Today’s rally cry? “God Bless America.” Three words. Chanted at stadiums, printed on t-shirts, shouted after tragedies. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: We demand blessing while we rebel. We invoke God’s name without submitting to His authority.
This isn’t business as usual. This is business with a higher calling. Paul M. Neuberger tackles the spiritual hypocrisy in our nation—where slogans drown out surrender, where faith is performative, where repentance is missing.
Revival starts not in the White House, but in your house. Not with political slogans, but with humble obedience. Jesus is still Lord—even when a nation mocks Him.
Are you ready to confront, repent, and lead?
"Do not be deceived: God cannot be mocked. A man reaps what he sows." –Galatians 6:7
Episode Highlights
03:33 – God cannot be mocked, and yet as a nation we mock him constantly while simultaneously asking him for protection and prosperity. Every Sunday in the fall, millions gather around televisions to watch NFL games. God bless America sung at stadiums, flags wave, hands are over hearts. But according to recent data from the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, only about 6% of Americans hold the biblical worldview. 6%! Yet we want his blessing.
16:00 – There is no such category. A nation either moves toward God or away from him. There is no stationary middle. There is no neutral lane. If we celebrate what God calls rebellion, we can't expect what God promises for obedience. Holiness isn't optional, it's foundational. And until we confront national sin honestly—not politically, not selectively, but biblically—revival is going to remain rhetoric instead of reality.
32:27 – Instead of chanting God bless America, perhaps we should begin praying any one of these three: God, purify your church. God, expose our compromise. God, break our pride. Because when God's people are purified, influence follows. When believers live distinctly, culture feels it. When the church walks in reverent obedience, blessing is no longer demanded, it's reflected.
Connect with Paul M. Neuberger