Like any media craze, the public’s fascination with “Duck Dynasty” and the folksy, country bumpkin-ish Robertson family has cooled somewhat. But Phil, Miss Kay and the rest of the Robertson clan remain fixtures in the American psyche, both for their duck calls and their downhome reality show antics.
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Similar to recent Christian films like “The Chosen” and “The Sound of Freedom,” response to “The Blind” exceeded box office expectations, resulting in its nationwide run being extended by weeks. What impresses most about the excellent film is its depiction of the redemptive, life-changing power of Jesus Christ.
From time to time, we’ll hear someone demanding evidence of Jesus Christ, the existence of God, or why Christianity matters anyway. There’s lots of evidence – historical, archaeological, eyewitness accounts, and many other kinds. But perhaps the greatest evidence is the testimony of changed lives; individuals and families saved from absolute ruin and transformed into people filled with joy, hope, and unwavering faith and trust in the God with whom “all things are possible” (Mark 10:27).
In “Duck Dynasty” Phil Robertson is the kindly family patriarch, spinning yarns and pithy witticisms about life in general and faith in particular. The motto on his official website is “Faith. Family. Ducks.” But “The Blind” shows how lost and desperate Robertson and his young family were before a country preacher introduced him to Jesus Christ nearly 50 years ago.
Growing up in a wrong-side-of-the-tracks family, with an oft-absent father and mother suffering from mental illness, Robertson didn’t seem destined for a path from poverty to celebrity. After girlfriend Kay became pregnant, he abandoned a promising college football career to provide for his family. Alcohol, however, soon became his constant friend, along with all its destructive consequences.
Sometimes people must get so low in life that they have no choice but to look up. That’s where Robertson was – having lost his wife and family, home and business. Only then was he willing to hear about what Christ had done for him on the cross and respond by receiving God’s mercy and grace.
His story of redemption and transformation is just one of countless accounts given through the ages. There’s the apostle Paul, formerly known as Saul, a zealous Pharisee and persecutor of Christians who met Christ on the road to Damascus. Radically changed, Paul went on numerous missionary journeys proclaiming the Gospel message. In Pisidian Antioch the transformed apostle told synagogue rulers, “We tell you the good news: What God promised our fathers He has fulfilled for us, their children, by raising up Jesus” (Acts 13:32).
The song, “Amazing Grace,” is well known not only in churches but also in concert halls: “I once was lost but now I am found, was blind but now I see.” John Newton, writer of those lyrics, penned those words from the depths of personal experience. One result of his conversion was renouncing the slave trade in which he once engaged and becoming an outspoken abolitionist, seeing slavery abolished in his native England before he died.
We could cite countless other examples. You probably know of some yourself – you might be one of them. Lives dramatically and eternally changed, not “cleaned up” but transformed by being born again spiritually, as Jesus told Nicodemus in John 3:3.
In His parable of the prodigal son, the Lord told of a young man with the gall to demand his inheritance while his father was still living, then proceeding to squander the fortune and end up wallowing with pigs. The son, defeated and ashamed, returned home hoping to be accepted as a servant but his father ecstatically embraced him and declared, “For this son of mine was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found” (Luke 15:24).
This story figuratively depicts the reception the Lord gives to each of His children who recognize the truth of Romans 3:10-12, “There is no one righteous, not even one; there is no one who understands, no one who seeks God…there is no one who does good, not even one.”
At that moment of discovery, many find God turning their despair into delight. Paul expressed triumphantly, “What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death?... Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death” (Roman 7:24-8:2).
Ultimately, the Christian life is one of faith, not empirical evidence. “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God not by works, so that no one can boast” (Ephesians 2:8-9). But the amazing outworking of that faith – lives forever changed not by personal effort but by the transforming presence of Christ through His Spirit – should be enough evidence to cause even hardened skeptics to reconsider.
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