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Monday, July 6, 2026

Faith and Marriage: How Can Two Walk Together Without Agreement?

Marriage Needs More Than Shared Affection

 

Marriage is not only about sharing a home. It is about sharing direction, values, purpose, worship, and a foundation for life. That is why Amos 3:3 asks, “Can two walk together, unless they are agreed?” The question matters deeply in marriage because two people may love each other sincerely and still be moving in different spiritual directions. Scripture warns against being unequally yoked because marriage is a covenant that joins two lives together. When one spouse seeks to follow Christ and the other does not recognize Him as Lord, the relationship carries a spiritual tension at its foundation. This does not mean the unbelieving spouse has no good qualities. They may be kind, loyal, responsible, and loving. The issue is not whether they are pleasant to live with. The issue is whether both the husband and the wife share the same final authority over truth, morality, worship, forgiveness, parenting, and purpose. 

Psalm 127 says, “Unless the LORD builds the house, they labor in vain who build it.” A marriage may have affection, financial stability, shared memories, and outward success, but if the Lord is not the foundation, the home is weaker than it appears. Every marriage faces storms. The question is what holds the marriage together when those storms come. If a believer is unmarried, Scripture’s counsel is to choose carefully and marry in the Lord. Attraction, kindness, and shared interests are not enough. The spiritual foundation matters. If a believer is already married to an unbeliever, Scripture gives pastoral wisdom. 

First Corinthians 7 says the believing spouse should not leave if the unbelieving spouse is willing to remain. The believer is called to peace, faithfulness, prayer, godly conduct, and patient witness. That distinction matters. Dating an unbeliever and already being married to one are not the same situation. Children also make this issue even more serious. They learn from what parents prioritize. They notice whether Scripture, prayer, worship, repentance, and obedience to Christ are central or optional. The real question is not only “Can we be happy together?” The deeper question is, “What kind of spiritual legacy are we building?” A Christian marriage is strongest when both husband and wife can return to the same Lord, the same Scripture, the same Gospel, and the same foundation for repentance and forgiveness. Marriage is too sacred to build on sand. 

 

Read the full reflection here: [Substack link

https://open.substack.com/pub/ammartinez/p/faith-and-marriage-how-can-two-walk?r=1smlyb&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true

 

#ChristianMarriage #FaithAndMarriage #UnequallyYoked #BiblicalMarriage #MarriageInChrist #SpiritualCompatibility #ChristianRelationships #FamilyDiscipleship #BuildOnTheRock #Psalm127 #Amos3v3 #FaithAndFamily #MarriageWisdom #ChristianCounseling #JesusChrist

 

Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW

 

Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H33MHYMY

Faith and Marriage: How Can Two Walk Together Without Agreement?

Faith and Marriage: Walking Together Under Christ 

I realize this theme echoes the previous reflections on unequal yoking, faith, family, and spiritual direction. That is intentional. I am working through my book’s devotional material and allowing each devotion to develop a related but distinct application. The earlier posts focused on unequal yoking in relationships and the spiritual direction of the home. Today’s reflection narrows the focus to marriage itself and asks whether two people can truly walk together when they do not share agreement under Christ. 

 

Marriage is not merely two people sharing a home, a last name, a bank account, or a future. Marriage is a covenant in which two lives are joined together before God. It is a union of love, responsibility, sacrifice, direction, worship, and purpose. That is why Scripture asks the piercing question, “Can two walk together, unless they are agreed?” (Amos 3:3). That question reaches deeply into marriage because walking together requires more than affection. Two people may love each other sincerely and still be moving in different spiritual directions. They may share a house but not a foundation. They may share children but not the same understanding of how those children should be raised before God. They may share responsibilities but not the same final authority for truth, morality, forgiveness, worship, and obedience. This is why Scripture warns believers not to be unequally yoked with unbelievers. Paul writes, “Do not be unequally yoked together with unbelievers” (2 Cor. 6:14). A yoke joined two animals together so they could pull the same load in the same direction. If they were mismatched, the work became strained, uneven, and painful. In marriage, the same principle applies. When one spouse is seeking to follow Christ and the other does not recognize Him as Lord, the marriage carries a spiritual tension at its core. 

 

Marriage Needs More Than Love 

Love is a gift from God, but love must be governed by truth. Many people ask, “Can we be happy together?” That is an understandable question, but not the deepest. The deeper question is, “What kind of spiritual legacy are we building together?” A Christian marriage is meant to reflect Christ’s covenant love for the church. Ephesians 5presents marriage as a sacred picture of Christ’s sacrificial love, leadership, purity, and faithfulness. That does not mean Christian marriages are perfect. Far from it. Christian husbands and wives still struggle with selfishness, pride, misunderstanding, wounds, disappointments, and sin. But when both are submitted to Christ, they share one Lord, one Scripture, one Gospel, one spiritual direction, and one foundation for repentance and forgiveness. Without that shared foundation, even ordinary decisions may become spiritually difficult. How will we raise the children? Will we worship together? Will we pray? How will we handle money? What does forgiveness mean? What is sexual purity? What is the purpose of marriage? Who has the final authority when our desires conflict with God’s Word? These are not small questions. They shape the home. 

 

Agreement Does Not Mean Sameness 

When Scripture speaks of walking together in agreement, it does not mean husband and wife will think alike on every matter. No two people enter marriage with the same personality, emotional history, habits, communication style, preferences, wounds, or expectations. Agreement in marriage is often a process. It requires listening, humility, patience, compromise, repentance, and love. A healthy marriage does not demand that one spouse erase the other. Instead, both learn to bring their desires under Christ's lordship. There is a kind of compromise that is wise and loving. A husband and wife may disagree about schedules, household responsibilities, finances, parenting details, or practical decisions, and through prayer and honest communication, they can find common ground. That kind of compromise is part of living together in love. But there is another kind of compromise that becomes spiritually dangerous. A believer must not compromise obedience to Christ in order to preserve emotional peace. A spouse should not have to choose between pleasing God and pleasing the marriage partner. When that tension becomes constant, the yoke becomes heavy. 

 

The Lord Must Build the House 

Psalm 127 says, “Unless the LORD builds the house, they labor in vain who build it.” That verse is not only about constructing a physical home. It speaks to building a life, a family, and a legacy. A marriage built without the Lord may still have affection, financial stability, shared memories, and outward success. But if God is left outside the foundation, the home rests on something weaker than it appears. Work, money, romance, attraction, and shared goals cannot carry the full weight of marriage forever. Every marriage faces storms. There will be pressure, grief, sickness, financial strain, conflict, temptation, aging, disappointment, and seasons of emotional distance. Jesus taught that the house built on rock stands when the storm comes, while the house built on sand falls. The difference is not whether the storm comes. The difference is the foundation. Christ is the only sure foundation. When both husband and wife are building on Him, they can return together to the Word, pray together, confess together, forgive together, and endure together. 

 

What If I Am Already Married to an Unbeliever? 

Scripture gives an important distinction. The Bible warns the unmarried believer not to enter an unequal yoke. But it does not tell a Christian who is already married to an unbeliever to automatically leave the marriage. Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 7:12–16 that if a believer has an unbelieving spouse who is willing to remain, the believer should not divorce. God has called us to peace. This is pastoral, merciful, and realistic. Some people come to faith after they are already married. Others may have married unwisely and now face the consequences with sorrow and confusion. In such a case, the believing spouse should not turn the home into a battlefield. The unbelieving spouse cannot be argued into genuine faith. Salvation is the work of God. The believing spouse is called to remain faithful, live peaceably where possible, refuse sinful compromise, pray consistently, and bear witness through godly conduct. First Peter 3 shows the power of quiet, reverent, consistent conduct. A spouse may be influenced not merely by repeated arguments but by a life that displays Christ. That does not mean the believing spouse should pretend the spiritual division is harmless. It is not harmless. But neither should they lose hope. God can work in the heart of an unbelieving spouse, and He can sustain the believing spouse in a difficult marriage. 

 

Children Are Part of the Question 

Marriage is never only about the two adults. Psalm 127 calls children “a heritage from the LORD.” When children are present, the spiritual direction of the marriage shapes the next generation. Children learn from what parents prioritize. They watch whether prayer matters, whether church matters, whether Scripture governs choices, whether sin is confessed, whether forgiveness is practiced, and whether Christ is treated as Lord or merely as an optional religious preference. If one parent follows Christ and the other does not, children may receive two different answers to life’s most important questions. That does not mean the children are beyond God’s reach. It means the believing parent must be intentional, prayerful, consistent, and wise. The goal is not to manipulate the children against the other parent. The goal is to point them clearly and faithfully to Christ. 

 

Solomon’s Warning

Solomon’s life provides a sobering warning. He began with wisdom and blessing, yet Scripture says that his wives turned his heart after other gods. His heart was no longer loyal to the Lord as David’s heart had been. Solomon did not fall because marriage itself was the problem. He fell because his relationships pulled his heart away from covenant faithfulness to God. His love became disordered. His alliances became spiritually corrupting. What may have appeared politically useful or personally desirable became a pathway into idolatry. The warning is simple: no one should assume they are strong enough to ignore God’s wisdom without consequence. Relationships shape us. Marriage shapes us deeply. The person we bind ourselves to will either help us walk toward Christ or make that walk more difficult. 

 

The Threefold Cord 

Ecclesiastes 4 says, “A threefold cord is not quickly broken.” In marriage, that picture is powerful. A husband and wife are strongest when Christ is not outside the relationship but at its center. Two are better than one when they lift each other up. But when both are held by Christ, the marriage gains a strength greater than human affection alone. The couple can face hardship with shared prayer, Scripture, repentance, and hope. This does not make marriage easy. But it does make the marriage spiritually anchored. A Christian marriage is not merely two people trying to be happy. It is two sinners learning to love, forgive, sacrifice, serve, repent, and persevere under the lordship of Jesus Christ. 

 

The Heart of the Matter 

The real question is not only “Can we stay together?” or “Can we be happy?” The deeper question is, “Can we walk together under Christ?” If I am unmarried, I need to choose wisely before entering a covenant that will shape my life, my children, and my spiritual legacy. Attraction is not enough. Kindness is not enough. Shared interests are not enough. The foundation matters. If I am already married to someone who does not share my faith, I need to remain faithful to Christ, love my spouse honorably, seek peace where possible, avoid compromise with sin, pray without ceasing, and trust God with what I cannot control. In either situation, Christ must remain first. 

Marriage is too sacred to build on sand. The home is too important to build without the Lord. The children are too precious to leave spiritual direction unclear. The soul is too valuable to trade obedience for temporary peace. Faith and marriage belong together because marriage was designed by God and must be sustained by God. Can two walk together unless they are agreed? Not deeply, not safely, not spiritually, and not in the way God designed marriage to be. But when husband and wife agree that Christ is Lord, the road may still be hard, yet they walk with a foundation that can endure the storm. 

 

Prayer 

Lord, teach us to build our marriages and homes on You. Give wisdom to those who are considering marriage, strength to those already in difficult marriages, and grace to those who feel spiritually alone. Help husbands and wives love with humility, speak with patience, forgive with sincerity, and obey Your Word above every competing desire. Where there is division, bring truth, peace, and salvation. Where there is unity, deepen it in Christ. Build our homes, guard our families, and help us walk together in agreement under Your lordship. In Jesus’ name, amen.


 

#ChristianMarriage #FaithAndMarriage #UnequallyYoked #BiblicalMarriage #MarriageInChrist #SpiritualCompatibility #ChristianRelationships #FamilyDiscipleship #BuildOnTheRock #Psalm127 #Amos3v3 #FaithAndFamily #MarriageWisdom #ChristianCounseling #JesusChrist

 

Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW

 

Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H33MHYMY

Friday, July 3, 2026

Has America Sacrificed Its Christian Moral Foundation for Political Peace, Power, and Pluralism?

America’s Spiritual Adultery: What Solomon’s Fall Warns Us About at 250

Has America Sacrificed Its Christian Moral Foundation 

for Political Peace, Power, and Pluralism? 

 

A Personal Word of Gratitude and Grief 

Before I speak about America’s spiritual decline, I want to explain why this country means so much to me personally. I was born in Jalisco, Mexico, in 1966. I came into this world as a sick baby, and my biological mother eventually realized that she could not provide the medical care and stability I needed. She brought me to the United States in the hope that I might receive the care, protection, and opportunities she could not give me in Mexico. Had she remained there with me under the conditions in which I was born, I might not have survived. My mother then made one of the most painful decisions a parent can make. She released me into the care of the state so that I might have the possibility of a better life. After the necessary paperwork was completed, I entered the foster-care system as a ward of the state. 

In 1972, I was adopted. The couple who adopted me provided for my needs and gave me opportunities that might never have been available to me otherwise. I attended private and public schools. My adoptive parents were college-educated and hoped that I would also pursue higher education. Because of my adoptive father’s health and other circumstances, that did not happen when I was young. Much later in life, however, I returned to school and pursued the education I had long desired. My studies included psychology and theology. I have always wanted to understand human behavior more clearly, but even more than that, I have wanted to understand the heart of man—our souls, our spiritual condition, and our relationship with God. My adoptive parents raised me within the Catholic faith, and that was the perspective through which I first came to understand God. As I matured, I began to desire a closer relationship with the God revealed in Scripture. That desire eventually led me into deeper study of psychology, theology, and the Word of God. 

I share this because my life might have been very different had my mother not brought me to the United States and made the heartbreaking decision to surrender me for adoption. Because of my poor health at birth, she chose what she believed would give me the best chance to live and have a future. It is my hope that, if she is in heaven today, she knows that the hope she carried for me came true. I remain mindful of the many children who entered foster care as I did but were never adopted. Many aged out of the system and struggled to survive without the family support, stability, and opportunities I received. I do not take lightly the fact that I was adopted when I was. I know that my story could have ended very differently. The United States became the only home I have truly known. It provided me with safety, education, opportunity, family, and the freedom to seek God, study His Word, and speak openly about my faith. That is why my heart is breaking as I watch this great country decline from within. I do not write because I hate America. I write because I love her. I write from gratitude and grief. 

 

Patriotism does not require silence when a nation is drifting toward destruction. Love tells the truth, especially when the truth is painful. As America commemorates the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 2026, I am not writing merely to celebrate what our nation has been. I am asking what we have become. A country may retain its flag, Constitution, institutions, patriotic ceremonies, wealth, and military strength while losing the moral convictions that once gave those things meaning. America’s greatest danger is not only an enemy attacking from beyond its borders. It is the spiritual decay that develops within when leaders and citizens reject God’s moral authority, divide their loyalties among competing gods, and still expect the nation to remain free, just, stable, and united. 

 

What Spiritual Adultery Means 

Spiritual adultery occurs when people who have received truth, blessing, and moral instruction from God transfer their highest loyalty to something else. The new object of worship may be another god, political power, wealth, pleasure, ideology, national pride, personal autonomy, or cultural acceptance. The form may change, but the betrayal remains the same. God is no longer given the first place that belongs to Him alone. James uses the language of adultery to describe friendship with a world system opposed to God. Jesus declared that no one can serve two masters. Spiritual adultery is therefore divided worship: professing loyalty to God while allowing another authority to govern the heart. This diagnosis must first be applied to individuals and churches. Yet the same spiritual principle helps us understand what happens when a nation abandons the moral convictions that once restrained its public life. America’s founding was not the establishment of a national church, nor were all the founders identical in doctrine or Christian commitment. Nevertheless, religion—especially Christian belief—exerted substantial influence on the Revolution, early civic life, public morality, and the belief that republican government required a virtuous people. The founding also protected religious liberty: the First Amendment prohibits Congress from establishing religion or prohibiting its free exercise, while Article VI forbids religious tests for federal office. Religious liberty is not the enemy. The deeper problem is expecting liberty to survive after rejecting the moral responsibility necessary to preserve it. 

 

Solomon’s Divided Heart 

King Solomon offers a sobering warning. Solomon began his reign with wisdom, privilege, prosperity, and an extraordinary calling from God. Yet he gradually exchanged wholehearted devotion for divided allegiance. Scripture records: “For it was so, when Solomon was old, that his wives turned his heart after other gods; and his heart was not loyal to the LORD his God” (1 Kings 11:4, NKJV). Solomon did not fall merely because he encountered people from other cultures. Scripture does not condemn human beings simply because they came from other nations. His sin was that he knowingly entered into alliances that introduced idolatry into the center of Israel’s leadership. He accommodated foreign gods, built places for their worship, and eventually participated in spiritual practices that violated his covenant loyalty to the Lord. His marriages may have seemed politically advantageous. The alliances may have promised security and peace. Each concession may have appeared small and manageable. Yet their cumulative effect was the corruption of his heart. Solomon did not awaken one morning and suddenly reject everything he had known. His fall came through gradual compromise. That is how spiritual adultery usually works. First, what God condemns is tolerated. What is tolerated becomes accepted. What is accepted becomes celebrated. What is celebrated eventually becomes protected, promoted, and imposed. Solomon did not cease being king when his heart turned away. The palace remained. The government continued. Israel still appeared prosperous and powerful. But decay had entered the center of leadership, and the consequences eventually reached the entire kingdom. The king’s divided heart contributed to the nation's division. 

 

The Central Parallel 

Solomon’s fall began when political advantage, personal desire, and religious accommodation became more important than covenant faithfulness. America’s spiritual adultery follows a similar pattern. We have attempted to preserve national peace by acting as though competing moral and religious authorities can all occupy the same throne. But a nation, like a human heart, cannot serve many masters indefinitely without eventually abandoning the true God. America has increasingly wanted the benefits associated with biblical morality—human dignity, moral accountability, fidelity, sacrifice, justice, restraint, and ordered liberty—while rejecting the God to whom those duties are ultimately owed. We want rights without responsibility, liberty without moral restraint, prosperity without gratitude, sexuality without holiness, justice without an objective standard, and government without accountability to anything higher than itself. Those contradictions cannot hold forever. A nation cannot serve God, wealth, political power, unrestricted personal autonomy, ideological conformity, and cultural approval as equally authoritative masters. Eventually, one of them will govern the others. Isaiah warned: “Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil; who put darkness for light, and light for darkness” (Isa. 5:20, NKJV). When a society loses the ability to distinguish good from evil, it does not become neutral. It becomes vulnerable to whoever possesses enough cultural, financial, judicial, or political power to redefine the terms. 

 

Religious Liberty Is Not Moral Relativism 

Religious liberty protects the conscience of the individual. It allows Christians to preach Christ, Jewish citizens to practice their faith, Muslims to worship according to their beliefs, unbelievers to reject religion, and people from every background to live under the same constitutional protections. That liberty should be defended. But protecting the right to hold different beliefs is not the same as declaring that all beliefs about God, truth, morality, human nature, family, justice, and government are equally true or equally capable of sustaining the same constitutional order. Contradictory truth claims cannot all be true in the same sense. Every system of law expresses some understanding of what human beings are, which rights they possess, what conduct is permissible, what marriage and family mean, where governmental authority begins and ends, and what obligations citizens owe one another. There is no morally empty public square. When biblical convictions are removed, they are not replaced by neutrality. They are replaced by other moral, religious, philosophical, or ideological commitments. The question is therefore not whether people of different backgrounds may live together as American citizens. They may, and the Constitution protects that freedom. The question is: Which understanding of truth and human nature will shape our laws, schools, courts, institutions, and national character? 

 

Compromise at the Center of Power 

Solomon’s spiritual compromise was especially destructive because it occurred at the center of national leadership. Leaders do more than administer policy. Through legislation, judicial decisions, education, appointments, public speech, and institutional power, they help define what society permits, protects, rewards, discourages, and condemns. The proper issue is not an officeholder’s ethnicity, birthplace, or religious label by itself. Neither should anyone be condemned merely for possessing another cultural background. The necessary questions are whether that person honors the Constitution, rejects violence and totalitarianism, protects the rights of all citizens, and refuses to place party, ideology, wealth, foreign influence, or religious authority above the lawful duties of office. That examination must be applied consistently. A leader who seeks to replace constitutional liberty with religious authoritarianism should be opposed. A leader who makes government into a substitute god should also be opposed. A politician who uses Christian language while serving corporate wealth, dishonesty, greed, and personal ambition must be confronted by the same moral standard. The idol of ideology and the idol of money may appear different, but both demand divided allegiance. Micah described leaders who judged for bribes, priests who taught for pay, and prophets who spoke for money, all while claiming that God was among them. Scripture does not allow me to condemn corruption in another political party while excusing it in my own. Political usefulness does not sanctify disobedience. Acts 5:29 gives the Christian’s governing principle: “We ought to obey God rather than men.” Our first loyalty does not belong to a party, candidate, institution, movement, or nation. It belongs to Jesus Christ. Only when that loyalty is properly ordered can our patriotism remain principled rather than idolatrous. 

 

The Church Must Examine Herself 

America’s spiritual decline cannot be blamed only on politicians, immigrants, secular institutions, other religions, universities, corporations, or cultural movements. The church must examine herself. In many places, we surrendered our influence through compromise, silence, scandal, shallow teaching, political idolatry, and failure in the home. We sometimes preached prosperity instead of repentance, pursued influence instead of holiness, protected institutions instead of wounded people, and treated political victory as though it were the kingdom of God. Some churches feared offending people more than they feared dishonoring God. Others spoke loudly about public sin while concealing private corruption. Before we condemn the nation for rejecting Christianity, we must ask whether the Christianity we displayed was faithful to Christ. Jesus rebuked people who honored God with their lips while their hearts remained far from Him. A nation filled with outward religious language but lacking inward obedience is not spiritually healthy. First Peter teaches that judgment begins at the house of God. Second Chronicles 7:14 begins not with unbelievers, political opponents, or citizens of other faiths, but with God’s people: “If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways…” In its original context, God spoke to Solomon concerning Israel, the temple, and the covenant land. The United States is not ancient Israel, and America does not possess Israel’s covenant status. Nevertheless, the spiritual order of the passage remains instructive. God calls His people first to humility, prayer, seeking His face, and turning from wickedness. The verse does not begin, “If everyone else will change.” It begins, “If My people.” Before I ask God to repair Washington, Sacramento, Albany, the courts, the schools, or the culture, I must ask Christ to rule me. Does He govern my thoughts, speech, money, sexuality, marriage, family, work, voting, and treatment of other people? Do I condemn public corruption while tolerating private compromise? Do I ask God to heal the land while refusing to surrender my own sin? National repentance must begin personally. 

 

The Family and the Nation 

National decline does not begin only in legislatures, courts, or executive offices. It also begins in the home. The family is a foundational institution of society. Government cannot manufacture what faithful parents, disciplined homes, healthy churches, and morally formed communities fail to produce. Judges 2 describes a generation that arose without knowing the Lord or remembering what He had done for Israel. The tragedy was generational. Truth, worship, gratitude, and obedience were not faithfully carried from one generation to the next. When marriages collapse, fathers and mothers abandon their responsibilities, children grow up without moral formation, and churches imitate the surrounding culture, the nation eventually reflects that disorder. A society cannot continually weaken the family and expect the government to compensate for everything the family once provided. The repair must therefore begin close to home: within the individual heart, then the marriage, the family, the local church, the community, and the broader areas of influence God has entrusted to us. 

 

The Warning Is Certain Even When the Timing Is Not 

I do not claim to know the exact timing or final form of America’s decline. Scripture has not given me that knowledge. The Bible does not clearly identify the modern United States in prophecy. Attempts to equate America with the “young lions” or other indirect references remain speculative. We should not claim certainty where God has not spoken clearly. But the moral principle is certain. A nation that continually rejects God, calls evil good, corrupts justice, destroys the family, abandons truth, and celebrates rebellion cannot escape the consequences forever. Judgment may unfold gradually through social disorder, institutional corruption, economic instability, the loss of liberty, internal division, external defeat, or the consequences of being given over to our own desires. Whatever form it takes, rebellion eventually produces loss. Scripture declares: “Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people” (Prov. 14:34, NKJV). America has no biblical guarantee of permanent prominence, military power, prosperity, protection, or continued national existence. No nation is indispensable to God. Billy Graham recalled that his wife, Ruth, once reacted to his description of America’s moral decline by warning that if God did not judge America, He would have to apologize to Sodom and Gomorrah. He repeated that warning in his 2012 message, “My Heart Aches for America.” The remark was intentionally startling, but its essential point was that no nation should presume upon God’s patience while continually rejecting His standards. Our wealth will not save us. Our military will not save us. Our technology will not save us. Our history will not save us. The Constitution cannot preserve itself if those entrusted with it no longer believe in the moral responsibilities necessary to sustain it. 

 

Repentance Must Become Practical 

Repentance is not merely feeling alarmed about the condition of the country. Repentance means turning. Christians must return to prayer, Scripture, faithful marriages, disciplined homes, honest work, moral courage, local church commitment, Gospel proclamation, and principled citizenship. We must stop excusing corruption because it benefits our party. We must stop remaining silent because truth has become unpopular. We must stop expecting government to repair what families and churches have neglected. We must teach our children why freedom requires responsibility, why truth does not change with public opinion, why every human being possesses dignity, and why no earthly authority is absolute. We must defend constitutional religious liberty while refusing to surrender the exclusive truth of Jesus Christ. We must oppose terrorism, totalitarianism, antisemitism, hatred of the Jewish people, religious persecution, political violence, corruption, and every attempt to place another authority above constitutional law. At the same time, we must continue proclaiming that salvation is available to every person. A Muslim may repent and believe in Christ. A Hindu, Buddhist, atheist, Mormon, Jehovah’s Witness, nominal Christian, secular American, Democrat, Republican, immigrant, or native-born citizen may do the same. The Gospel does not assign salvation according to nationality, ethnicity, party membership, or cultural identity. God “commands all men everywhere to repent” (Acts 17:30). That includes every political party, every religion, every social class, every leader, every citizen, and every one of us. 

 

Patriotism That Tells the Truth 

This warning is not anti-American. Biblical patriotism does not flatter the nation, excuse corruption, or treat America as incapable of wrongdoing. It loves the country enough to tell the truth. I want America to defend ordered liberty, preserve constitutional government, protect the free exercise of religion, resist terrorism and totalitarian ideologies, reject antisemitism, protect innocent life, honor marriage and family, administer justice impartially, and restore moral courage in public leadership. But America cannot preserve these things merely by celebrating its history. The principles of liberty must be believed, taught, practiced, and defended. The Declaration of Independence affirmed equality and rights bestowed by the Creator, and the American republic developed around foundational convictions concerning liberty and government. Yet our history also contains serious failures to apply those principles equally. The presence of an enduring moral standard allowed later generations to expose injustice and call the nation toward greater consistency with its stated ideals. If we abandon the Creator while demanding the permanent security of Creator-given rights, we should not be surprised when those rights are redefined by whoever possesses political power. I love this country because I know personally what it has made possible in my life. But loving America does not require me to pretend that she is spiritually healthy. My gratitude compels me to speak. 

 

The Clarion Call From Solomon 

Solomon’s story reminds us that wisdom possessed is not the same as wisdom obeyed. He knew the truth. He received an extraordinary blessing. He witnessed God’s faithfulness. Yet he allowed affection, political advantage, prosperity, and competing worship to divide his heart. America has also received much. We have inherited constitutional liberty, material abundance, extraordinary influence, generations of Christian witness, and opportunities unknown to much of human history. “To whom much is given, much will be required.” Our greatest need on this 250th anniversary is not merely another celebration. We need sober remembrance, gratitude, humility, repentance, and renewed obedience. Elijah confronted Israel with these words: “How long will you falter between two opinions? If the LORD is God, follow Him” (1 Kings 18:21, NKJV). That call begins with me. It begins with the church. It begins in our homes. From there, it must reach our communities, institutions, and leaders. True patriotism does not remain silent while a nation destroys itself. It speaks truth because it desires repentance, renewal, liberty, and life. God may grant America renewal, or He may allow judgment and decline to continue. Our obedience cannot depend upon which outcome He chooses. The calling of the church remains the same: preach Christ, make disciples, defend truth, love our neighbors, protect the vulnerable, pray for those in authority, expose darkness, and remain faithful until the end. Our ultimate hope has never been in America. Our hope is in Jesus Christ. 

 

Prayer 

Father, I thank You for the freedoms, opportunities, and blessings I have received in this country. Forgive me when gratitude becomes complacency or patriotism becomes an idol. Search my heart and reveal every divided loyalty within me. Bring repentance to Your church, wisdom to our homes, courage to our leaders, and truth to our institutions. Protect our nation from enemies beyond our borders and corruption within them. Teach us to defend liberty without abandoning righteousness and to love our neighbors without compromising the Gospel. Father, God, if You are willing, grant America mercy, repentance, and renewal. Above all, keep Your people faithful to Jesus Christ, our only Lord and Savior, and final hope. In His name, amen. 

 

 

Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW

 

Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H33MHYMY