that they used the wrong gender identity and committed a misgender offense.

Three nine-year olds died. Three adults died. And we are worried about offending social conventions because of this woman’s gender identity?

Are we so foolish? Are we so stupid?

In Dostoyevsky’s famous quote: “Without God, all things are permissible.

It goes without saying that our culture is now one that is “without God”. It is bad form to appeal to Him anywhere in the public square, the classroom or the courtroom. It is impermissible to speak of Him in the House or the Senate or from the Executive Throne. He will not be mentioned on the newscast or the late night talk show. You cannot appeal to Him or His moral laws before the school board or the Supreme Court. We have essentially removed our Creator from our cultural discourse.

Therefore, all is permissible… within the new social guidelines.

Today’s social guidelines provide us with the new moral code, which begins with the “homo deus” rule that the individual heart is divine. If the homo divine heart speaks of its new gender and pronouns, the world must bow down and genuflect. It is unassailable. The murderer in Nashville declared she was a man with male pronouns so the media must affirm her, though she is dead, or be guilty of blasphemy. And the new blasphemy laws will get you verbally tarred and feathered, until you repent and conform and affirm, or you will be shunned and cancelled.

We have entered a new form of tyranny.

A tyranny where speaking of “absolute moral law” or “sin” is no longer permissible. Because to do so concedes the Transcendent whom we have previously summarily dispatched. To do so would bring our minds to the horrible foolishness and stupidity of our pathway and the hopelessness that lies before us. For there is no solution to the wickedness of the human heart other than a divine solution. There is nothing in our future, no matter which current side gains the political power to enact more foolish policies, that will stem the tsunami which is heading our way.

Stupidity never ends well.

There will be more children die. From gunshots to suicides. There will be fewer people who want to work. There will be fewer people who care about America at all. There will be fewer people who want to get married. There will be fewer people who will want to have children. There will be fewer people who will want to serve you coffee or meals or deliver your goods or police your community or your home or your business. There will be fewer people who will care about the elderly or the sick. There will be fewer who will want to defend this nation, with or without a uniform. There will be fewer people who will care if you live or die, even if you are nine years old.

Selfishness will reign supreme… until the chaos germinates a true tyrant who will rule with an iron fist.

This is the road before us… unless we repent and return to Him.

Dear Remnant, the Lord has given us the direction to see this happen. Your family needs to begin to build deep relationships with your neighbors, praying diligently for them, in the “hope that God will grant them repentance and lead them to a knowledge of the truth, and they will come to their sense and escape from the trap of the devil who has taken them captive to do his will.” 2 Timothy 2:24-26

Please be in prayer for the Scruggs and the other families that are in unimaginable grief today. And, join together, Tuesdays, noon Eastern, to ask God to grant us repentance.

Community tags

This content has 0 tags that match your profile.

Comments

To view comments or leave a comment, login or sign up.

Related Content

24
When Infants Invade Adult Bodies
On Election Day, at lunchtime, I was at a park in Colorado Springs. On one corner of the park sits one of our big high schools. It was a nice day (normal for the Springs) and the students filled the park, several making out lying on the grass. On the opposite corner stood a young man, conservatively dressed, holding an American flag and a Trump sign. He had a radio on the ground, not very loud, but playing a conservative talk show. I sat at a bench near the young man because I was curious about what I saw happening. As the students walked by, they shouted obscenities at him and Trump. I am not willing to repeat any of it, suffice to say it was as filthy and vile as you can get. Some spit toward him. As it was getting close to the end of their lunch hour, a group gathered in front of him and pummeled him with profanity and obscene gestures. One girl was screaming at him. I suppose even worse was that after they would shout their obscenities, they would then howl in laughter pointing at him as if he were a joke. Of course, in the world of child-like behavior, this is considered the cruelest of all taunts… to make another seem like a worthless outcast… insignificant scum. Although I couldn’t hear what the young man was saying, he remained calm and would sometimes turn and wave at cars that would supportively “beep-beep” as they drove by. As I write this, I’m not sure if I was right or wrong to not jump into the middle of it. I was committed to offer help if it looked like it was going to escalate beyond words, but for now it was free-speech being played out, though admittedly disgusting. After the lunch crowd had returned to their classrooms, I approached the young man and our conversation went something like this: “Students were pretty rough on you.” “Yeah. A lot of nasty stuff.” “I’m impressed you remained calm through all of it.” “Well, I kept telling them that obscenities didn’t add to the conversation and just encouraged any of them to simply enter into a civil discussion with me.” “I’m sorry they didn’t do that.” “Me too. I really wish we could just talk about the issues like adults.” I think it was the “adult” word that helped frame some of this for me. I had, indeed, witnessed deep immaturity, with its pure emotional spewing and little to no rational thought. I don’t go to the park all the time, but I’m there enough to occasionally hear their conversations. I remember one of the first times, next to a group of high school girls, in which I was dumbfounded at the filth of their language. I spent over 20 years in the military, and I’d never heard anything that matched it. Where does this come from? My heart sank as I experienced what was happening Tuesday. It was quite scary, actually, because I was not only looking at such deep expressions of hate and loathing, but I was also looking at the generation that is going to replace us all. It didn’t look good. We woke this morning to the continued news that there are protests all around the country. Some have become violent and destructive. Interestingly, the chants of the protestors are much like those I heard in the park… quite childish, selfish and filled with hatred. Where is all of this coming from? In the park, my first thoughts were to put the blame on the high school that was right on the corner, thinking that this was coming from their classrooms. But then something dawned on me after reading the list of “tweets” that went out from Hollywood and TV and music “stars”. They were all saying the same things, in “star” lingo, of course, but just as childish. This is Cher’s mature tweet on the election: “Trump will never be more than a toilet…” Andy Cohen (along with all the other late-night talk show hosts): “Did we just elect a snake oil salesman and his wicked court of terror…?” Snoop Dogg: “The worst day in America: 9/11. The second worst day: 11/9.” Really? Worse than the Civil War? Worse than the trail of tears? Worse that Kennedy’s assassination… or Pearl Harbor or the stock market crash in 1929? This is the mindless mantra of our “entertainment” empire. And it is here we find the prime tutor of our children. The average teen consumes 9 hours a day of entertainment on their smartphone or TV. You may want to reread that or say it over to yourself: 9 hours per day of smartphone/TV entertainment. This domain of music, rap, video, shows, comedy, movies and gaming is cultivating a mind that is filled with sex, violence, obscene language and destructive ideas. It numbs them towards a true reality. It strips them of common sense. It erects in their heart, mind and soul a virtual world of all-about-me and my pleasure. And if things don’t go my way, I throw my tantrums. I call people names. I stomp my feet and chant emotional non-sense. And I demand. Like the 3-year-old girl I saw the other day stomping her feet, screaming at her mother, demanding her own way. For 9 hours a day, our youth live in a non-real world where lyrics and scripts and rap words rhythmically and cinematically draw them into believing that the virtual world of the entertainment empire is the world we all ought to live in… the world we WANT to live in. It seduces. It hypnotizes. It frames a worldview that is totally self-centered and hedonistic. And it is totally irrational. It spews out the most hateful and vile stuff. It beats up people, destroys property, flips off the world and then smugly chants “love trumps hate”. It is the la-la land of infants demanding to get their own way in their self-defined, virtual world. The problem is that the infants are increasingly in adult bodies with lots of power. Our addiction to entertainment will continue to stunt our culture's maturity. We must wean ourselves and our kids. Here is what troubles me most, however. Immaturity, when it doesn’t get its way, will often erupt into a “make you pay” rage. I sense that is what we are seeing. But I fear it is only the beginning. We are going to be treated to a host of "See what you made me do!" and "This is all your fault!" and "You'll be sorry!" acts and situations and new stories and personal stories, ad infinitim. Brace yourselves, for the revenge of self-centered infants who live in adult bodies and carry great wealth and power can, and will be, be scary.   
10
If Jesus Rose from the Dead, then... (#0)
The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the most important event in history. It is the most important truth claim in a biblical worldview. It is the key apologetic for Christianity. Over the next seven weeks, I would like for us to think through forty compelling arguments and implications that are true if Jesus, indeed, “rose from the dead”. This will take us through Ascension Day and Pentecost. Both are important days of remembrance following the Resurrection and we will highlight them. But more importantly, I want for us to see the tremendous significance of the Resurrection by looking at not only the many proofs, but also the many implications. And this, I pray, will lead to deep contemplations in our hearts and minds. Paul states that without the resurrection, our faith would be in vain and we would still be lost.  “… if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins.”      1 Corinthians 15:17 This is not a minor statement, and it should cause us pause, for it puts this unique historical event into sharp perspective. Without the Resurrection, we are hopelessly lost. We are without a true faith and we are unforgiven, still condemned in our sins. We should probably read that verse over several times before plowing forward. It is easy for me, and possibly you, to treat Easter as another Christian holiday marked by multiple, and possibly extensive, preparations. Church choirs rehearse diligently and on overtime, special services are prepared (think Good Friday and sometimes Sunrise Services), thousands of lilies are tended and provoked to bloom at the right time and are purchased to line sanctuary rails, special meals are planned and prepared and joyously consumed, treasure hunts are created, painted eggs are hidden and Easter baskets are filled with chocolate bunnies, peeps, and who knows what else the market has, and will, come up with.  The point here is that just like Christmas and Thanksgiving and every other holiday, including birthdays, anniversaries, and the multitude of “take-your-boss-to-lunch” kind of days, they are preceded with much preparation, happy execution, and then forgotten except to toss the wrappings into the trash and press on with life as usual. When I was at the White House, the annual “Easter Egg Roll” on the south lawn was a big deal with weeks of preparation, followed immediately by a massive clean-up and the Secret Service hustling folks out of the “compound”. For the Resurrection, however, Paul implies that it is something so critical to our faith that it should be an ever-present reality. The astounding cry, “He lives!” should be ongoing, not a one-and-done holiday. I believe it is important for us to frequently ponder and meditate upon the deep implications that the tomb was really, truly empty and the resurrection of Jesus from the dead is absolutely true… a historical fact that has everyday implications. So, we will look at not only these implications, but also the apologetic propositions and the incredible truths that logically follow this unmatched historical assertion. We will not go through these in any particular order. We are not going from the least to the greatest or vice versa, although we will generally lay down the apologetic arguments first and then deal with the implications. And hopefully, after seven weeks, we will have imprinted these truths deep in our hearts such that they will help us with our walk into the darkness we call future. Because it is the Resurrection of Christ that stands at the forefront in the apologetic reality of who Jesus is and what God has done for us. As a famous hymn states: "Because He lives, I can face tomorrow." [Next: The Seal Was Broken]