LIFE Bite

In this timely episode, Pastor Chet addresses one of today's most divisive topics through a biblical lens, sharing his personal discovery of his family's undocumented immigration status from the Bahamas and how it shaped his understanding of Christ-centered responses to controversial issues.


πŸ”₯ Pastor Chet teaches three essential principles for Christians navigating immigration and other sensitive topics: maintaining Christian character as outlined in Matthew 5, demonstrating Christian conduct worthy of the gospel, and understanding Christian contention through the balance of Romans 13:1 and Acts 5:29.


πŸ“– This message challenges believers to move beyond political divisions and respond with the heart of Christ - showing mercy to all people, being peacemakers, and choosing prayer over protest. Pastor Chet shares powerful examples from his missionary work in Liberia, where he and his wife rescued 1,500 child soldiers, demonstrating what sacrificial gospel living actually looks like.


πŸ“Œ If you're struggling with how to respond biblically to complex social and political issues while maintaining your witness for Christ, this episode offers biblical perspective and practical guidance. Pastor Chet reminds listeners that the most powerful response to any crisis is prayer, encouraging believers to seek God's intervention rather than relying solely on human solutions.

What is LIFE Bite?

LIFE Bite is a short-format Christian video podcast where Chet Lowe and guests dive into real-life issues with biblical truthβ€”one bite at a time.

Each episode delivers practical wisdom, spiritual insight, and honest conversations to help you grow in faith and live with purpose.

It was this year that I was able

to walk into my mom's house after having

the home for over 30 years.

She sold it and moved out to California

to be with us.

And my dad always used to put every

year's worth of income tax or special documents.

He had a great filing system.

He would throw it into a black garbage

bag and then throw the black garbage bag

up into the ceiling.

So as we were going through, my mom

would just like, hey, throw everything away.

But I decided to go through everything and

discovered as I was looking at our immigration

papers.

Now, some of you don't know that I

am an immigrant from the Bahamas.

And I was looking at our immigration papers

and I noticed that we were asked to

leave the country.

We're being forced to leave.

And we stayed in the United States illegally

until we were able to secure a green

card.

Now, I didn't never knew this.

When I asked my mom about it, her

response was your father paid his taxes.

I'm letting you know a little story about

my own life's journey as an immigrant from

the Bahamas because of the current situation that

we find ourselves here in L.A. County.

There's a lot of people that are up

in arms.

And this is not necessarily something that I

want to delve into any kind of political

structure, whether you're Republican, whether you're a Democrat

or whether you're independent, because there is a

biblical response that we must adhere to in

order for us to minister as Christ's ambassadors.

And there's three things that I want to

talk about today.

The first is Christian character.

A lot of times when we get emotional

and when there is an issue that is

very sensitive to us, as this one is,

sometimes we can lose Christian character.

But Jesus did not give us a pardon,

nor did He give an excuse that we

can have for us to lose it.

Some will say, well, Jesus, He lost it

in the temple.

Well, we have a theological term for that.

It's called righteous indignation.

You see, Jesus can do something that no

human being can do.

He can read the heart.

He can perceive.

He knows what's going on.

Now, human beings, we can discern the heart

by what people say, because out of the

abundance of mouth speak the heart.

But we don't know the reality, like Jesus

does, of what was going on in people's

hearts.

He was righteous in what He did because

He knew exactly what was going on.

But for the human being, we've been called

to Christian character, and we find that Christian

character in Matthew 5.

In fact, even if we're slapped on one

cheek, we're told to turn the other cheek

because of this particular character.

That character, poor in spirit.

We're to be humble, humble at all times.

We're to mourn with those who mourn.

That is the heartbeat of a Christian.

We're to be meek, and that means power

under control.

And we're going to talk about that in

just a little bit.

We're to hunger and thirst for righteousness.

In other words, with every issue and every

situation in life, we should be discovering in

the Word of God how we're to handle

that situation.

Not how we feel about it, not our

politics, but how Jesus directs us.

That's a hunger and thirst for righteousness.

Then He says, blessed are the merciful.

Now, that's a quality that every single one

of us should have.

And it's not mercy to who we pick

and choose.

So whether we have mercy for ice or

we have mercy for the immigrant, we're to

have mercy for all people because God did

not pick and choose His mercy.

He had mercy on you, and He had

mercy on the thief on the cross.

Then there's the pure in heart.

This is the desire of the Christian to

be pure in heart, not to have any

kind of motive, not to have any kind

of heartbeat except for that of the Spirit

of Christ that is guiding inside of each

one of us.

Blessed are the peacemakers.

We can't throw that out, that Christian character

out, simply because we're upset or we're frustrated

about a given situation.

And then the Bible goes on to say

our Christian character, we're going to be persecuted

for righteousness.

And the reason being is because the enemy

can't stand when we stand up for our

Christian character.

Now, I'm going to go on to the

second one, Christian conduct.

Listen to what Paul wrote the church, that

we're to conduct ourselves in a manner worthy

of the gospel.

Once again, listen, we're to conduct ourselves in

a manner worthy of the gospel.

There is something that I majorly disagreed with

many years ago when I was serving as

a missionary in Liberia, West Africa.

There were children being used as soldiers, children

being used as young as five.

I have a four-year-old that we

were able to rescue, four, five, six, seven,

eight years old, children killing children.

I was enraged about it.

I was so angry about it that I

did something about it.

I started rescuing child soldiers and bringing them

into my home.

That's a conduct, I believe, that's worthy of

the gospel.

So many people are willing to hold up

signs, even against abortion, and they're willing to

go and do an event against an abortion.

But if you ask that same person that's

holding up that sign, are you willing to

adopt, take that woman into your home and

then pay for all the medical bills and

then adopt that child?

Oh, that's a whole different story.

You see, Christian conduct walks worthy of the

gospel.

And I need to help us all understand

what that means, that sacrifice, that we're willing

to sacrifice, that we're willing to love unconditionally,

all people, not just people that we pick

and choose.

And then 1 John 3 describes it.

It's a laying down of our lives.

Now, I don't have anything against anyone putting

up any kind of sign in protest.

That's not what I'm saying.

What I am saying is that we need

to be as Christians, we need to have

a Christian conduct.

And that's one that's worthy of the gospel,

one that's willing to lay down our lives,

to go the second mile, to do something

above and beyond what the world would expect

in order to make a difference in culture.

And so, Andre and I, in the course

of this Liberian civil crisis, we actually went

against the existing government because they were warlords

that were, they were warlords that were leading

children into fighting.

And we rescued 1,500 child soldiers, and

we brought them into our home, and we

began to raise them and then foster them

into other Christian homes.

That, I believe, is sacrifice.

It's not just simply holding up a sign.

It's choosing to make a difference in someone's

life for their eternity.

Sometimes we're so concerned about the politics of

the border.

But are we concerned about the politics of

the border between heaven and hell?

What do we speak most about?

Are we willing to speak about our politics,

or are we willing to lead someone to

Jesus Christ with the same words?

What do we talk more about?

It's a question that we all need to

ask ourselves, because I believe what the church

should be doing is going amongst those that

are in that riots and offering the peace

of the gospel to everyone that's there.

Now, does it mean what's happening is right?

That's not what I'm saying.

But what I'm choosing to communicate is that

we don't have the right as believers just

to throw away our Christian conduct because we're

upset about an issue.

And then, finally, let me talk about Christian

contention.

There's two verses that I want to bring

up, and they seem like they might, well,

be oppositional to each other, but not really.

First is Romans 13, verse 1, Let everyone

be subject to the governing authorities, for there

is no authority except which God has established.

We've got to remember that God established Cyrus.

He established Nebuchadnezzar.

These were wicked guys that God chose to

use for His glory.

Would I have picked these guys?

Absolutely not.

But I'm also not the all-knowing God.

God establishes authority.

But listen to this verse.

The Bible then goes on to say in

Acts 5, verse 29, We must obey God

rather than human beings.

Well, let me tell you something.

I don't believe there's anyone that has decided

how to solve the difference of these two

verses other than Martin Luther King, Jr. I

want to give you a quote that he

said in the process of the Civil Rights

Movement.

He said this, Darkness cannot drive out darkness.

Only light can do that.

Hate cannot drive out hate.

Only love can do that.

Recently at our church, we had a gentleman

by the name of Ivan Mawariri, and he

was in Zimbabwe during a very corrupt government.

And while there, he decided to oppose the

government.

And let me tell you how he did

it.

He did it through prayer.

And by prayer, we were able to see

that government come down because God took over.

There's nothing more powerful than the power of

prayer.

I'll never forget.

It is an indelible imprint in my mind

when the state of Florida was deciding over

whether or not the abortion was going to

be illegal.

There was all kinds of hatred in front

of the Florida Supreme Court.

You should have seen it, and I would

encourage you to pull it up on YouTube.

And there in front of the Supreme Court,

there was all kinds of hatred.

But Christians yelling at non-Christians, and non

-Christians yelling at Christians, and pastors shouting and

screaming against abortion.

Well, it's easy to show up for that

event.

But if you had to take a look,

and maybe you'll see them or maybe you

won't, if you took a look beyond that

image of all that rioting that was going

out in front of the Supreme Court, there

were two women.

And two women were on the steps of

the Florida Supreme Court, and there they were

in prayer.

You see, the most powerful people that were

there that day were those two women that

made the decision, we're going to choose to

go to God because we can't solve this

problem.

Politics can't solve this problem.

A legislature cannot solve this problem.

A president cannot solve this problem.

But God can solve this problem.

And if we go to God in prayer,

there is so much power in prayer.

Please don't ever say to someone, the least

I will do is pray for you.

The most you can do is pray for

someone.

And then when God presents in front of

you a need, remember Scripture.

And remember how God would lead you to

minister to someone in need.

You don't turn someone away, whether they're legal

or illegal.

You choose to minister the way that the

Word of God tells you to minister, and

you choose to be led by the Holy

Spirit of God.

And the best way that you can know

is you commune with God, you have a

communication with God, and that is going to

be through prayer.

Seek God in prayer and go to God

in prayer for this, for what's going on

in LA.

And let's ask God to intervene and watch

how He will part our Red Sea, and

God will be glorified in this.

Let's go to God in prayer.

Until next time.