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Go to 1-800-Dementia.org or call 1-800-Dementia. Thank you. All come together. And now, here's today's Truth Talk Live host. Welcome to Truth Talk Live. This is Peter Rosenberger. I am your host today.
Glad to be with you. PeterRosenberger.com. P-E-T-E-R-R-O-S-E-N-B-E-R-G-E-R. Normally I host a program on this network every Saturday afternoon for family caregivers, and I'm thrilled to be able to join the Truth Talk Live family of hosts to talk about things that are happening in our culture right now, politically, culturally, theologically, all the things that you heard in the opening header for this. If you want to be on the program, 866-34-TRUTH. 866-34-TRUTH. 3-4-8-7-8-8-4.
866-3-4-8-7-8-8-4. We've got a lot of ground we want to cover today. I want to start off with a quote. We are in the middle of the political season, and I think it's important that we, as Christians, be engaged and be able to speak with clarity into this. You've heard me talk about this over the last several weeks that I've been hosting this program, on how important it is for us to know our message, know what we're saying, know why we're saying it, know how to say it.
All these things are incredibly important, otherwise we're going to be left taken advantage of by a group of people that you've been watching who doesn't appear to have the best interests of the country. I talked about this last week with boundaries. If the boundaries are violated and we allow it, then we're volunteering. We're not victims. We're volunteering. And people who don't respect boundaries are the people who benefit from no boundaries.
So, for example, on our southern border, if this is being done intentionally when it appears that it is, then why, what is the motive, what is the purpose, what is the benefit, and how does this affect the health of the United States of America financially and national security-wise? And if those answers don't illuminate the issue of what's going on with our culture, I don't know how to help you because this is how serious we've gotten. So I want to start off with a quote. This is some guy you may know. His name is Plato. And he said, One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors. I thought that was a pretty good quote from Plato. And I think this is something that a lot of Christians have felt like that we didn't belong in this, we shouldn't be doing this, we should stay out of it and do this.
I don't agree. I don't see anywhere in Scripture that we're not encouraged to be a part of the discourse, the civil discourse in our country. And even the Israelites in captivity were encouraged to participate, to be good model citizens in wherever they were and pray for the peace of the land so that they could be left in peace. Well, if we're not doing that, then we're just going to end up being victimized by this whole process. And part of that is we've got to vote. But then we have to do more than just vote.
We have to be engaged and we have to be a part of the discourse. We have to insert our thoughts and beliefs, most importantly what Scripture says about this. We cannot change somebody, make somebody different. But God can.
Remember he says the king's head is turned by the Lord. And we can be good witnesses to what's going on. Here's another quote.
I'll do three of them today because I think they're all very telling. Mark Twain said this, suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress, but I repeat myself. I always thought that was a very funny quote. And you've got to look at Congress and you've got to think we're not electing our best and brightest, are we? And we've got some real problems there in Congress. We've got a sitting member of Congress who was concerned that Guam was going to tip over when they put too many Marines on it back in the, I think it was 2010 or 2011. Go look it up.
Hank Johnson, Georgia. Go look it up. He asked a serious question. It's in the record.
Is Guam going to tip over? And you've got to question the constituents that elect somebody like that. And then I'm going to read a more sobering quote and check this out and see if this doesn't apply to where we are. It is enough that the people know there was an election. The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything. You want to take a guess who said that?
I'm going to read it one more time and then I'm going to tell you who said it. It is enough that the people know there was an election. The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything. In other words, a guy that said this is saying, look, we didn't say we had an election. We had an election. Doesn't matter how they voted because we're going to count the votes the way we want to count them. That's how it's decided.
And that was Joseph Stalin. Something to think about, isn't it? So are you prepared for this fall election season? Are you volunteering for anything?
Are you engaged? Are you supporting a candidate that you feel like best represents your values? Are you contributing to this by volunteering or by writing a check?
All of the above. And are you praying about it? These are things that we have a responsibility to do. I had a friend of mine, and I love to tease him, but I said, he's always griping about this and that and so forth with this candidate. They're not going to do it right.
They're going to do it wrong. I said, well, have you donated? He said, I'm not going to trust him with my card. And I said, well, I trusted him with your card this morning.
Took him a minute on that. So are you engaged? And if not, why not? And if you are, congratulations, you're part of the process now. You're part of the solution. Whether or not we prevail, I can't say. But we, in order to provide for the common welfare of this country, and a more perfect union as our founding document state, we've got to work. We've got to put our shoulder to the wheel. And we are to be salt in the light of the earth. Scripture says, are we?
Are you? These are things that I want to unpack a little bit in this program today. Plus, I may go to the caregiver keyboard and see if I can play a hymn that you may or may not know.
See if you can guess it. How about that? This is Peter Rosenberger. This is Truth Talk Live. The number to call is 866-34-TRUTH. 866-348-7884 if you want to weigh in on some of these topics. Don't go away.
We'll be right back. Truth Talk Live! Welcome back to Truth Talk Live. I am Peter Rosenberger.
Glad to have you with us. PeterRosenberger.com The number to call if you want to be on the program is 866-34-TRUTH. 866-348-7884 Did you happen to catch RFK Jr.'s speech on, I believe, Friday? And when he came out and he endorsed Trump, but it was in the afternoon. It was not at the rally.
It was at the afternoon. He spoke a little bit at the rally, but I'm talking about the speech he gave at the press conference. And if you have not seen it, please take a moment. You can go out and find it anywhere, I'm sure.
On social media, YouTube, whatever. And take a look at it. And if you did, I'd be curious to know what you thought of it. I personally was astounded and quite impressed. You know, presidential oratory has been a bit lacking as of late. Would you not agree? And you would hope that presidents could have a soaring way of speaking to lift a nation. Building morale of a nation is part of a healthy nation.
And when people are trodden down, they feel embarrassed by their leaders or all this kind of stuff, it makes it difficult. But, you know, you go back to Reagan when he said, you know, America is that shining city on a hill. And Reagan could really give a speech. I don't know where Joe Biden is at this point. I mean, he just got back from vacation, I think, in California, and now he's going on a vacation in Delaware or something.
But I don't know where Kamala Harris is. I don't even really know who's running the country right now. And I've been watching Trump with intrigue because I think he's been toning down a lot of his rhetoric. And he's staying on issues and being more measured in the things he says.
And that's good. There's some things he says, though, that just crack me up. And, you know, he gets – this is a quote, he was in North Carolina, and he said, Kamala Harris, a lot of illegals are coming in very illegally, very illegally. Not just – I mean, you know, that just makes me laugh. A lot of illegals, they're coming in illegally.
It's not too good, not too good, not too good. You know, and so you want to see a level of speech that is worthy of a nation. And Robert F. Kennedy has got a vocal condition, so it makes his voice very raspy, and sometimes that's off-putting to people.
But I would suggest to you that the speech he gave on Friday was nothing short of astounding, and he prosecuted a case on how we got here. And part of that is, is a sycophant media that is now partisan and will take sides and they'll carry the water for their candidate, or maybe the candidate is carrying the water for the media. It's kind of hard to tell these days, don't you think? Who's got the agenda? Is it the media that's telling the Democrats what to do, or vice versa?
Is it Fox News telling the Republicans what to do, vice versa? You know, there's a lot of that back and forth, and you have to kind of ask yourself, who is the thought leader here? Who has ideas that are worthy of discussion? And whether or not you agree with him or not, and there's certainly very specific things that I have sharp disagreements with him on, but I got to tell you, I did not hear anyone else driving RFK's speech at all. I mean, he was, you could tell this is a man who felt very passionate about what he was doing, and he had conviction about it, and he was putting action to it, and I thought it was quite an impressive speech, and he referenced his father and his uncle who never shied away from a debate, never shied away from having a conversation about an idea that it's worthy of having a conversation. And he went to the Trump campaign and said, look, I'd like to be a part of, I have ideas, and I see where my campaign is going, it's coming to an end here, I don't want to be a spoiler, and would you meet with me? And the Trump campaign did, and he went to Kamala Harris' campaign, and they wouldn't even take his call. And so I think that's the kind of thing we don't want, is to have a closed-off thing where we're not going to have a conversation, we're not going to have a debate, we're not going to have a free exchange of ideas. If you have a better idea, a better mousetrap, then let's hear it.
And if you don't, then be willing to listen to others who might. But to close one's mind off, and I was watching how his whole family came out and attacked him for getting behind Trump. I mean, his sister and, I mean, they had an open letter signed by a lot of the Kennedys, and I thought, that's kind of odd. Don't you think that, I mean, here's a family that, you know, Teddy Kennedy drove off of the bridge at Chappaquiddick and left a woman to die. And there was another Kennedy kid that was involved in a very sordid rape scandal down in Florida. And yet they're going to draw the line and do this to a guy for voting his convictions and supporting Trump. And I thought, boy, Thanksgiving's going to be rough at that family. You know, so I was stunned that they would come out and not say, you know, look, we disagree with our brother, but it's America, let's have a free flow of ideas.
Nope, they're excoriating him for that. And I think that's part of the problem we've come to is that everybody has to be bifurcated into this, you're either with us or against us, as opposed to can we work, what can we find that is common ground to us? What can we find?
And is there? And on certain things, we don't need to compromise. I don't feel the need to compromise, but the southern border, for example, I mean, is that an issue that we need to say, well, let's allow, you know, a million in versus a million five?
Or do we need to close it? Abortion. You know, this is an increasingly, I've said this whole, I've said from the get-go, this campaign is going to be the Boer campaign, not to be confused with the Boer campaign in South Africa that Churchill fought in, but the Boer campaign, B-O-R, is going to either be the border or abortion. And that's where we've landed as a society.
And I think when you have a, you know, when they bring Planned Parenthood or whoever brought it in, the mobile abortion and vasectomy site to the Democratic National Convention, that ought to tell you everything you need to know about what the value system is. And so these are the two issues, and the country is at a very perilous place. What are we doing about it? What can we do about it? I mean, you know, I'm just one voice on the radio.
What can we do? And I say to you that we can do several things, and one of them is we can vote. So we make sure that we vote, and we make sure that our votes count. That quote I read from Stalin in the last block, it is enough that the people know there was an election.
No, it's not enough. It needs to be a fair election. Stalin said the people who cast the votes decide nothing. Do you feel like that's happened in our society as of late, that people were casting the vote and it meant nothing?
Because Stalin said it's the people who count the votes decide everything. Are you participating in that process to make sure it's fair? Are you contacting local leaders, election oversight, all those kinds of things? Are you donating to those kinds of things?
If not, why not? It's a good thing to do, don't you think? This is Peter Rosenberg and this is Truth Talk Live. We'll be right back. Welcome back to Truth Talk Live. This is Peter Rosenberg and we're glad to have you with us. This is 866-34-TRUTH, 866-348-7884.
By the way, I thought I'd go over to the caregiver keyboard. I am going to play this. If you know it, you're welcome to give me a call.
There's a reason. I'm switching mics here. This program talks about not just what's going on in the culture, politics, and all this stuff, current events, but also theology.
I thought I'd play this one for you. If you know that one, I'd love to have you call me and tell me. 866-34-TRUTH, 866-348-7884. I have a Substack page. It's caregiver.substack.com.
I've got an article out there today that I thought might be kind of interesting. One of the principles I deal with for family caregivers, and I've been a caregiver for four decades for my wife with severe disabilities, and the principles that I deal with really speak to the human condition. I do not share the Pope's view that we are basically good people. I don't see where Scripture teaches that. In fact, I think Scripture teaches just the opposite, that the heart is exceedingly wicked. Who can know it? And Jesus didn't even trust himself to his own disciples on these things.
He removed himself, and he perceived people's hearts. But no one seeks after God, Scripture says. So when the Pope says that, well, why is he saying that? We're somehow wanting to say that we're basically good people? No, we're not. And Billy Graham said this many years ago. We have invented no new sins. We just keep doing it more efficiently.
So it's the same thing. We've been dealing with the same issues for a long time, and these principles are covered in Scripture. So, you know, people used to say all the time about, you know, God understands what you're going through, and Jesus knows this, and so forth.
And I didn't get it, because I looked through all of Scripture, and I didn't see somebody taking care of a woman with 86 surgeries, both of her legs amputated over four decades. But if you step back from it, you start seeing the principles of what God does speak to. Fear, guilt, despair, bitterness, resentment.
All of these things are covered throughout all of Scripture, so that no matter what we go through, those are the reactions that we're going to have in our flesh. But Jesus said, I've come to give you what? Life, and life more abundantly. My peace I give to you. Peace. That's what we all want, is peace. We want assurance that it's going to be okay. And what we have is we have a culture that's looking for the benefits of Christ without looking for Christ.
Are you tracking with me on this? That's what you see in the political culture. They're trying to get the state to provide what only Christ can. So when you understand what's driving this, there are a lot of people who truly look at the state, at government, at the state, their status, and they look at the state as a deity. The state is supreme. The government is all. And we saw that in COVID.
They got a real taste of that in COVID, how they could just shut down everything. And we can't allow this to happen again. But this has been going on since, you know, the Old Testament. Go back and look at the Tower of Babel.
Read that story. We will join together. We will ascend to the high.
Where did you hear that before? That's what Satan said when he said, I will ascend to the most high. There's this collective thing. We will be exalted. And Scripture says, no, no. He is exalted. And so I write about things and I talk about things that affect those core heart issues that we have that the Gospel speaks to clearly.
Scripture speaks to these things very clearly. And one of those was conflict. And so I wrote about this today in my Substack article. And you can go out at caregiver.substack.com. Every Monday I put out a brief excerpt from my book, which is called A Minute for Caregivers When Every Day Feels Like Monday.
And this is the one I put out today. In ancient times, numerous civilizations developed a sport where teams pulled on opposite ends of a sturdy rope and victory went to the team overpowering the other. This activity, commonly referred to as Tug of War, will exist today. Webster's Dictionary describes this activity as a struggle for supremacy or control usually involving two antagonists.
Well, that sounds pretty much like our current culture. Not limited to teams with ropes, this struggle for supremacy extends into virtually every relationship, including family caregivers, particularly those dealing with cognitive impairments or addiction issues. The War of Wills adds increased stress to an already stress-filled environment. And by the way, this also extends into churches, because there ain't no fight like a church fight.
You all know what I'm talking about, don't you? So this War of Wills adds increased stress to an already stress-filled environment. In Tug of War, winners often land on their rears and losers fall flat on their faces. That's the only outcome. You're either going to land on your rear or you fall on your face. Since those are the only two possible outcomes, only one alternative exists for family caregivers when faced with a Tug of War relationship.
You know what that is? Don't pick up the rope. Don't pick up the rope. Now, they may throw that rope out of there in front of you and, Oh, what do you think about this? What do you think about this? You don't have to pick that rope up. You know what you can say?
Well, I wasn't thinking about that at all. Try that one time and see what happens when you say that to somebody. It blows their minds, because some people just stay agitated and they want you to be agitated with them. They want to hook you in this thing. And they want to say, Don't you agree that this is... You don't have to pick up the rope. Now, what does Scripture say? Well, Proverbs 23, It is honorable for a man to stop striving, since any fool can start a quarrel. Well, that's pretty good counsel, wouldn't you think?
It is honorable for a man to stop striving, since any fool can start a quarrel. Now, we're going to go into this election season here and it is ramped up. I mean, it is everywhere. It's in our churches. It's in our schools. It's everywhere. There is a pitched battle, literally, for the direction of this country. And I don't think I'm overstating when I say that this election is going to decide quite a bit of where this country is going to go.
And it's going to be easy to get embroiled in these things. People's nerves and their thoughts are just at an all-time high. They're inflamed.
People are unsettled. You can feel it. You know, I live in Montana.
I live 10 miles from a paved road. So I'm pretty removed from the hustle and bustle, and I can still feel it. Now, granted, it's just the cows and the elk and the deer. No, we've got more than that around us, but you can feel it. You can just sense the country is very unsettled. And you remember in COVID when they said, during these uncertain times, what have they ever been certain?
Answer me that. Do you recall a time when times were certain? Times haven't been certain since the garden, and mankind fell through at them.
I've said this over and over and over, and I'm going to keep saying it. Sin is a bigger problem than we think it is. And the cross is a bigger deal than we could ever imagine. And are we prepared to go with that kind of message into this world? Are we prepared to let our light so shine?
Are we prepared to not get embroiled in the craziness of other people and get hooked into debating crazy, but just not pick up the rope and recognize we have something else to do? Go back and look at the way Jesus handled conflict. I mean, they came to him trying to trap him in every which way. Should we give taxes to Caesar, or should we pay taxes to Caesar?
Look how he handled that. And there are scriptures where he said, and he perceived their heart, that they were trying to trap him. You know, you say, well, that's Jesus.
Well, what does Paul say? Let this mind be in you which is also in Christ Jesus. Be not conformed to this world, but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind. Do you think that if you study scripture that your mind will get sharper and clearer and you'll be able to speak with great focus and clarity and discernment into the most horrific of circumstances? Do you believe that? I'm asking, do you really believe that? If so, how much time are you devoting to studying this, getting into your scriptures? How much time are you spending on this, stewing on these thoughts? Only you can answer that question.
But if you believe that that will change your mind and it will improve your ability to go into this world, then by all means, immerse yourself into scripture. Okay? That's how we do it. This is Truth Talk Live. This is Peter Rosenberger, 866. 34 Truth, 866-348-7884. We'll be right back. Welcome back to Truth Talk Live. This is Peter Rosenberger.
This is the show that is dealing with the cultural, theological, the political things that are happening and how we as Christians from a biblical worldview can insert ourselves into it in order to point more clearly to Christ. I did a hymn earlier and nobody's gotten it. And I know I played some different chords on it, but that's no excuse.
And so, I will go back over here to the caregiver keyboard. Now, that's a different chord. I know that, but you'd still tell what it is.
On Christ the Solid, rock, I stand. The guy named Edward Mote wrote that he was going to work one day, walking to work, and it was back in the early 1800s. And he had the chorus and several verses written in his head. Then he went to go visit a sick friend. And the sick friend had, it was a woman, a guy and his wife, and the wife was very, very sick, to the point where she was dying. And she asked if he had something. He had just written this and he shared this lyric with her.
I believe William Bradbury wrote the music to it. But the text says this, and two things. One of them is, my hope is built on nothing less than Jesus' blood and righteousness. You know, we say this a lot, Jesus saved us. Jesus saved us.
Well, there's actually several things that happen here. One of them is, there's three imputations, if you will. Adam's sin was imputed to the entire human race, for in Adam all sin. Paul said this very clearly.
Three imputations. Adam sinned and it was imputed to the entire human race. The sin of God's people was imputed to Christ. And he died bearing the penalty of that sin. And his righteousness was imputed to us as believers. And this is what Edward Mohd is saying in this hymn here. Hymns are often called compact theology because they take very difficult theological things and are able to do it in beautiful prose so we can remember these things and sing them.
And this is one of the greatest hymns of all time. My hope is built on nothing less than Jesus' blood and righteousness. I dare not trust the sweetest frame. In other words, I'm not going to look to government. I'm not going to look to anything else.
I'm not going to look to an elected official. I'm not looking to anything else other than Christ. But holy lean on Jesus' name.
On Christ's solid rock I stand, all other ground is sinking sand. But now think about this hymn reading to this woman who is bedridden and sick and dying. And understand that I deal with an audience filled with caregivers on my regular program.
I've been a caregiver for four decades for a wife who has severe challenges. And he said, darkness veils his lovely face, I rest upon his unchanging grace. In every high and stormy gale, my anchor holds within the veil.
On Christ, the solid rock I found. Can you just picture him saying to this woman who was dying? I can because I've said it to my wife as she's gone into surgery after surgery after surgery.
And now I'm saying it to you. And I'm going to keep saying it so that you will go out and share this with other people because that's how this country is going to get turned around. We can elect all kinds of leaders and they can promise all kinds of things.
But the heart is what the problem is. And when a nation's heart is turned to God, that's when real change can happen. But God gives people over and he gives nations over. We do not—I mean, we deserve everything we're going to get, by the way, that is dastardly in this country. We have 60 million babies that have been aborted. 60 million child sacrifices to mock.
That's basically what we've done. We look at ourselves as so technologically superior, but we're no different than the heathens of old and then they co-opted the people of God to do this. And they made—you go back and look in 1 and 2 Kings, and you go back and look at the story of Elisha and Elijah. And Elijah called out those prophets of Baal, but you could see it everywhere.
The very people of God who should have known were being co-opted on this. Where is our anchor? Does your anchor hold within the veil? When in darkness veils his lovely face, I rest on his unchanging grace. Let me tell you something.
When you're taking your wife into surgery and you're watching them come and get her and take her through those doors time after time after time after time again, it gets a little dark. I've got to tell you. His oath is covenant. His blood, support me in the whelming flood. When all around my soul gives way, he then is all my hope and stay.
Is he all your hope and stay? How would anyone know? What does that look like? Now look at this, this last verse. When he shall come with trumpet sound, O may I then in him be found, dressed in his righteousness alone.
In other words, we bring nothing to this. It is his righteousness. There's a great old hymn, Jesus, Thy Blood in Righteousness. That's it.
That's all we have. The only thing we bring to our salvation is the sin that required it. Don't let anybody tell you differently because then you're adding to the work of Christ. And that is no, no sir. Faultless to stand before the throne because we're dressed in his righteousness alone.
On Christ the solid rock I stand. If you want to change this culture, sing this hymn. Embrace what this writer is saying. Think about him saying this to a woman dying in her bed and she was so encouraged by this. It built her up so much. He went back and wrote several more verses and then he printed a bunch of copies and this thing, you know, we're still singing it here almost 200 years later.
He wrote this 190 years ago. You know I've played a lot of funerals over my musical journey and I have yet to have anybody come to me and ask me to play anything other than the hymns at their funeral. Because that's what people, that pierces through all the stuff here. I mean I'm sure there are funerals out there where people play songs by the D.B.
Brothers. But, you know, they've never asked me to play it. I mean I'm not holding my breath for it and I'm not seeking it out. But these hymns speak so loudly over so much time. And look at that text.
Yeah, I'll throw in a couple better chords for it. And that's okay. But I love that text. When darkness veils his lovely face, I rest on his unchanging grace. In every high and stormy gale my anchor holds within the veil. Does your anchor hold? Does your family's anchor hold? Does your church's anchor hold? Does your pastor's anchor hold?
Are you feeling, drifting about, are you feeling like you're just being tossed to and fro or is your anchor holding? If you're feeling to and fro, if you just feel overwhelmed, then I would exhort you. Spend some time with this verse and spend some time in scripture.
Get in it today. If you don't know where to start, then just start with Psalm 1. And just read slowly. If you are struggling right now, go to Psalm 13. But the more you understand the gospel, the more you understand what Christ did, it was his blood and his righteousness. The more you understand that, the more anchored you are.
And the more your anchor will hold within the veil. Anybody else can tell you that and you think it's just words? When somebody's been watching a woman suffer for 40 years, you might want to pay attention. You might want to pay attention. Because this is how we live. We have no other place to go. I know.
I'm the wily coyote of caregivers, man. If you could screw it up, I've screwed it up. And I have come to the place where I understand this sin is a bigger problem than we think it is and the cross is a bigger deal. And if we want to change this culture, if we're worried about this election, if we're worried about what they're teaching our kids in school and all these kinds of stuff, it starts with us understanding that text right there. When darkness veils his lovely face, I rest on his unchanging grace. In every high and stormy veil, my anchor holds within the veil. In every high and stormy gale, my anchor holds within the veil. That's how we do it, folks. So that when we go into the election booth or when we go into the hospital, we go into a rehab center, when we have to go into divorce court, when we have to go into a funeral home, our anchor holds because our anchor is in Christ.
Not in anything we do. There are scary things ahead of us, difficult things ahead of us. But Corrie Tim Boone said, Don't be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God. Do you know him?
Because if you don't, you're never going to trust the future to him. By the way, when my wife was six years old, she encountered a little old lady who said to her, Is Jesus your friend? And she blurted out, Well, I want him to be, but nobody's telling me how.
She said, It's really easy. And she laid out that book of colors and shared this plan of salvation. And that woman was Corrie Tim Boone, and that little girl was my wife, Gracie, many, many years ago. And Scripture says, When appropriate, imitate those who share the word of the Lord to you. And God knew that Gracie needed somebody that had faith worth imitating, and he sent somebody to do that. Isn't that a great story? PeterRosenberger.com, this is Truth Talk Live. Thanks so much for joining me.