Almost every morning I pray for America with what I call the four Rs. All Christians regardless of what they believe about “end times,” want America rescued from its wicked Marxist enemies, and the only way that happens is with God, specifically God in the person of Jesus Christ. That means God must pour out his Holy Spirit on our land, and therefore I pray for revival, but that is just the beginning of what needs to happen. That must be followed with renewal, restoration, and ultimately Reformation. The church and the Christians who inhabit it are the tip of the spear for the re-conquest of Christian Western civilization from the pagans, but what needs to happen goes far beyond the four walls of a church.

This prayer is why the picture of Washington at Valley Forge is so profound to me. I didn’t realize it would be so important when my wife and daughter got it for me on my birthday in the momentous Covid year of 2020, the year in God’s providential mercy that woke up the world. Since then, and the writing of my book, Going Back to Find the Way Forward, I’ve come to see a connection between the founding of America, and the current need to refound it. In this context, I came to realize our job is far easier than it was for those who fought the mighty British Empire to forge a country out of 13 separate colonies.

Those who are given to doom and gloom, we’ll call them doomers, don’t seem to realize how immense the odds were against America ever coming into existence. Very few people in the 1770s thought the Americans had any chance to defeat the British. Most thought it was some kind of joke, and the rebellion would be quickly crushed. After the Colonies declared independence on July 4, the rest of 1776 looked like those predictions would prove true. But Patriots fought and prayed, and prayed and fought, believing in the rightness of their cause before Almighty God. I would suggest the odds against the founders of America were far worse than the odds of us refounding America in the 21st century, and that is what I think and pray every time I look at this picture.

One morning when I was praying I realized that to accomplish this we want and need more Christians, and a Great Awakening type of revival, but there are plenty of Christians in America already. What is needed is for these Christians to be activated to their true calling as world changers and culture transformers. Unfortunately, it’s far easier to complain and do nothing, to be a doomer. Not only that, but most Christians’ faith is a form of Pietism, a type of faith that is focused primarily on going to heaven when we die and personal holiness. Christianity is a whole lot more, and we need to wake up these Christians, to activate them to their Christian responsibilities to their families, their communities, their counties, their states, and their country. And this means teaching them to take their Christian worldview seriously as applying to ever area of life, and proclaiming Christ as sovereign Lord over all of reality.

What Does the Great Commission Mean?
What I’m describing is the context of the Great Commission given by Jesus to the 11 Apostles in Matthew 28:

18 Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

Most Evangelical Christians see this as primarily relevant, often only relevant, to individuals, but Jesus clearly says nations and not individuals, the Greek making that abundantly clear. Yes, nations are made up of individual people, and those people need to be discipled, but Jesus used the word ethnos, a race, people, nation, for a reason. We need to decide why, and if it has implications for how we disciple the people who make up a nation. I am convinced it has profound implications.

First, let’s look again at Jesus’ charge in the Great Commission. There is a reason Jesus said he was given “all authority in heaven and on earth,” and few Christians appear to ask what that reason might be. Again, most Christians think this is for “spiritual” reasons of our personal salvation from sin and holiness, justification and sanctification. Jesus’ authority applies to this and nothing else, so this means it applies only to the church and those within it. Because of this perspective, one we imbibe unconsciously from Christian culture, Christians think the Lord’s Prayer, God’s kingdom coming and will being done on earth as it is in heaven, is only applicable to the church. The rest of the earth and those who don’t come into the church, are going to hell in handbasket, which it appears to them has been the plan all along. I beg to differ.

One reason comes from the Apostle Paul who gives us more context in Ephesians 1 about the extent of “all” and from whence Jesus exercises it. Jesus, he says, was raised to the right hand of God in a position “far above all rule and authority, power and dominion, and every name that is invoked,” both in this life and the one to come. This power raising him to the ultimate position of authority in the heavens and earth is that same power that conquered death when he raised Jesus from the dead. That is ultimate power because death is the ultimate enemy of man. And you, I, and every other human being who has ever lived knows it. Death is the biggest bully in the school, and he’s been picking on everyone in the school our entire lives. Now we know because Jesus of Nazareth came back from the dead, the bully is ultimately powerless over us, even if he roughs us up a bit in our journey to the resurrection.

If we go back to Matthew 28, there is also a reason Jesus said immediately after his declaration of all authority, therefore go. The authority, his authority, means he calls the shots, he’s the ruler, the King of kings and Lord of lords. Nothing happens outside of his express will, whether that is allowed or caused to happen, we have no idea, and it is fruitless to speculate. We only know all history is redemptive history, and moves inevitably toward his teleological end, meaning his ultimate purposes in a redeemed and restored heavens and earth. The process started when both John the Baptist and Jesus declared in the exact same words, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near” (Matt. 3 and Mark 1). Pentecost was when Jesus began to implement his mission on earth. We read in Psalm 2 via Acts 4 that his mission was specifically to the nations just as God had declared to Abraham and the Patriarchs 2000 years before.

What does this mean, then? It means the implications, the consequences of the Gospel and God’s law are for the entirety of creation, and that means everything nations do. It applies to entire cultures just as a painters’ paint encompasses the entire canvas, every pixel is imbued with the color of God’s salvation from sin. That means we as his body, his emissaries, his bride, push back against the curse, we overcome it by the truth, God’s law, and the fruit of the spirt. In fact, as Paul says in that passage in Galatians 5, against such fruit there is no law. In other words, that law can’t condemn and provoke those who live out the obedience to the law, which is to love the Lord with all our heart, soul, and minds, and our neighbors as ourselves. Love is the fulfillment of the law, and is transformational wherever it goes. And this is how nations are discipled, teaching Christians to love and serve in every single thing they do.

Discipleship in 21st Century Secular Pagan America
I had never thought along these lines until I went to my first post-millennial conference in March 2023. I heard a speaker say something like we need to disciple Christian lawyers, and Christian academics, and Christian architects, etc. The point isn’t to be a more moral and honest lawyer, academic, or architect, but for Christians to understand how their Christian faith impacts how they understand and practice law, or how Christianity informs their academic pursuits, or what it means to design and build things as Christians. This applies to worldview professions, or those that are a direct influence on the worldview of the culture, but it also applies to those who work with their hands; they influence the culture in more indirect but no less important ways. We often think creating or building a Christian counter culture coming primarily out of Hollywood, but that is only one slice of the cultural pie, albeit a critically important one.

Culture is a strange and amorphous thing, more like trying to hold water in your hands or nailing Jello to the wall than catching a ball. At its most basic level, culture is whatever human beings create, meaning culture is an amorphous set of influences. Christian sociologist James Davison Hunter in his book, To Change the World, states that, “culture is a system of truth claims and moral obligations,” and that, “culture is about how societies define reality—what is good, bad, right, wrong, real, unreal, important, unimportant, and so on.” Culture affirms certain values and propositions, while it denies others, it embraces certain beliefs, while it eschews others; culture is never neutral. Our modern concept of culture derives from a term first used in classical antiquity by the Roman orator, Cicero: “cultura animi.” In Latin, cultura literally means cultivation. We could say culture cultivates.

This seems obvious, but most people don’t realize that culture shapes not only what they believe, or what they like, or how they behave, but literally shapes who they are. Most people also don’t understand, including Christians, that everything we do shapes culture as well. It is a two-way process of shaping and being shaped. Even if we are not aware of it, it is happening in and around us. This is why Christians need to think in a discerning way about the culture we inhabit, to not be merely reactive but rather proactive. Culture is something we cannot take for granted or escape, so we must take into account its effects both on us and us on it.

This means in everything we do we represent the King of Glory, the Lord Jesus Christ and everything he stands for, both law and gospel, the truth about the nature of things, his creational order. It is only through obedience that there can be righteousness, and only in right living, i.e., love, will true flourishing be able to happen, in Hebrew shalom, peace as well as prosperity. Many Christians don’t like to hear this because there are a lot of places in the world where there is very little peace and prosperity. We give monthly to Voice of the Martyrs, and I read their magazine every month, so I’m well aware many Christians in the world are living and dying as martyrs, but that doesn’t change the biblical facts. If we want peace and prosperity, if we want God to bless our efforts, that will only happen through prayer and obedience. As I often say, work like it depends on you, pray because it depends on God.

This applies to everything we do in our families as husbands and wives and parents, building the God glorifying home being the foundation of civilizational blessing, or in some cases survival. It applies in our occupations whatever those are. With an attitude of a servant’s heart, we are advancing God’s kingdom and spreading the fragrance of Christ in the culture, and more importantly transforming it from a cursed, weed infested, overgrown garden, to one bountiful and beautiful that can sustain and bless people, as was God’s plan from the very beginning, to spread His blessings on earth.

Why We Should Have Hope: There Are a Lot of Christians!
As we know, American and Western culture are in dire shape. Wokeness infects everything like a black plague spiritually wiping out millions upon millions, spiritual bodies metaphorically dropping in the streets all around us: bring out your dead! But this can change. This will change. The question is, do you believe that, and do you want to be part of making that happen. If not, you are part of the problem. That’s called tough love, speaking truth to spiritual and cultural apathy. There is no opting out in this war, no floating downstream on this one. Any old dead fish can do that.

If we’ve decided to go against the rushing current, then we must figure out how we do our part, whatever that might be. We are all called to be world changers in whatever sphere God has called us to, big or small or in between. Whatever we do, we do specifically as Christians, and how as Christians that determines how we do it, even if that is just serving others with a great attitude and a smile, going the extra mile. I also suggest that everyone you interact with on whatever level knows in some way that you are a Christian, and that means they will also in some way know being a Christian makes a difference in who you are and what you do.

Given that there are a huge number of conservative Christians in America, our influence should be massive. The reason it isn’t is the above mentioned Pietism, a disaster for Christian culture and society, as is obvious to all. But instead of going down the doomer drain in rebellion against God (pessimism and cynicism is a sin reflecting a lack of trust in God’s goodness, love, and power), we can begin to set the example for other Christians in our lives and words that we are servants of the King. Does Paul sound like a doomer?

14 But thanks be to God, who in Christ always leads us in triumphal procession, and through us spreads the fragrance of the knowledge of him everywhere. 15 For we are the aroma of Christ to God among those who are being saved and among those who are perishing, 16 to one a fragrance from death to death, to the other a fragrance from life to life.

This sounds like Paul very much expected victory, both in this life, and in the life to come.

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