Welcome to my first ever (and likely last) political blog post. I want to say up front that I mean no offense, and I don’t expect most of you to agree with me, and I’m truly not doing this to open up a heated debate between sides. But it’s time for me to respond to the statement/accusation I encounter practically every day: “But… but you’re a Christian. You can’t be a Democrat!” I just want to state my case, just once ... just because I can.
To me, the very foundation of Christianity is the right to choose whether to accept or reject God. We choose when to come to Him, how to come to Him, how much of Him we will accept into our lives, how closely we will follow His Word, and if we will come to Him. The ultimate gentleman, He never forces us to receive Him. He could, you know, but He doesn’t. He loves us beyond anything we can fathom, yet He wants us come to Him because we want to, not because we have to. The New Testament teaches us that serving God is not about the law; it’s about the attitudes of our hearts. That’s how we find Him, that’s how He knows us. Throughout our whole lives, God gives us free will and then He roots for us to make the right choices.
So when I look at politics, I take the same approach. If God, creator and ruler of the universe, allows us free will to make choices – choices with eternal ramifications, the most important choices we could ever make – than who am I to make those choices for someone else? I cannot choose whether someone should be able to have an abortion. I cannot decide what someone can or cannot say or how they will express their freedoms. (If I do, they’re not freedoms.) I mustn’t declare that some people have rights over others, and I mustn’t judge that simply because someone lives in a state of sin (according to my standards, or even those of God), they do not deserve the fundamental rights the rest of us have. Christ died for all of us while we were yet sinners. We cannot regulate morality. Even the Lord did not do that. He offers guidelines; He gives us rules; He rewards us for following them. But it
all boils down to individual choice. If we, as followers of Christ, will choose to operate within the freeing realm of His will, politics and party affiliations really become irrelevant. When we act right, there won’t be a need to regulate us.
I don’t believe I have the right to make crucial life decisions for someone else. But I do believe, rather than slinging mud and bashing those who disagree with me, I should put my focus into educating people. Teaching them about God. Showing them through my actions and by example that I genuinely care. Helping and counseling them to make Biblical choices. I am more likely to have an impact that way than by voting for a particular party. And I also think about this: who is more likely to effect change? Someone who’s never struggled, someone who shouts judgments at a woman who is deciding whether she can go through with an abortion … or someone who has experienced the same struggle, someone who can say with genuine emotion and empathy that she’s been there, and these are the consequences she’s experienced from the decision she made? I’d prefer, rather than taking it all into my own hands, to give God the chance to work through His imperfect people. As He has always done.
As Christians, we are called to be ambassadors. We are to be Jesus’ hands extended. To me, one way to do this is to feed, shelter, nurture, educate, protect, and nurse the sick and the poor and the underprivileged. We cannot decide certain people don't qualify for kindness, and we cannot take away opportunities simply because there are people who will abuse the system. In my mind, the Democratic party’s approach more closely embodies what we are to do as individual Christians and allows us the freedoms we are granted within our chosen faith.
And no matter the outcome, no matter who ends up in office, I will pray for our leaders’ wisdom and right choices. I will
pray for compassion and peace and provision and blessings. And I will thank God daily for putting me in a place and time in which I am allowed to express my views and find my own ways to give glory to the Almighty God.
Comments
Thanks so much for risking
Thanks so much for risking to share your perspective. I appreciate your blog.
But may I just offer one counter to your blog. Actually, you do have the right and responsibility to set boundaries for others' decisions. We all do. That's what government does. Government (i.e., our laws) says my neighbor cannot build his or her house on my property. That's a boundary. We vote for representatives who will create and uphold those laws. We also vote for representatives who will create and uphold. laws that say you cannot come into my home and kill my husband or my child. For those of us who believe that life starts at conception, it's appropriate for us to elect representatives who will create and uphold laws that protect the not-yet born.
I agree with you that you can absolutely be a Christian and a Democrat. I personally believe that the responsibility for caring for the poor, sick and underprivileged lies with the Church. And I would say that we (I) have been doing a very poor job of it.
Thanks for your respectful blog and for letting me respond. I also hope to bring glory to God and am quite thankful for living in a place where we can have these blog discussions.
Be blessed, Sandy
www.ApprehendingGrace.com
thank YOU
Thanks for responding with such respect. I absolutely try to honor and respect a person's own beliefs and viewpoints, and I appreciate that you don't agree yet you said so without condemnation, with kindness.
I've had others express similar disagreement, and I agree that I want a law protecting me from having someone come into my home and hurting or killing my family. At first I thought that caused my logic to fall apart on that point, but I think in my mind there's still a distinction between rules and boundaries that fall within society's or community's common belief systems and those that are based upon individuals' morals or faith traditions. You are absolutely correct, though, that we all have a responsibility to support those candidates whouphold those things we believe in, and that the Church needs to step up and care for the poor, sick and underprivileged. I, too, have been convicted recently that I must find a way to do my part in that, because I have certainly failed miserably in that area up to now.
Thanks for your input. Be blessed...
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