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							We’re finishing our summer sermon 
							series in Galatians this month and I have really 
							enjoyed preaching this book. It has challenged me to 
							see freedom differently. Through most of this 
							letter, Paul is turning us away from a religion of 
							works to simple acceptance of our freedom in the 
							work of Jesus. As Paul says, “It is for freedom that 
							Christ has set us free” (Galatians 5:1). Jesus also 
							said, “If the son sets you free, you shall be free 
							indeed” (John 8:36). It would appear, Jesus is a 
							freedom lover too. But something has happened to 
							what freedom now means in our country.
 For over 200 years, we have celebrated our 
							independence—our right to do as we please in 
							governing our own lives as a nation (within reason 
							and law). What a wonderful country we live in, 
							despite all its faults and failures. What wonderful 
							freedoms are offered to us as citizens of the USA. 
							The rest of the world hungers for what we have. One 
							of those freedoms is what the Bill of Rights calls 
							“freedom of religion.” We can believe and worship
 God without punishment or threat.
 
 
 Many thousands of Christians around the world die 
							for that right every year. Yet in America—a country 
							established for that very right—many will not give 
							God the time of day. Now millions would prefer to 
							celebrate freedom FROM religion instead of the 
							freedom OF religion. God is no longer welcomed 
							anywhere except in a church building. It is not 
							Hinduism, Islam, philosophies of reincarnation, or 
							New Age they want out. Primarily
 they just want free from God and Jesus Christ.
 
 
 Today, much of society ridicules and mocks those who 
							are serious about their faith. America’s only 
							respectable form of bigotry is bigotry against 
							Christianity. And the only reason for hatred of 
							religion is that it forces us to confront matters 
							many would prefer to ignore. Sin! To a great extent 
							our society has gotten what it wanted—a society 
							without God. But what good has it done? Are we a 
							better country for it? We all know the answer to 
							that. NO! Pain, crime, and atrocities of all kinds 
							are all up! Division in every area of American life 
							is off the charts. Few people believe we’re better.
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							In the 1940s, teachers identified the 
							top problems in America’s schools as: talking out of 
							turn, chewing gum, making noise and running in the 
							hall. Today, teachers listed drugs, alcohol, 
							pregnancy, suicide, rape, assault, weapons, and fear 
							of mass shootings.
 
 I think what bothers me more than anything is that 
							people are losing their capacity to be shocked, 
							disgusted, and repulsed. As God said, “Are they 
							ashamed of their detestable conduct? No, they have 
							no shame at all; they do not even know how to blush. 
							So they will fall among the fallen; they will be 
							brought down when I punish them, says the LORD” 
							(Jeremiah 6:15).
 
 
 What is the answer? We must speak the truths of God 
							without apology and without being ashamed. After 
							all, if we have employment and greater economic 
							growth; if we have cities of gold and alabaster, but 
							our children have not learned to walk in goodness, 
							justice and mercy, then the American experiment, no 
							matter how gilded, will have failed.
 
 
 The Lord also said, "If my people which are called 
							by my name will humble themselves, and pray and seek 
							my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I 
							will hear from Heaven, and will forgive their sin 
							and heal their land" (2 Chronicles 7:14).
 
 
 Can America be turned around? If America wants to, 
							then yes. But first, Christians need to take a stand 
							for God to show the country the “good” it is 
							missing. Often it is the Christian who remains 
							silent. Thank goodness our forefathers didn’t choose 
							the same.
 
 Ron Otto, preaching minster at Lincoln Christian 
							Church
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