Prior to New Year’s Eve, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal sent a letter to 100,000 pastors to “discuss the importance of raising up the next generation of leaders in America,” referring to the men of Issachar in the Old Testament of the Bible. He asserts that America needs “such men and women of wisdom today who will accept the challenge to restore America’s Judeo-Christian heritage.”
Jindal’s letter was a precursor to his busy schedule, which began in Iowa in early January at thirty below. Other politicians and potential 2016 presidential candidates will meet with pastors in Iowa on January 24th at Iowa’s Freedom Summit.
Instead of joining them, Jindal will be in Baton Rouge hosting “The Response- Louisiana: A Call to Prayer for a Nation in Crisis.” Following the first Response in Houston in 2011, the free event hosted by the American Renewal Project is organized to bring people together to worship God through prayer.
The day before Jindal and I met at another event for pastors in Houston he had initiated a two-hour prayer meeting with thirty men to pray for spiritual revival in America in his home.
One key point Jindal has repeatedly emphasized is that electing the right people or passing the right legislation is not enough to steer America in the right direction. What concerns him the most he says, “is the secularization of America, the coarsening of our culture,” and the loss of religious liberties, which appear to be largely directed towards Christians.
“Religious liberty created the United States of America, not the other way around,” he emphasizes. “We seem to have leaders in our universities, in the media, and in the government that don’t understand this. Nor do they understand that our founding fathers created a limited government to secure our God-given rights, not to create those rights.”
In speech after speech, Jindal crisscrosses America encouraging everyone he meets. A die-hard New Orleans Saints fan he cannot help but use football analogies to explain why he and others must not lose hope.
“It’s like you’re watching a football game and you already know which team is going to win,” he says.
“Our God wins. He beats death. There’s no question that our God wins. That doesn’t mean we know what’s going to happen in the first, second, third or fourth quarters, or that we know what’s going to happen before the end of the game.” But because the outcome is known, he argues, “Christians need to be more joyous.”
We can boldly suit up, show up, practice, be part of a team and focus on the same goal.
“We need to understand that it’s not inevitable that our best days as a country are ahead of us. But it can happen,” he adds.
“Our 40th president used to remind us that every generation has to choose for itself to renew those principles of freedom. The great thing about America’s history is that it seems that when the hour was darkest we would have these amazing great awakenings, a specific time of turning back to God.”
Jindal highlighted his time in Cedar Rapids and Des Moines this week when pastors reflected on the truth espoused by early 19th Century theologian Adolph Saphir, who said, “It is in the night of adversity that the Lord sends forth bright stars of consoling hope.“
He insists The Response is necessary for America’s future especially because he is a father of three young children. With sparks in his eyes he says resolutely, “I want to make sure we leave them the inheritance we received, the blessings and the ability to be raised in the greatest country in the history of the world. But we need to turn to God in prayer for that to happen.”
One can hope. As the classic song inspires:
“We are traveling in the footsteps
Of those who’ve gone before
But we’ll all be reunited (but if we stand reunited)
On a new and sunlit shore (then a new world is in store)“Some say this world of trouble
Is the only one we need
But I’m waiting for that morning
When the new world is revealed“O Lord, I want to be in that number
When the Saints go marching in.”
This is a revised version of a column first published by Townhall.