
Wake Up and Build: Immigration, Economics, and the Spiritual Battle for America — GoodVue Episode 32
In Episode 32 of Good News on GoodVue, hosts Duke White Jr. and Dr. Lee Kanter dove into one of their most urgent and eye-opening conversations yet—a discussion that spanned immigration, global economics, spiritual complacency, and the internal erosion of American values.
What unfolded was more than a commentary on current events—it was a prophetic call for the Church to wake up, take responsibility, and return to a biblical worldview before the consequences of complacency consume the very freedoms so many take for granted.
Immigration: Compassion vs. Chaos
The episode began with a biblical examination of immigration—not from a political lens, but a kingdom perspective.
Duke pointed out a key distinction between the biblical call to help the foreigner and stranger and what we’re witnessing today, which he described as something more akin to invasion. Citing Scriptures that both welcome the wanderer and warn of judgment through conquest when nations fall away from God, he drew parallels between ancient Israel and modern America.
“When the people of God are walking in righteousness, God says to welcome others. But when His people are rebellious, He uses outside nations as judgment.”
He emphasized the need for compassion but also for order, systems, and national boundaries that uphold righteousness—not open-door policies that allow crime, corruption, and foreign powers to exploit a weakened America.
Spiritual Decline: The Doorway to Invasion
Duke and Lee agreed: America’s vulnerability isn’t just about policy—it’s spiritual.
When morality is compromised, leadership falters, and the people grow complacent, the result is a society ripe for exploitation—both physically and spiritually.
“The world saw America’s moral decay on national TV,” Duke said. “They saw us turn from God, and it signaled our weakness.”
This wasn’t alarmism. It was an invitation to repentance—a warning that when the Church becomes passive, the enemy becomes bold.
Borders, Debt, and the Power of Prayer
Lee provided sobering insight into the economic war America is already losing, especially with China. Referencing cyberattacks, tariffs, and the national debt, he emphasized that we’re in a battle that most Americans don’t even realize we’re fighting.
“We’ve exported our wealth. We’ve allowed consumerism to overtake national responsibility. And now we’re vulnerable—militarily and economically.”
He cited recent reports of China admitting to preparing cyberwarfare, while highlighting how the American people have been lulled to sleep by comfort, failing to realize how close we are to collapse.
But amid the warnings came a consistent refrain:
“We must pray.”
Not just passive, generic prayers—but bold, strategic, nation-shifting prayer. Because true change begins when God’s people humble themselves and seek His face.
The Kingdom Vision: One Spirit, One People, One Purpose
Lee brought in Ephesians 2 to reframe the immigration debate spiritually:
“You are no longer strangers and aliens, but fellow citizens… built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus Himself being the cornerstone.”
This is the vision: that all people—regardless of origin—can become one in Christ. But unity only works when it’s built on shared values, moral clarity, and covenantal commitment to truth.
As Lee put it:
“If we’ve lost our own compass, how can we expect others to align with our values?”
Consumerism vs. Kingdom Culture
A major theme of the episode was how consumerism has overtaken patriotism, creativity, and legacy.
“We’re not even called citizens anymore—we’re called consumers,” Duke said. “They define us by how we spend, not who we are.”
He challenged viewers to return to biblical stewardship, warning that comfort is the enemy of progress. When comfort becomes king, innovation dies. Vision dies. And eventually, nations die.
“There is nothing more dangerous to progress than comfort.”
It’s time for Christians to reject the idol of comfort and embrace the discipline of legacy-building, education, and innovation—especially in media, business, and government.
The Debt Trap and the Fall of Education
Lee broke down the crisis of national debt with clarity and urgency:
- Credit card debt is rising.
- National deficit is unsustainable.
- Treasury bond rates are vulnerable to international manipulation.
And yet, most Americans are unaware of the danger. That’s why GoodVue exists—not just to report the news, but to help translate it through a biblical worldview, giving people a foundation to act with wisdom and conviction.
Meanwhile, the education system continues to decline. Duke pointed out that for decades, schools have focused less on learning and more on conformity, leaving generations of young people unprepared for critical thought.
The solution? A return to homeschooling, private Christian education, and platforms like GoodVue that model biblical literacy, innovation, and responsibility.
Biblical Insight: How Egypt Enslaved Israel Through Economic Dependence
One of the most profound analogies came when Duke referenced how Israel became enslaved in Egypt—not through force, but through economic dependence.
“When the money system failed, they said, ‘Just take care of us and we’ll work.’ That’s how it started.”
This mirrors what’s happening in America now. As comfort rises, so does reliance on government. When a generation loses the ability to produce, innovate, and think independently, they become enslaved not in chains, but in systems.
A Final Call: Repent, Rebuild, and Reclaim Our Nation
As the episode wrapped, both hosts returned to the foundational promise of Scripture:
“If my people who are called by My name will humble themselves and pray…”
They urged viewers to wake up, rise up, and refuse to let another generation be raised in bondage to debt, deception, or spiritual darkness.
“We’re not saved by green paper—we’re saved by red blood. The blood of Jesus Christ.”
America’s future doesn’t rest in policy alone. It rests in repentance, unity, and a people who know how to fight spiritually.
“Let there be no division among you. A kingdom divided against itself cannot stand.”