As I watched the debate last night, a grim realization settled over me—this isn’t Kansas anymore. It’s more obvious now than ever before. Something feels off, something has changed. What we once knew, the life we cherished as kids, has slipped through our fingers. It’s gone. And as I sat there, John Calvin’s words struck me, searing into my thoughts:
“When God wants to judge a nation, He gives them wicked rulers.”
Those words clung to my mind, haunting me through the long, sleepless hours of the night. If we look at America today, we can see a picture that perfectly illustrates this truth. Our nation is being governed by leaders—both Democrat and Republican—who embody not the virtues of righteousness, but the very essence of wickedness.
And today, there is no escape, nowhere to flee, no other “greatest country in the world” to seek refuge in.
Jeremiah 23:19 says, "See, the storm of the LORD will burst out in wrath, a whirlwind swirling down on the heads of the wicked." How can anyone deny that this whirlwind of divine judgment is churning right over our nation?
Let’s not play pretend—like some Evangelical leaders are doing today—like the Democrat party has some kind of moral high ground over Republicans. The Democrat party, with its open celebration of sin and mockery of basic human morality, is parading our nation toward God's wrath. Church leaders, who should know better, have begun to align with them, in the name of “love” and “compassion” when it’s really nothing more than their personal grievances on display.
They cozy up to progressive politics and talk about “social justice,” ignoring the stench of death that hangs over abortion clinics and the debauchery flaunted in the streets. How can they square this with the Word of God? Have they forgotten Isaiah 5:20:
"Woe to those who call evil good and good evil"?
No, I will never support the Democrat party—not in the slightest. It's a den of wickedness, through and through. But here’s where it gets a little dicey. Even the so-called "lesser of two evils" is becoming harder to distinguish from the darkness it once claimed to oppose.