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For the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.
I Timothy 6:10

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Showing posts with label Christianity And Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christianity And Politics. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Comments Which Conservatives Blocked From Their Blogs For June 12, 2024

May 5

To R. Scott Clark and his article that talks about the real problems and conflicts behind the scenes of the world we live in. In that article, he made a questionable statement that described the status of our world. The article appeared in Heidelblog.

The least we can do when lamenting the problems of the day is to be accurate and fair. But both seem to be missing to some degree in the above article.

'Undergraduates openly calling for the slaughter of Jews, the widespread use of chemical abortifacients, the transgender madness (now magically embedded into Title IX, an act of Congress, by executive order), and seemingly unchecked crime and violence in American cities'

We should note that the first and last items of lament are exaggerations. How many undergrads are calling for the murder of Jews compared how many are protesting the slaughter of Palestinians by Israel's IDF. In fact, there is no concern for the plight of the Palestinians in Scott's article.

Regarding the last item, the FBI reported that violent crime, including murder was down in 2023 compared to 2022. Homicides were down 13%.

And scientists are discovering some physical causes for gender dysphoria. So how much of the transgender craze is really madness?

We need to be more accurate and fair in reporting the status of our world today. Failure to do so could hurt our credibility when preaching the Gospel

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May 18

To Bill Reddinger and Part 2 of his two part series on Christian ideas that help us be  moderate in our politics. This appeared on the Heidelblog

Radical and Moderate, like conservative and liberal are relative measurements. For example, what was conservative in America during the Cold War was liberal in the Soviet Union. Therefore, being radical or moderate implies nothing about our views.

In addition, it's not whether a position is radical or not that is the problem, it is whether a person believe that they are superior to others to the extent that they believe that they have no need to listen to others.

There are at least 2 areas where this belief in one's own superiority takes place. One is intellectual superiority. This occurs when one believes that they themselves or their own group is so superior to others that they have no need to listen to others. They feel entitled to be the leaders. In fact, they get irritated when someone with different views tries to contribute to a discussion.

The other superiority is spiritual/moral superiority. Here a person believes that they themselves or their own group are spiritually and/or morally superior to others. Here, one can think of the Pharisee from the parable of the two men praying (see Luke 18:9-14) for an example. Note how the Pharisee looked down on the tax collector. This sense of spiritual/moral superiority moves us try to silence those whom we dislike by discrediting them. When we feel spiritually/morally superior to others, we forget that neither is there a day when it is safe to pray like the Pharisee nor a day when we don't need to pray like the tax collector. When we think that we are spiritually/morally superior to others we forget how Romans 2 and James 2 reminds us that either we are in the same boat as the people we judge because we either commit the same sins that they do (see Romans 2) or we commit different sins (see James 2).

When we recognize our ties to others rather than believe that there are areas where we are better than others, it has a moderating effect both on what we say and how we say it. Recognizing our ties to others help keep our ideas more within the realm of reality and prevent us from being too radical in how we express those views.

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To Heidelblog T. David Gordon and the part of his article on Tocqueville and his view of American exceptionalism which was quoted in Heidelblog. Gordon tries to show that Tocqueville had an ore negative view of America and its exceptionalism. This appeared in Heidelblog.

The article cited:

https://www.frontporchrepublic.com/2023/10/alexis-de-tocqueville-and-american-exceptionalism-exegeting-tocqueville/

In the article cited by the above blog post, the writer reinterprets a Tocqueville statement on America from being a compliment to that of being a criticism. And thus America did not provide a positive reflection on democracy, a form of government and society which Tocqueville preferred. So America's exceptionalism was a negative indicator rather than a positive one.

If democracy means the 'rule of the people,' then how can one have democracy without equality? But if Tocqueville saw equality in America during that time, then he was overlooking the plight of Native Americans, blacks, and women, to name a few.

So if because we don't have equality, we don't have democracy, then what has America been since 1776? Jeff Halper's distinction between technocracies and democracies might help us what America has been and still is (see pg 74 of Jeff Halper's <I>An Israeli In Palestine: resisting Dispossession, Redeeming Israel</I>):

'<b>An ethnocracy is the opposite of a democracy, although it might incorporate some elements of democracy such as universal citizenship and elections. It arises when one particular group—the Jews in Israel, the Russians in Russia, the Protestants in pre-1972 Northern Ireland,  the whites in apartheid South Africa,  the Shi’ite Muslims of Iran, the Malay of Malaysia and, if they had their way, the white Christian fundamentalist in the US—seizes control of the government and the armed forces in order to enforce a regime of exclusive privilege over other groups in what is in fact a multi-ethic or multi-religious society. Ethnocracy, or ethno-nationalism, privileges ethnos over demos. whereby one’s ethnic affiliation, be it defined by race, descent, religion, language or national origin, takes precedence over citizenship in determining to whom a country actually “belongs.” Israel is referred to explicitly by its political leaders as a “Jewish Democracy.”</b>'

Halper's distinction between ethocracy and democracy adds more criticisms to America than what the cited article claimed that Tocqueville was giving to America at that time. That perhaps, Tocqueville didn't understand what democracy was about, which is quite understandable for his time. 

But we also need to add that because of Tocqueville's admiration for British society, perhaps Tocqueville was using British society as his canon for measuring how advanced a society is. That though Tocqueville saw the American experiment as being detrimental for any positive claims one would want to make about democracy because of the lack of advancement in American society, Tocqueville was being unfair in his evaluation of the American experiment. Tocqueville was being unfair because he took for granted Britain's age and thus its time to development vs America's. That is a point that the writer of the article directs our attention to.

Therefore, any conclusions about democracy in society cannot be confidently reached by the comparison of America to Europe. First, there was no equality in America and thus it was not a true democracy during Tocqueville's time. Second, Tocqueville was comparing a just born nation with nations that were middle age if not old. Their stages of development were in two different times.

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May 19

To Russell Hittinger and his article on the failure of liberal humanism and the importance of basing a nation on Catholicism. His article appeared on the Imaginative Conservative blog.

If liberal humanism includes democracy with equality, then we must ask the question of whether liberal humanism has failed us or have we failed liberal humanism. For what we see when we look at when religion dominates society is a pervasiveness of intolerance and a domination of the other, of those who are different. At least, that is what Church History teaches us. And seems not to matter which branch of the Church is in control over a given region.

Those who call for the dominance of religion are like those who support Trump for President in 2024. For those who support Trump for President do so regardless of Trump's history. It matters not why they support Trump for President. It matters not whether they are true believers in Trump or they just oppose Biden, Trump left the nation in shambles when he was voted out of office.  Trump's bungled responses to Covid, his attempts to overthrow fairly elected new government, Trump's lies, Trump's racist descriptions of immigrants from South of the Border, his setting the future up for disaster by denying climate change, his divisiveness by denying systemic racism, his risking our future by his part in renewing the arms race, his threats to our nation's sovereignty by his friendships with and admiration of several dictators in the world, and his part in threatening our economic future by increasing deficit spending even before the Covid pandemic.

What does Church history tell us about religious dominance over a nation? It tells us of religious wars, inquisitions by both Protestants and Catholics, support for imperialism and colonialism, anti-Semitism, the acceptance of superstitions, and the oppression of those who don't believe. All of that was practiced during Christendom. Regardless of any contributions to the understanding of metaphysics, Church History does not speak well of religious dominance.

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May 23

To David Hall and his article that calls the current protesters who are siding with Hamas the 4th Reich. This was posted on the Heidelblog website.

If the above is not hyperbole, I don't know what is. It isn't that Jewish anti-Semitism hasn't increased or isn't a problem. BTW, I believe that the ADL would tell us that Jewish anti-Semitism occurs in right-wing circles more than on leftist college campuses. But if the 2nd Reich had nothing to do with anti-Semitism, why should we name what's happening today the 4th Reich? Perhaps some so name this present time in order to incite fear and enflame fury against a favorite whipping boy in order to rally the troops.

We should note how the term anti-Semitism is wrongfully used. It is wrongfully used because it is selectively used. We should note that the Semite classification of people does not revolve around ancestry or race. The Semite classification is for people whose language comes from a specific group of languages. And therefore Jews are not the only Semites in town. Arabs, and that includes Palestinians,  and people from some African nations are Semites too. And yet, the term 'anti-Semitism is not used when prejudice and bigotry is expressed against Arabs or certain groups of people from Africa. Quite often prejudice and bigotry expressed against Arabs is called Islamaphobia. And do we associate the same shame that we do with Islamaphobia  as we do with anti-Semitism? BTW, one never has to worry about answering rhetorical questions.

By that, I don't mean that we should minimize what is now called anti-Semitism. But if we believe in equality, then we would either call prejudice and bigotry against any Semitic group of people 'anti-Semitism' or we would rank prejudices against other Semitic groups as being equally wrong as anti-Semitism.

BTW, something that is not well known amongst conservatives. Some of the most famous Pro-Palestinian college encampments are organized by a coalition of Jewish groups and other groups. That was the case at the Columbia University encampment which included an anti-Semitism workshop, Seder service, and, if memory serves, a joint prayer meeting. In addition, along with the encampments. increases in Islamaphobia have also been seen across college campuses. And so why wasn't that reported?

One final point, yes, Hamas is horrible. They want the land from the river to the sea for a pro Islamic Republic. And their means include committing horrific atrocities. But doesn't Modern Zionism want the same land, the land from the river to the sea, for its own people too? The Settlers I spoke to once outside a CUFI conference told me that they view the land that Palestinians live on as their, referring to the themselves, inheritance. Israel has sometimes denied the presence of its Occupation by asking how can one occupy its own territory. And during the Occupation, besides oppressing Palestinians, Palestinian land on the West Bank is being confiscated and annexed by Israel. And yet, none of that is reported by the above article.

Instead, the above article rightfully complains about those who support Hamas. But the same article neglects to report the full context of why some wrongfully side with Hamas. Instead, it seems to suggest that all of the pro Palestinian college encampments are pro-Hamas. Doing so is simply dishonest.

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June 7

To T. David Gordon and his series of articles that opposes sending an overture regarding regarding transgender procedures for minors to the government. This was posted in the Heidelblog website.

Click here for Article #1

Click here for Article #2

Click here for Article #3

Just perhaps the WCF is the problem. I understand its position in Reformed denominations like the PCA. But when an argument is based solely on the WCF and not first on or even supplemented by the Scriptures, then doesn't that indicate that the WCF is put on too high a pedestal?

The problem I see with the WCF passages pertaining to the issue mentioned in the above article is that it prevents this portion of the Church from speaking prophetically to society and the state concerning corporate sin. Such produces a silence over perceived corporate sins. And as Martin Luther King Jr pointed out in his sermon against the Vietnam War, silence can be betrayal.

The problem I see in sending the above mentioned overture to the government--Civil Magistrate is an antiquated term--is that the Church has not put itself in the position to sufficiently understand the what science has to say about the issue. And so the overture can be based too much on ignorance even though I agree with the positive character assessment of the people responsible for the overture. And I would say the same about those who would support the above article.

We need to see that the Scriptures tell us to oppose sin, which is part of preaching the Gospel. The Old Testament prophets preached against the social sins of their time. And though we don't see much of that in the New Testament, one of the reasons could have been the context of that time. The average American citizen in today's world bears much more responsibility, due to our democratic form of government than citizens in the Roman Empire during the time of the Apostles.

By relying too heavily on the WCF in judging the sending of the Overture, we forget the disparity in the contexts of the time in which the WCF was written and now. To neglect that disparity in determining how the Church should interact with the government today is not a wise thing to do. Instead, adhering to the WCF 31.4 and other related passages in today's setting could indicate a blind obedience to the WCF and the placing of the WCF on too high a pedestal.











 

Friday, November 9, 2018

Where Is The Balance Between Christianity And Politics?

In a recent blogpost, David Rupert (click here for a short bio) tries to warn us on his blog about the dangers that Christians and the Church face by becoming too involved with politics (click here for the article). He cites the relationship between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian government as an example. Rupert mentions that both are scratching each other's back by noting how much land the Orthodox Church owns and how Russia has passed laws that make it difficult for evangelical churches to make any inroads into Russia while the Orthodox Church says nothing about how dissidents are disappeared.

Rupert then asks whether the Church in America is also too involved in politics. He correctly notes how problems emerge when the state and the Church get too friendly and how some tend to have too many expectations on the state provided the right people are elected. 

According to Rupert, Christians who get too involved in politics are vulnerable to losing their passion for God's kingdom and the eternal.  He also mentions how Jesus asked whose picture was on the Roman coin so as to say give unto Caesar what is his. Finally, he reminds us that the solutions to our problems do not rest in politics and what politicians do.

Now it's not that Rupert has not made some valid points, it is that his overall perspective of what politics is and  and the relationship Christians should have with politics seems shallow. Yes, our first passion should be for God's kingdom. But how much we can contribute to that kingdom partially depends on how we participate in the earthly kingdoms in which we find ourselves. This is especially true because when we call ourselves Christians, all that we do and say become associated with the Gospel. So if we are seen as supporting exploitation either by explicit promotion of or through silent complicity, that becomes associated with the Gospel. And the association of exploitation with the Gospel acts to inhibits people to listen and consider what the Gospel preaches.

We should also agree with Rupert in tempering our expectations of how much politicians can do to make our lives better. However, Martin Luther King Jr. understood a vital role of the state in a different way. For King saw politics as providing a partial solution to the racial and economic problems of his day. For when people's hearts are to too cold to want to treat others as being made in God's image with the respect they deserve, laws passed by politicians can significantly contribute to preventing people from exploiting others. So while politics may not be the solution, politics can significantly contribute to providing a partial solution to some of our problems.

Certainly the Church should not want to impose most of its standards on the state. For there is a certain degree to which people should have the political freedom to reject what God commands. But that doesn't mean that the Church never try to speak prophetically to the state. For when the Church is silent in the midst of the exploitation of either people or the environment, that silence in the face of evil becomes associated with the Church and the Gospel. That is partially because the silence results in the Church becoming complicit in the sins of society and the state while it harshly condemns individuals for personal sins. In addition, the same time, the Church shows itself to being poor stewards of the tools God has given those of us who live in democracies.

How much the Church should be involved in politics depends on at least two basic tenets: first, all that the Church says and does becomes associated with the Gospel and second, we should share society with unbelievers as equals. Regarding the former point, we should remember that during prerevolutionary times in France, Russia, and Spain the Church sided with those with wealth and power. So when the revolutions came, the Church and the Gospel were understandably viewed as being enemies of the people of the revolution. And being viewed as enemies caused unnecessary persecution of the Church as well as a loss in the credibility of the Church and the Gospel.

Regarding the latter point, the Church has consistently failed in treating many whom it considers others as equals in society. During a vast majority of America's history, many in the Church supported various expressions of white supremacy. And some of those expressions unfortunately live on. Today, the Church struggles with sharing society with the LGBT community as equals.  Though having resigned to themselves to fate, many worked hard to prevent the legalization same-sex marriage and thus preventing Christians from sharing society with the LGBT community as equals. This portrays the Church and the Gospel as being the enemies of equality and justice. Thus when Vladimir Lenin claimed that religion is the opiate of the people, he was basing his state on observation (click here for an example of Lenin's claim).


Because once we call ourselves Christians, all that we do and say becomes associated with the Gospel. Thus, we need to be very careful regarding what politics we adopt because we will associate our politics with the Gospel. For example, many of today's Christian Republicans have bowed down to the almighty dollar while denying how such reverence is severely wounding both the environment and many people.   Meanwhile those Christians who support elective abortion are blind to how they then associate the killing of unborn children with the Church and the Gospel. Both groups have associated horrific actions and thinking with the Gospel. And lest the rest of us become arrogant to such Christians, we should remember the parable of the 2 men praying.



 


Friday, May 25, 2018

The Time Is Now But This Message Is Not Yet

There is no time like the present for the Church to speak out about the injustices that are so pervasive both in our nation and in the world. And the Reclaiming Jesus movement has done just that. A collection of religious leaders met in order to issue a statement that tries to reassociate Jesus and the the Gospel with another, but very general, political perspective than what is promoted today. And considering Church history, the time for such a reassociation of Jesus with a new set of political views was needed yesterday. For in the pre-revolutionary times of France, Russia, and Spain the dominant branch of the Church in each of those times supported those with wealth and power. And the danger for the conservative evangelical Church today is that it is very prone to following those historical examples.

Here we should note that the Church can support wealth and power in two distinct ways. One way is to explicitly state its support for those policies and ideologies that preserve the status quo for benefit of those with wealth and power. That occurred in each of the examples listed above. The Roman Church spoke out in support of the aristocracy of France, the Russian Orthodox Church spoke out in support of the Tsar and the economic elites of that time, and the Roman Church spoke out in support of the Spanish Kingdom before the Spanish Revolution.

As for America, we do have, in part, a repeating of history. Before we go into that, we should note what is the dominant part of the Church in America. That title belongs to conservative Protestants or the combination of conservative Protestants and Conservative Catholics. That defines the dominant part of the Church in America at this time. And there are parts of that dominant part that explicitly speak out in support of those with wealth and power. One only needs to read a few articles on economics at the Acton blog or listen to some sermons from white evangelical churches to witness that support.

But another way that the Church can employ to support those with wealth and power is for the Church to remain silent on the corporate sins of state which are the result of the direction provided by those with wealth and power. For the Church to say nothing about those sins while it strives to point out all of the personal sins committed by individuals is to minimize, if not deny the existence of, those corporate sins. And that is despite the fact that there are fare more people who become victimized by the committing of corporate sins than those who are are victimized by the committing of personal sins.

When the Church is silent in the face of the injustices being revived by any government, the Church becomes complicit with those injustices. So in either case of whether the Church explicitly supports or is silently complicit with the corporate sins being committed, the Church is supporting the primary beneficiaries of those corporate sins: those with wealth and power.

Thus, part of the preamble of the Reclaiming Jesus document (click here for the text) states the following:

When politics undermines our theology, we must examine that politics. The church’s role is to change the world through the life and love of Jesus Christ. The government’s role is to serve the common good by protecting justice and peace, rewarding good behavior while restraining bad behavior (Romans 13). When that role is undermined by political leadership, faith leaders must stand up and speak out. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said, “The church must be reminded that it is not the master or the servant of the state, but rather the conscience of the state.”

there exists another part of the Church, not a part of the dominant part of the Church in America, that is pushing back against the corporate sins being overlooked by much of the Conservative Church here in America.

There certainly should be little objection to what was cited by Martin Luther King Jr. The Church should serve as part of the conscience of the state. The Church should not be the only source of objection, but should be speaking out now. But the beginning of that quote also suggests a bit of an overreach by the Christian leaders who wrote the document. The role of the Church is not to change the world through the life and love of Jesus. The moment we say that is the moment we open the door up accepting some sort of vanguard position of authority in the state. And yet, acting as the conscience of the state is one of the responsibilities of the Church. Why? It is because the job of the Church is to preach the Gospel of Christ in order to persuade people to believe and follow Jesus. Preaching against all kinds of sins is part of that job. And some of the sins people commit involve corporate sins that exploit people and the environment and thus endanger other people either now or in the future.

So on the one hand, the Church is to preach against all kinds of sins including those state sins and other sins that consist of exploiting others or the the environment. At the same time, the Church must avoid justifying the seizing of power for the sake of preaching against all kinds of sin. So let's take a look at what the document promotes.


The Reclaiming Jesus document speaks against the prevalence of racism today. Though while conservatives would like to point out reverse racism on the part of some minorities, many from those from minority races have yet to fully escape the race-based marginalization that has been so much a part of our nation's history.

The Reclaiming Jesus document also speaks against the marginalization and abuse of women that has taken place in our nation's history and present.


In addition,  the Reclaiming Jesus rejects policies that target the most vulnerable in our society. When budgets allow the vulnerable to be ignored or exploited, then those budgets become 'moral' documents according to the Reclaiming Jesus document.  The vulnerable include immigrants, the poor, and refugees. And the beneficiaries of those exploitive policies and budgets are those with wealth and power. On a side note, in a very real sense our nation is undergoing an Ayn Rand coup of the government as more of our sponsored elected officials are preferentially voting for bills that benefit themselves and their friends at the expense of those in need.

The Reclaiming Jesus document then denounces the lying that is so pervasive not just in our government, but in our society as well. And all of that is well and good.

The Reclaiming Jesus document goes on to reject the consolidation of political power that is occurring in our nation, as well as the world,  today. This rejection includes the hostility that some political leaders show to those who disagree as seen in their efforts to discredit them. And all of that is well and good.

Finally, the Reclaiming Jesus document condemns the 'America First' agenda announced by President Trump. What comes with rejecting that agenda includes rejecting all policies of domination and the exploitation of the resources of other nations. And again, all of this is well and good.

But if most, if not all, of what is written is well and good, where is the problem? The problem rests in any part of the Church seeking a place of supremacy in society to control society regardless of the intentions of the Church. This document needs to include plans to collaborate with all other legitimate groups of people to address the wrongs noted in the document. That is because the purpose of the Church is to preach the Gospel, not to change the world. 


But being a conscience of the state, as was noted in the Reclaiming Jesus document, becomes an important subtask for the Church to perform anyway.  Why is that the case? It is because for the Church to preach the Gospel, it is must not only preach against all kinds of sins, it must also find ways to exist in the world. And in order to exist in any nation, the Church must decide on how it will share society with the resident of a given nation. And while some conservatives look at that line about sharing society as simply loving one's immediate neighbor, sharing society involves much more than that. It involves whether we will look to share society as equals or as superiors. And once that concept is introduced, sharing society revolves around what legislation we will support. Will we support legislation that promotes equality for all and collaborative efforts to write our laws or will we support legislation that gives our group a place of supremacy so we can exercise some degree of control over the rest of society.

So there are problems with the Reclaiming Jesus document. And to avoid the chance that any part of the Church would use the problems cited by the document to try to seize a place of supremacy over others in society,  one must talk about how the Church needs to collaborate with others. But all of that is insignificant compared to the problems pointed out by the document.




Friday, February 5, 2016

How Shall We Christians Then Not Vote

Mark Woods (no bio available) has just written an excellent article regarding how Christians should not vote (click here). And the diving board that helped him go head first into this topic is Ted Cruz. 

Woods objects to Cruz's personality and campaign for 3 reasons. First, Cruz favors the Republican view on issues like climate change. Second, Cruz's personality suggests to Woods that Cruz seems to be far more interested in winning than on being right. Last but not least, Woods believes that Cruz has so identified his campaign with the Bible that he feels that Cruz has co-opted the Scriptures. And it is this last perceived characteristic of Cruz that has broken the camel's back for Woods.

But Cruz is not alone in co-opting the Scriptures, other Republican candidates have too according to Woods. It's just that Cruz won Iowa because he outdid his Republican rivals in so doing. 

What tipped Woods off about Cruz co-opting was a statement Cruz made after he had won Iowa. He cited a verse from Psalm 30 to the crowd that said that joy comes in the morning following a night of weeping (click here for the verse). He then equated his win in Iowa with Iowa's way of telling the world that morning is here.

Indeed, Republicans have for years sold Evangelicals on the idea that a vote for them is a vote for God's program. What Woods did not mention is that Republicans have used the abortion issue to do this. For how can a Christian vote for a pro-choice candidate when such a candidate sanctions the murder of unborn children in the womb? The result of such reasoning is that abortion has made many evangelicals 'single-issue voters.' 

Some Christian writers have become sensitive to the single-issue voter label. Joe Carter, writing for the The Gospel Coalition website, just wrote an article trying to correct this perception (click here for the article). In his article Carter stated that single issue Christians should vote on is justice, not abortion. However, he asks how can anyone who is pro-choice be sincerely concerned about the human dignity of people who are in other dire situations. So he implies that though one should not vote for a candidate because that person is pro-life, Christians should not vote for any candidates who support woman's choice to elective abortion because it isn't possible for anyone who is pro-choice to care about justice.  

Woods' solution to the problem he sees is that while Christians should let their individual convictions determine their vote, they should not allow the Christian label to be attached to a particular political party or candidate. That is because once we have done that we have allowed our faith to be constrained by our political views and thus have corrupted the faith rather than vice-versa. Woods notes the irony here because rather than relying on the First Amendment's statement on the freedom of religion and Jefferson's 'separation of Church and State,'  Christians who allow their faith to be dictated by their political beliefs are becoming American counterparts to Muslims who support theocracies in nations like Iran and Saudi Arabia.

This equating Christianity with America, however, is a practice that is older than the Republican Party. In fact, it is a practice that is older than America's life as a nation. In reality, such a strong association between America and the Scriptures is done in order to ride the coattails of Christianity to obtain some degree of authority for their own political position or embrace self-aggrandizement or both. 

Woods' article is really excellent and should be read because this blogpost cannot do it justice in this brief review. However, we could add one point here. Even though we should never attach the Christian label to political positions or campaigns, it is legitimate for both individual Christians and the Church to tell society and  the State that certain practices are unacceptable. In other words, and I think I've written this before, while we cannot identify any single candidate or political party as being the one Christians should support; both individual Christians and the Church should be more than willing to speak prophetically to society and the State in denouncing its sins and injustices. Yes, elective abortion must be one of those injustices preached against. But other practices or results such as an ever increasing wealth disparity, immoral wars (a phrase that is sometimes almost redundant), and destroying the environment are also wrong and immoral and thus must be opposed. In this way, both individual Christians and the Church itself can speak prophetically to the world without risking the corruption of the faith.  




Monday, April 27, 2015

ONIM For April 27, 2015

Christian News



World News



Pick(s) Of The Litter




Monday, February 23, 2015

ONIM For February 23, 2015

Christian News


World News




Pick(s) Of The Litter