From Michael Quinn Sullivan <[email protected]>
Subject Texas Minute: Jan. 31, 2020
Date January 31, 2020 11:55 AM
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A quick look at the news and info of the day.

Good morning,

When given the choice of tip-toeing around the sensitivities of the political and religious elite of the day or exposing their rank hypocrisy, Jesus called them a “brood of vipers.”

But first, here is today's Texas Minute.

– Michael Quinn Sullivan

Friday, January 31, 2020

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In just a few hours our cousins across the pond will finally shake off the chains of their would-be European potentates, exit the EU, and reclaim their British sovereignty. It is my hope this will be a first step in a bold new era of self-governance for the people of England.

And if you have a few minutes, watch the entertaining farewell speech Britain’s Nigel Farage gave [[link removed]] before the EU parliament earlier this week.

Texans for Fiscal Responsibility has announced the endorsement [[link removed]] of conservative standout Jon Francis in his campaign for Texas House District 60. He has also been endorsed by numerous individuals and organizations, including U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller, Texas Right to Life, and local activists Don and Rene Poe.

With a judge’s orders officially declaring the Midland school bond as having failed, Matt Stringer reports [[link removed]] residents are now looking for a better way to meet the district’s needs while improving an election system that broke down so dramatically.

Faced with a massive field of candidates for an open congressional seat, a band of citizen-activists in Brazos County didn’t wait for others to step up and serve their fellow voters. Cary Cheshire explains [[link removed]] how a group of Brazos County Republicans, members of the Bryan/College Station Tea Party, and other grassroots activists came together to plan a series of candidate forums designed to help their voters make sense of the choices. ​

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​ Friday Reflection

If anyone knows the name “Chorazin” today, it is only because it is twice mentioned in the New Testament for Jesus’ famous “Woe to you” lines about the city. Not exactly what you want to be known for...

As you might imagine, Chorazin fell off the map for almost 2,000 years. Some people even doubted it ever existed. When archeologists in the early days of the 20th century discovered the village, they found not only the remains of a synagogue but an intact “Seat of Moses.”

This was a common feature in ancient synagogues; it is where an esteemed teacher would sit, read from Scripture, and lecture. A replica sits in Chorazin today; I’m probably the least distinguished person to have sat on it. (The original is preserved in Israel’s national museum; they won’t let anyone sit on that one.)

In Matthew 23, Jesus mentioned how the “scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses' seat” but he cautioned the people to “do and observe whatever they tell you, but not the works they do. For they preach, but do not practice.”

Public hypocrisy, we find, isn’t the exclusive domain of modern politicians.

But let’s back up. For two thousand years, the world has grown to see the Pharisees as the bad guys, as self-serving hypocrites. But that’s not how they were viewed in Jesus day; they were regarded as the right-thinking heroes of Israel – because they once had been. They had begun to rot from the inside, but it was Jesus who was willing to call them out for what they were.

It’s also important to realize the Pharisees were as much a political institution as they were a religious one; an unavoidable circumstance in the context of a society in which religion and government were so deeply intertwined.

If anything, the Pharisees of Israel in the years surrounding Jesus’ life were as well regarded by Jews as the Republicans in Texas have been for the last two decades. But like the dwindling devotion of some GOP politicians to their party’s stated values and the grassroots base, the Pharisees had begun serving themselves rather than God and their fellow Jews.

You will recall Jesus described how the Pharisees did “all their deeds to be seen by others.” Meanwhile, they “tie up heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them on people's shoulders, but they themselves are not willing to move them with their finger.”

Can you relate? Today’s politicians – Republicans and Democrats alike – want to be credited with the “righteousness” of so freely spending other people’s money on their “good” causes. (The politicians’ photo op is the basis for our public debt.)

Jesus’ solution wasn’t to coddle the hypocrites but to expose them! He didn’t tip-toe around their sensitivities, but called them a “brood of vipers.”

When we as citizens fail to hold public officials accountable, we fail our responsibilities. When we allow a continuing divergence between what politicians promise and what they deliver, we enable hypocrisy.

And their woe becomes ours.

Number of the Day

31

Number of days until the 2020 Primary Election

[Source: calendar]

Quote-Unquote

“To be free is better than to be unfree - always. Any politician who suggests the opposite should be treated as suspect.”

– Margaret Thatcher​

Programming Note

Texas Scorecard will be unveiling a new content section on Monday!

Your Federal & State Lawmakers

U.S. Senator

John Cornyn - R

(202) 224-2934

U.S. Senator

Ted Cruz - R

(202) 224-5922

Governor of Texas

Greg Abbott - R

(512) 463-2000

Lt. Governor

Dan Patrick - R

(512) 463-0001

U.S. House, District

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Texas Senate, District

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Fiscal Index Rating:



Texas House, District

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Request A Speaker [[link removed]] Contribute [[link removed]] Managed / Update Your Email Preferences [[link removed]] Michael Quinn Sullivan

CEO, Empower Texans

Texas Scorecard & Texans for Fiscal Responsibility

​www.EmpowerTexans.com

www.TexasScorecard.com

(888) 410-1836

PO Box 49730 | Austin, TX 78765

PO Box 700981 | Dallas, TX 75370

PO Box 36875 | Houston, TX 77236 The Texas Minute is a quick look at the news and info of the day that we find interesting, and hope you do as well. It is produced on week days and distributed at 6 a.m. (though I'll probably take the occasional break for holidays and whatnot).

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