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A Leader Anointed of God?

1-16-17

Four years ago this week my wife lay dying. She had been sick for a long time – all her life, really – but in recent years the diabetes and heart attacks and strokes and cancers and heart and kidney transplants and amputations and much else, had taken their toll. She suffered a hemorrhage, lost most of her blood before transfusion, and was in a coma for a week. Our children flew in from far and wide – half an hour away; from across the continent; from Ireland.

It was on Monday, January 21. In the hallways of the hospital, and from other rooms, we could hear the TVs turned to news: Inauguration Day. It was pushed back from January 20, as the Constitution respects Sundays. We stood around Nancy’s bed, with monitors blinking, and we faintly could hear the pomp and circumstance, the music and announcers, from the Capitol steps, echoing in shiny hospital hallways.

At the moment, the very moment, that Obama took the oath of office, Nancy died. The monitor flat-lined. The first of us to break the silence was my son Ted: “Mom always said that if Obama actually became president a second time, she’d just die.”

Families have different ways of coping. Seeped in humor and politics for years, we evidently found ours. Lest we be thought cold, my daughter Emily will tell people that we had grieved for Nancy in many ways for many previous years.

“My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways My ways,” says the Lord
(Isaiah 55:8-9). Thank God.

This anniversary of sorts has me thinking of the upcoming inauguration, also. Meditating upon God’s ways, I thought about that famous unpredictable, larger-than-life character; intemperate and over the top in uncountable ways; notable for prowess and strong actions, but also for womanizing and crazy hair. Well known to history. An unlikely person to be chosen by God to lead and perhaps redeem His people.

Donald Trump?

No, actually I was thinking of Samson.

We can find parallels, antecedents, and foreshadows wherever we look, if we look hard enough; affinities as well as exceptions to rules that tempt us to draw lessons. So I will only go so far. I mean, Samson was flawed, yet ultimately obeyed the commands of righteousness. He tore down the temple; yet to reform the system he deigned to destroy its artifice.

With Trump a new era begins – and I think this is, for once, not a quadrennial cliché. At the beginning of the campaign I opposed him, wrote against him, saying that I would not want to vote for someone whom I would not want as a neighbor. I still am not reconciled to his coarseness… but I have learned to discern between scatology and straight talk. The vocabulary of hard truths and agenda of bold solutions.

As the campaign progressed, he defined his message and platform, even to enumerating specific grievances and remedies, while his opponents in the primaries and general election actually grew less explicit about their own views. Week by week, citizens in living rooms and kitchens, churches and taverns, offices and factories, started to think that things they had complained about last week – and even since the ‘60s – were finally being articulated. And by someone who they seemed to trust would not forget them, as politicians always do.

The silent revolt of the Silent Majority is thus explained. No mystery. People with grievances; evangelicals; disillusioned working people; long-suffering victims of stagnation and rising crime rates and economic insecurity and public corruption… did not stay home this year. No mystery. People who had become too cynical to vote for president, for years, trekked to the voting booths. I know. I was one of them.

But, now what? Who knows? A man as unpredictable as Donald Trump might wind up disappointing his legions. But I don’t think so. More likely, he will disappoint nervous Republican politicians who are hoping he will revert to form in Washington DC – to be the same old, do the same old.

But the entrenched interests – those within his own party; and those who thirst for his blood, even before the inauguration, from the Disloyal Opposition – sense their possible doom, and they will fight like wounded rats. Return to this essay in a year, in four years, in a decade, if the nation and the world last that long. Let’s see: I say that myriad things will never be the same. We are at a turning point.

Civility; good will; public discourse; genuine bipartisanship; legislative compromise; political traditions… all are now virtually extinct. Those geniis will never return to those bottles. And if your first mental response to this was, “Yes, but remember what so-and-so did…” inserting the name of your favorite enemy, you have proven my point.

Samson tore down the temple, a necessary act of obedience. Daniel calmed vicious lions. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego endured the fiery furnace. David was a horrid and lustful sinner who yet was anointed of God for great works. Review the heroes of faith and history, and pray that President Trump may be found not wanting.

Get ready for a ride. Whether Donald Trump is a committed Christian I know not. But he can receive, as any of us can, and act upon, God’s call. Buckle up your prayer sandals: the new president will need our prayers, as does the nation, as do we all, every one of us.

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Click: Battle Hymn Of the Republic

Category: Government, Patriotism, Politics

Tagged: , , , , , ,

8 Responses

  1. Jerry Livasy says:

    Good one Rick

    one of the silents

  2. Barb Haley says:

    So well said.
    Samson … Trump. Ha! In a day when it’s easy to mourn for the way “things used to be,” prayer is our release. Our hope. And our duty.

  3. Jeanie says:

    I think of Judges 15.15 “And he found a new jawbone of an ass, and put forth his hand, and took it, and slew a thousand men therewith.”
    And I should not be surprised, if God’s purposes can be met using a dead ass, He can surely, somehow use anyone of us. Even Trump.
    Or..especially Trump??? ?

  4. Cleata Brown says:

    So much to digest in these words. I do agree, we absolutely must pray for our new President and the leaders of our country.

  5. Martha Mahon says:

    Trump has fooled you; there was nothing of God in this election. I pity you and all who support you. 81 % of evangelicals were duped by, and voted for Trump. I am a Christian, who uses my God-given brain; The 81% should use theirs.

  6. Martha Mahon says:

    No moderation needed here; I see you do not appreciate honesty, just like Trump. You may print my comments as they are , or choose to censor the facts. You decide.

  7. Martha Mahon says:

    Upon reading all the comments above, and especially yours, Rick, paragraphs filled with delusion and fantasies, fibs falsehoods, fabrications; I repeat; I pity you and all who voted for a mentally unfit “manchild” who has the ability to destroy America.

  8. Dear Miss Mahon: Thank you for your thoughtful responses. Why you anticipate “censorship” says less about my dialogs with readers — you can see that I have engaged with many dissenters through the years — and more about your paranoiac tendencies. Unless we agree on the desirability of changing our system in America to a theocracy, or a friendly monarch, or a benevolent dictator, you likely will not persuade many of us. Perhaps you favored a possible Mormon presidency; or are already nostalgic for Obama’s policies toward religions — hostile in many ways foreign and domestic to Christians, and clearly tolerant to many aspects of Mohammedan practice. Help yourself’ I cannot join you.

    Specifically, however, to your critique: You should notice that I stated that I was originally sceptical of Trump, but have appreciated the evolution of his positions; that I remain a Watchful Waiter, but he is now president; that I implicitly invited readers to review my essays from the campaign arc (most did not deal at all with politics) to see my full reasoning; and that — look again at my title — I like his friends more than I like him. All things in time, and in order.

    If you “see that I do not appreciate honesty,” and your definition of honesty is what you see and think, a) there is no evidence for either proposition; and b) I wonder why you wasted electrons in writing three Comments to me. Odd. We were all duped, and you are correct — reminding me of the mother who saw a military parade and remarked to a friend that every soldier was out of step except her boy Johnny. I will concede that you might be right (still employing my God-given brain with which you are so supportive) but with an Administration only hours old, I will continue to faithfully monitor.

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About The Author

... Rick Marschall is the author of 74 books and hundreds of magazine articles in many fields, from popular culture (Bostonia magazine called him "perhaps America's foremost authority on popular culture") to history and criticism; country music; television history; biography; and children's books. He is a former political cartoonist, editor of Marvel Comics, and writer for Disney comics. For 20 years he has been active in the Christian field, writing devotionals and magazine articles; he was co-author of "The Secret Revealed" with Dr Jim Garlow. His biography of Johann Sebastian Bach for the “Christian Encounters” series was published by Thomas Nelson. He currently is writing a biography of the Rev Jimmy Swaggart and his cousin Jerry Lee Lewis. Read More