Like many of you, I watched events (especially 2020 thru today) unfold with a growing awareness that the world was changing—quickly, and not for the better. I began to reflect more deeply on the biblical motif of Babylon, not as a distant ancient empire but as a present-day force: a symbol of secular power that opposes God’s people, corrupts the truth, and seduces the soul. And whether anyone agrees or not, the Trump admin bought some time to still flesh this out. I hope the anti-globalist mood stays, but something tells me the empire will strike back. It is deeply rooted in Europe at the moment and the seeds of anarchy are in our soil and part of human nature.
This is not a manifesto... and it surely isn't a white flag of fear, this is a statement of faith. Not a call to arms, but a call to courage. Not a retreat into isolation, but a return to the ancient path. Like Augustine’s vision of the City of God and the City of Man, this is about learning to live as loyal citizens of Christ’s Kingdom while dwelling in the streets of Babylon.
The Motif of Babylon
Babylon in Scripture is a recurring symbol of cultural pride, economic exploitation, and spiritual rebellion. From the tower in Genesis to the collapse in Revelation, Babylon always represents man’s attempt to build a world without God. Its modern equivalents are found in systems that prioritize power over principle, image over truth, and pleasure over holiness.
"Worldliness is what any culture does to make sin seem normal and righteousness seem strange." — G.K. Beale
"Sin is not just doing bad things. It is making good things into ultimate things." — Tim Keller
Babylon still whispers promises of success, security, and significance—so long as we worship at its altars. But to follow Jesus is to renounce that worship, even when it costs us.
History’s Warning: The Knights Templar
The Templars started as defenders of pilgrims—humble servants of a holy cause. But their growing power, wealth, and secrecy eventually eroded their mission. They serve as a warning that good beginnings can be lost when we trade humility for hubris. The church must learn: influence without accountability becomes idolatry. The sword may defend, but it also tempts. Our warfare must be spiritual, not carnal.
I became more interested in the Templars as I watched the History Channel show "The Curse of Oak Island" faithfully for almost 7 seasons! Then I realized the Curse of the Island was actually the show!
It did inspire a song which I think is pretty cool: Rust on the Armor
The Christian Dilemma: Submission or Resistance?
Jesus taught us to love enemies and turn cheeks; Peter said to honor the emperor. Yet those same apostles also stood their ground when told to stop preaching. “We cannot but speak of what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:20).
It’s a tension I haven’t always navigated well. I’ve overreacted in some moments and stayed silent in others. But slowly I’m learning: faithful dissent is not disobedience—it’s allegiance to a higher King. We must prepare our hearts for both submission and resistance, led not by pride but by the Spirit.
This is where social media DOES NOT HELP- hastily posting shallow, often snarky, zingers is not resistance nor does it help the cause.... Though it is a marketplace of exchange... sadly, it is only the marketplace of emotions, irrationality, rumor, gossip, and word salads... it is not the marketplace of ideas at all!
I participate in social media and try to keep it sane, positive, and up lifting... but I find myself posting less and less.....
I’ve made mistakes in my thinking. I’ve let fear drive me at times, and I’ve harbored frustration against those who disagree with me. But I also see the beauty in God allowing different believers to take different stands—some quiet, some vocal—all part of His mysterious strategy to spread truth.
I’m not a fighter by nature. I’m more comfortable listening, teaching, and mentoring than confronting. But I can’t ignore what’s happening around us. Cultural shifts are isolating the faithful, redefining morality, and pressuring conformity. And I can’t let that silence my hope or my witness.
You can look back over my blog and see MANY posts struggling with these concepts- how do we live in the City of Man (spiritual Babylon) but still proclaim our loyalties to the City of God (spiritual Jerusalem)?
Resist Panic – The Bible is a letter of hope, not despair. God is sovereign.
Be Faithful Dissidents – Our battle is not with people but with powers. We speak truth in love.
Call Out Our Own Side – Integrity demands we rebuke error wherever we find it, including among our allies.
Prepare Our Youth – Raise them with clarity and courage. Let them see our steadiness and strength. I haven't made much headway in my call for a new epistemology but will keep trying.
Maintain Gentleness and Respect – These virtues are not optional. They are our witness.
Plan Wisely – Think ahead. Community, communication, and stewardship matter if exclusion comes. We already see the tactics- digital currency and fully integrated communication systems, cameras in every place. It won't be hard for them to lock us down.
Engage Politically – Don’t abandon public life. Find and support leaders who uphold liberty and virtue. The globalists have way more political passion than we often do- I hate politics, but if we don't engage we will hasten the decay.
Stand Against Cancel Culture – Expect mockery. Don’t fear it. Don’t be bullied by avatars/bots.
Watch Globalism – Be alert to the global admiration for authoritarian efficiency. It’s a temptation. China is a lead concern, but globalists exist beyond nation states- they want to own and control you in every way for your own good as they see fit.
Pray for Leaders – Not cynically, but sincerely. God appoints authorities and removes them.
Destroying Babylon in Our Personal Lives
Allegiance to the King – Christ alone commands our worship.
Spiritual Disciplines – Word, prayer, worship, and fasting are resistance tools.
Honest Evaluation – Do an idol inventory. What good things have become ultimate things?
Fellowship and Accountability – Resist isolation. Seek community.
Use Your Gifts – Serve with love. Build up the body.
Be Wise with Media – What enters the home shapes the heart. Discern.
Practice Gospel Liberty – Don’t major on minors, but don’t excuse sin either.
Pursue Holiness – Not out of fear, but as a joyful witness.
Teaching TRUTH Through Culture
Truth can be found in unexpected places. Paul used pagan poetry; I use blog posts, poems, music, books, movies—even secular ones—to draw out truth. Not to glorify the world, but to point to the gospel. This is how we train our students, athletes, and children—to engage wisely, not withdraw fearfully. Nothing I do online is monetized- it is free to all. Please take it, steal it, share it.....
We are not called to be prudes, but prophets. Not detached, but discerning. Our kids don’t need bubbles; they need discernment. Let’s reclaim the good and reject the evil.
A Song of Resistance
The lyrics of Not to Babylon came from this journey. They are my anthem of courage in the face of coercion:
They can take my bread and take my blood, But I will stand where I’ve always stood.
This is not just poetry—it is my posture.
We live in a world of fragments and slogans, echo chambers and shallow sound bites. But we are called to wisdom, patience, and perseverance. Proverbs reminds us not to move the ancient boundaries. Stand firm. Be skilled. Serve the Lord.
There will be conflict and trouble.
If you give your allegiance to Christ, you will get the wrath of Satan
If you give your allegiance to Babylon, you will get the wrath of the Lamb
Whose wrath do you choose?
Jesus told us-
“I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” John 16:33
The worst persecution I face today might be social shaming or censorship. But how I respond to small things will shape how I respond when the cost is greater.
Babylon is falling. Christ is reigning. Let us shine, sing, and stand.
Let the world know: we will not bow.
And please- trust Jesus... not me. :(
FINAL NOTE: As we walk the way, we aren't called to be culture warriors. I was on the apologetics circuit for a time and became acutely aware that I was falling into a trap of winning arguments but losing people. The Lord was gracious and basically said "I don't need you to defend me, I can vouch for myself". This doesn't mean I stopped presenting the reasons why I believe, it basically meant I don't have to be so right that I am 'dead right' and I can stop beating people with the truth. I needed to be hard on my sin... not the sin of others. We feel the need to be culture warriors- but it is a bloody battle that hides gospel light and love. God works like yeast not dynamite. Meekness is not weakness- we are called to stand firm but also proclaim the love and forgiveness of Christ. He moves on the heart of men... I don't. I want others to have the same grace I expect to receive.