Dr. David Jeremiah May 17, 2023 – A Political Prophecy: Cancel Culture (Pt. 1)

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A Political Prophecy: Cancel Culture (Pt. 1)

The influence of social media has made it difficult to stand against popular opinion. Doing so can result in harassment or even removal from public life. Dr. David Jeremiah takes a closer look at this so-called “cancel culture.” Is it just a passing fad or a signal that the End Times have begun?

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Dear Lord,
Today…….I am asking all my prayer warriors to say a prayer that may help others. So many people are hurting right now. Many are struggling with finances and need jobs. Some are facing foreclosure and don’t even know how they are going to make it from week to week..

Many are lonely. . Many are heartbroken. . Many are facing sickness and health is fading. . Some are dealing with difficult family members. Many have lost HOPE.. Tonight, let us put our prayers and faith together decree and declare breakthrough over our families. Financial miracles WILL take place. Jobs WILL be found. Our Bodies WILL be made whole & sickness WILL flee. Marriages and relationships WILL be restored. Family members WILL find Jesus. Heartbreaks WILL be healed. JOY WILL be restored and HOPE WILL be found. In Jesus Name. Amen!!!!!! Keep God First…….

Here’s David. Thank you for joining us today.
We are in the midst of some prophetic messages based upon scriptures uh in mostly the New Testament here and there in Old Testament scripture today, we’re going to talk about some things that are very um present with us.
And uh this message is called cancel culture, a political prophecy.
What do we do with what is happening today when people are being destroyed?
You don’t like what they say. You don’t like how they look and destroy them. That’s what’s happening.
We cancel people out every day. Some people wake up and their biggest fear is not crime in the street.
It’s not financial uh difficulty. It’s the fear of having someone cancel them through the detrimental things that are said in social media.
So it’s a big problem and you may be a Christian and you think if I’m a Christian that won’t happen to me, don’t, don’t count on it.
It can happen to anybody. What does the Bible say about it?
And what does that mean as we look toward the return of Christ more about that in just a moment.
But first, let me remind you that uh the more we look around today, the more it seems like our modern world and contemporary of life are hanging by a thread.
And this whole series that we’re doing, where do we go from here is in response to what we see, what should we do now?
How can we move forward as citizens of God’s Kingdom?
Even as the world teeters on the brink, where do we go from here?
Uh We are talking about these issues and today, perhaps one of the most prominent issues is before us, the issue of cancel culture.
If you don’t have the book, where do we go from here?
You can get your copy for a gift of any size.
All you have to do is send a gift to turning point.
And uh when you send your gift, just um put a little note in there that says, please send me the book and we’ll send it to you.
It’ll come as soon as we can get it to you through the mail.
This 240 page hardback book can be kind of like a resource for you as you face some of these issues that are creeping up around us in this day.
I hope you’ll give us the chance to place this book in your hands.
Well, here we go with part one.
This is Cancel culture, a political prophecy except for 1968 and its riots and assassinations.
I cannot remember a more challenging year in my lifetime for America than 2020 between the pandemic and the flaring of racial tensions after the death of George Floyd floundering economy, skyrocketing murder rates.
The impeachment of Donald Trump people had a lot to argue about and argue they did.
Of course, the US presidential elections added fuel to those fires in the midst of that tension and animosity.
Pastor Chris Hodges of Birmingham Alabama logged on to his Instagram account one day and clicked like on a small number of posts from a conservative author and speaker.
Can you imagine something so innocuous causing trouble?
Well, it did a high school English teacher living in Birmingham saw what Pastor Hodges had done and felt uncomfortable.
She created a Facebook post to address that discomfort, including an image of Hodge’s name next to the notorious likes.
She later ironically told reporters I would be upset if it comes off as me judging him.
I’m not saying he’s a racist.
I’m saying he likes someone who posts things that do not seem culturally sensitive to me.
In less than two weeks, the Birmingham Housing Authority voted to cut ties with Pastor Hodges and the Church of the Highlands.
No longer allowing the church to rent space for one of its campuses.
The housing authority also cut ties with Christ Health Center, a separate ministry founded by the Church of the Highlands to provide free health services for residents of public housing.
Now stop and think about that, a local government shuts down a free clinic for the poor in the middle of a public health crisis.
In their words, Pastor Hodge’s views do not reflect those of the health board and its residents.
That wasn’t the end. The Birmingham Board of Education also voted to cut ties with the Church of the Highlands.
After the so called scandal. For several years, the church had rented two high school auditoriums to serve as additional campuses on Sunday mornings, paying more than 800,000 for that privilege.
No more. The leases were terminated immediately.
Ed Stetzer who often writes for the Southern Baptist Convention was quick to point out the sad irony of these decisions, given all the ways Hodges and his church have contributed to the Birmingham community and beyond.
He wrote, Chris Hodges has led his church to be the largest diverse church in Alabama to engage the poor and the marginalized to minister widely and well in his community.
He and the church he leads has served the poor, engaged the sick, volunteered in the schools and more during the pandemic.
Church of the Highlands has served thousands of meals, made masks, hosted blood drives, helped other churches with online services.
He also liked some social media posts, get the pitch forks.
The long and short of it was that Pastor Hodges had been canceled because he liked a few posts from a popular conservative pundit.
Now let me not stop the story there.
I do not know Chris Hodges personally, but I know a lot about him.
I have incredible respect for him and his leadership and his church and I promise you he will be back and this won’t take him down.
Nobody gets to where he was by letting something like this get in their way.
So just give him time and he’ll be back with greater effectiveness and doing all the things he was doing before.
But a lot more the word cancel once described what we did to magazine or newspaper subscriptions, we canceled them or what happened to a faltering television program, we canceled it.
Now, it’s what people do to people in our society canceling someone is a punishment for doing something, saying something even thinking something that violates a set of unwritten rules currently in play throughout much of the liberal world.
These punishments are typically carried out in three stages.
First of all, there’s an attempt to publicly humiliate the person by flagrantly exposing the supposed wrong he or she committed.
And then once the person has been exposed, he or she is pushed mercilessly to confess and apologize.
Whether that person has actually done anything that requires regret is irrelevant.
Simply to be accused means a retraction and an apology is expected.
And thirdly, regardless of whether the accused apologizes or not, attempts are made to remove that person from public life and from all public conversation.
Once and for all as a result, people are fired, mocked, threatened, de platformed and de legitimized in every way.
Professor Evan Gershman says there is no single accepted definition of canceled culture but at its worst, it’s about unaccountable groups successfully applying pressure to punish someone for perceived wrong opinions.
The victim ends up losing their job or is significantly harmed in some way.
Well, beyond the discomfort of merely being disagreed with.
So what does it take for a person to be canceled?
We’d like to know because most of us would rather not have that experience, but no one knows what it takes to be canceled.
At least not specifically. And as I said, the boundaries that govern this new way of life, what many are calling canceled culture are very unclear.
The rules are unwritten and it reminds me of a car driven by an inebriated person swerving from lane to lane best.
Stay out of the way if possible.
One of the more frightening aspects of cancel culture is that its tenders extend to regular members of society to people like you and me.
For example, Marie Purdy is an artist who was accused of plagiarism.
When a Phi design went public, the accusations were not true, but that didn’t matter to the hundreds of people who posted hateful comments on their Instagram and found other ways to harass her.
She even attempted to apologize for a possible misunderstanding.
But in her words, the apology was torn to shreds and then she wrote this, I have survived five miscarriages and breast cancer.
And this was the worst thing that’s ever happened to me in this culture.
If it sounds unreasonable to you, even unbiblical, you’re absolutely right.
Jesus was asked to identify the most important commandment in the Bible.
And he replied with a two for one special. Do you remember that?
He said, you shall love the Lord, your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind.
This is the first and great commandment, but the second is like it, you shall love your neighbor as yourself.
And I can think of a few things less loving than publicly excoriating random people even trying to get them fired or shamed or silenced all for the sin of daring to disagree with you.
Yet that’s what cancel culture demands.
It bears noticing that Jesus spent a lot of time with people in his day who had been canceled so to speak.
Remember the woman at the well, women were considered second class citizens in the ancient world and Samaritans were scorned.
Furthermore, this Samaritan woman lived in a state of sexual immorality.
Even her own people shunned her, which is why she came alone to draw water from the community.
Well, at the heart of the day, yet Jesus approached her, he spoke kindly to her.
He even offered her the water of life saying whoever drinks of this water will thirst again, but whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will never thirst.
But the water that I shall give him will become in him.
A fountain of water springing up into everlasting life.
Jesus touched lepers who were untouchable according to the law, he welcomed sinners who were despised.
He blessed Children when others were trying to push them away because they were a nuisance.
He expressed compassion for a woman taken in adultery.
He accepted the worship of a woman who was criticized because she poured perfume all over his feet.
He touched the eyes of the blind and the ears of the deaf.
He cast demons out of people who were violent.
And during his final hours, he comforted a murderer who was nailed to a cross next to him.
And after his resurrection, he reassured a doubting disciple and reestablished the disciple who had denied him.
Jesus had no place in his heart for the Cancel Culture.
He was wonderful at demonstrating God’s love and grace to everyone and ladies and gentlemen, he still is.
So what does this mean? It would be nice to think.
Cancel Culture is a temporary phase. Our world is going through.
I hear people say that oh, we’ll get through this.
But society is becoming more intolerant and polarized by the day.
And I’m not so sure we’ll see a reversal of all of these trends.
The more insidious elements of Cancel Culture are a malignant form of spitefulness common to all human nature.
What we’re seeing today reminds me of what Jesus described in Matthew 24.
Here is the prophecy which is foreshadowing what’s happening today.
This was our Lord’s sermon about the last days in the great tribulation leading up to this great tribulation.
Jesus predicted a series of signs that would foreshadow the end of the world in Matthew.
He spoke of wars and rumors of wars and famines and earthquakes and pestilences.
This is what usually we read right over but don’t read over it. Here’s what he said.
These are the beginning of sorrows and then many will be offended will betray one another and we hate one another.
Then many false profits will rise up and deceive many and because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold.
Read that again because there are several terms in these verses that represent the ethos of cancel culture.
First of all, it’s a culture of disdain.
Jesus talked about how easily people would be offended in the days leading up to the tribulation. Boy.
Is that ever true? Recently NFL Star Aaron Rodgers got attention when he appeared in a black T shirt bearing the words, I’m offended.
The sports world wondered if it meant something or if it meant nothing.
But I know a lot of people that walk around with that on their soul.
How easy it is for people to get offended.
You don’t have to do much to offend some people lots of people seem to be going around with an offended attitude if they don’t have it on their shirt.
I mean, how many groups or products have had to change their names, their symbols, their mascots out of fear they might cause offense.
None of us want to be offensive. But doesn’t it seem like people everywhere are too easily offended.
How long before someone sees you reading a Bible on an airplane and feels uncomfortable.
When will someone take offense when you wear a T shirt with the slogan, John 3 16 on it.
What about the cross around your neck? They might come for that.
Jesus linked being easily offended with hating one another and betraying one another.
The Greek word that is translated, betray is important.
It doesn’t mean betrayal like saying negative things about co workers so that you can get promoted and it doesn’t mean betrayal in terms of deceiving others or turning on someone who used to be your friend and stabbing them in the back.
No, instead the text is talking about betrayal in the sense of intentionally revealing or exposing something that is hidden.
It’s the same idea as betraying a secret or people betraying the Jewish identities of their neighbors to the secret police in the run up to the Second World War.
In other words, Jesus said society leading up to the end times would be marked by people who actively root up, expose and betray those around them wouldn’t you say that kind of betrayal is commonplace in our world today?
It is. When you say that kind of betrayal makes up an essential part of cancel culture.
It does in many ways. Cancel culture is dependent on betrayal.
We all have mistakes from our past. We’d like to forget, kind of get a witness.
All of us have made choices we regret and decisions we would correct if we could get a redo.
But in a world fueled by cancel culture, those mistakes are not allowed to remain in the past.
People intentionally dig through the histories and biographies and social media posts of others, even those they consider to be friends in order to drag those mistakes into the present.
Back in 2010, Diana Gerber’s daughter attended Journey school in California.
Students and staff, there were attempting to confront a major cyber bullying incident, which was the first in that school.
Everyone did their best to understand the situation and figure out a way to respond.
But there was much uncertainty, this was totally new ground.
Diana had just finished her master’s degree in a new field called media psychology and social change.
She had academic experience helping people adjust to the new world of the internet and social media.
And she was eager to put that experience into practice together with Journey school.
Diana created a new course called Cyber Civics.
And the goal was to teach middle schoolers what she calls digital citizenship, a way to help them make sense of the challenges posed by a digital world to gain a better understanding of ethics and morality, to think critically instead of superficially and to build their digital reputation, their privacy reject all forms of cyber bullying, shaming and intimidation.
You see today, cancel culture is defined by disdain, a culture of disdain. In his great sermon.
On the end times, Jesus warned of the rise of many false prophets who would deceive multitudes.
That’s never been easier than today.
Today, we are living in a culture not only of disdain but of deception.
And most of the people who are at risk in this day of deception are senior citizens, senior people.
I was shocked to find out that in 2020 senior citizens lost over a billion dollars in cyber scams.
A total of 105,301 people over the age of 65 were taken to the cleaners.
The average person lost more than $9000.
Almost 2000 senior citizens lost more than $100,000 fake news, fake people, fake products, fake friends.
All of this has come to us via the world of big tech and all of this is contributing to a growing culture of deception.
And then finally, it’s a culture of disconnection.
The next logical step in sil culture is disconnection in a culture marked by disdain and deception.
People want to withdraw from society.
They don’t always get pushed out of society, but when you find out people are after you and they’re trying to hurt you.
What do you do? You go into the castle and you shut it down and don’t let anybody near you.
You don’t talk to anybody. You don’t send any messages to anybody.
Listen to what Jesus said in Matthew 24 12, he says, and because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold.
In other words, relationships will go South.
Apologist Abdul Murray had this to say about the relation, frightening nature of today’s society in canceled culture.
A single mistake is perpetually unforgivable because it’s not simply a guilty act.
Rather, the mistake is led to define the individual’s identity, turning them into a shameful person, someone who can be canceled the culture that leads up to the tribulation.
And the end of history will be characterized by coldness in our feelings for one another and in our dealings with one another.
Shockingly, a recent study revealed that nearly half of Americans have not made a new friend in the last five years.
As hatred and deception have increased love in our world has decreased and our relationships have grown cold once again, a little parentheses during this day and this time when I have been studying all these issues, one of the things I have been overwhelmingly impressed with is the absolute necessity of small groups and almost all the literature that I have read, people are saying even non religious people that small groups are going to be the way in which cultures like ours survive.
The onslaught of all of this socialism and stuff that’s coming at us.
Small groups are not just for you to have affinity with others, to be friendly with others, to have fellowship with us, even to study the Bible, but small groups will be the whole defense against what is happening.
I mean, there could be a time when they say we can’t meet in our church anymore, but they can’t keep us from meeting in our homes.
There’s too many of us and there’s too many homes.
And there’s a way in which what is happening now with this friendless society is Christians need to run right into the face of that and say not us.
We’re in a small group with eight other couples and we know a bunch of people and we pray for one another and we serve one another and we rejoice with one another and we born with northern, we have friends.
We’re a part of the body of Christ. We come to church but we have small groups.
And if you’re not in a small group, I guess you probably get the idea. I think you should be.
What we need is to be in a really strong small group.
Well, coming to the end of this talk, let me ask this important question.
Where do we go from here now that we understand more about cancel culture and the dangers that it poses.
Where do we go from here?
What does it take to live in a world like the world we live in?
Well, I’ll tell you, it takes a lot.
What does it take to create a different kind of culture in your home at work at church?
The short answer is it’s not easy to live as members of God’s kingdom in a world that is increasingly hostile to the values of that kingdom.
This is the shared experience of every generation of Christians since the very first one.
So we’ve had 2000 years to prepare for these days.
One thing we know for sure following Jesus is worth it.
And uh I say that with an exclamation point, you may wonder, is it worth it?
It is worth it. And uh what is that old hymn we used to sing?
It will be worth it all.
When we see Jesus, it’s worth it even now to know that you’re standing for the truth.
When you walk around and see the ugliness of what’s happening in our culture today.
The absolute uh rejection of, of any kind of good truth.
You’re so thankful that you got someone you can depend on that, that your truth is not only the truth.
He’s the way in the life.
He’s the Lord Jesus and he is your solid rock tomorrow, we will finish up our discussion on cancel culture.
And then on Friday, we’re going to begin a discussion of spiritual famine, a prophecy that says that in the last days people will be hungry for the truth and won’t be able to get it so much more to learn from this current study.
Where do we go from here?
Once again, the book is yours for the asking when you send a gift of any amount to turning point during this month.
Don’t forget Israel is March 12th through the 22nd, 2024 the information is at David Jeremiah dot org slash events.
Happy to have you with us today. See you tomorrow. God bless you.

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