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Redeeming 9-11: Devotional and Prayer Guide

Redeeming 9-11: Building God's Kingdom Today by Dr. Jim Denison

Why did God allow the worst terrorist attack in American history? God redeems all he permits. As we near the tenth anniversary of 9/11, how would the King of the universe redeem this tragedy? What is God saying to our people? To our churches? To you?

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Radical Islam: What You Need to Know


Radical Islam: What You Need to Know by Dr. Jim Denison

Why do radical Muslims hate us? How will the death of bin Laden affect this global conflict? What will it take to win the longest war in America’s history?

Jim Denison explains the mind and motives of radical Islam, telling you what you need to know about the greatest threat our nation has ever faced.

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President Obama delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill, January 24, 2012 (Credit: Reuters/Saul Loeb/Pool)I write a column each week for The Dallas Morning News as part of their "Texas Faith" panel.  This recent question especially intrigued me.

Our editor states, "President Obama made the case for the common good, as he saw it, in his State of the Union address. Jackie Calmes of the New York Times summarized his theme this way: 'Government and citizens are responsible together for the common good, even as they celebrate individualism and free markets.'  Of course, you might say.  Shared responsibilities and creating room for the individual to flourish are major elements of our national creed.

"But how do we build a common good today?  We hear plenty about how political bodies can shape it, but I’d especially like to hear what other institutions could play a role.  And how they could shape the common good, or perhaps are shaping it."

Here's my response.

Woodrow Wilson was one of the our most religious presidents.  The son of a Presbyterian minister, his faith motivated all he did.  Yet he claimed that "there is no higher religion than human service.  To work for the common good is the greatest creed."

Jesus agreed: "A new command I give you: Love one another.  As I have loved you, so you must love one another.  By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another" (John 13:34-35).

How did he love us?  Sacrificially (1 John 3:16) and unconditionally (Romans 8:35-39).  Imagine a society in which we imitated his altruistic commitment to each other.  The Founders did: our Constitution exists to "form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, and promote the general Welfare."  The government it formed can and must work to fulfill this vision.

What other institutions can help promote this common good?

Our schools should teach and reinforce the ethic of public service that motivated the founding of our republic.  Service organizations, many in numeric decline today, should find ways to engage a new generation.  But communities of faith have an especially crucial role to play.

Judaism (Micah 6:8), Christianity (Matthew 25:40) and Islam (Qur'an 3:110) challenge their adherents to public service.  Mormonism (Mosiah 2:17), Hinduism (Bhagavad Gita 3:10-26) and Buddhism (Bodhicharyavatara 8:126-128) agree.  Unfortunately, it is tempting for religious leaders to focus more on building our organizations than on serving our community.  All the while, a skeptical public wonders how our beliefs are relevant to their lives.

Ken Medema, the Christian singer and composer, once wrote a line that challenges me every time I hear it: "Don't tell me I have a friend in Jesus until you show me I have a friend in you."

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Comments  

 
+3 # Valarie 2012-02-18 08:41
Jim,
I agree wholeheartedly with you. I would take it one giant step further and comment that one of the inherent problems with our government is the "career politician". Our political leaders should remember that they are public servants. They should come from mainstream America, stepping up to serve our country as their sacrifice to the common good, and NOT as a career, for personal power and/or gain. Our polical leaders receive HUGE salaries, HUGE lifelong pensions regardless of the time spent in office(in a system all their own, not our Social Security system), , and have "special" health care provisions.
If our government wants to really help the common good, then I challenge them to serve as volunteers....share in our social security system and health care system....serve for a limited time and bow out and let the next man serve. Can you imagine the impact on our deficit if the politicians declined taking a salary for their services? OR even pared it down to the average American's salary? I guarantee that alot of our system's ills would be addressed quicker, with greater results if the politicians had to actually LIVE IN OUR WORLD!
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0 # DanaDee 2012-02-18 10:03
Jim--your column today confuses me, or perhaps it stops short--I don't know. It gives the impression that it's okay for governments to do all that they purport to do in the name of the "common good." Nothing could be further from the truth. My understanding of the Bible is that it focuses on the individual. God calls the individual to have a relationship with Him through Christ, and it is individuals who can work together for the common good--not government. In the name of working for the "common good," our government is robbing us of our individual liberties bit by bit--so that our own individual abilities to work for the common good are being severly dimished. I could give you countless examples, but that would require more space than I am allowed. There are few things that government does well, and it is to those things that government should limit its business. That is constitutional, and I believe that a conservative constitutional law scholar who understands the intent of the founders and who agrees with the principles behind the drafting of the Constitution would tell you the same. Woodrow Wilson was the beginning of the "progressive" movement in which government would ultimately take over the responsibility of individuals working for the common good (primarily through the individuals' churches in which they served). As for teaching children "service," well . . . having a school-age child, all I can say is--try finding a school in which the emphasis on service is not as equally important as the academics, and in some, more important. They abound! No doubt, schools should be a place in which character is taught, but we are a nation falling behind in the academics, too. Being all that God wants his children to be in knowledge, spirit and wisdom is required of individuals in order that they may work for the common good.
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