The Media Stable: Time for a Clear Out

One benefit of elections is that every few years there’s a clear out of politicians and their staffs. It doesn’t matter whether they are Republican or Democrat, the regular electoral purge keeps the process from rotting too much on both sides of the aisle. Even those who start out with the purest principles and motives can stay too long and end up being infected with the corrupting power of power.

But there’s one class of people in the political process who never seem to get cleared out; the pundits and opinionators. No matter how long they stay, how corrupt they grow, how out of touch they become, how wrong they are, the electoral brush never sweeps them out the stable. But, if anything’s clear from the past days, large tracts of the commentariat are past their smell-by date. Multitudes of them have utterly failed in their duty to the public and yet none of them will lose their jobs.

I’m not speaking of ordinary journalists and reporters here — although it’s increasingly hard to separate them from the pundits these days. I’m referring to the talking heads, the op-ed columnists, the “experts.” The majority of them have failed dismally in their basic duties to us for a long time, but especially in the past year A.D. (After Donald).

Job Description
Think about their basic responsibilities. They are paid to identify important events and trends in public opinion and interpret them. They are paid to invite, interact with, inform, and influence public opinion. How few have done this well in the past twelve months, or even the past ten years or so. Isolated from ordinary Americans and their everyday struggles, their world and their minds have shrunk to the tiny artificial world of their home offices and their regular commute to the TV studios in New York and Washington.

The only part of their job description they’ve worked at is “influence public opinion,” but even that has been ineffective because they are not doing the much harder work of getting out of their electronic bunkers and meeting public opinion in the flesh. As a result, they’ve failed to identify important events and trends, they’ve failed to interpret them, they’ve failed to interact with public opinion, and they’ve failed to accurately inform public opinion. That’s why their attempts to influence public opinion have so dismally failed.

They’ve laughed at Donald Trump. They’ve dismissed Donald Trump. They’ve lambasted Donald Trump. They’ve enjoyed over a hundred thousand negative ads against Donald Trump. They’ve assured us of his demise and defeat. And now Donald Trump is the President.

“How come no one listened to us?” they protest. Because you’re not living our lives and you’re not listening to our opinions.

Isolated and Insulated
I remember an amazing journalist I used to know quite well. He was an incredibly gifted writer who had won a number of awards early in his career. He used to be required reading. But he moved to an extremely isolated part of the country in order to get away from the distractions of city living and write more. However, although his words multiplied, his influence diminished. His writing lost touch with reality; it lacked authenticity; his commentary was like someone trying to understand the world through postcards. His columns were still interesting and even entertaining; but they were not influential. Cut off from the influence of public opinion, he had cut off his influence upon public opinion.

Though most of our punditocracy live in and around the bustling metropolises of Washington and New York, they are no less isolated and insulated from the ordinary daily lives of ordinary Americans. What they say and write is still interesting, and sometimes entertaining, but they’ve lost their power to influence because they’ve lost contact with reality. Their columns and opinions feel out of touch, artificial, unreal, and prejudiced. As a result, fewer and fewer are reading them or listening to them.

I used to read the Washington Post and New York Times regularly, not because I agreed with their views but to hear the other side and come to a balanced conclusion. I stopped reading them six months ago because they were so unhinged and extreme in their reports and opinions. I’m sure there are millions like me. If they had been more balanced, they would have had more influence, and perhaps a President-elect Clinton.

For years the media have ignored mighty economic, social, moral, cultural, and spiritual events and trends impacting tens of millions of Americans. They’ve failed to interpret these events and trends. They’ve failed to identify massive shifts in public opinion. They’ve failed to invite and interact with public opinion. And they wonder why their golden words aren’t valued any more! If you don’t know what’s happening, how can you hope to tell us why it’s happening, or how to change it.

The Trump Train
All the TV studios were subdued on Tuesday night/Wednesday morning. The chattering class were still chattering but they were clearly flummoxed and discombobulated. The Donald Trump train had just rampaged through their universe leaving their prestigious opinions in a tangled mess. Alternating between holding their heads in their hands and wringing their hands, they wondered, “How did we not see this coming?”

You only need to spend regular time in rural McDonald’s to understand why this train has so many passengers on it. Look at the people serving there — and eating there. Listen to the conversations. Look at their faces and their postures. Instead of insulting them, listen to their stories. Or drive an hour from most major cities and take a look and listen around. My conviction that Trump would win the Presidency was largely based upon what I was seeing and hearing in my fishing trips in Northern Michigan over the past eighteen months. The guys I fished with and spoke to, all working class men who had been Democrats for all their lives, were 100% Trumpers. And, by-the-way, let’s drop the disgusting “uneducated” adjective when speaking of such citizens. They may not have college degrees but they have more independence of thought, and more sense and wisdom than most college graduates.

Too Little, Too Late
There are some signs of the media beginning to acknowledge their failings (here and here). After the GOP primary David Brooks at the New York Times admitted journalists needed to get out more and actually talk to at least some of the Americans that don’t inhabit news rooms and TV studios most of their lives. But it’s too late. We need a clear out. We need new blood and new brains. In no other profession would so many people make so many serious mistakes and suffer no serious consequences.

Pundits and commentators serve a useful public purpose in the democratic process. We need them to help us make sense of our world and our lives. However, they cannot do that unless they are living in our world and living our lives. We need intelligent commentators. But we also need real-life people, people who are a fair representation of the population in age, class, color, religion, background, region, education, etc. Otherwise we just end up with the current complacent and dangerous groupspeak and Donald Trump in the White House. Or worse.

Pundits, do the honorable thing. Resign and relocate as a public service, as your contribution to homeland security. Live among us for ten years and you may be qualified for your posts again. You need to be influenced by us, if you are ever going to influence us. You cannot move public opinion unless you are moved by public opinion.

This is an updated version of an article I wrote after Trump won the GOP Primary.


Check out

Blogs

Four Implications of Martin Luther’s Theology
“For Luther, the Christian life is a gospel-grounded, gospel-built, gospel-magnifying life that exhibits the free and sovereign grace of God and is lived out in gratitude to the Savior who died for us, yoked to Him in cross-bearing until death is swallowed up in victory and faith becomes sight.”

Praying for our president elect
Here are five ways you and I might pray for our president elect.

10 Ways To Help When A Friend Is Diagnosed With A Chronic Illness
Not specifically Christian, but much wisdom here.

Where in the world are African American missionaries?
“Less than 1 percent of American missionaries serving around the globe are African American. Rectifying that great omission will call for African American Christians to play a greater role in taking the Word to the world.”

Start where you are. Use what you have. Do what you can.
“let’s start where we are, use what we have, and do what we can. Who are the people most different from you right around you? The Indian man behind the counter at the gas station? The Hispanic family at school? The African-American neighbor? Are you willing to go out of your way to invest a little emotional currency to embrace them? ”

Seven Core Productivity Apps for Pastors and Church Leaders

Kindle Books

For your non-Kindle book buying needs please consider using Reformation Heritage Books in the USA and Reformed Book Services in Canada. Good value prices and shipping.

The Remarkable Record of Job by Henry Morris $2.99.

If You Can Keep It: The Forgotten Promise of American Liberty by Eric Metaxes $1.99.

Seeing Christ in All of Scripture by Westminster Seminary Faculty $2.99

Video

The Best Two Minutes You’ll Hear on TV all Year About the Presidential Election


America Tells Washington and Media: “You’re Fired”

When Donald Trump won the Republican primary in May of this year, I wrote an article, I’m Winning With Evangelicals, that attempted to explain his victory, especially his success with evangelicals. With evangelicals being credited with putting Trump over the top last night, I thought it would be appropriate to re-post the article. It’s the closest to a prophecy I’ve ever come.


In almost every speech Donald Trump says, “I’m winning with Evangelicals.” He did the same in his Indiana victory speech last night. Although there is some debate about whether he really is winning a majority of Evangelicals, he’s clearly won a lot of them and in my conversations with Christians, I’ve been surprised at how many are secretly (very secretly) supporting him.

Why?

It certainly can’t be his Christianity. Despite his protestations, he doesn’t have much of that. Consider the following:

  • He’s on his third marriage.
  • He runs the Miss World contest.
  • He boasts continuously about his self-made-ness.
  • He can’t name a favorite Bible verse.
  • He says he doesn’t ask God for forgiveness.
  • He takes communion because it makes him feel cleaner.
  • He says he’s a church-goer but his church says he’s not an active member.
  • He regularly insults people who disagree with him.
  • He is rude towards women and minorities.
  • “He personifies greed, embodies pride, radiates lust.”

As New York Times columnist Frank Bruni, put it, “I don’t see someone interested in serving God. I see someone interested in being God.”

On top of all that, many of the other candidates, including the last one to fall, Ted Cruz, were evangelicals and had a record to prove it.

Why? Why? Why?

So why the increasing levels of support for Trump while “evangelical” candidates have sunk? Columnists of every stripe and hue are struggling to answer this question, (just Google “Evangelicals and Trump” to sample the media disarray on the question).

In a previous article I wrote about how much of his support is coming from Republicans who have come to despise the political class. As Peggy Noonan put it recently: “His rise is not due to his supporter’s anger at government. It’s a gesture of contempt for government, for the men and women in Congress, the White House, the agencies.”

Americans want to punish the political establishment, both red and blue, for their multiple failures and are looking for someone, anyone, to be a battering ram through politics as usual. As someone said, trying to explain Trump’s popularity, “He’s giving voice to what millions of Americans are yelling at their TVs every night.”

Within a few weeks of Trump’s campaign launch last week, it was obvious to me that this guy could make it all the way. I saw the widespread frustration with the political culture, especially the disconnect between elite politicians and ordinary people, and the ever-rising taxes and living costs for the squeezed middle-class. There was a deep longing for an outsider to come in and shake things up. Conservatives were fed up with the Republicans’ cowardly surrenders to the slightest media criticism, and admired Trump’s disregard for what mainstream journalists thought of him. They were sick of all the promises that never seemed to produce any action, and angry at the use of political correctness to silence debate and sideline Christian views.

Anti-politician and Anti-media

But anti-politician feeling can’t explain all of Trump’s support. In talking to people, I’ve heard some Christians express an additional thought, and that’s anti-media sentiment. As one woman put it to me, “People are fed up with journalists choosing our candidates and presidents.”

That might explain why Trump’s support surged even after he feuded with the popular conservative journalist, Megyn Kelly. It also explains why the more the media hammer Trump, the more his support grows. People want to send a message not just to the politicians but to the media that it’s “we the people” who choose our leaders not “you the media.” People are sick and tired of the media spinning, the utter dishonesty of so many journalists, the bias, the prejudice, and so on, and want to communicate how much they despise their opinions and practices.

Honesty or Hypocrisy

Although there were Christian alternatives for Republican nominee, I believe many Christians were thinking, “Well, every President for the last 40 years has said “I’m a Christian” and where did that get us?” Maybe it’s better to have someone who doesn’t pretend to be a Christian but who is not afraid of the media, who is not in it for personal enrichment, who is competent, and who is able to get things done. Someone who just does what he says he will do. Better honesty than hypocrisy.

The results and exit polls show that Christians are clearly prepared to risk sacrificing some previously important priorities for the possibly greater end of striking a hopefully fatal blow to the almost omnipotent and corrupt political and media establishment. They are taking a massive risk, but people, especially the middle class, have been driven to desperation by the Republicans giving their money to big business, by the Democrats giving their money to big welfare, and by journalists who have got way too big for their screens.

To put it simply, Christians, like much of the general population, are fed up with the lies and falsehoods of politicians and the media, and they want a clear out. Trump is their way of saying to all of them at once, “You’re fired!”



Check Out

Blogs

How to Pray When Someone You Love Is Stuck In Sin | Erin Davis, True Woman Blog
“When the people closest to us sin, it hurts. Sin is destructive. When we are standing close by, we often get hit with shrapnel. If you’re in the line of fire, I deeply admire your willingness to pray instead of simply assuming the position of duck and cover. But I also don’t blame you for wondering, How am I supposed to pray about this?”

How to Cure Pastor Burnout | Ryan Nelson, LogosTalk
“I can’t snap my fingers and give you a sabbatical, but if you or a pastor you know is on the brink of burnout, here are some things you can do to make regular rest a reality:”

The Key to a Flourishing Mind | Dr. Stephen R. Graves
“Five centuries ago, Francis Bacon said, “Silence is the sleep that nourishes wisdom.” My advice is to get some “sleep.” A flourishing mind awaits. It must be cultivated. You’ll have to make some adjustments, like stretching a muscle you haven’t stretched in a long time. But it’s there.”

The gift of being limited | Christine Hoover, Flourish Blog, NAMB
“Why is it that when my body is exhausted, my mind goes into overdrive? As I lay in bed, staring into space, taking a moment in my room to get my act together, my thoughts began berating me for being tired. I felt bad for needing to rest. I felt bad for not having the mental capacity to immediately mov e on to the “next thing” on my agenda.”

Living Like Christians After the Election | Erik Raymond, TGC
“Now in light of God’s sovereignty, let’s think together about four biblical words that should depict our lives as followers of Jesus.”

Sermon prep for the non-vocational preacher | Aaron Armstrong, Blogging Theologically
“Sermon prep methodology fascinates me. I love learning how pastors manage their time to prioritize prayer, study, writing, and practice. Through the years, my own habits have changed pretty drastically.”

12 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Posting Something Online | Mark Dever, TGC
“Perhaps you could write down these questions and ask a friend to look over your social media feeds with them in mind. Or, even ask someone you know disagrees with you on an issue you’ve posted about and see what they say. ”

Learning from the Judges | R.C. Sproul, Ligonier
“Judgment begins at the house of God (1 Peter 4:17), but it is a judgment that is disciplinary, not destructive. It’s designed to move us to repentance and faithfulness. And the era of the judges shows us that the Lord will not fail to rescue and preserve His church when His church repents and cries out to Him.”

New Book

For your non-Kindle book buying needs please consider using Reformation Heritage Books in the USA and Reformed Book Services in Canada. Good value prices and shipping.


Devoted to God: Blueprints for Sanctification by Sinclair B. Ferguson. I have a review of this planned with the title, “The Long-Awaited Successor to J C Ryle’s Holiness.” That’s how good this book is.

Kindle Deals


Parables: The Mysteries of God’s Kingdom Revealed Through the Stories Jesus Told by John F. MacArthur ($1.99)


Manhood Restored: How the Gospel Makes Men Whole by Eric Mason ($0.99)


God Is Red: The Secret Story of How Christianity Survived and Flourished in Communist China by Liao Yiwu ($1.99)


A Family Guide to the Bible by Christin Ditchfield ($2.99)

Video

Digital Rehab


If I could vote, I’d vote for…

Although I began my application for citizenship over a year ago, frustratingly I am still merely a lawful permanent resident. I had hoped that I would not only be a citizen but a registered voter by the time November 8 rolled round. But I’m still on a green card and watching from the sidelines.

Apart from two posts that explored (but did not endorse) possible reasons for Donald Trump’s primary victories (here and here), I’ve therefore largely restrained myself from speaking on the presidential election. However, as increasingly large numbers of pastors and Christian leaders have taken very strong public positions, I’ve asked myself, “What would you do if you were a citizen and you could vote?” It’s also a question I’ve been repeatedly asked by others.

So, here’s what I’d do if I could vote.

I’d be planning to vote, and I know who I’d vote for, but I wouldn’t tell you who it is.

I know it sounds cowardly, and I may be accused of abdicating leadership, but here’s my reasoning.

Loss of Gospel Capital
I’ve watched numerous pastors and Christian leaders come out publicly for one of a range of options: voting Donald Trump, voting Hillary Clinton, voting third party, voting a write-in, not voting, voting anyone-but-Trump, or voting anyone-but Clinton.

The immediate result is that a tranche of like-minded people rally to their side; but, in doing so, they also alienate and antagonize even larger numbers of people choosing the other options. In a year when political passions are running such a high fever, I just don’t think that making one’s 2016 choice public is worth the loss of Gospel credibility, Gospel capital, and Gospel opportunity.

Of course, it’s possible that taking a “secret vote” stance may itself carry a cost with some, but I reckon it’s pretty minimal compared to the other options.

There are ministers and Christian leaders who are going to find it very difficult to recover from their 2016 stances. I’ve repeatedly heard people saying or writing that they will never listen to or read Pastor-so-and-so again because of his political stance. I know congregations where people are privately fizzing, and sometimes publicly fuming, because of their pastor’s stated (and even “suspected”) presidential choice. That’s not going to be easily or speedily healed.

I have to be honest, I’ve been pretty annoyed at some people too for their stances, and it’s going to take me a while to separate their political preferences from their ministries and get back to pre-2016 relationships.

Complexity and Confusion
If the choice was morally clearer, then I’d have less hesitation in taking and recommending a public stance. The cost in terms of Gospel capital would be irrelevant. But given the extreme moral complexity surrounding each option, is it worth risking the loss of Gospel usefulness for the sake of making one’s presidential preference public?

People who know me best, and whom I trust, know which option I would take. We’ve talked about it a lot as a family and watched just about every debate since the primary season began. But I’ve also asked my children at various points to keep their parents’ views private so as not to create unnecessary barriers to and distractions from the Gospel.

So, although I cannot cast my ballot on November 8, I have been praying for all who will. I’ve also been praying for God to overrule everything for the good of his church. And now I’ve begun to pray that God would minimize the damage to Christian leaders and ministries whose controversial political stances have put them at odds with other Christians. May God grant a sense of perspective when the dust settles and enable us to seek peace and pursue it, for the glory of God and the advance of the Gospel.


Check out

Blogs

12 Lies American Evangelicals Believe
“According to a September study by LifeWay Research, Americans don’t know much about theology. While most Americans identify as Christians, they seem confused about the details of their faith. “Contradictory and incompatible beliefs are OK for most people,” explained Scott McConnell, executive director of LifeWay Research. Even those who identify as evangelicals often fell into some of the worst theological errors. Here are twelve lies about God, morality, and salvation which Christians in the study believed, and why they are wrong.”

Europe’s Show Trials Are Where America’s Anti-Speech Regime Is Going
“Progressives are prosecuting conservative dissenters for ‘hate crimes.’ Criminalizing politics not only crushes diversity—it’s just plain wrong.”

25 Leadership Lessons From Millionaire Business Owners
“To help you run your business a lot smoother, here are 25 leadership lessons from millionaire business owners so that you don’t have to make the same mistakes we have.”

Do You Exercise Like a Nonbeliever?
“God made us to move, and to do so vigorously. And he wired our brains to reward and reinforce it with chemicals called “endorphins.” Exercise makes happier humans”

The Secret to Giving and Receiving Critique
“The critic and the critiqued should each care more about speaking truth in love than anything else. We should speak and write carefully, hoping to offer the most fair, reasoned, and careful opinion we can. We should receive critique with the humility that comes from having the long view in mind.”

John Macarthur is Voting For Trump and John Piper is Voting Neither Republican nor Democrat

Kindle Books

Understanding the Bible by John Stott $0.99

The Oxford Guide to People & Places of the Bible by Bruce Metzger $2.99

God’s Promise of Happiness by Randy Alcorn (FREE)

Video

Strength Through Weakness

Russell Moore, president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention and TGC Council member, tells us about a time in ministry when in his weakness God demonstrated his faithfulness.