This week, the president detailed the many ways in which he has
fundamentally transformed America. When he took office, Barack Obama set
out to accomplish this goal by tragically departing from the values
that made America a great nation. Unfortunately, this isn't cause for
concern for the President—it's cause for celebration.
The evidence
of this transformation is everywhere—from terrorists attacks on our
streets to the confusion in our classrooms; from the further fracturing
of the family to the misuse of our military to the expanding racial
divide. And unfortunately, we'll be spending the better part of a
generation trying to repair the damage of the Obama administration.
But,
as those who watched tonight's State of the Union know, there is light
at the end of the lawless tunnel. We see it in the fresh face sitting in
the Speaker's chair behind President Obama. We saw it in the audience,
where women of conviction like Kim Davis and the Little Sisters of the
Poor were seated—symbols of courage in the president's war on religious
liberty. And we see it in the speeches of the men and women vying to
stand exactly where the president is next year.
We remember that
for every outrageous ruling on marriage, there were brave county clerks.
For each attack on faith and nature's law, there were cities like
Houston. And for every atheist suing to take God out of schools, there
were godly principals. At last night's State of the Family address at
FRC, we paid tribute to them all—and called on the Church to pray and
act for a spiritual, moral and cultural renewal in our nation. That
clearly was not the president's message tonight, but it's the message
our country needs to hear.
President Obama's faith in Washington is far greater than his faith
in the American people. He calls for national unity in the same breath
that he lauds same-sex marriage—the single most divisive Supreme Court
decision since Roe vs. Wade. And his condescending attitude discourages the kind of cooperation he claims to desire.
Marriage,
religious liberty, human sexuality, the church, race relations and our
core beliefs have all been frayed by the words and deeds of this
administration. As Christians, if we don't have the freedom to live
according to our faith—whether it's in the home, the workplace or
school—then we really can't be free.
That's why I believe it's time for America's Christian leaders to come together and show our political leaders a way forward.
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