Sunday, March 8, 2026

1008 - National Interest

Friends: I love Jesus and I love America, and am beyond thankful for both.  But being called a “Christian Nationalist”? That is not meant as a compliment. Blessings, Bob

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Spirituality Column #1008

March 10, 2026

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

National Interest

By Bob Walters

“Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord. …” – Psalms 33:12

There exists a contemporary pejorative sobriquet that is a dog-whistle attack on American patriots who also happen to believe in the proper Gospel of Jesus Christ.

In our Left vs. Right political climate, with even the Gospel-believing Right muscularly subdivided between those who revere Donald Trump and those who revile Donald Trump, “Christian Nationalist” communicates a disdain for any who would dare claim salvation in Christ but not assert and fear imminent destruction by Donald Trump.

America has never been nor would long survive as a theocracy, which is when a religious faith actually is the government.  That is what Islam and the Koran comprise, an inseparable package deal of faith being the government. The Mullahs are in charge.

While the chosen Israelites were a theocracy of Laws, the New Covenant in Christ holds a valuable separation of church and state enumerated by Jesus himself some 1,770 years before Thomas Jefferson’s famous comments on the matter.

In John 18, Pontius Pilate asks Jesus if he is a king. Jesus affirmingly replies, “My kingdom is not of this world.” Adding, “I was born, and came into this world to testify to the truth. Everyone on the side of truth listens to me” (John 18:36-37).

In the high school government class I teach, we spend a couple days early studying Romans 13:1-7, where Paul delineates faith apart from government, but saying governments are ordained from God based on what the people deserve. In 1 Timothy 2:1-4, Paul instructs Christians to pray for their governing leaders and for themselves to be “salt and light” as moral examples in their nations.  It is worth noting that in the Old Testament 1 Samuel 8, the Israelites reject God as their king, insisting on a human king.

Rusty Reno, editor of First Things journal I constantly read and frequently cite, this week wrote, The Case for Christian Nationalism. Reno is no particular fan of Trump, but makes the point that if one is going to be a nationalist, Christian Nationalism is the best.

Why has “Christian Nationalism” entered our lexicon? I think because it is a handy “scare” epithet meant to harken back to the evil World War II Axis nationalisms of Fascism in Italy and the Nazis in Germany. A “fasce” is a bundle of wooden rods, a traditional Roman decoration, which became the symbol of Mussolini’s 1930s leftist “Fascist” party. “Leftist,” like “progressive,” refer to government control superseding individual freedom. Faith in Jesus undermines that control; leftists cannot abide it.

The Nazis – Hitler’s “National Socialist” party, was also leftist but added in a racist component, Aryan Supremacy, heavily laced with pagan mysticism.  Atheist socialism, and its more draconian progression, communism, further eliminate personal freedom by calling for government or “collective” ownership of all property and industry.

Christian Nationalism is nothing like any of those, but the phrase has a linguistic Nazi echo of “National Socialist,” useful to those who like neither Christians nor Trump.

I’ll close by noting that there is a convenient alliance of thieves that explains how a Muslim communist like New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani can even exist.

Islam, as with any form of progressive leftism or collectivism, cannot exist beneath the authority of Jesus Christ. Communism refuses all religion, and Islam is a religion strictly governing itself.  Neither will share moral or cultural authority with Christ, but they will work together in common cause until their interests diverge. When is that?

They will get along as long it takes them to get rid of Jesus. And that’s the truth.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) is a Christian and an American patriot who  understands our nation was founded on Christian values, not “religion.”

Sunday, March 1, 2026

1007 - Pick a Lane

Friends: When our faith produces loving acts of Godly outpouring, we’re probably working on the right road. See the column below. Blessings, Bob

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Spirituality Column #1007

March 3, 2026

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Pick a Lane

By Bob Walters

“You did not choose me, but I chose you.” – John 15:16, Jesus to the disciples

I wish I could sing.

My dad could sing.  Both my sons can sing (younger son John, an alum of the Carmel High School Ambassadors show choir, can really sing). My wife Pam in college toured Europe with Olivet University’s varsity Orpheus Choir, then for decades sang in our church choir and occasionally today leads traditional worship.

Most in our Sunday lunch “Old Friends” small group are trained vocalists.  It is quite something in a restaurant to hear this group sing “Happy Birthday” in soaring, four-part harmony.  I smile and hum along, enjoying their talents immensely.

Those folks who hear me talk are often surprised I can’t sing.  My God-given, strong speaking voice is clear, resonant, and loud, but not the least bit musically dependable. The joyful noise I make for the Lord during hymns in church is silence, i.e., not ruining beautiful choruses with honking aires. No need to force it.

Thankfully God has gifted me with other joyful, faithful voices I can share, whether writing, teaching, or occasionally offering a communion homily or corporate prayer. Our current Sunday school curriculum is James’s writing on faith and works, and it’s so true that the varied ministries we pursue with love for the Lord yield great dividends in our faith and expression of Christian joy.

I bring all this up because in visiting another church earlier this year the sermon settled in on those who pursue ministries for which they are not really called but nonetheless pursue them as an act – a work – of measuring their faith walk. I.e., for better or worse, don’t just stand there, do something! And that got me to thinking.

Not so much about singing, but about trying to measure faith as a quantity totaled by our ministry and service activities. It didn’t add up, salvation as the sum of an equation rather than trusting the profound eternal grace of God’s gift to us in Jesus. Salvation is by faith, and obedience is by love. Service and ministry are the “hands and feet” of the Holy Spirit directing us in our walk with Jesus. You just do it, not keep score.

Measurement of activity is the first killer of love, but absence of activity – including prayer – is the first sign of faith that is lacking. What a Christian needs to discern, prayerfully with the Spirit, is an expression of faith that feeds on love. To pick a lane, and be glad in it, and to not envy other lanes, i.e., other lanes not taken.

In the Bible verse above, John 15:16, Jesus is leading the disciples from the Last Supper through Jerusalem and out to the Garden of Gethsemane. Jesus doesn’t say much about their behavior or their ministries, but locks in on them understanding who He is, who His Father is, on how they will need each other, how their faith will feed each other, and to trust the Spirit to be with them, no matter what.

Jesus says they are not servants, but His friends.  By affirming that He, Jesus, chose them, they understand their calling is above their own desires. They are not there to merely serve, but to add to what Jesus is already there to do: reconnecting fallen mankind with their Father God in Heaven by retelling to all, all that Jesus has done.

The new lane they each had to pick was the new covenant of faith in Jesus, departing the pathway of the Law. When I think of my own decision to follow Jesus, I realize it wasn’t so much a decision as that I had been hugged by God’s love and brought into a new life; reality had shifted. There was a new song in my heart.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) can sing loudly, but then, a foghorn is loud.


Sunday, February 22, 2026

1006 - Simple Faith

Friends: The great treasure of this life is faith in Jesus Christ … and it isn’t complicated.  Blessings, Bob

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Spirituality Column #1006

February 24, 2026

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Simple Faith

By Bob Walters

“Can it really be that simple?” – Character Ben Gates in the movie, National Treasure

If you know the 2004 movie National Treasure, you know that the lock to the world’s greatest fictitious treasure chamber – located under a Wall Street church in New York City – is unlocked by inserting an ornate tobacco pipe and rotating it with the stem.

Everything about finding the pipe and then locating the lock opening the chamber is the adventure of the movie.  But for all the riddles and complexity, in the end, accessing the uncountable treasure is as simple as insert, turn, and push a button.

Our searching human hearts, minds, and souls are unbound by such manmade mechanics, but discovering the faith we have in Jesus Christ and the treasure it leads to in God’s Kingdom is the glorious light of God’s unfathomable riches and His gift to us.

It is our faith – given by God, accepted by us – that is the proof of God’s treasure and our assurance not merely of life everlasting, but life everlasting with God as part of His treasure. We make our faith overly complicated wondering if God loves us or is mad at us, what he wants us to do or not do, and what He is going to do with us later.

My experience has been that as I journeyed on the path, it wasn’t my life that got easier, it was my faith that became stronger, simpler, less confusing, and more free.

You have no doubt noticed, as I have, that much of our modern culture depends on fear to gain and hold our attention, control our hopes, limit our freedom, and shape a world without personal assurance in and love of Jesus Christ. That’s the part of the path that gets easier: the part that focuses more and more on Christ and less and less on the fears attendant to this world. This is our freedom in the heavenly realms.

Yes, “Fear the Lord.” Respect Him, know His sense of humor has limits, and be infinitely convinced that His righteousness is absolute and unchanging.  That does sound scary and epitomizes a fearsome imprecation. That is the trustworthy God.

But also, Jesus says, “Fear not.”  Simple faith in Christ – which oddly is a mysterious mix of both mature faith and childlike faith – is the most uncomplicated key to unlock the door of the kingdom into which we are invited.  Ask all the questions you like.  Talk to God and express doubts, ask for wisdom, pray for strength, beg His truth, know His peace.  This too is the trustworthy God, freeing us from fear, with love.

I never worry about God being mad at me because – with my faith in Jesus – I know God doesn’t see me; God sees His Obedient Son Jesus on the Cross. That doesn’t give me license to sin; that gives me purpose for living in the joy, hope, freedom, and love His sacrifice provides. My sin is covered by His blood of the Cross.

We are studying James in our Logos Sunday school class, which I’m teaching this month while regular teacher Dave Schlueter is thawing out in southern Florida. Our section this week is James 2:14-26, Faith and Deeds, which folks often incorrectly view as one or the other, not both as the same. The Holy Spirit lights and guides both paths.

Those quick to theologically debate needn’t think this is a “salvation” issue; it is a “quality of this life” issue.  When we have faith in Christ, His light and Spirit will not stay inside us. The fun of a life in Christ is our deeds – our works – that aren’t performed to impress the world but to inspire our joy and usefulness and purpose of our faith.

God doesn’t need us to impress Him with works. He already knows we’ll be happier if we teach about Him by sharing Jesus and loving others. It’s as simple as that. 

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) knows of no treasure greater than faith in Christ.


Sunday, February 15, 2026

1005 - Sack Cloth and Ashes

Friends: It is a mix of joy, faith, and gratitude, not self-inflicted misery, that defines a Christian life. Blessings, Bob

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Spirituality Column #1005

February 17, 2026

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Sack Cloth and Ashes

By Bob Walters

“It will be more bearable for Sodom on the day of judgment than for you.” – Jesus, leveling a condemnation at Capernaum, Matthew 11:24

You know the story well. John the Baptist is in prison, not exactly condemned but knowing Herod wants him dead for criticizing Herod’s marriage to Herodius.

Contemplating his own imminent fate, John sends his disciples to ask Jesus, “Are you the one who is to come, or should we expect someone else?” (Matthew 11:3). This question leads Jesus – who isn’t yet ready to say, “Yes, it’s me” – to recount His own miracles, and identify several of those who have seen miracles but not believed.

This included the town of Capernaum on the northwestern shore of the Sea of Galilee where Jesus performed much of his ministry. As a shortcut, I asked A.I., “Why was Jesus mad at Capernaum?” A.I.’s answer: “...because of [Capernaum’s] unrepentant hearts, their stubborn unbelief, and indifference despite being the primary location of his ministry and witnessing the most ‘mighty works.’ Despite being treated as ‘his own city,’ the town failed to believe or repent.” Sodom, you see, didn’t know Jesus; Capernaum did.

It is worth reading the rest of Matthew 11:1-24 as Jesus speaks to the gathered crowd, noting the unmistakable and famous condemnation of Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 18, 19) and that it will be worse for Capernaum. (John’s ultimate fate, his beheading, took place at the hilltop palace of Herod Antipas at Machaerus, east of the Dead Sea in Jordan, approximately A.D. 30, is recorded in Matthew 14:1-12 and Mark 6:14-29.)

What Capernaum was facing, and what every Christian knows, is that once the presence and truth of Jesus have been revealed to a person – and His presence and truth are rejected – woe to the unbeliever and the unrepentant. None of us is exactly sure how God’s grace and mercy work for those who have never heard the word of God or encountered Jesus. But Jesus had lived, preached, and performed miracles there, and to paraphrase many Bible verses, the people of Capernaum “believed Him not.”

Our greatest personal gift is to know Jesus, believe He is the Christ, accept His grace and love, and live in repentance – renewed thinking – knowing our own sin but also trusting God’s forgiveness. “Sack cloth and ashes” is the Bible’s way of signaling our own sorrow and humility, and our discipline of repentance. It indicates our low moments.

Yet I am sure Jesus does not want us to live that way: Our joy is our strength.

We examine the life of Jesus, the very few of his years we know about, and despite His looming fate Jesus lived what I perceive to be – what I hope was – a life of joy. It seems that from the young age of 12 Jesus knew who He was. And at the start of His ministry in his late 20s, we see signals that He knew the tasks, obedience, and crucifixion ahead.

Incarnate Jesus is God become man.  What God made “very good” in His own image – humanity – Jesus is God’s perfect image and visitation into that now fallen and imperfect creation. There was a scene in Mel Gibson’s Passion of the Christ movie (2004) of Jesus as a young carpenter laughing with his mother Mary. While that is a movie I never want to see again, the imagined image of Jesus knowing moments of joy, despite being a “man of sorrows,” gives me comfort, even if it is a made-up vignette of cinematography.

This week, on Ash Wednesday, some Christian denominations begin the observance of Lent, 40 days of fasting and prayer ending on Resurrection Sunday, Easter. The celebration typically involves “giving up” – sacrificing – some favored thing, but must properly be met with renewed focus and prayer on the gifts we have received.

Despite the “sack cloth and ashes,” we honor Jesus by being joyous for His gift.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) continually states his belief that repentance reaches far beyond behaviors and into spiritual and intellectual transformation: Think like a Christian.


Sunday, February 8, 2026

1004 - Looking Beyond

Friends: Want to find meaning in this world? Better look to the life beyond. Blessings, Bob

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Spirituality Column #1004

February 4, 2026

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Looking Beyond

By Bob Walters

“God will bring to judgment both the righteous and the wicked.” – Ecclesiastes 3:17

Now there’s a cheerful thought: we will all get what’s coming to us.

As Christians, we know the righteousness of Jesus covers what we accept to be our fallen wickedness. If any person is interested in heaven, or in a loving God, restored eternal relationship with that God, or is seeking divine purpose and ultimate meaning in this present realm, then faith in Jesus is the only way, truth, and life to attain them.

Our job at hand isn’t to defeat our wickedness; we can’t, although it doesn’t hurt to try. Our goal, our faith, is to accept the love and truth of God. Then, to love others.

On the other hand, if a person in this life has no interest or belief in those divine things, or perhaps is openly contemptuous of, hostile to, or cynical about them, it makes no logical sense in this life to worry about spending eternity with someone, i.e. Jesus, in someplace, i.e., heaven, they already reject. Are you going to like Jesus better later?

We all, as Christians, pray for those folks.  We call them the lost.

This is the lesson in Luke 16:19-31 of poor, sick Lazarus in heaven and the rich man viewing him from hell. The rich man awoke too late to the truth of his sin, and once he departed this life, there was nothing he could do to save his sons from the same fate.

Every time I settle into my gratitude for the sacrifice of Jesus and his gift of freedom from sin’s eternal consequence, I am unsettled knowing many are still shackled to their sin.  It is not only their forever fate I grieve but their absence of light in this life, seeing the things of God as meaningless, and the things of this world as supreme.

I don’t want people first to fear judgment; I want them first to feel God’s love.

It is a tough nut to crack.  Ecclesiastes famously declares all things of this life as “meaningless.” Yet, why would a loving, creative, rational, and relational God create a world and its inhabitants for no discoverable purpose? It wouldn’t be logical or rational.

Then look again at Ecclesiastes 3:17, about God’s judgment of our righteousness and wickedness. None of us likes judgment, we all think our opinions are righteous, and many folks seriously wonder if their wickedness (if wickedness is real) truly matters.

We know Christians who are awful, and we know “lost” folks we would trust with our lives. So how do we put this together: that this life means something glorious, God’s love is as immutable as it is righteous, and faith in Jesus is the only key that unlocks heaven’s door? And, why would we want that? Don’t we just want to be happy now?

As widely as I do not understand either end of the Bible – creation or restoration – what I have learned is that God does only what is just and true and righteous. That I do not understand all of it is of no consequence. What is of consequence is whether I trust Jesus’s promise and believe God’s love. The Seeker in Ecclesiastes is looking for meaning on this earth. He learns the only way to find it is to look beyond, to God.

My mentor George Bebawi often made the very helpful point not to look at judgment and mercy as opposites; they work together. The greatest secular problem of this age, culturally, politically, and philosophically, is that we are quick to levy judgments on others without considering the joy and righteousness – and peace – of mercy.

God’s judgment on us all is guaranteed, and God’s righteousness is eternal. His mercy toward humanity is the component of judgment that Jesus delivered on the cross.

Mercy doesn’t erase wickedness; only Jesus could do that. Our lives in this realm are blessed, though, when we look with mercy and faith beyond the ugliness of sin.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) knows that God put a longing in our hearts…for God.


Sunday, February 1, 2026

1003 - Free, But Responsible

Friends: In Jesus we are free to do what is right, not to do whatever we want. See the column.  Blessings, Bob

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Spirituality Column #1003

February 3, 2026

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Free, But Responsible

By Bob Walters

“It is for freedom that Christ has set us free … The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.” Paul, Galatians 5:1,6

Having myself grown up in the “do your own thing” 1960s and then maturing in the “Me Decade” of the 1970s, I look back with dumbfounded gratitude that it was responsibility that my father pounded into me from an early age.

I’m neither perfect nor bragging, though I had a friend in college who leveled a criticism at me saying, “You don’t have to be responsible all the time.” But long before I had true Christian faith or freedom, I had, thanks to Dad, an on-board, secular sense of responsibility along with, sparing specifics, no shortage of examples of irresponsibility. 

The second of four kids born 1952-1959, I shared standard kid household chores like setting the table, clearing the table, washing the dishes, drying the dishes, taking out the trash, burning the papers (in our backyard we had a metal incinerator that looked like the Tin Man from The Wizard of Oz; trash went in a trash can; paper refuse was burned in the incinerator located between the garage and our basketball goal).

Any lack of attention to these or other chores was met with a sternly worded speech from Dad on being responsible. And it was many years later that I grew to fully appreciate the importance of what Dad was telling me.  It means far more to me today in a Christian sense and a civic sense than it ever did about pulling my weight at home.

In Galatians, and really in much of Paul’s writing and the New Testament overall, our freedom authored by Jesus was a function of “faith expressed through love” (Gal. 5:6), not about chores but about salvation. We think mainly of salvation from sin, but Paul was teaching salvation generally from death and specifically from the law.

Galatians overall is Paul’s book coaching believers in Jesus to understand that the game in Christ was now departed from the “yoke of slavery” (Gal. 5:1) presented by the Old Testament Law. My Bible mentor George Bebawi, who by the way, in Egypt, grew up Jewish and converted to Christ in his late teens, constantly made the point that Galatians was “a stick of dynamite” leveled against the Jews who refused to recognize Jesus as the Messiah. “Think like a Christian, not like a Jew,” was his common refrain.

This, at its most basic, is the meaning of “repent” (metanoia): Think anew.

Sadly, too many people through the ages – and our age is no different – see this difference of worldview, across all religions, as fighting words meant to wipe out opponents. With our freedom in Christ, we are urged to love God, our neighbor, and our enemy.  We are to be free of the enmity and condemnation the world so exemplifies.

And I’ll add, sadly even in our Christian family through the ages, history shows us that the name of Jesus and the idea of Christ have often created as much intramural havoc and hatred as any beliefs from the outside. In the centuries up through, say, the 1600s, Christian-on-Christian violence was a regular occurrence.  We see little of that today, but the mindsets of various Christian churches teach vastly different attitudes when it comes to the spirit of the age and the liberality of just what we are free to do.

As I teach high school students about history and government from the worldview of Christ and the authority of scripture, my dominant, accompanying point is that the most important, operative aspect of freedom is responsibility, Christian responsibility, of love for God and others. Jesus came to save, not condemn (John 3:17, Romans 8:1).

It is not about doing what we want to do; it is wanting to do what is right.

Walters’ (rlwcom@aol.com) father John passed away in September, 1991.

Sunday, January 25, 2026

1002 - Sharing the Joy

Friends: It is a blessing to share our joy with others, and for others to share their joy with us. Have a great week. Bob

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Spirituality Column #1002

January 27, 2026

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Sharing the Joy

By Bob Walters

“… I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances.” – Paul, Philippians 4:11

Though it was never part of my plan, especially not my retirement plan, I somehow blessedly wound up now in my later years teaching high school history and civics at Mission Christian Academy in Fishers, Indiana.

I mention it often; MCA is a private K-12 school of 500 students this year heading north of 600 students next term in just its seventh year of existence.  It was born out of the Covid shutdown and opened in the fall of 2020 with 38 students. In its second year, with 150-ish students, my wife Pam became the high school English teacher. Two years later I came aboard teaching high school history, government, and economics.

We start the econ term in January discussing Christian perspectives of unlimited human wants discerning and deriving contentment amid choices of limited resources.

I.e., we want it all, but there’s only so much to get. Supply, demand, pricing, value, propensities, basic business structures, an overview of financial markets, and a mix of personal finance exercises (credit cards, insurance, banks, taxes, etc.) come later. I happily defer in-depth discussion of monetary policy and the Federal Reserve Bank for their college professors; there’s a reason econ is called “The Dismal Science.”

MCA’s is not a watery Sunday school treatment of a serious topic, but our econ text book integrates biblical principles and scripture.  We spend a couple of early econ classes deeply discussing the nuances of joy vs. happiness vs. contentment. I wrote a column about that two years ago (Link: #898 Happy for Now), but a story popped up this week having to do with IU’s football championship that showed me I missed something.

Heisman Trophy winning Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, a member of the St. Paul Catholic parish on the IU campus, the day before Christmas phoned Father Patrick Hyde and asked if he could “stop by with the trophy.” Hyde’s story about that appeared in a First Things post January 19, (Link: The Joy of Being a Hoosiers Fan).

It’s a fun story to read, and Hyde had this brilliant line: “Joy, from a Christian perspective, is a gift to be shared.” I had missed that in our econ discussions.  We can be content in our circumstances and happy with a situation, but joy is special because it is something of God that we can truly share. Be happy, yes.  Be content, yes.

But share your joy. In all circumstances share this Godly gift, and be content.

As an aside, the “page ribbon” in my Bible stays tucked in Philippians 4. Mainly that is because back in early 2003 when my mother Ruth, then living seven hours north in Alpena, Michigan, was in the final months of her life – and we knew it – I began one of my regular drives from Carmel up I-69 by calling friend and minister Russ Blowers.

I was in borderline tears; Russ knew my situation and suggested we pray his wife Marian’s favorite Bible passage, Philippians 4:4-9. I listened as he quoted, “Rejoice in the Lord always” through “whatever is true, noble, right, pure, lovely, admirable, or praiseworthy” to “think about such things”“And the God of peace will be with you.”

Mom died that March. Marian, in memory care, died 18 months later. Because of Mom, and Russ’s tender prayer and his unwavering love for Marian until the end, I leave my Bible’s page ribbon in that spot as a fond reminder. Also, it is a quick “jumping in” point when finding the shorter books Paul wrote. Everything from Galatians to Philemon is within a few page flips, and that wonderful prayer is always right there waiting for me.

Sorry to wander a bit, but be joyful in the Lord, and content in His love. Always.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) is happy, and wrote about joining MCA HERE.


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