As I’m reading Jonah, Amos, and Isaiah I’ve been pondering
this question. These guys were bold, many times unpopular, and believed what
they said—because they believed in the God who said it first. They weren’t
(contrary to popular belief) just crazed preachers who flew-off-the-handle
every chance they got. They were neither gluttons for punishment nor did they
have some kind of martyr-complex. And they certainly weren’t out for personal gain. They
were lovers of God in a world that was running away from God as fast as it
could. They were lone voices proclaiming hard truth when all other voices were
spewing lies. They were people who loved their nation and loved people enough to warn and admonish—sometimes through tears.
A few months ago, Ron Brown, an assistant football coach for the University of Nebraska Cornhuskers, found himself in the news for being, well, a modern-day
prophet. I know Ron. He and I were the speakers for a Fellowship of Christian
Athletes leadership camp in Shreveport, LA a few years ago. Quite frankly, he
may be one of the godliest men I know and perhaps the best speaker I have ever
heard. Yep. You read that right. He’s not hateful—quite the contrary. He is a compassionate and loving man. I saw this in the way he treated his wife
with honor and how he spent many hours with high school and college students that week that he didn’t even know. He was vulnerable and humble. He genuinely
wants people to know the Christ that saves sinners. He’s also passionate and
uncompromising about God’s word. Of course that means he's a lightning rod for
controversy. That’s what makes him, in my estimation, about as close as we can get
today to a prophet.
He proved it when he weighed in on a hot issue this April—perhaps the hottest of our time: homosexuality. It’s the same issue about
which I get pushback almost every time I mention it in light of God’s word.
Of course, the popular media frame his words and edit his comments to make him seem like an unloving, extreme fundamentalist. He’s not. He’s a
prophet. And like those of old, after the names of all the “kings” that “rule”
today are relegated to obscure lists that no one knows except to note their collective
complaisant (read: cowardly) attempts to be considered tolerant and hip, Ron
Brown will be remembered for much more. He is FAR from hateful. He is faithful
to be a lone voice of grace, love, and truth to sinners like me whose salvation
is found in no other name but Jesus. He could just enjoy his own redemption and wait around for heaven. But he chooses to put his reputation on the line to invite others to find new life in Christ.
We need prophets today.