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Vice-President for Student Services and the Director of the Christian Worldview Center at North Greenville College in Tigerville, South Carolina, Dr. Tony Beam received his Master of Divinity from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, North Carolina, and his Doctor of Ministry from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. Dr. Beam also serves as Interim Pastor at East Pickens Baptist Church

Tony Beam

Pastor, Conference speaker, Professor, Talk Show Host, and Columnist

  •      On July 15, 1979, President Jimmy Carter spoke to the nation about what he called, “a crisis of confidence.”  He described this crisis as “striking at the very heart and soul and spirit of our national will.”  In a speech that became infamous as the “malaise speech,” Carter said, “We can see this crisis in the growing doubt about the meaning of our own lives and in the loss of a unity of purpose for our nation.  The erosion of our confidence in the future is threatening to destroy the social and the political fabric of America.” 
         Wow…I am no fan of Jimmy Carter but I find those words hauntingly prophetic in light of the cultural and political climate we see in America today.  Carter’s speech actually contributed to his own downfall because Ronald Reagan was able to capture the hearts and minds of Americans with a message of hope that America’s best days were ahead and not behind us.  Today, both Barack Obama and John McCain are attempting to tap into this “crisis of doubt” that has crept back into the American psyche.  On the Left, you have Barack Obama’s message of hope and change that has ignited an almost spiritual response among voters.  It appeared that the Right had nothing to counter the revivalist fervor of Obama until Sarah Palin swept down from Alaska through Minneapolis and right into the heart of middle America.  Palin’s ability to identify with and connect with the American people ignited the Right and made what looked like an Obama cakewalk into a political fight reminiscent of the finale of a Rocky movie. 
         There is no question the American people are angry and confused about what they perceive as the lack of the ability of government to act in any way except for its own benefit.  High gas prices, economic meltdown, virtually open borders, and the threat of enemies from just about every corner of the world has led us to a point in history where we are dangerously close to grasping at straws in this election cycle rather than grappling with the facts and gravitating toward a solution. 
         Prior to the speech, President Carter spent ten days at Camp David listening to a group of ordinary Americans as they aired their concerns about the country.  One person summed up the thoughts of many who attended the meeting saying, “Mr. President, we are confronted with a moral and a spiritual crisis.”  If that was true then it is certainly true today.  The pressure we feel, the great sadness we seem to have embraced as a nation has been brought on by our unwillingness to operate at any level according to a shared set of moral standards.  Our economic meltdown is not merely the result of greed on Wall Street as many would like for us to believe.  There is certainly greed to spare on Wall Street but if we are honest, we will have to admit we all have had a part to play in our current situation.  The average American is maxed out on their credit cards with little or no savings to fall back on.  While it is true banks and other lending institutions are guilty of pushing unsustainable loans on people who had no business borrowing beyond their means to repay, it is also true that individuals chose to step willingly into a morass of debt in order to “have it all and have it now.”  They borrowed assuming they could sell quickly if they got into trouble or worse, assuming they could just declare bankruptcy. 
         During part of the debate over the seven hundred billion dollar plus bailout passed by Congress, one of the pundits described what would happen to us if the government didn’t step in and relieve the pressure on the mortgage industry.  He said credit would dry up because banks would require a down payment for loans and people would have to demonstrate they had the ability to pay back the money before the bank would lend them anything, whether it be for a car or a house.  In other words, if we didn’t get a bailout we would be forced to return to sound financial policies based on logical principles.  How ironic that our political leaders either refused or were unable to hear how ridiculous their arguments for the massive bailout sounded to the American people. 
         President Carter was profoundly wrong about many things.  But if he believed the problems we faced in the mid to late 70’s that led us into a national sense of disconnect with government were caused by a lack of spiritual and moral fortitude he was right.  Until we begin to face up to the fact that we have brought our current crop of problems on ourselves by abandoning our spiritual and moral foundations we will not experience a renewal of America’s confidence and greatness.  From Wall Street to Main Street to your street, we need a revival of our spiritual dependence on God and our shared sense of moral accountability.  I pray that as a nation, we will hear and heed the call Jesus made in Revelation to the church at Ephesus to “remember, repent, and return” to the place where we collectively embrace the Truth and live according to His will. 

        


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  •      I came to know Christ as my Savior when I was twenty-five years old.  I made a “profession of faith” when I was in middle school but it was merely an acknowledgement of the faith of my father.  I wanted to know Jesus because my dad knew Jesus and I wanted to be like my dad.  It was a faith in having faith rather than a faith in the living Christ. 
         I say all that to say I thought I had an anchor that would hold.  I believed that the act of walking an aisle and being baptized was the essence of salvation.  When the storms of college life hit with all its freedom and temptation, I pulled up the anchor and sailed into whatever pleased the flesh. 
         I married right out of college and set a new course but I was carrying the same old cargo.  Four years into my marriage I was asked to be a part-time youth and music minister in a small Southern Baptist Church in South Carolina.  I took the job because it was part-time and the pay was a nice augmentation for my salary as a sales manager for a local radio station. 
         Four months later I took the members of the youth group to youth week at Ridgecrest Baptist Retreat Center in Black Mountain, North Carolina.  The camp pastor’s message brought me face to face with the lie I was living.  When the invitation was given, I went forward.  Broken and deeply convicted, I was ready to put my anchor into something other than just the idea of faith. 
         I love music so I naturally started looking for inspiration and encouragement through music.  I was listening to the radio one day and I heard Ray Boltz singing “The Anchor Holds.”  When I heard him sing, “I have fallen on my knees as I faced the raging sea, the anchor holds in spite of the storm” it took me back to that night when I finally threw my anchor onto the rock and I knew that it would hold for eternity.  I immediately became a Ray Boltz fan because his music and lyrics seemed to always land right in the cracks of my life bringing healing and encouragement when the road was rough or the water deep. 
         I found out two weeks ago that Ray Boltz announced to the world that after years of struggling with homosexual longings he decided to pull up his anchor, stop fighting the storm, and just go with the flow. For two weeks, I couldn’t even think about it, let alone write about it or talk about on my radio show.   It has been a long time since I experienced the flood of emotions that when right through my soul.  I was angry, hurt, disappointed, and profoundly confused as to how someone who had been such an inspiration to me and to millions of others could just walk away from the faith.  How could he walk away from his wife and children?  How could he write those words that stirred my soul, creating in me a hunger for a more intimate relationship with God when his anchor was obviously dragging along the bottom of such a dark place in his life?
          The Lord took me to two places in His Word that helped me come to grips with the depth of the deception that led to this decision in Ray Boltz’s life.  The first place was Matthew 7:21-23, “Not everyone who says to me Lord, Lord, will enter the kingdom of heaven; but he who does the will of my father who is in heaven.  Many will say to Me on that day, Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform many miracles?  And then I will declare to them, I never knew you; depart form Me, you who practice lawlessness.”  I had read those verses many times and preached numerous sermons about their meaning.  But now the hard truth of Jesus words made me realize that no one knows the heart of another person.  The people Jesus referred to in this passage were shocked to hear their relationship with Him was a not a relationship with Him but merely a relationship with the ministry they performed for Him.  They knew Jesus but it was knowledge of Him as a man and not as the Messiah.  They were turned away because the fruit they produced was like the fruit that sits in a bowl in our living room.  It looks like fruit but in reality it is just a plastic, empty, cheap imitation. 
         The second place the Lord took me was to 1 John 2:19, “They went out from us, but they were not really of us; for If they had been of us, they would have remained with us; but they went out, in order that it might be shown that they all are not of us.”  We cannot fool God and we will not be allowed to fool the world forever.  The one who truly can hold your anchor in the storm will not allow a false anchor to hold forever.  There comes to all a day of reckoning and revelation.  Reckoning to God and revelation of that reckoning to the world so that the truth of God can be upheld. 

         I pray for Ray Boltz…. that God will show him where the anchor really holds. 

        


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  • The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life and the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press surveyed 2,905 adults from July 21-August 10th. The survey revealed a disturbing trend concerning the attitude of conservatives about the mixing of politics and religion.  Four years ago, just thirty-percent of conservatives believed that churches and other houses of worship should stay out of politics.  The 2008 survey found that now, fifty-percent of conservatives express this view.  The survey also discovered that the sharp division between Democrats and Republicans concerning religion has virtually disappeared.
         Two years ago, only two out of every ten people surveyed believed Democrats were friendly to religion.  Today, that number has doubled to four out of ten.  Also disturbing is the number of evangelicals who seem to be waffling between McCain and Obama.  While McCain enjoys a significant lead in the polls with evangelicals, only twenty-eight percent say they "strongly" support McCain, which means the support of the vast majority of evangelicals is still up for grabs.
         As I have said many times, 2004 was a watershed moment for the Democrat party.  Up until 2004, they saw conservative evangelicals as an irritant.  The party’s take on religion was to ignore it within the party and to condemn Republicans for mixing politics and religion. 
          But the exit polling data from the presidential race revealed that it was conservative evangelicals that gave Bush the edge over Kerry and expanded the Republican majority in Congress.  Democrats immediately began changing their strategy from defeating evangelicals to becoming pseudo evangelicals.  They launched an all out attack against conservative evangelicals, painting them as fundamentalists who want to turn America into a theocracy.  When you add the scandals associated with prominent evangelical leaders that preceded the 2006 mid-term elections you have the disappointment and disillusionment throughout the Christian Right that opened the door of opportunity for the Democrats. They replaced the haranguing of religion with the hiring of consultants who could teach them the language of Zion while many continue to support the agenda of Babylon.
         The Democrat National Convention kicked off in the Pepsi Center in Denver looking and sounding more like a tent revival than a political stump meeting. Rev. Leah Daughtry led what was billed as the first ever Convention interfaith gathering.  Rev. Daughtry demonstrated the “big tent” atmosphere of the meeting by greeting those in attendance in the language of the Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, and Christian faith. 
         Four years ago the Democrats could boast only one meeting during the convention that dealt with the topic of religion.  This year’s convention includes ecumenical prayers offered at the beginning and ending of each session along with a plethora of discussion groups led by Left leaning religious organizations that didn’t even exist prior to 2004. 
         If the results of this poll are accurate, and I suspect that they are, it means the strategy of the Left is working.  The good news from the poll is that a majority still believe it is important for presidents to have strong religious beliefs and that fifty-two percent still view the Republican Party being favorable toward religion.  While those numbers are encouraging we should remember that the Left doesn't have to win a majority of conservative evangelicals in order to win the election.  They only have to siphon off between ten and twenty-percent in order to seal the election for Barack Obama. Believers must be wise in this election cycle.  It is more important than ever for born-again Christians to know where the candidates stand (and have stood in the past) on key social issues.  The culture war, the war for the heart and soul of America is still raging.  This year's presidential election will be a major battlefront.


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  • The questions about religion began with the primary season.  On the Republican side you had Mitt Romney, who made no secret of his devotion to Mormonism.  Mike Huckabee, a former Southern Baptist pastor, spoke openly of his faith saying his faith “defined him.”  During the primary debates Republican candidates fielded questions about when life begins, how the earth began, and about how their personal beliefs would impact their public policy.  Mike Huckabee caused a stir when he recorded a Christmas message that appeared to have a floating cross in the background.  The questions about Mitt Romney’s Mormonism became so intense he crafted a speech to explain his faith that was compared to President Kennedy’s speech defining his Catholicism.  Romney’s speech was billed as the defining moment of his candidacy. 
         On the Democrat side Hillary Clinton was busy sounding like a southern evangelical while Barack Obama was trying to distance himself from Rev. Jeremiah Wright, his pastor/mentor of 20 years.  The Wright controversy threatened to sink Obama’s meteoric rise from relative obscurity to political superstar status.  When he finally gave a speech to put the Wright controversy to bed, it turned out to be a rambling speech on racism that, if anything, poured more fuel on the fire by failing to distance himself from Wright and by bringing his grandmother into the debate.  Wright wouldn’t go away and neither would Father Pfleger.  When Wright met the press and Pfleger decided to imitate Hillary Clinton from Wright’s pulpit, Obama was left with no choice but make a clean break from his now former mentor.  Barack and Michelle Obama announced they would leave Trinity Church of Christ and that they wouldn’t be joining another church until after the election.
         Now fast forward to the showdown at Saddleback.  Rick Warren, arguably the most well known pastor in America, sits down with McCain and Obama for a night of purpose driven politics.  Surprisingly, with the teleprompters off and the pressure on, McCain outshines the new great communicator and a crack in the evangelical ice toward McCain sends a much-needed rush of excitement through the Republican base.  That small crack breaks wide open just before the Republican Convention when McCain shocks the political establishment by choosing Alaskan Governor and evangelical Christian Sarah Palin as his running mate.  Any leftover icy feelings by evangelicals toward McCain totally melted away in the heat of Palin’s convention speech.  A new political superstar was born and she just happens to be a born-again Christian. 
         Now that both teams are set for the final race to the finish, both sides are taking aim at the other sides religious jugular vain.  Obama is being accused of being a closet Muslim and his slide in the polls among evangelicals forced him to admit his “above my pay grade” answer to Warren’s question about when life begins was “a bit too flip.”  Palin’s family has come under attack by feminists who, amazingly enough, are now concerned about what kind of mother she can be if she is just one heartbeat away from the presidency.  When was the last time you heard a feminist leader give a hoot about the traditional family, let alone the role of a woman as a mother?
        The latest attack against Palin comes in the form of scrutiny of the Wasilla Bible Church that according to the Associated Press is promoting a “pray away the gay” conference in Anchorage, Alaska.  In reality, the conference is a “Love Won Out” conference sponsored by Focus on the Family.  These conferences, which have been held in cities all across the country, teach that homosexuality is a lifestyle that can be overcome through prayer and the Word of God.  The AP referred to Focus on the Family as a “fundamentalist” organization.  A quick perusal of other websites reveal a host of stories about how radical and wacky Palin’s church is.  You can be sure the Left will do their best to turn Palin’s pastor into the equivalent of Jeremiah Wright and they will try to paint her church as an extreme right wing haven for assorted religious kooks and cranks. 
         One thing is for sure…religion is now front and center in the race for the White House and it is showing no signs of retreating.  It proves that Americans care deeply about the religious convictions of their leaders.  Evangelicals will play a major role in this election.  I pray that we will all pray our way through the political static and allow the Word of God and the Holy Spirit of God to be our guide as we choose our next leader.  Whoever wins this election, history will record that religion and religious voters played a major role in shaping both campaigns. 

        


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  • Thursday, September 18, 2008
    Values Voter Summit Focuses on Values
         I just returned from Washington and the Family Research Council Values Voter Summit 2008.  The difference between this year and last year was startling.  Last year, all of the Republican candidates for the nomination lined up to tell us why they should be the one true choice of values voters.   Mitt Romney won the straw poll by a nose but it was clear to everyone present former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee stole the show.  Huckabee proved he was more than just a good speechmaker when he won Iowa and went on to win several more southern primaries, staying in the race longer than any other candidate before finally bowing to the inevitable nomination of John McCain.  McCain, Thompson, Tancredo, Huckabee, Romney, even Giuliani and all the rest pushed their worldview as the most Christian, the most “value friendly.”  Each one was going to change the world by the power of their ideas.  They each claimed they held the key to victory over the Democrats because each one carried the mantel of Ronald Reagan.
          What a difference a year makes.  This year Newt Gingrich, Coach Joe Gibbs, Bill Bennett, Chuck Colson, Gary Bauer, Starr Parker, and Tony Perkins all stressed the power of values over the power of the ballot box.  They all agreed that believers have a responsibility to take their values into the public arena by participating in the political process but each speaker, in his or her own way, called for a renewal of Christ-centered values as the foundation of political action. 
          There is no question the political catch phrase; the buzzword that flies from the mouth of every political commentator or pundit is “change.”  Barack Obama emerged from the Democratic primary as the candidate of change when he uttered the now famous but somewhat dubious line,  “You are the change you have been waiting for.”  His mantra of change filled arenas and fired up the Democratic base.  His fiery, yet eloquent, and somehow polished rhetoric drove his multitude of devoted followers into an almost ecstatic state.  Change became the word of hope.  Hope was inexorably linked to change and for awhile, for a long while, it looked as if change would become the political tsunami the Democrats would ride to crushing victory in November.
          Then came the missteps by Obama.  The public embarrassment of Jeremiah Wright; the “finally proud of my country” comment by Michelle Obama; the host of shadowy associations from Obama’s past; and his own verbal waterloo, his “clinging to God and guns” comment.  Just as in the movie Rocky IV when Rocky finally drew blood from Ivan Drago, the seemingly invincible Russian champion, Obama looked like a prizefighter with the title in his pocket suddenly on the ropes. 
         Then came Sarah Palin...and the long suffering and up till now silent base of the Republican Party erupted with a new kind of change.  Obama chose Biden as his running mate.  It was a safe but uninspiring choice that left the media and the Democrat masses subdued.  Obama’s soaring speech from pseudo-Mt. Olympus had barely ceased ringing in the ears of the faithful when hurricane Sarah blew in from the frozen north, swept up the Republican base, and the word “change” took on a whole new meaning.  Now it appeared the Republican Party was the true party of change while the Democrats looked like the party of the same.  Now, change is changing and Barack Obama no longer has exclusive dibs on change.  Change is back up for grabs and whichever party changes the most to put their candidate in the best position to embrace real change will change the course of the election. 
         In the middle of all this meaningless change, Tony Perkins stepped up the podium (which became a pulpit) on Sunday morning and reminded all the “Values Voters” what real change is all about.  He opened the Word of God and read just one verse, “From that time, Jesus began to preach and say, ‘Repent, for the kingdom of Heaven is at hand.”’ Perkins then spent the next thirty minutes or so talking about how repentance, the change of the human heart by the power of Christ, is the only change that is real…the only change that lasts.  He then reminded all of us that repentance comes when we “humble ourselves, pray, seek God’s face, and turn from our wicked ways.” He told us the story of the man who wanted to catch a mouse but was too cheap to buy cheese.  He reasoned that the mouse he was trying to catch was stupid so he cut out a picture of a piece of cheese and put it in the trap.  The next morning he hurried to the kitchen to see if the mouse had taken the bait.  He found a picture of a mouse where the cheese picture had been. 
         We were still laughing when Perkins delivered the line of the summit.  He said, “pseudo change will always bring about pseudo results” (my paraphrase).  It hit everyone like a ton of truth that change is not a political slogan or a phrase to be won as a political prize.  It is the power of God.
         What a difference a year makes. 
         


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